Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 18, 1874, Page 2

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i l | { { ¥ “ THE OMAHA BEE i OFFICIAL PAPEE OF THE CITY. | W2 90 70T desire any contributions whatever | of & Mierary or poetical character; snd we | will mot undertake to preserve, of 10 Tetura o same, in sny case whatever. Our Suf s sufclently large fo more than supply our | Manited space in that StasWaxz or Warrss, in full, must in esch | @8 gvery case sccompeny suy communica- | iowel what nature sopver. This s mot io- | Ous Cousrar Fuxxps we will always be plonsed to heat from, on sll matters connected | with crops, country politics, and on sny sub- Joct whatever of general interest Lo the pee- | Jlo of ouz State. Asy information connect- ol with the election. and relating 0 80ods, | sssidents. cte., will be gladly received. Al ok communicstions, however, must be Srief as possible; and they must, in all cases, * 5o writien upon oe side of the sbeet only. rouTICAL. A ANBOGCEMASTS of esndidstes for office | whether made by sell or friends, and | whether as Dotices o communicatious L0 the Sditer, are (ustil Bowinations are made) simply porsonal, sod will be charged as ad- Alleommunications should be addressed to ‘S BOSEW ATER, Editor and Publisber, Draw- - moricE | ©u and after October twenty-first, 1872, the sty eireulation of the DarLy Bex is assumed M#ul&t‘l&'lllhpy.\n‘!- 1 ik by whom all receipia or subscriptions will | 3 E. ROSEWATER, Publisher | A@OORDING to the new Chicago direetory that city contains a popu- Istlon of 531,708. If Nebraska «could add to her census returns the difference between Chicago's actual and that directory esti- “piste she would have no difficulty in Indueing Cohgress to admit two eontingent Congressmen from this State. | e— e Nema- of the New Party in Nebraska, at the hands of the two Grant newspa- pers in Omaha. Herald. Doctor Millers memorable move- ment through the burnt distriot (@oubtiess ennbiles Lim to arrive ata better appreciation of the Nemaba ‘méovement than people who have hopersonal experience in this con- mection. — ACCORDING to the latest official dsta the debt of the District of Col- umbis now approximates twenty million dollars. In view of the fact that the National Treasary has con- ‘tributed very largely to all the pub- lic improvements in the District we can form some idea how much of the twenty millions went into the eapacious pockets of corrupt officlals and their allies, the raseally con- tractors. — By THE amended postal act Omalia, Des Moines, Davenport, Keokuk, Dubugue, Leavenworth, 8t Joseph, and other Western eities that cannot muster 30,000 in- O/ pabitants, will be deprived of the /") gaetropolitan luxury of the free de- ' livery system. This change will of course curtail the carreer of the liveried letter carrier, but it will | also force an increase in the clerical force In the respective postoffices. — ACCORDING to the Chicago 7ri- bume of the 16th, agents of the Union Pacific and its direct Chicago con- mections have patched up a truce. Pacific freights will, in the future, be sent through Towa, and the Alton ‘combination will be left to shift for Atselt. The Union Pacitic Company has fallen back upon this arrange- ment with some reluctance, being | to do so by the refusal of the Central Pacific to pro rate on Esstern bound freights beyond Omahs. —— Tue passage of Councilman Stephenson’s amended ordinance regulating the manner of serving Police Court warrants upon the | owners or inmates of disorderly “ mouses will effectually do away with the corruptions that have heretofore ‘contributed so much to the demoral- isation of our police force. If Mar- éhal Buowden will faithfully observe and_enforce the law there will be @0 further reason for complaint on that score. — e CoUNCIL BLUFFS papers have " 7 @latoveséd & new delusion to keep ¢ " wpthe hopeful spirits of the good and_ . patient people over the ““river. It is the alternate writ of Wabdamus which a deputy U.S. Marshal of Towa succeeded in serv- ing upon President Dillon of the Pacific. to our Spoon Lake con- that writ is expeeted to U. P. to make the connec- with the Towa roads at Spoon Kake station. A careful reading of that ponderous document seems, Mowever, to leave no room for doubt a:--lmu writ is simply an to the company to de- ‘Send the suit now pending in the U. | 8. Distriot Court of Towa. S — - A DISPATCH to the Chi- ‘eago announces that the in- L into the affairs of the - T u by the House is now ed. Ttis intimated that the re- - pertel the Investigating Commit- . Sawill throw some light on_the of the Indian Com- mmmm brought se- ' @mith and Secretary Delano, which mmembers of the committee say they ‘were wutterly unable to sustain. “They were unable to understandthe ' . mocosmts which were sent to them, " the result accounts, when disap- proved by them, were referred to the Attorney-General for an opin- i It was for this reason that it ‘w:a ploposed fo compel the com- mlesioners to spend some_part of thelr time in Washington. The ‘committee seems to think that the | 1aw, the Mormon Apostle Cannon | | | that there is really discussion was * that | P focH interest is manifested in politieal cireles throughout the coun- tryfin the action of the Hlinois Res publican Convention which meets at Springfield to-day RocHEFORT did not meet with & | very cordial reception on landing upon Brittish soil. Aeccording to our cable dispatches from Queenstown, bhe had & very narrow escape from Iynching at the hands of a crowd of roughs, who, anticipating his ar- rival, had congregated on the wharf. This turbulent demonstra- tion was probably gotten up by some of the Bonapartist sympathi- zers who are quite numerous in the various cities of Ireland. A bill defining the qualifications of Territorial Representatives in Congress, passed the House Tues- | day. The principal feature of this | act is the provision disqualifying all | persons guilty of bigamy or poliga- | from such positions. This of ourse was mainly intended to cover the Utah case, but, inasmuch as the | last clause of the act exempts sitting | delegates from the operation of the | will still retain his seat until his present term of office expires. ~This | is a commentary on Congressional consistency. Cannon has openly confessed that he has been, and 15, a polygamist _He s, therefore, liv- ng in open defiance to the national law, and still he is permitted to as- sist in framing laws which loyal nd law abiding citizens are expec- ted to obey. —— WHEN Mr. J. H. Johnson wss a member of the Nebraska legislature, the Omaha Herald ocould hardly find words enough in Webster’s un- abridged, to extol his honorabie and | consistent course., In those days and often sulse- quently Hudsan Wwas held up to popular admiration as a perfect model of unbending official integ- rity and reliability. And now the Herald is lavishing its accumulated. stock of choleest billingsgate upon this model public servant of Platte county. He is denounced as a cor- | rupt legislator, and unreliable offi- cer, and last but not least, as a po- litical renegade. The cause of this remarkable change seems to be Mr. Hudson’s refusal to endorse the Greeley departure in 1872, and his action In conneotion with the con- test for the clerkship of Platte coun- ty. Now the BEE has no inclina- tion to interfere in a purely loeal affuir, but when the Herald reminds Mr. Hudson that he owes his bread and breath for years to the Nemo- crats of Platte county, we would