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THE OMAHA BEE. OFFICIAL PAPEK OF THE CITL. TO CORRESPONDENTS. . ‘he same, in any case | 1s sufficiently large to more than supply our | Hmited space fn that direction. Bzar Naxs oy WaiTks, in full, mast 1o esch and every case sccompany SnJ COBMmUBICA- tion of what nature soever. This is Bot in- Sended for publication, but for eur own sstis- Saction snd s proof of good faith. Ous Coustey Fmixxps we will always be ‘pleased 1o bear from, o all matiers conected ‘with crops, ceuntry polities, and on any sub- yoct whatever of general interest 1o the pee- ple of our State. Any information conpect- | o with the election. and relating to floods, | secilents. ete., will be gladly received. All such communiestions, bowever, must be brief as poasible; and they must, in all cases, be writian upon one side of the sbeet only. rouTIiCAL. | ALz ApouscEMEFTS of candidates for offce | —whetper made by sell or friends, and whether as notices or communications o the | Editor, are (until nowiuations are made) | simply personal, and will be charged s ad- | vertisements. Al communicstions should be addressed to | £ ROSEWATER, Editor and Publisher, Drav- | ram. NOTICK. On and after October twenty-Srat, 1572, the | ity eirculation of the DaiLy Bxx is assumed | by Mr. Edwin Davis, to whose order all sub- | seriptions ot paid at the office will be payable. and by whom all receipts for subscriptions will | be countersigned. | E. ROSEWATER. Publisker | FRANCE has outlived many astrous calamities, and we appre- | hend she will manage to survive, | even if Count De Chambord should | earry out his threat to abdicate his | claim to the French throne and the Royal title of Henry V. —— Now that eivil service reform is dead and beyond resurrection, peo- ple will atleast know that some- body besides “civil service reform’ «4s reponsible for bad appointments, or the proportion of imbecile or cor- rupt officials. —_— BONAPARTISM and Imperialism received a stunning and well nigh mortal blow in the French National Assembly Monday, and it will re- quire much skillful doctoring and careful nursing to prevent it from shuffling off its shattered mortal coil. THEamended bankrupt bill which has been quictly slumbering in the Conference Committee pigeon holes for nearly four months has at last been taken up. The bill as reported embodies the principal features favoring the debt- or class attached by the Senate to original the bill. The probabilities now are that it will become a law. THE German vote is the trump card with which the Nebraska De- mocracy expect to win the battle in the coming campaign. With this object in view their organ in these parts has, of late, exhibited unusual tenderness toward this class of our population. 'With all its anxiety to soft-soap the Germans, the Herald seems not to be able to overcome its native antipathy to the people who eaged Louis Napoleon and his cagles in a Prussian chicken coop. ‘WHILE the crew of political bym- mers who have certain very dull axes to grind are spouting inflation and other cheap clap-trap to the in- dustrial classes, the horny-fisted far- mers of Nebraska are quietly solv- ing the currency problem by raising a splendic crop of grain. The indi- cations are that they will succeed in getting about eight million of dol- 1ars currency for the erop of 1874, and that will put more money in circulation than forty new banks would eirculate, even if they had an unlimited quantity of money to lend on approved securities. For consistent journalism, com- mend us to the Omaha Herald. Three days ago that staunch organ of Bourbonism endorsed the new departure in Nebraska politics, that has just been hatched out in Ne- maba county, and to-day the same paper turns the cold shoulder to the Independents, by exhorting Nc- braska Democrats “to maintain their organization, hold their State Convention, adopt a sound plat- form, and nominate the best ticket possible, lenving results to God and the people.” That appeal to God and the pec- ple, is refreshingly original. Boss HessiNG, who carries the German vote of Illinois in his breeches pocket, went to the Tllinois Independent Convention with un~ bounded enthusiasm and returned ¢ Convention, held in day before yesterday, are a terrible mockery of the much- boasted parliamentary education of the American ple. No Polish Starest could have used greater violence to force a horde of Gal- ts to ery “Yes” to he ordered, than the «chairman of this Farmers’ Conven- did to his ‘ independent” far~ Tn the Munich Fiiegenden laettern is a_picture of a Prussian lleutenant, who, with angry gesti- culation, screams oul to a soldier - scoundrel, if h'mmm,houy-m the same tashion officer of the Farmers’ eall and - offer M;:who“\-eum‘ - looking t, or who wished to & remark on any of the reso- Jutions presented by the committee. - - . . money, against the pro of home industry, and for and Sunday laws !