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farmers are jubilant over the pros- BANKING. pects of a rich return for their labor. Between Blair and Plattsmouth we counted no less than thirteen school houses and four churches in | course of erection, which tends to | show that Nebraska is getting the | | right kind of emigrants. | Axoxc the Congressional pro-| NEBRASKA SKETCHES. THE OMAHABEE | otay we notice a e OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY. yort by Senator Hitcheock from the | e -—r’___ ESPONDENTS. | Committee on Territories, in favor ALVIN SAUNDERS, _ ENOS LOWE ! President. Vice Presdent. | BEN woop, Cashier. STATE CS BANK, N. W. Cor. Farnham aud 13th Sts., From Blair to Plattsmouth. | of the admission of New Mexico. | B mm& | Oxama, June 11, 1874, New Mexlco and Colo-| After leaving Blair we traveled | FEG S ) S8y ylate, T will | north along the Missouri Valley | gonin use my crow-quill, but for the | & A FIIN bottom, which here extends full | present I will wait for the end of | ! twenty miles from bluff to bluff. | this dreary, monotonous rain. | | ANGER. | | There are many fine farms along | Capital .... 000 | this Valley, and in the vicinity of | — i S @rizona beautiful groves of timber | NATURAL CURIOSITIES. | give variety to the otherwise monot- | onous dead level of the landscape. | Tekamah is the commercia cen- | tre of this portion of the State, and | 300 (P UL ot Aaonzg A0 NI0LS ‘Wz o ¥OT destre any of o litatary or poetical character; and we | ]y assum will aet undertake to ,r—w-.u:-mmm of pulling case whatever. e tres o mare thas. supply our | Tado through the Senate. B e i ot diowction. ——e T Bmaz Naxz or WaiTss, in full, must 1o each RETCURNS from the census of Ne- and every case accompany any communica- | braska, just taken by the State au- thon of what natare scever. This is not in- | thorities, have been received from tended for publication, but for eur own satis- | a]] the counties except seven, and taction and @8 Proof of good faith. | foot up 222,392. The counties yet l_mmndflflnnhgwhmmme to bring from, on all matters connected | the grand total up to 225,000. Doug- i 'Ilm-l'"fl“‘::;:l’::‘hmmmy,lnwhlch ‘Omaha is sit- | o whatever of general uated, 570. Allowing Omaha Advantage | | ="'"-:;:-"'..4 ..un"..m..“’"“"“‘l;.‘:‘ o o e 1s decidedly the most thriving to > £ | ‘ ol with the = - | county—a very liberal allowance— lecidedly the mos ving town = v, Wil- OVER eietn st wil b gy recive. i | SOMNSE SR Containg I | we bave seen in our travels. Here | | A4 (he g:f;;y,g;:,sgg,‘::,{,},w r ur i t r D l rs B the neightworhood of 11000 inhabl- | we found Mr. George Zanner, 1or- | 20,00 soung gum trees, growing | Certificates of Deposit : tants. By the consus of 1870, the | ,orjy of Omaha, occupying an ele- | splendidly L i o et ' W Nos. 187,189 and 191 Farnham Street. OMAEA, NEBRASKA. P EPOSITS AS SMALL AS ONE DX lar sece'ved and compound injerest jowed on the s ame. AILAVLS A0 ¥ ced in abund- grafting the | Temons are produ ance in Florida by en | . o e | town had some 14 that You | gant jewelry store’ his show cases | A yell t Taylor’s ranch | T positafier remaining in this Beuk th el i -an see it hasn’t increased muc velry : yellow dog, at Tay] n | et A S e s— el s thoeomtzary, quli;pl\d shelves well stocked With | pear Big Pine, Inyo county, Cali- | penthe wibl dray lueros from e of deves: | —whether made by sell or triends, 3nd | WEVCR TR b Bl Non- | watches, clocks and bijoutiere of the | fornia, recently gave birth to twen- | posit an be érawa sty thae. e e nstiomer stmmentsstions o 22 | most beautiful kinds. Mr. Zanner | ty_one pups. The Oldest Establishea 2 is a universal favorite, for he is one | Biditer, are (until Dominstions are made) | mar2att simply personal, and will