res spectfully remind the Herald that, according to its own repeated dec- larations, no man in Nebraska ever | earned his official bread more cred- itably than did Mr. Hudson when he was in office. FOLITICAL NOTES. Senator-clect Eaten of Connecti- cut has resigned his seat in the State Legislature. Governor Allen fills the inflation | Democraey of Ohio with sorrow by warmly indorsing the President’s financial “memorandum.” Congressman A. R. Colton of the 24 Towa district is in trouble. He desires a re-election, but the ma- | jority of his constituents seem to think he needs rest. The §t. Joseph Gazette, which is good Democratic _ authority, an- nounces Senator Thurman a3 the coming man for the Presidency. The leading journals ¢ Tilinois and Indiana donot appear to be very much impressed with the work of the Independent or farmers’ con- | ventions which were recently held in those States. The only Republican Journal of | standing in the State which openly | opposes the renomination of Gov. Dix is the Albany Erpress. Its cferences are manifetly for the on. A. B. Cornell. The Tllinois Staats Zeltung thinks that the only contingency by which a third term for Gen. Grant is pos- sible, would exist if he would be, in | 1876, the representative of specie payments and the national honor as opposed to Inflation and repudiation. | In such an event, the Zeltung thinks | that even Carl Schurz would be -compelled to support him. The Tndianapolis Sentinel de- nounces the platform of its “new | party” as 3 mess of “gibbering fus- tian,” and an “affront to civiliza- tion” TLis is the worst year for new parties we ever saw. The thi d section of the second article of the constitution should be | amended so as to read : “The Presi- | dent shall from time to_time, give | Senator Jones information of the state of the Union, and recommend to his_consideration such measures a8 he shall judge and ex- pedient.”—Uleveland. 7, (Rep.) The ITon. George W. Julian «f Indisna delivered an elaborate ad- | dress ‘on Wednesday before the | meeting of Abolitionists in Chi go on the lessons of the Anti-Slav- ery confliet. ‘The most Important Jesson ot the st le,’he thought, was the almightiness of truth. Anotler lesson was theduty of still further extending the right of suf- frage. He admitted that the ex- periment of negro suffrage had not been a remarkable success, but the trial had only been partial and un- der the most un) ising circum- stances, and we finally succeed. Tepublicans of Towa are discuss- ing the financial question, and try- ing to decide how to treat it in their State Convention, which meets on July ("); course th.'n; -n.n great diver ity of opinion. rling- ton Hawk Eye, which has a faculty of tzlking sound sense on a good wany subjects, goes t to the bottom of the question when it says no need for any on thes . It recalls themmlon of the o and !\'; tional Republican Cot.ventions 1872, declaring in favor of a speedy ption of mmcnnt,, and “will some of the inflation explnln‘—dm us how we are to a ly. of et Ly 4 eagies of currency of the country. to aup‘ld’.;-;"d:'nh,m a t its pledges and promises, if die PUNGENTISTIC. If you see & policeman aim at a dog, try to get near the dog. As the Almanacs say, about this | time look out for vetoes. | | ‘The reason why-nmmvmenm‘ bald-headed is becsuse they bave | not enough hair. Eugene City, Oregon has twenty- | three painters, exclusive of young | Iadies. An ostrich does draw the line “ somewhere. He stops at | hinges. The grasshopper will eat the shoes off an exbausted mule. Gabriel Schmidt, in Towa, has| just killed his wife, for sewing al ‘wrong button on his coat. I it bad | ‘een on his shirt—bat never mind! { A Lebanon man has broken one | of his wife's ribs by embracing ber. | Now, if