—this whole | at exorbitant figures. The opening | takes peasure in placing the obser- | vations and conclusions of its envoy to to | plac CHEAP LUMBER. The want of cheap lumber has | been felt in Omaha and Nebraska | ever since the first white man set | his foot upon our prairie soil. The | 8t- Paul, want of cheap lumber has, In 8 great measure, retarded our progress s a City and State, and does even now prevent the inauguration of many public improvements and pri- vate enterprises. ‘With cheap lum- ber we might be able to -construct | cheap dwelling houses, and cheap | dwelling bouses would result in a | reduction of rents to the working | classes. Such a reduction,feoupled | with our ability to precure the raw | material at reasonable figures, | would enable many of our small capitalists to undertake the manu- facture of various articles Which we | are now importing from the East | of the through all rail route to the Minnesota pinery regions promises eventually, if not immediately, to supply Omaha and Nebraska with | cheap lumber. Our readers | are doubtless aware that the | recent railway exeursion to that | region was mainly improvised for the purpose of acquainting the peo- | ple of the Missouri Valley with the | advantages offered by the direct | trade with the lumber makers of | the Upper Mississippi. The BEE| before the people of the State. They contain much valuable and interest- ing statistical information touching the manufactare of and traffic in lumber. That Omaha is deeply interested in & direct Importation of lumber from the Minnesota pine regions is evident from the fact that Omaba buys and distributes almost double the quantity of lumber annually purchased and distributed by St. Joseph or Kansas City. It now only remains to be seem whether the railroad lines between Omaha and St. Paul will pursue a liberal policy to encourage the buildingup is significant, that an Omaha lum- ber firm has already taken the in- {tistive step by investing in & heavier bill of lumber than any purchased by the representatives of the other citles in the Missourl Val- ley. Itis to be hoped that the ex- perimeat will prove remunerative. In this connection, we may as well also eall attention to the supe- rior inducements offered by the ex- tensive manufactuing establish- ments of Minneapolis and St. Paul, in the quality and price of certaln articles of merchandise, heretofore imported by Nebraska merchants, and small manufacturers from the far east. HONEY FOR THE LADIES. Black satin fans trimmed with white lace are something new. New shoes of French manufac- ture are tipped with Russian leather. Those very preity and becoming white guuwe veils are wgain i i Gray, blue, dark brown and wal- nut black are the four most fash- ionable colors of the season. New French flowers come highly pecfumed, aud aro alike picasant to ook upon and smell. Many women who are counted honest steel their petticoats, bone their stays, crib their baby, and even hook their dresses. Emily Faithfoll insists that the intemperate use of ice water is the chief cause of bad health among Ameriean women. The popular walking drass con- sists of & loose sacque and long overskirt of gray or drab woolen stuff with skirt of silk. A Missouri man who swapped wives with another Missourian, got a cow, a calf, thirty steel traps, and four children “to boot.” Cape May bas an ancient lady who has worn the same bonnet since 1812, If any watering place can lay elaim tosuperior attractions, it should “ante up” at once. A poor old colored woman in Virginia, was never so happy in her life as when she learned to read # few days ago, and she went right off and sold eight geese, and bought 