be charged as ad- vertissments. All @mmunieations should be addressed o That is as near the truth asany | : of those genial, manly gentlemen of our liberal Spoon Lake contem- | with whom it is a pleasure to trans- have ever been known to | act business, and in Mr. Zanner Te- Portions of the remains of a large | animal, supposed to be a mastadon, BANKING HOUSE MILTON ROGERS. [ poraries Tve been found in New York Flat, | Nenture. In 1570 Douglas county | kamah has gained a finished work- | Yuba county, Cal. 1 moTiCK. s & fraction over 20,000, of | MAD Whom Omaba could illy afford | Macon, Miss., is willing to make On snd i Octover swenty-rst, 1572, the | Teturned a fraction over 20,000, of | ¢, 1oce At the next door we stopped | affidavit fhat an African bride with- e tioe o toe Datix Bux 1 asvamed | which Omahs supplied 16,384, Al- | tg se Mr. Hoile, formerly with J. | in her limits is nursing her first- by M s Dovi 0 e asdes sl 0 | Jowing the county outside of Omaba | J. Brown & Co., Omaba, Who is | born babe at the age of sixty. weriptions st paid st the olfice will Le payen' rti i d | now inpartnership with Mr. Nelson, | i e b i oyt e subcriptionswil | bt proportion of the increase, and | 8000 "R e Uolinees in o large | Fiddletown, California, relolecs | well-filled general store in_which | & ROSEWATER, Editor and Publisher, Draw- . IN SEBRASKA. Caldwell, Hamilton & Co., | BANKBRRS. | Business transacted s; of an [mrnnm lhnll.m5 no | | | | Wholesale Stoves at | or Gold | Union Pacific Railroad a mountain In which strange | we still find at least 18,000 inhabi- in bises are heard and floods of water | Accounts be constarsigned. e . E. BOSEWATER. Publisber ‘THEY do not even mourn the de- | mise of the Indian Peace Commis- ‘ sion at the National Capital. Accord- | ing tothe Washington Chronicle, the | resignation of the Peace Commis- sioners was not unexpected; indeed they have extended their services Jong beyond their period of useful- Frow al] accounts by mail and " telegraph, the damage to growing " erops throughout the northwest by | the recent storm will be quite se- | yious, Qur information from the warious sections of the State is yet $oo limited to warrant any estimate, but we hgve reason to believe that Nebraska has fared much better | than some of the States cast of the ME-—- 7 48 now generally conceded that the civil rights bill cannot pass du- ring the present session of Congress, 30 it has to go through the regular oourse, The vote in the House, Monday, when Butler moved the of this measure, under a suspension of rules, clearly indicates | that its passage out of the regular | ‘course is impossible. JLova Joux W ’s ealled farmers convention put seventeen planks into theiwr plat- form. That platform is therefore lengthy enongh to hold Long John and all the other disappointed politi- cal bummers who have falled to meet with proper appreciation in the ranks of the political parties | that had heretofore given them a fair trial. OMAHA has so often been de- ceived by flattering promises and | disappointed by broken pledges that | nothing shert of a visible realization | of these hopes can fully satisfy her people. Nothing short of the actual | completion of the Union Pacific depot and headquarters will con- vince the doubters that all is safe. | It is, nevertheless, gratifying to | know that the present managers of | the road announce their detormina- | tion to earry out every pledge made | by their predecessors. Mg. A. C. HesiNG, like Patrick O'Flaherty, scems to be born to bad Juck, For several months sr. He- sing has been industriously at work to organize a political party that would coincide with his peculiar views, but so far be has met with very poor encouragement. Even the politieal hayseed bummers who held a Convention