she’d been copper-bottomec. with steel corsets, he couldn’t have done it. An old, hale and hearty gentle- | man in Sacramento assures the Bee | that he has not drank a diop of wa- | ter in the last twenty years. The crusaders should go after him. «Cast Iron Sinks,” is written u) the sign of s plum- DBOR (Wl who In the (hic) said it didn’t?” chuckled an inebriated man after reading it over three times. The first photographer has opened his saloon in Truckee, Nevada, and has been shot at by & miner, who insisted on having his picture taken by lamplight, as he was going away early in the morning. The instructions to the police force of Alexandria are: “Don’t arrest the Mayor or any member of the Common Council for intoxication, | but assist them home, and say noth- ing about it. Kentucky doesn’t care & conti- mental for the transit of Venus, siuge it has discovered itself to be the possessor of & eolored woman 103 years old, “who sctually saw George Washington.” ‘A man in Providence, on the oc- casion of the death of an infant daughter, entered 2 milliner’s store and_ asked if they kept “black tripe to hang on their door-bells. 'll&y did, he wanted three yards. “The following concise and ecom- hensive note was sent to an 1l- E.:ols ‘merchant by a neighboring farmer the other day : “Send me a tracechain and two hinges—Jane had a baby last night—also two pade locks." The poct of the Lynchburg News hasn’t been particularly lucky. In an ode to his girl, he says: ¢Keen is your sorrow, but keener is my £” The compositor, who lost his uttermost nickel on the top row the night before, set up, “but keno is my grief.” A man who was seen coming out of & newspaper office with _his nose sphit open, one eye_gouged out, and an ear chawed off, ned’ toa policeman that he was not a sub- seriber o the paper—he had simply entered the of to ascertain if the editor was In. “And he was in,” he mournfully added. The editor of the Eureka Cut\e}l, in that paper of June, says: “We feel it & duty to the public to offer an apology for having inadvertent- Iy fallen into an_unpleasant fracas n the public street this morning. hile it more becomes a gentleman to carefully avoid personal encoun- ters, there are nevertheless timey and circumstances in which to do it surpasses the power of most of us.” It may Interest the “champion baggage-smasher” to learn that a New Yorker, who Iast season, had $200 worth of trunks destroyed, has bad five new ones made to order and supplied with compartments containing five pounds each of nitro-glycerine. He proposes to travel from Maine to Texas, cover- ing all the watering-places, and will bave a coroner slong to hold in- quests or. the vietims. The Danbury News man has had disappointments in London—as for instance, when filled with an un- quenchable desire to see the queen he stepped into 8 shoe store doing business *by special appointment to her majesty,” and waited patient- 1y for an hour for her to call in “to see if that shoe was fixed.” Buthe didn’t see her. He afterward took a little census, and found that the queen had 3,810 tobacconists and 242 hatters. The Burlington Hawkeye says: “Night before last Mr. Throckmor- ton, who lives on South hill, staid down town very late, being deeply interested in a game of draw poker |and trimmings’ When he got home he was so deeply affected by the trimmings and the memory of his last hand, which somebody had played waxed eards on him, thatin- stead of unlocking the door he crashed through a window and sank to the floor in repose. Down came his wife, half-way down stairs. ‘Mr. Throckmorton,’ she crled, are you hurt ? Did you call? ‘Call nothin,’ he responsively murmured, ‘Call? 1 raise ye 20 chips! ~ You call ’f you want to. Hic!”” Bill Whaley, who recently died