28 dime novels. The fashionable world is informed that $20,000 worth of mirrors have just been put in the Grand Union Hotel, at S.ratoga, to enable ladies to see themselves as others see them. The Train-tearingSociety of Vien- na and Frankfort-on-the-Main each has severnl thousand members who are pledged to omit no opportunity to step on & womau'’s train, and ruin the dress to which it is attached if possible. Sacramento boasts of having sev- eral nqgh;n' ‘women who are the hap- Py, or unhappy, possessors of con- siderable beards. The Bee thinks these women may be the vanguard of the good time coming when there shall be “no distinction on account of race, colur, previous condition or sex.” The Virginia Enterprise says an interesiing suit for the possession of a baby is_going on in Eureka be- tweena white and eolored woman, each claiming to be the mother of the child. baby Is perfectly white, and one of the contestants for it is as black as the ace of spades. As the judge is not a Solomon, the case bids fair to last for some time. ‘We don’t know how Dana, of the New York Sun, found 1t oat, but he says: “No French or English wo- man of cultivation. now-a-days wears her garters below her knees. The principal vein of the leg-sinks there beneath the musele, and var- icose veins, cold feet and even pal- pitat’o 1 of the heart may be brought. on by a tight garter ‘wrong ve. When itis the knee all thispain and. be avoided. ity of this traffie. It is gratifylng as it | ings GULF OF MEXICO- TO LAKE SUPERIOR. Minneapolis, Stillwater and Duluth. Pinerics, Lumber-making snd Manufacturing in Minnesota. Future Commercial relations be- tween the Missouri Valley and Upper Mississippi Region. [Correspondence of Tus BEE. My cursory review of the 9th has already conveyed to the reader of the BEE a general outline of the origin and objeets of the recent ex- | | shown us costing as high as $1,800. cursion from the south-west to St. Paul, Minneapolis, and other Min- nesota lumber districts. The importance of this new route | will be better appreciated by the public when they become more fa- milliar with the manufacturing fa- cilities and resources of the country through which it passes. THE SCENERY along the greater portion of the route is well worth the cost of such a journey, and when it receives its just merits these roads will not erely be travelled by the commer- cial public but tourists and pleasure seekers, admirers of the beauties of nature in all its forms, will flock thither from all sectionsof the coun- try. Forone hundred miles along the road south of St. Paul there is one continuous line of bold and _di- versified seenery. = Every few miles one can observe small lakes with clear sparkling water, so transparent that every pebble upon its bed can be counted. The banks are shaded here and there by rocky cliffs and overhanging limbs loaded down by thick clusters of foliage which, with the various shades and hues pro- duced by the different kinds of trees. and shrubbery, give every- thing an indescribable picturesque and romantic appearance. These waters abound in the finest kind of ish; already small castellated build- are erected and arranged here .and there for the conyen'ence of the pleasure-seeker and che invalid. One of the most romantie country places upon the route is the little town of MANKATO. It is situated upon the banks of the Minnesota river, a stream full of raplds and rocky banks, and possessesexcellent manufacturing facilities. The place is the very em- bodiment of picturesque beauty. Trees of all descriptions, from the broad stately oak to the tall and towering pine, can be seen in its beautiful gardens. Its hills, grounds and terraces, tend to Intensify the pleasing effect of its romantic ap- pearance. The State normal school located bere, is a fine building. This town was the first place visi- ted by the ravages of the Indians during that brief but terrible period of the horrible massacres of 1862. The Indians laboring under the de- lusion that all the men had gone south to engage in the war, came upon towns everywhere like an avalanche, with a view of extermi- nating the whites from Minnesota. Seven hundred men, however, were soon in armed pursuit, and hundreds of savages were killed. Over 1,800 were taken prisoners, at one sweep, and kept for & long time at this town, in a elmem})en. Three bundred were convicted upon short trial to be hung; but through the clemency of President Lincoln, all but forty escaped such punishment, As the train north- ward from this point, the scenery becomes more and more bold, and timber more common. At about seven in the evening, we arrived at ST. PAUL. This city is situated upon high rocky cliffs, on the north bank of the Mississippi. It has numerous bridges over the river to facilitate the manufacturing interests center- ed along its banks; the water is cov- ered with dense masses of logs, ready to be cut at the mills. The streets of the city are hard and rocky; in the older portion of the town,which now comprises its business centre, the streets are quite narrow, and look, in that respect, somewhat sim- ilar to the narrow thoroughfares of St. Louis. The buildings mostly, are constructed of very fine ash col- ored stone, quarried right at the grounds; here and there are fine brick structures, made of white clay, resembling closely thatof Mil- waukee manufacture; street rail- roads lead to most every part of the city. There are many very fine hotels, among the most inent are the Metropolitan, the Ferchants and Park Place. They are all kept in first-class style and each have their peculiar advantages. One no- ticeable feature which strikes the stranger’s eye at once is the cleanli- ness of the streets, and the numer- ous fountains and aquariums obser- vable in all private as well as pub- lic grounds. One can scarcely real- ize how much these fountains add to the beauty of public squares and gardens. In this, as in many other respects, however, the city is indeb- ted for its fine drives, stone struc- tures and watering facilities to the lavish hand of nature. No water works are needed here. Nature hasprovided a lake some distance from the city, which supplies the citizens with pure, clear water al- brudy ]flflltervdl.', It is elevated in the ouse pipes vity alone, the lake being muc er than the eity. The people here need make o 1o the municipal au- as in Omaha, for fermits to remove material, but the stone quarried out to make a cellar or basement is put imto foundation walls. Among the institutions worthy of notice in this city are the NEWSPAPERS. high, 3 it has every possible econvenience necessary for a complete office ; even a lif . room §s being fur- nished. number of hands em- ployed by this office alone are eighty- five. | shops, and everything needed, all most complete in _that yespect we have seen. Mr. Cl ts city edi- tor, and Mr. Nind, of the Press, has us_under many obli courtesies shown while there. tion, but from all either ability in editorial manage- ment or want of means tq make It what a journal in such a live city | Ry the Asi rom the newspapers livery of a city is often a criterion of the life it contains, and certainly St. Paul is not behind in_that res- pect. Few cities westof New York can boast of a finer establishment than the METROPOLITAN LIVERY STABLES. This is kept by Mr. Isaac W. ‘Webb, and has paint shops, repair combined in a3-story brick building 65x130, and contains 90 head of fine select horses. Single were Among the other places of at- traction, aside from the publie square and fine avenues on the plateaus coming to our notice, was BEAL'S GALLERY OF ART, oon Washington avenue. This place bas a large floral hall, with an open arch at the front and & beautiful ornamental fountain in the centre. The water gushes forth in four cen- tral strsams through a beautiful beguet, and then descends into an aquarium of fine fish. Half way up the fountain is a circular vase with small cast frogs painted in natural green color, through their mouths also come forth small. streams of water. The pictures at this gallery are of the most artistic finish. ‘Among those hanging on_the walls are two fine photographs of the Misses Kimballs, of Omaha. The taste displayed in arranging this gallery is well worthy of note. Such an institution is an ornament to any city, From St. Paul the excursion pro- cecded to Stillwater. It is needless to say that the scenery is one con- tinuous source of admiration. To endeavor to describe all the various atiractions of nature which greet the eye on all sides in Minnesota would require a special volume for that purpose, and