at Springfield Wednesday under the now popular disguise of “farm- ers” did not see fit to incorporate | Hesing’s notions into their platform. ‘While Hesing sdvocated immediate specie payments they advocated the conversion of national hank notes Into greenbacks and greenbacks in- to bonds. While Hesing wanted to stigmatize and denounce the cru- | saders they were inclined to form an alliance with what Hesing styles | the temperance fanatics. They even went so far as to hiss | Hessing’s anti-crusader speech. | This was the unkindest cut of all, and the great would-be leader slunk away even more disgusted with the Farmers’ Reform party than he professed to be with the party he had recently deserted. —_— | | Tk Chieago Tribune which at first endorsed President Grant's memorandum to Senator Jones, is now beginning to pick flaws in the document. The Tribune especially considers the President’s propo- | sition to abolish all small notes of a denomination below $10 a8 unnecessary and unscientific According to the Tribune ‘“‘the chief purpose had in view by the President in the abolition of small prevent future panics or to miti- | gate thelr effects. Would the aboli- | tion of small notes accomplish this | end? Atfirst blush it would scem erises, or panics, occur, in England, where there is no currency of less denomina- tion that £5 (the equivalent of §25), | industry at St. Paul, Minn., bas led | excellcace that has practically cut the | erage dividend of 15 per cent. du- tants in Omaha now. P TuE would be Indiana reformers | were decidedly more sensible than the would be Illinojs reformers, They at least had sagacity enough not to encumber their platform with impracticable and meaningless whereases, which could only entan- gle them into profitless discussion. Six planks covered all their refor- matory notions, while the Illinois reformers slopped over on seventeen planks. Even the Indisna reformers are, however, not likely to accomplish much in the way of political re- form. If the St Louis Globe is cor- rectly Informed about their make: up, they simply consist of the ex- iled ex-Republican editor of a repu- diated newspaper and a few perjured Patrons ot Husbandry, who rely on the dark-lantern features of their Order to drive the farmers to the polls like sheep, and secure their own election to places where the salary is am- ple, the work Jight and oppartunis ties for theft considerable. The most important and noticeable per- formance of the Indiana Reformers hag boen the publication of a forged with intent to decejve the peo- ple at large. It is not probable that the future career of the party will be marked by any feat less dishon- est or more notorious than this. —_— ~ INDUSTRIAL POINTS. The Wyandotte (Mich.) rail mill is running double turn. Steps have been taken to establish a produce exchange in Baltimore. Two hundred and forty men are employed at the Northwestern car shops, at Fond du Lac. The first attempt to manufacture beet sugar in Melbourne, Australia, has proved unprofitable. The citizens of Alton, by paylng $5,000 to an extensive plow factory, have induced them to move their shops to that city. They ordinarily | work about 200 hands. One thousand seven hundred per- sons were thrown out of employ- | ment by the recent stoppage of the Lackawanna Iron and Coal Compa- ny’s works. A Company has been formed in Great Britain, with a capital of £200,000 sterling, to export fresh Canadian beef to the English mar- Ket. The chief establishment will be in the Province of Quebec. The new rolling mill at Topeks, Kansas, recently went into opera- tion, and employs 164 men. Unlike most iron mills, it has orders which it will take many months to exe- cute. Nashville, Tenn., recently cele- brated the success attained by the tobacco