in the Fayette county, Pa., poor- house, formerly drove a stage-coach hetween Uniontown and Morgan- town, in’ that State. He wouldn’t own 8 borse that had more than ‘enough skin to cover his bones, and through which the moral law could day ho came driving into Unlontown at full speed, and just as he drew up in front of the hotel, one of. his horses dead. “That was a very » remarked s bystander. “ ” Captain Bill, - in Smithland, nine from here, but I never let him until I got to town.” — of the Ponca Coal Mines. mine, the work being principally experimental, to demonstrate the of the enterprise. Coal Company say they have a two-foot' vein already, whi Provided they strike better. The drift Into the | Rogue river, Oregon, is good. FISH POINTS Danger to the salmon fisheries by the sawdust is apprehended on the Lower Fraser. The receipts of salmon at Sacra- | o them, bl the come to them, 9 of Semees sugli cerning _crops _th country is hopeful, quite as much 80 as any year the pastdecade. Al- mento average 600 to 700 per day— | though ~the about four tops. Saimon- fishing at-the mouth. of The | 2,500 two-pound cans a day. The Navarro river of Mendocino | country, Cal., near its mouth, is lit- | terally filled with herrings. and luads are caught daily. The creeks in Boulder and Lari- mer counties, Colorade, abound in trout this season. A Langmont | man made a cateh in the St. Vrain, the other day, of one hundred and twelve, in five hours and & half. Yank Hammond, says the Truckee Republican, of June 4th, has pur- chased 1,200 trout of the Comer Fishery, for the Virginia and Gold Hill Water Company. The reser- voir of the Company Is 250 feet square, and 14 feet deep. ~The trout purchased are one year old. The Oswego (N. Y.) Times of the 12th says that on the day. previous a gentleman fishing with a fly from the pier of that harbor, a shad measuring nine and weighing a quarter of & pound. This is the first Oswego result of the Seth Green experiment of stocking Lake Ontario with North River | T"pC shad. John Williamson, ‘Secretary and General Superintendent of the Cali- fornia_Acclimatizing Society, is at o prodnca’ LD, S, Thia to luce spawn will bel’hflche'd “at the fish farm of the society at San Pedro Point, Ban Mateo county. The Ac- climatizing Sool ‘were ver'; suc- cessful last season in raising trout, and have sold large numbers of them to pisciculturists, not only in California, but in the Atlantic States. The society has orders this season for 11,000 yong trout from the east, and the demand exceeds the supply. Fish are plenty in the streams about Pueblo. turbine wheel in the mills of that city recently came to a sudden, stand-still. The | miller shut off the water and pro- | ceeded to iuvestigate, und, | ing to the Chieftaln, on examina- | tion, he found that piece of machin- | ery filled to its utmost capacity witly cat-fish. The wheel was opened, and about 100 pounds of fish, varying in weight from two to fifteen pound, were taken out, The orifi- ces in the wheel aré sufficiently 1arge to allow fish under two pounds in weight to pass through, and how many more members there were in this piscatorial exploring exhibition, it is impossible to tell. The fish seem to have come down the mill diteh iu a school, and their voyage of discovery was. brought to a sud- den termination by the turbine, which seems to make an excellent trap for large sized members of the flany tribe. In g letter to the Rochester Deme- crat, Mr. Seth Green says: “I com- menced hatching shad in the year 1869. Twenty shad were a good take for a drift for the gill nets; that is, the fisherman stretch their nets cross-ways of the river and drift down with the tide until it changes. For the last three years shad area good drift; they are nearly