an artist’s pencil to make the impressionsmore vivid. The arrival of the excursionists at STILLWATER, | On Wednesday was greeted with a | band of music. A steamer was ‘waiting on the shore to take us up the 8t. Croix Lake, which is only a widening of the river at this point. Here one first derives an impression of the immensity of the lumber bu- siness, As far up as the eye could reach logs lay thickly ther con- fined within the west half of the river channel by the boom, which extends up for six miles. These booms form rather a liar but valuable auxiliary to the business, They consist of & series of logs con- nected together at -their ends by chains and stretched diagonally across the streams, aud strengthen- ed every few hundred feet by log- iers constructed firmly upon the of thestream. Every man who cuts logs up the river brands them with a private mark and lets them float down stream. They are caught up in the boom and assorted by ex- perts appointed by & company in- corpol the State authority, who obtain stipulated fees for their trouble. There are in the boom sometimes as much as three hun- dred million feet of logs at a time. The rope consumed h>re annually for tieing rafts costs upward of forty thousand dollars. While the ex- cursionists were passing the rafts and rafts-men, chegrs upon cheers filled the air with greetings of wel- come, and every mill blew its whistle to its utmost capacity. Ar- riving again at Stillwater, the citi- zens received our party with a band and a most excellent banquet was served at the Saw— yer Houes. Among the nu- merous toasts offered was one by the Mayor, He extended our party the hospitalities of the eity; and also assured the party that he had issued special orders to the police department to “take care of us,” and the warden of the State Peni- tentiary had arranged, if desirable, to extend the hospitalities of that State Institution. Stillwater is certainly a live and enter- prising town, and possesses a ‘vast amount of wealth. Prominent among the manufacturers here Is Mr. Lewis E. Torinus, 8 Russian by descent. This gentleman represents the St. Croix Lumber Company at this place. A hasty trip was here improvised from this live city to DULUTH, the city of the unsalted sea. In this place every one was disappoint- ed. It has gone down very much; even its last daily paper expired a fortnight ago. The weather was so cold and stormy that some of our party were arranging to get some dogs and start out in search of Dr. Franklin. The Clark Hotel here is quite a credit to the town, now con— taining about thirty-five hundred population. The only possible trade that might ve developed here is that of fish. Trout can easily be shipped directly south to Omaha in thirty- hours, and by proper manage- ment they might possibly be shipped proportionately faster to St. Louis, without re-handling. From this point we returned by way of MINNEAPOLIS. This city is located at St. Anthony Falls on the Mississippi. It is not only one of.the most beautiful cities in the United States, but also one of | the wealthiest. No' one can form any adequate idea of the vastness of her ml’l;:lmtum and natural re- sources. e city is regularly laid out with streets 100 feet wide.y The residences are indeed superb ; nearly every yard_has a fine garden with beautiful tefraces, omamental flower vases, and fountains with fish aqua- riums. There is as yet no street railroad here, simply because almost every one has a carriage. Welooked here in vain for a shanty. The city authorities and citizens received us in the most princely style, and after spending a half day among the manufactories, furnished us with complimentaries to the theater. The theater building is very large and beautiful ; the roof and ceiling are both dome shaped, and present au inviting appearance. There is but one daily paper, THE TRIBUNE, a fine, nine-column journal, publish. ed in the postoffice bulldl;ll: The office of the Western Un- jon is separated from the BANKING: ALVIN SAUNDEBS, _ ENOS LOWE President. Vice Presdent. BEN WooD, Cashier. STATE . W. Cor. Farnbam sud. 13th Ste., Capital....c..c.. Authorizal Capit 3 i 1,000,000 —_— AS SMALL AS ONE DOL- ece nd compound injerest al- Advantages OVER Certificates of Deposit: HE WH )LE OR ANY PART months, will draw interest from d.te of depas- it to payment. The whole or any part of . de- Posit can be drawn atSiny time. aug?8i( The Oldest Estabiishea | BANKING HOUSE N RANKA. Caldwell, Hamilton & Co., BANKERRS. Business transacted sa o n Carre subject 10 SIght chork wiThont oo Certificates of Deposit P - able on demand, nl:“ac L:x‘:d‘ 5'.