industry there, the quantity of tobacco received having inerd®sed from 900 hogsheads three years ago to 3,700 last year. The Exchange for the sale of manufactured tobacco in Rich- mond, Va., is found to facilitate business and encourage merchants to buy there who formerly purchased tobacco in the larger cities, The movement in favor of home to the organization of a manufactur- ing and trust company with a capi- tal of $251,000, designed to encour- | age local manufactures. A new lot-blast oven is in use in iron-making at Troy. 1t utilizes as fuel the gas generated in the fur- nace, aud being placed on the ground the blast from it into the cupola with little or no loss of power. Mr. Jerome Jones, who is connec- ted with the glass industry of New England, recently stated, after his return from Europe, that the glass works there were nearly idle, and the proprietors admit that American makers have attained a degree of m off from_this_market. The glass works of New England, he ob- served, produces articles which in quality, design, and engraving, are equal to any made abroad. The New England Glass Company, Mr. Jones said incidentally, paid an av- ring the past 40 years, but had earned no dividend in the last two years. The contemplated winding up of the Company however, been postponed ation. ‘The state of the iron trade is dis- cussed in the Commercial Bulletin of Baston, which speaks y of the&mre. It _fy‘n::h‘;nd re- ‘marl.al progress of ustry for the two years immediately pre- ceding the panic, and the enormous demand for American iron, give reason to hope for a partial revival of this brach of business at no dis- tant day, and arenewal of profif ns. This growth has prob- no parallel in the of any industry in the country. ‘was 80 great F; {i £ 5 § t is kept everything imaginable from a skein of silk thread to a cabl rope. Mr. Hoile was so busy wait- ing on a large crowd of customers that we had no chance for a visit there, but in the evening we smoked a fragrant weed and talked of the olden times in Omaha. The next morning we reluctantly bid to our friends and started for Fremontacross the high prairies. The road is not confined to section lines, but follows the high rid, which gives a magnificent vie the rich cultivated valleys below. Along Bell Creek and down the Elkhorn Valley we passed through a garden like couptry which is cer- tainly unsurpassed ~anywhere for fertility of soil and variety of pro- duets. ~ At Nickerson Station, on the Elkhorn Valley Railroad, we noticed @ fine large elevator with about & dozen teams waiting to dis- charge their loads. We thought it very strange that | Omaha with her vast wholesale | trade, could not competp with even | Nigkerson Station (which has not a | single store) In_facilities for hand- | ling grain. ~ At Fremont everything indicated prosperity. Real Estate being especially lively, 5o much so that it “flew through the air with the greatest of ease.” Fremont is undouhtedly the dustlest town in Nebraska on a windy day. ‘At the hotel we met Judge Lake, District Attorney Connel and sever- al members of the Omaha bar who | had just arrived from Wahoo, where | they had heen huldini a session of | the District Court. At this point | we crossed the Platte on the new | bridge which is certainly an archi- | tectural curiosity. It is wide in some places and in others a team can scarcely get through. It makes as many crooks and turns as a poli- tician on_election day and almost touches the stream over which it is built, That bridge must be seen to be appreelated. About four miles from Fremont on the south side of the Platte, the Grangers have erected a commodi- ous hall which will be completed this summer. We talked with the people in this vicinity in regard to the bridge question and nearly every farmer