all sold to dealers and when there comes a glut dealers cut the price down on fisher. men, and keep the price up on the country dealer. There have been a few days in each year for the last three years that shad have been sold for $5 per hundred, andZno one got the benefit of the increase ex- cept the le who lived near the river and the dealers. And that is notall. The dealers along the rive ers buy the fish and sell all they can at retail. They are spread on their tablesand the shad are picked until their sale is over, and I never knew a man tfo take a small one if he could get a lsr one for the samne price. The e fills his orders and sends his cullsto the country dealer, and he gets them one day longer out of water than he ought to. I have under- taken to even it up and give the people & fresh shad and a cheap shad, what they have never had before. I go to the fishermen and buy the shad. .y are sold here the next morning. lhey are as fresh as the est shad sold in the Albany market. Thave been obliged to do this to give the people living away from the river, that helped pay for it, the benefit of it, and teach the dealers how to give the people a cheap, fresh shad. can make the same difference with white fish in the great lakes, when the Canadian government will join us in the expense, in four years that I have had shad in the Hudson and Connecticut rivers; that is, in the ratio of 12 white fish to 200, four years from the {ime I commenced operations.” THE GROWING CROPS. Favorable Report from all Sec- tions of the Country. The crop prospeets in the Middle Btates—west to include Ohiv—are good for wheat, with local excep- tions. Spring grains of all kind: 1::1( well on the ground. Corn- planting is pretty nearly or quite completed, and but little lep‘llanl_ iug has been done, the early plant. ed coming up and doing well, orado to beet's Im Ohjo, Western sylvania, New Yark, aad its appearance as far east as New Jer- sey and Massachusetts - has been mll.‘e'l\)w‘hl;mlm nt l:h'm af- erop it ipossible to diet, but inexperience in the nfi of destruction which have been ap- p.lllal su(xuf:.lrly in the west and the neglect hand-picking, i Soasi 1 ke T moceEALE Iy fought on some farms, may well cause apprehension for the safety of the crop. In New England it is too soon to determine what the small grain crop will be, and it #s of not mueh im.- it must, than it mnmg:on ghost by attempting exploit of upending its own record n:utrglutomhh something it ‘winle-the soil was “half the battle.” BANKING. ALVIN SAUNDERS, _ ENOS LOWE ~BEN W00D, Cashier. STATHE SAVINCGS BANK, N. W, Cor. Faruham sud J3th Sts., Lo o — ‘Authorize] Capi -~ 1000,00) —— e, EPUSITS AS SMALL A3 ONE DOL- lar sece:ved and compound Injerest al- | D e omp | Advantages OVER Certificates of Deposit : E WHOLE OB ANY PART OF A" DE- after remaining in this Benk three months, will draw interest from d.te of depos- it to payment. The wholeor any part of 8 de- posit rawn atSny time. | 3ugISH The Oldest Established BANKING HOUSE IL] RASKA. Caldwell, Hamilton & Co., BANZERS. Basiuess transacted same as that of an rated Bank. or Gold Ane-::l - t‘ in c‘k subject to sight chec! i it tioe, be % Certifieates of Deposit issmed pay- ahle on demand, n’r“:fi fixed '&L bearing interest at six perceat. per :‘n&:. and available In in all parts Advances -'.aa to customers on roved securities at t rates LA at market raf Buy and sell Gold, Bills of Ex. 3 : (S Suisyerss kG Ive l attention to mego- m‘nfl and dler.lhrw- rate issued within the Stato. retand, Seotiand and 21l pects Europe. CuL Lll"l‘l()s-s Puourru’r‘:.ms. sult! RZBA MILLARD, President. H. MILLARD, Cashier. OMATEIA NATIONALBANK Cor. Douglas a0d Thirteenth Streets. OMAHA, - « NEBRASKA. NANCIAL AGENTSFOR THE UNITED STATES. AND DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY FOR DISBURSING OFFCERS. THIS BANK DEALS i Exchange, Government Boods, Vouche Gold Comm, - R . VY {BULLION ana oownvsr.j et sl i And sells drafts and makes collections on all ‘parts of Europe. - - oy e B ot orae, 588 i ™ (CKETS FOR SALE TO ALL PARTS of Europe via the Cunard and National Steamship Lines, and the Hamburg-American Packet Compan e U.S. DEPQSITORY The First National Bank O OMAIXA. Corner of Farham and I3th Wtreets. THE OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHMENT IN NEBRASKA. (Successors to Kountze Brothers.) ESTABLISHED IN 1858. Organised as & National Bank, August 26,1863 Capital and Profits over - $250,000 ICERS AND DIRECTORS : A. KOUNTZE, er. Vice Pres't. As't (hshr,xiér. A. J. POPPLETON, Attorney. The ¥Peatrice Hvdraulic, Cement, —AND— PIPE COMPANY, OULD INFURM THE PUBLIC THAT they gre now resdy to furnish HY- DRAULIC CEMENT, of the very best quality, s say quanuty,eliberat e actory w i5 Jocated ot Beatrice,Neb., or at the Pipe works in also rd_to furnish SEWERAGE, ‘manufacture TO ANY ENT MANUPACRURED !4’I'A'l'lv‘_-§),l it O S ATRICE AULIC CEN & PIPE CO. OMAHA - - NEBRASKA. my21-3m = =m.PAGH, CARRIAGE, BUGGY asd WAGON MANUFACTURER. N. E. CORNER of 14th and HARNEY 8T8, QULD respectfully annotnce to the W DT or s now ready to. 401 2t “oon racts in the above lines with and press wagous constantly on hand and 400,000 ACRES! —OF THE FINEST— Elkhorn Valley Lands! E LANDS ARE CUNVENIENT TO ‘the market and the FINEST in the STATE! | And will besold at from $2,50 to $5.00 PER ACRE! For Cash or on Long Time. 8@ LAND EXPLORING 1ICK- ETS for sale st 0. & N. W. De- :t, bearing coupons which will taken for lan at full cost in_payment JomN BAvmES, Praetical Watehmaker, out . the | | ndllflnn,m‘hmh col wl is considered | farmers canning establishmentis putting up | ), good President. Vice Presdent. | FurnitureDealers Nos. 187, 189 and 191 Farnham Street. | OMAEIA, NEBRASKA. MILTON ROGERS, | A Lasd Grast of 12,000,000 Acres o the best FARMING aad MINERAL Lads of America | 1,000,000 ACRES IN NEBRASKA IN THE GREAT PLATTE VALLEY THE GARDEN OF THE WEST NOW FORSALE! ‘These lands are In the central portion of the United States, on the {Ist degreo of Nuth Lat itude, the ral e e of i ntinen! et e s T e OHEAPER IN PRICE, mare hvnb{:'.n g'--.;‘l‘ more convenient o market them o8 mar2a TINWARE and TINNERS” STOCE. ——SOLE WESTERN AGENCY FOR—— STEWART’S COOKING and:+HEATING STOVES, THE “FEARLESS,” COOKING STOVES, CELEBRATED CHARTER OAK COOKING STOVES,| All of Which Will be Sold at ¥anufacturers® Prices, With Freichta dded. : FIVE and TEN YEARS' credit given with interest at SIX PER CENT OCOLONISTS and AOTUAL SETULERS canbuy oa Ton Yoars' Oredit. Laads st the vam rice toall OREDIT PURCHASERS. A Deduction TEN PEE CENT. FOR CASH. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR ACTUAL SETTLERS. And the Best Locations for Colonies ! Soldiers Entitll%d to a Homestead ¢f Acres. - ohanors of I.and new waps, poblished in English, German, Sweed ddress S 4 ez Sond for Frice Liste. | J. A. THORUP, NEBRASKA SHGTUBY Free FPasmos to | 8end for new bescriptive Pamphlct, with | ‘isiled troo everywhere. A . Land Cowmissioner U. P. R.R. Co. FARNHAM ST., FRRMRENE ST | o5 S x| e OMAHA, ¥ NEBRASKA. | WATCHMAKERS,|OF JEWELRY SH:RTS AND GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, &C. &C.| S- E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. #@r-Shirts ofall kinds made to order. Batisfation guarranteed.“®8 | . 'WATCHES & CLOCKS. Fort Calhoun Mills. | ;rwgLRY AND PLATED-WARE, WHOLESALE OR RETAIL. FLOUR, FEED & MEATL Manufactured with Great Care from the Best Grals. Ceneral Depot, Cer. 14th & Dodge Sts, | om ELAM CLARK. W. B. RICHARDSON. ODMAEIA - = NEER ASKA PITCH, FELT AND GRAVEL ROOFER. Awd Manufactarer of Dry an1Saturated Roofing and Sheathing Felt. 