& bearing interest at six percent. per dn-n-‘h # ‘:;.Alnbu- in'in all parts Advances made to customers on roved securities at market rates | Buy aud sell Gold, Bills of Ex- change Government, State, County, W Boads. . . e '"ml attention to nego- Kell European Passace Ti CULILECTIONS PROMPTLY ;‘.l’l:t EZRA MILLARD, I 3 MILLARD, President. T Cashier. OMATETA NATIONALBANK Cor. Douglas and Thirteenth Streets. OMAHA, - . NEBRASKA. Surplus and Profi FrSANciaL ac AND DESIGN. DISH| THIS BANK DEALS iz Exchange, Government Bouds, Vouchers, G, e e T T [ BULLION ana GOLDDUST.) And sells drafts and makes collections on all 8 Drafts drawn ble i i - cyen the Bank u“'l‘?l{orn\l, .M.: fl::!:l:;r.fll ICKETS FOR SALE TO ALL PARTS of Earope vis the Canard and National Bteamship Lines, aud the Hamburg-American Packet Company. sy U.8. DEP_(ZSITORY The First National Bank OF oMAIxIA. Cormer of Farham and 13th’ Streets. THEOLDEST BANKING ESTABLISEMENT. 1IN NEBRASKA. (Successors to Kountze Brothers.) ESTABLISHED IN 1858. Orgaaised as a National Bauk, August 26,1863 Capital and Profits over - $250,000 pre— E. CREIGHTON, President. H. COUNTZE, H. W. YATES, Vice Pres't. As’t Cashier. A. 3. POPPLETON, Attorney. mECTORS : A. KOUNTZE, Cashier. The Beatrice Hydraulic, Cement, —AND— PIPE COMPANY, QULD INFURM THE PUBLIC THAT they are ready to furnish HY- DRAULIC CEM] *'the very best quality, aod in any quantity, at the ich s located at Beatrice, Neb., or at the Pij in Gmaha _Ther alioare preparsd to farnish all kinds ofCe MENT PIPING for SENERAGE, DRAINAGE, ETC, Al manuiaciure styles of CHIMNEY WORK. “WE GUARAN- TEE T TO BE EQUAL TO ANY HYDRAULIC CEMENT MANUFACTURED INTHE UNT ATES. S¥ORDERS FROM DEALERS RESPECT- FULLY SOLICITED. AD DRSS, BEATRICE MYDRAULIC CENENT & PIPE CO. OMAHA - - NEBRASKA. my21-8e = a.PAGH, CARRIAGE, BUGGY ssd WAGON MANUFACTURER. N. E. CORNER of 14th and HARNEY STS, OULD respectiully anuounce to the fpub- Lic that e is now ready to il all_con- Iacts in the above lines with neatuess and 8% Express wagons constantly on hand and sale. Wood! Wood! Wood! Immense Reduction! T 8. P. BRIGGS' YARD, CORNER OF AS e T, oo o 00d $7 00 ; Sott §5 00. Stove Weod l:ullll any umber of stove very cheap. PER DAY, Agents want- 85 to 520 3" 2wty T more mouey at work for us in their m ents of ail the tinie, than st snythiog else. Address Portland, STINSON & 00,000 ACRES! —OF THE FINEST— Elkhorn Valley Lands! FOR SALE BY B. M. CL.ARIK, Wisner, - - Neb, TPUEsE LaxDe ARE CONVENIENT TO ‘the market and the FINEST in the STATE! And will be sold at from $2.50 to $5.00 PER ACRE! For Cash or on Long Time. @ LAND EXPLORING 1ICK- ETS for sale at 0. & N. W. Et,b—rhgwupmflwhhh will taken at full cost for land. in payment marzit MILTON THE “FEARLESS,” CELEB apas ROGERS. Wholesale Stoves TINWARE and TINNERS’ STOCE. ——BOLE WESTERN AGENCY FOR—— STEWART’S COOKING and HEATING STOVES, COOKING STOVES RATED CHARTER OAK COOKING STOVES, All of Whieh Will be Sold at ¥anufacturers® Prices, With Freighta dded. Send for Price Lists. NEBRASKL FARNHAM ST, OMAHA, aprilyl e od TH FARNHAM ST, NEBRASKA. SHIBTS AND GENTS' FURNISHING 6OODS, &C.. &C.| Bar-Shirts ofall kinds made to order. Satisfation guarranteed.~S& A. ORUP, SHIRT MANUFACTORY | MAX MEYER & BROTHE FurnitureDealers Nos. 187, 189 and 191 Farnham Street. | OMAEIA, NEDBRASIA. | | | | ‘SAEIELINOOD L : R, OMAHA, - may 9-1y. Fort Calhoun Mills. FLOUR, FEED & MHEATL Masufactured with Great Care from the Best Grais. Ceneral Depot, Cer. 14th & Dodge Sts, OMAXA. ELAM CLARK. ODMAZEIA = 3 JOOFING inany pa't of Nebraska 12ths treet. Address P. 0. $ox W. B. RICEARDSON. NEB ASKA PITCH, FELT AND GRAVEL ROOFER. And Manufactarer of Dry aniSaturated itoofing a1d Sheathing Felt. ALSO DEALERS IN Roofing, Pitch, Coal, Tar, Etc, 2 sdoioiog Ststen, Oftce oppositecthe as works, on | Canned Goods, Dried Fruits, Green Fruits in Season. JOMN BAUMER, Practical Watchmaker, 171 Paradam. OMAHA . and wil 1l sell at EASTERN PRICES Dedlers in this State need uot want to go East for CANDIES. A trial Is solicited. Douglas St. Cor- 12th, ‘meh11t: SINGER. The Kingof the SEWING MACHINE WORLD as pre-cmineatly a» Gold Reigus in the Realms of Finance. SINGER. SALES FOR 1873: In Round Numbers 232,444 Machines!