said that he would market his grain and stock in Omaha, if there were a bridge at Valley or Waterloo, but that now they had to he content with wading through the Fremont sand hills and receiv- ing the terms given by a market which had no competition. Wahoo, the new coun'y seat, is nearly in the centre of Saunders county, and has more buildings in course of erection than ccmpleted buildings. From here we traveled down the rich and beautiful valley of Wahoo creek to Ashland, which town feels keenly the loss of the county seat, still trade was in a flourishing condition, The cruel war is over here, that is the whisky war. The crusaders were triumphant, and there is not at present a saloon in Ashland." ‘We picked up at this point a parody on “Excelsior,” which a certain genius had composed in order to describe the struggles, per- sistent perseverance, and final sad fate of an agent of the celsior School Furniture Company, who had passed through that portion of the country. We give it here asa specimen brick of Nebraska poetry, which we propose to enter a State Fair this fall, although it may have the genius of a Hitcheock to contend with for a premium : Ihe“:hldfl of night '";I falliog h;(. ‘youth o sung, with note and din, A word of singular meanin'— Excelsior ! 4, his moustache curled, As'if the very ground he spurned ; And like a bovine clarion rung The accent of that unknown tongue-= Excelsior ! Eis nose wa 1n waloons he saw the glowing light t ©f Bourbon whisky sparkl t ay,” an ex-crusader said, * The road is rough and I want A tear stood Bat stfll he a Exi “Try not the road,” “A thunder storm brews overhead, And Wahoo Creek is dark and wide." But loud_that clarion voice replicd— Excelsior ! ““Beware the bays of Billy's Ranch ; Beware This was the Gravger’s last good night. A voice replied, far out of sight,— Excelator | A traveler by the faithiul hound, HIt burried in the mud_ was found, »tll trying & schoo] boand to entice, To buy 3 desk with the strange device, Excelsior ! There In the mud the agent lay, "Till he sank bene-th his kindred slay ; But from under the ground a sound is Vecy sirangaly like the word,— On our road to Plattsmouth, we found there was not a single ferry in operation across the. below Ashland. Somethingshould be done to remedy this, for by it, Omaha is excluded from' proper communica- i i 3 1 i i £ i : i ) t the | ! | pursued Andrew Johnson like a re occasionally ejected with great | foree. | Herds of wild Rocky Mountain | | goats exist in the Sierra Nevada | untains, near the summit. These | animals are only found in the high- | est and most inaccessible regions. | A mother-mule Is the sensation in | Salt Creek township, Franklin | county, Indiana. The animal be- longs to William Pruitt, and bears | her maternal honors meekly. The | | offspring is anmistakably a mule. | A post mortem examination | | made on a valuable cow, which died at the Hester Place, SBan Jose, Cal., last week, revealed the fact that the animal had been dieting on nails. Fourteen nalls of assorted sizes were found in her second stomach. The body of Alanson Dyer, who died at Rutland, Vermont, in March, 1872, of oonmd of the petrified, and weighed nearly 1,200 pounds. At the time of death, the weight was 145 pounds. The hydrophane, or so-called Mexican opal, takes its name from the peculiar property of becom- ing ~transparent after immer- sion in water, and in that state it often displays prismatie colors of a | beauty equal to those of the noble opal itself. Although very similar to the latter as fur as substance goes, it1s of a porous texture, and very absorbent. On becoming dry again its transparency vanishes, leaving a white or yellowish surface. It is said that “‘when boiled in oil the hydrophane acquires the same ap- pearance