'WHOLESALE GROCERS | « Roofing, Pitch, Coal, Tar, Etc, Xtc.| AND DEALERS IN OOFIXG 1 gy ot of Nehsks ar al oiiog Siaes Olesappoiteshe Gas Works, on | Canned Goods, Dried Fruits, Green Fruits in Season. je 1 12ty treet. Address P 0, Box 432. iz | Je ORDERS SOLICITED AND PROMPTLY FILLED. WH LESALE CANDIES 1 am now manutacturing all varieties of candies and will sell at HASTERN PRICES,| Dealers In this State nced not want to go East fn CANDIES. A trial issolicited. HENRY LATEY, - = * Omaha ! AT Dealers Can Save TIME and FREIGHT by Ordering of Us. ENGRAVING DONE FREE OF CHARGE ! $&ALL GOODS WARRANTED TO BE AS REPRESENTED.“Wm 1anSi-tf CLARK & FRENCH, may 8-1y. S C. Amsorr S. C. ABBOTT & CO., Booksellers = Stationers * DEALERS [N WALL PAPERS, DECORATIONS, | AND y WINDOW SHADES, 1\ No. 1SS Farnham Street. Omaha, Neb’ ‘ Publishers’ Agents for School Books used In Nebrasks. Douglas St. Cor- L2th, mehlit! SINGER. SINGER. “The Kingof the SEWING MACHINE WORLD as pre-emineatly av Gold Reigns in the SALES FOR 1873: ; WAL I EOSTES In Round Numbers 232,444 Machines! X\Tholesale Lum ber, ny other | One Hundred and Thirteen Thousand more Machincs than were old by ine Company duriug the same tme, 1y Ve denied'upon such evidence that the wuperiority of the Singer is fully de- | WINDOWS, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, &C. T“E S|N5En MANF’E cnl 43 Plaster Paris, Hair, Dry and Tarred Felt. ,W.N. NASON, Agent. | NO. 212 DOUGLAS STREET, OMAHA. Sole Agentsfor Bear Creek Lime and Louisville Comeat o A ami vougie sis OM A HA, NEB. " N.I D.SOLOMON, I~wWEHOLESALE PAINTS on C. L. A ELATTE, MERCHEHANT TAILOR, 288 Dodge Street, 24 Door Eas* of 16th Street. 1 keep constantly on hand the finest stock of Broad Cloth, Cassimeros and Vestings; which T am prepared to make up L the most ashiouable 4iyles and fo suit the most fastidious, at the lowest possible prices. 1. . jetoaty GRAND CENTRALt EOTHEIs. - FEBBASKA and best hotel between Chicago "Opened iember 30th, 1873. B0t GEO. THIALL. Propristor. xws """ BYRON REED & €0. The Oldest Established Real Estate Agency IN NEBRASKA Ke plete Abstract of Title to allReal R, T Buaha 204 Doagles count: JOHN H. GREEN, STATE MILLS DEALEE IN GRAIN, FLOUR AND FEED, axp OCOMMISSION MERCHANT et e e T AL | TimmsTosmamcs. | . OILS AND WINDOW GLASS, Fashionable Tailor, | No. 203} Farnham Street, | Between Twelith and Thirtenth Strests, OMA A - - NEB. | LL OtLE '8 ATTENDED TO PROMPT- | Iy and éx e most fa bi oML 4 COAL OIL AND HEAD-LIGHT OIL¢ 8 OMAHA ~ NEBRASKA FAIRLIE & MONELL, | H. C. WALKEFE, —MANUFACTUREK AND DEALER IN— | } P Stationers, Engravers and Printers. y BOOTS & SHOES NOTARIAL AND LODCE SEALS. ¢ 101300 50 Batwesn Faratam and Douzis | Masonic, 0dd Fellows and Knights of Pythias = | UNIFORMS v ] Established 1858. | ta A | LODGE PROPERTIES, JEWELS, BOOKS, BLANKS, ETC., AT A.7.SIMEPESON'S | P-EASTERN PRICES AND EXPRESS.-&8 | OMAIXA. NEB, may il 282 Douglas Stroot, - ARTHUR BUCKBEE. CARPENTER, BUILDER —AND DEALER IN— | O IN DEMNIM —DBALES IN— ‘Fruits, Confectionery, CIGARS AND TOBACCO. NE corner Farnham snd Eleventh streets, OMAHA, NESRASKA! WH LESALEBUTCHER AYD CATTLE BROKER, Orses Omahs, Nebraaks. _Cusrisges TR T ot b | g apenu | U. P. R. R MEAT MARKET, | 16th street bet California and Webster. | i ¥ 7 i > Py st CFRESH. nA'K:D:"SA{an; 4 For Ysrds, Lawns, Cemeteries Church Grouds ana - Hams and Sreakfast 2t "the low —axv— SLANOId aNNOY ORNAMENTAL TONTL NOYI Public Parks, OMAHA 171 Farsdam o 8. B Orr. 11tk 8t OMAHA - - . NEB and Office : SALTLAKECITY,, - - UTAR. 11eh S bek- i sud Hermey } aplitt WM. AUST & KNUTH, | o Propriewors. |

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