| re sold by any other Ser achine Compan; Wittt 1y be denied I monstrate d . ItBeing over Ong Hundred and Thirteen Thourand more Machiacs th % daring the same time. upon Sach evidence that the superiority of the Singor is fuilv de- THE SINGER MANF'G CO. 'W. N. NASON, Agent. NO. 212 DOUGLAS STREET, OMAHA. C. L. A. ELATTE, MERCHANT TATLOR, 288 Dodge Street, 2d Door East of 16th Street. 1 keep constantly on hand the finest stock of Broal Ci which I am prepared to make up in the most Iashionable siyles a at the lowest possible prices. Cassimeres and it the mest Vesti Netins GRAND CENTRAL EOT=HEI.. ol - NEBRASKA The largest and bast hotol betwesa Chicago nd San Francisco. Sepiember sotn, 1873. O ™™ GO, THRALL. Provrietor. BYROX REED. LEWIS 5. REED BYRON RH;.DN& 00. Real Estate Agency IN NEBRASKA. Keop & complete Abstract of Title to all;Real Estate in Ow ba and Douglas county. HERMAN TOYBRINCK, Fashionable Tailor, + No. 204} Farnham Street, Between Twelith and Thirte nth Streets, H. . WALKEF, —MANUFACTU 4Lt AND DEALER IN— BOUTS & SHOES NOT. 510135 5t. Between Faraham sad Douslas | Masonie, 0d: —_wolavt JOHN H. GREEN, * STATE MILLS DEALER IN 4 GRAIN, FLOUR AND FEED, axp 2 COMMISSION MERCHANT WINDE NI ~DEALER IN— Pruits, Confe CIGARS AND TOBACCO. P P aepf Established 1858, | A.T.SIMPSON'S CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY 588 & 540 Fourteenth Street, e U. P. R. R. MEAT MARKET, 16th strest bet California and Webster. FIVE and TEN YEARS' eredit gives On toe Line of the ¢ 404 stock raising unsurpassed by auy ia the United Sta‘es. b intersst a: orice to all CREDIT PURCHASERS. A Deduction TEN PEK CENT. FOR CASH. | A Laad Graat of 12,000,000 Actesof the best FARMING and MINERAL Laads of A: 1,000,000 ACRES IN NEBRASKA IN THE GREAT PLATTE VALLEY THE GARDEN OF THE WEST NOW FOR SALE! These lands are {n the eantral portion of the United State the 41st degree o, IX PER CENT FREE HOMESTEADS FOR ACTUAL SETTLERS. And the Best Locations for Colonies ! Froo ¥Pa Send for new Descrip and Danis, matled tree ulyzidawii Acres. Pamphlct, with new maps, po hore. dire reryw! A = Land E PRACTICAL Manufaocturer | WATCHMAKERS,|/OF JEWELRY S. E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. Dealers Can AT WHOLESALE OR RETAIL. Ordering of Us. Save TIME and FREIGHT ENGRAVING DONE FREE OF CHARGE ! | s&@r-ALl ‘1an31-1 | | | | | | | Je WH LESALE CANDIES 1 am now manutacturing all varieties of candies C. Amsorr S. C. ABBOTT. & CLARK & FRENCH, 'WHOLESALE GROCERS !¢ Etc. | AND DEALERS IN ORDERS SOLICITED AND PROMPTLY FILLED. ‘Union Pacific Railroad can Centinent, and for grain OHEAPER IN PRICE, more favorable terms flren, and more convenient to market then ea OOLONISTS and ACTUAL SETULERS canbuy on Ten Years' Oredit. Lands 3¢ the vam Soldiers Entitled to a Homestead <f 160 oms to FPurchamsers of Inand in English, German, Sweed . DA Rk Co Neb. 'WATCHES & CLOCKS. JEWELRY AND PLATED-WARE, !‘, GOODS WARRANTED TO BE AS REPRESENTED.-wn J. Caurmm. CO. ‘Booksellers = Stationers | | | DEALERS IN AND s WINDOW SHADES, No. 188 Farnham Street. Omaha, Neb’ Publishers’ Agents for School Books used in Nebrasks. WM. M. FOSTER, WINDOWS, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, &C. Plaster Paris, Hair, Dry and Tarred Felt. Sole Agents for Bear Creek Lime and Loulsville Cemeat | OFFICE AND YARI: ) On T. P. Track, bet Farnham aod Doaglas Sts. | ape2 " N. I D. SOLOMON, | WEOLESALE PAINTS OMAHA, NEB. | WALL PAPERS, DECORATIONS, Wholesale Lumber, OILS AND WINDOW CLASS, OMAHA COAL OIL AND HEAD-LIGHT OIL NNEBRASKA FAIRLIE & MONELL, BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS. Stationers, Engravers and Printers. ARIAL AND LODCE SEALS. d Fellows and Knights of Pythias UNIFORMS :LODGE PROPERTIES, JEWELS, BOOKS, BL. | I CE | a@a Dow AST! PRICES AND EXPRES: las Streot, - CHEAP, DURABLE, —~AND— ORNAMENTAL- ARTHUR BUCKBEE. CARPENTER, BUILDER For Yards, Lawns, Cemeterles Church Grouds s shop and Offies: 11 o b w4 Haraey } splitt —AND DEALER IN— KS, ETC., AT HONTI NOHI may i ‘LANON ANDOY Public Parks, = =+ OMAHA OMAZIIA,. NEE, \ |CHEAP FARMS! FREE HOMES ¢ i i !