as when immersed in water, and retains it in_part for years, as the oil does not dry. This morning Carl Beneditti, the celebrated sword-swallower, appear- ed at the clinic of the Jefferson Me- dieal College, and was the subject of a lecture by Professor Maury. A | number of the most eminent sur- geons were present. Beneditti first swallowed a sword-blade twenty- three inches in length, and bending over, completely bent the steel, He next placeda suber measuring twen- ty-nine inches in length down his throat to the hilt. The sword was kept in this position about a minute. and several of the medical men present made an examination. In their opinion the point of the sword passed through the gullet down into the tesophagus, or channel leading | to the stomach, thence apparently separating the left parts of the stom- ach and passing to a point three inches below the umbilicus. Next, Beneditti took a musket weighing about sixteen pounds, with & bayo- netattached. The bayonet heswal- lowed, and, bending over, supported the musket in several positions by the strength of his jaws. Another | wonderful feat was to swallow six sword blades at one time and extri- cate them separately. There appeared to be no malform- ation whatever about the sword swallower, and it is'said that he first discovered his ability to perform these feats by thrusting his finger down his throat cnce while sick and finding that it would not make him vomit. { A Bee Fancier. | On Sunday a large swarm of bees | settled on a lamp post on Mulberry | street. A colored man living near | the spot placed some molasses in a | tin pan, and tried to coax the in- | sects to'partake of the sweet diet; | but the bees stuck to their post. The | negro then requested an Irish neigh- | bor to bring an old Christmas tree, as affording a better swarming place | tor the honey-makers: The pine | bough was brought, the branches | dipped in molasses, and the two | men_beld it up near the post and | ““conjured” the bees to settle upon | it. The bees finally left the lamp | post, but instead of going to the | Christmas tree, they lit upon the | body of the Hiberian, covering him | from the waist to the ears. The Irishman found the burden too hot and heavy for comfort, and at- tempted fo shake it off, but in vain. At length some women came to the rescue with brooms, and swept the bees from the unfor- | tunate man, but not before they had stung his face, neck and head in a dreadful manner. His head became swollen to the size of a barrel, and ie pain was almost unindurable, nd yesterday the man was ina | critical condition. A reporter of | the Anzeiger was & witness tc the | | scene, butdid not learn the names of | the parties.—St. Louis Democrat. | The Third Term. Perhaps the gravest of the dan- gers to whieh the country is sub- Jjected is the hunger and thirst of | Presidents to secure a second term. | It was this ambition which led Abraham Lincoln to consent to the inauguration of the most stu- pendous political machine ever in- | vented — the memorable provost- marshal system ; it was this which phantom of unrest, and i was this which possessed the thoughts of Gen. Grant from the first moment of his accession to his first term. sed of weak can resist the every means powerful place tial oceupan- | AND DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY FOR t in Currenc; fl““‘ sight check wl{hontlo- Certificates of Deposit issued pay- able on demand, nl:'Mn fixed 'n‘l:{e bearing interest at six percent. per annam, and available in in all parts | of the country. Advances made to eustomers om 3'mud securities at market rates interest. Buy and sell Gold, Bills of Ex- | Governm S i eIA-&EI Sk ent, State, County, v ard e ‘We give special attention to nego- | tiating Railroad ard other Corpo- | rate Loans issued within the Stato. Draw Sight Drafts on England, Ireland, Scotland, and all parts of Europe. Sell B Passaze T CJLLLECTIONS Pl‘-UMITLYlg‘Ik,\’l"t sull EZRA MILLARD, J. H. MILLARD, President. Cashier. OMATTA NATIONALBANK Cor. Douglas and Thirteenth Streets. | OMAHA, NEBRASKA. | Capital. e Surplus sad Prof INANCIAL AGENT SFOR THE UNITED STATES. DISSURSING OFFCERS. b TI{IS BANK m;:‘;.\ls n Exchange, G ods, Vo change, Gosernment Vouchers, Sos CERERS, . [[BULLION and GOLD DU 7| i o2 ‘ Angells drafts and makes colleetions on all ariaof Eurepe S Drafts drawn payable in gold or curren- cyen the Bank of California, Sau Francisco. HCKETS FOR SALE TO ALL PARTS of Europe via the Cunard and National Steamship Lines, and the Hamuburg-American Packet Compay. 2t TINWARE and TINNERS' STOCE. — —SOLE WESTERN AGENCY FOR— STEWART’S COOKING and HEATING STOV THE “FSABLES™.” COOKING STOVES, CELEBRATED CHARTER OAK COOKING STOVES, | Allof Which Will be Sold at ¥anufacturers’ Prices, With Freighta dded. ap2t = J. A. NEBRASKA SHIR 189 S W A5 OMAHA, ¢ NEBRASKA. Sond for Frice Liimts. (o) =Y SHRTS AND GENTS FURNISHING 600DS, &C. &C. ‘565~Shirts ofall kinds made to order. Satisfation guarranteed. THORUP, NANGFACTORY A A 189 FARNHAM ST, FARNHAM ST, HAWLEY & BURKS, —WHOLES ALE AND RETAIL PELERS IN— AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMFNTS, Farm Machinery and Wagons. No. 13 South 10th Streef LINCOLN, N2 mehil U.8. DEPESITORY The First National Bank OF OMATIIA. Corner of Farham and 13th Rireets. THE OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISEMENT IN NEBRASEA. (Successors to Kountae Brothers.) ESTABLISHED IN 1858. Organised as a National Bank, August 26,1863 Capital and Profits over - $250,000 OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS: E. CREIGHTON, President. H. COUNTZE, % V. YATES, Vice Pres't. | .Ajs't Cashier. A. J. POPPLE OUNTES E, Cashier. The Poatrice Hvdraulic, Cement, —AND— PIPE COMPANY, OULD INFORM THE PUBLIC THAT are now ready to furnish HY- MR f the very best quality, STORDERS FULLY SOLICITED. ADDRESS, BEATRICE MYDRAULIC CEMENT & PIPE CO. OMAHA NEBRASKA. my21-3 400,000 ACRES! —OF THE FINEST— Elkhorn Valley Lands! | FOR SALE E. M. CLARK, Wisner, - - Neb, HESE LANDS ARE CONVENIENT TO the market and the FINEST in the STATE! And will be sold st from $2.50 to $5.00 PER ACRE! | For Cash or on Long Time. { $-LAND EXPLORING1[CK- | ETS for sale at 0. & N. W. De. | pot, bearing coupons which will be taken at full cost in payment | for land. | O‘A . el - Nzemms AN AN CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY 588 & 540 Fourteenth Street, : (Oen Owaha, Sikunbe; Turtegss 503 Bugties on hand or ade 10 onder. N. B.—Particular attention paid to Repair ing. apras-u STOVE STORE.| E. F. COOK. 837 14t B, between Douglas and Dodes Manufacturer of Tin, Copper andZSheet Iron Were, and dealer in Cooking and Heating stoves Japanned and ‘French Wi Roof ti & Reotag Gatiers snd Spos | l = 23| JooWark | MERCHANT TATLOR,| |GRAND CENTRAL Fort Calhoun Mills. | FIOUR, FEED & MEAL,| Mauufactured with Great Care from the Best Grain. Cieneral Depot, Cer. 14th & Dodge Sts, OMAERA. W. B. RICHARDSON. ODM AXIIA NBEEB ASKA | PITCH, FELT AND GRAVEL ROOFER. And Manufactarer of Dry an1Saturated Roofing and Sheathing F elt. ELAM CLARK. may 9-1¥. ALSO DEALERS IN Rocofing, Pitch, Coal, Tar, Etc, OOFING inany 12thy treet. Address P. 0, Box B. & J. WILBUR, Books and Stationery, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, !_'ourteenth Street, Omaha., Neb —_— s | GENERAL AGENTS FOR ALL St HOGL BOOKS | ars-lmy WHOLESALE CANDIES T ama now manutacturing all varieties of candies will gell at EASTERN PRICES " 7 Dealers in this State need not want to go East £ CANDIES. A trial Is solicited. HENRY LATEY, Douglad St. Cor- 12th, ‘mehtits SINGER. SINGER, The Kingof the SEWING MACHINE WORLD as pre-omineatly as Gold Reigns in the Realms of Finance. Etc. | t of ueuukmrmmnmg States. Oiice o posite the Gas Works, on | Omaha SALES FOR 1813: In Round Numbers 232,444 Machines! asand more Machine: than were sold Ly any otber | hat the superiority of the Singer is fu Iv de- | THE SINGER MANF’G CO. 'W. N. NASON, Agent, NO. 212 DOUGLAS STREET, OMAHA. ‘ nstrate d. C.L.A. ELATTE, 288 Dodge Street, 2d Door East of 16th Street. | I keep constantly on hand the finest stok of Broad Cloth, Cassimeres snd Vestings: | 282 Dousla A Land Graat of 12,000,000 Acres of the best FARMING aad MINERAL Laads of Amerloy 1,000,000 ACRES IN NEBRASKA IN THE GREAT PLATTE VALLEY THE GARDEN OF THE WEST NOW FOR S8ALE! These lands are in the central portion of the United States, on tbe 4lst degree of Noth Lat itude, the ceatral line of the great Temperate Zoue of the American Coatinent, and for gra @ growing and stuck raising unsurpaseed by oy in the United Sta'es. OHEAPER IN PRICE, more favorableterms given. aad more convenieat to market then o8 be found Elsewhers. FIVE and TEN YEARS' credit ith interest at SIX PER CENT OOLONISTS and AOTUAL SETULERS canbuy on Ten Years' Credit. Laads st the ssm vrice to all C(REDIT PURCHASERS. A Deluction TEN PER CENT. FOR CASH. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR AGTUAL SETTLERS. And the Best Locations for Colonies! Soldiers Entitled to a Homestead ¢f Acres. ¥F'roeo Fam - to chanors of Inand Bond for new Descriptive Pamphit, with new mape, pebiished in Enclsh, German, Sweod an mailed freo every where. resa (=) e, alyzds (oo Camiseionts U TF. AR o Sk Rob, A. B. HUBERMANN & CO., PRACTIOCAL Manufaocturor WATCHMAKERS,|/OF JEWELRY S. E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. WATCHES & CLOCKS. JEWELRY AND PLATED-WARE, AT WHOLESALE OR RETAIL. Dealers Can Save TIME and FREIGHT by Ordering of Us. ENGRAVING DONE FREE OF CHARGE Y $&-ALL GOODS WARRANTED TO BE AS REPRESENTED."w% 1an3i-tf WHO CLARK & FRENCH, LESALE GROCERS! AND DEALERS IN | Canned Goods, Dried Fruits, Green Fruits in Season. LICITED AND PROMPT LLED. jel J. Camrmn, *S. C. ABBOIT & CO., Booksellers Stationers DEALERS IN WALL PAPER DECORATIONS, aAaND WINDOW SHADES, No. 188 Farnham Street. Omaha, Neb ? Agents for School Books used in Nebraska. s.C " WM. M. FOSTER. YWholesale Lumber, WINDOWS, DOORS, ELINDS, MOULDINGS, &C. Plaster Paris, Hair, Dry and Tarred Felt. Sole Agents for Bear Creek Lime and Loulsy ille Cemeat OFFICE AND YARL© 0On T. P. Track, bet Farnham aud Doug awprnt 'N. L D. SOLOMON, PAINTS WEHOLESALE OIL3 AND WINDOW CLASS, COAL OIL AND HEAD-LIGHT OIL OMAKA ~ NEBRASKA FAIRLIE & MONELL, 'BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS. Stationers, Engravers and Printers. NOTARIAL AND LODCE SEALS. | Masonic, 0dd Fellows and Knights of Pythia% . UNIFORMS . JEWELS, BOOKS, BLANKS, FTC., AND EXPRESS.-ga omMAIXa. AT N - Streeot, ot which I am prepared to make up ia tbe most fashionable Atyles and o suit the most fastidious, | Je10d1 at the lowest possible priccs. = HERMANTOMBRINCK, | Fashionable Tailor, | No. 204} Farnham Street, | Between Twelith and Thirtecnth Streets, OMAHA, NEB. | A’ gEvEas aTrenpED TO PROMPT- Iy and executed in the most f ble style iris 3nd_done in the best EEOTEHIL. 'NEBRASKA nd Opened new Sepiember 30th, 1573. ™GRO TiRA o i clesning 8 pravp— e = JI. C. WALKE B@mm. WU“K AND DEALER IN— " Real Estate Agency|gB DOTS & SHOES Keep & complete Abstract of Title to . IN NEBRASKA Between Faroham and Douglas Bstate in Om.ha and count. ‘manner. spisvl ARTHUR BUCKBEE. CARPENTER, BUILDER —AND DEALER IN— P WA —AND— ORNAMENTAL ‘LANOId aNnou HONHJI NO¥I CHEAP, DURABLE, taries, Church Grouds ana Public Parks, e T e . OMAHA 111h St Yet. Farpham snd Harsey S aplit