Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 10, 1874, Page 2

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| sane man believe that this change| ~ INDUSTRIAL POINTS. of 2,500 votes would elect the Demo- | cratic ticket? | An effort is being made to_estab- But says the Herald, if it be- | lish a silver-plate factory at Peoria. | comes known that all the Ger- Des Moines is to have a new brew- THE OMAHA BEE OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY. 70 CORRESPONDENTS. W Do 30T desire any contributions whatever | man Republicans are going over to | of u literary or peetical character; and we | will not undertzke to preserve, or to return e sume, in sny case whatever. Our Suaf | s sutBciently large to more than supply our Humited space in that direction. Raar Naxx or Waires, in full, must in esch and every case accompany sy commuBics- tionof what nature soever. This is Dot in- tended for publication, but for eur own satis- | faction and as proof of good faith. | Oum Couwrar Faixxps we will always be plensed to bear from, on all matters connected | that usually support that party? If | every barrel of western flour will be | with crops, country politics, and on any sub- | Joct whatever of general interest Lo the peo- ple of our State. Any information connect- ol with the election. and relating to foods, | the Democracy, other Republicans will follow suit, and gise us the vic- | tory. Is it not more probable that the massing of all the German votes upon one ticket would result in a wholesale desertion from the Dem- ocratic ranks of other nationalities the Germans are all ging one way, will not the Irish, Danish, and Swedish voters jump the Democrat- | ry, 40 by 100 feet, d three stories high. Des Moines manufacturers claim | business this year as in 1873. The new Palace Hotel at San | Francisco is to have water-works of ity own. An Jowa paper manufacturer pre- dites that in less than five years | sent east in barrels made from the | straw of the wheat it grew on. secklents. ete., will be giadly receivel. All | j fence, and go over en masse to | t€f Guardian, estimates the total wach communicstions, however, must be | eief 28 poasible; and tuey must, in all cases, b writian up " © ove side of the sheet only. PoLITICAL. ALs ANNO! NCEMANTS of candidates for office | —whether made by self or Iriends, and | whether as Dol “cesor con. sunications to ‘e the Republican side? Suchis human nature and such | would doubtless be the outcome of this proposed German stampede. And now we reprat what the BEE | cotton supply of Europe in 1874, at | ,450,000 bales. Of this estimate 2,850,000 are American, 1,300,000 East' Indian, and 1,300,000 Egyp- tian and other kinds, The Michigan wool erop amounts Bditor, are (uatil nominations are made) | gtqted upon a former occasion; the | to about 6,000,000 pounds, of which simply personal, and will be charged as 3d- vertiseme uta All communications should be addressed to & BOSEWATER, Editor and Publisher, Drav- | - NOTICE. On and after October twenty-first, 1872, the ity circulation of the DarLy B is assumed ®y Mr. Edwin Davis, to whose order all sub- | scriptions not paid at the office will be payable. snd by whom all receipts for subscriptions will E. KOSEWATER. Publisher GESERAL BEAUREGRD, of con- federate notoriety, is about to emi- grate to South America. He hnl\ received the appointment of Chief Engineer of the Argentine Re- | public, with a salary of $20,000 in | gold per annum, and will sail for | South America within a few days. | He will have charge of the defen- sive woks, and will also superintend the explorations of the Plata river, | AN order has just been issued by the War Department, defining the setual expenses for officers traveling under orders, which under the late | law takes the place of mileage. Hereafter pay wiil be allowed for fares and meals. Where not inclu- ded in the fare, one double berth ina sleeping car, state-room, or lodging st ahotel. Nothing allowed for re- | freshments except ordinary food prepared for travelers, omnibus fare and baggage fare to porters, and $4 | #dsy for not exceeding seven days #t hotels, where delays are incident o the execution of the arder. This s what the Bee might oal) military service reform, —_— THE profundity of the financial views of the Omaha Republican is oaly equailed by its devotion to the expansive principles of the Ko-op omder of industrious bummers. A #ow days ago this ponderous Pendle- fomian oracle argued that times ,were hard in the west because mon- ey was too high and currency too | soarce, And now we are assured that the commercial stagnation is to ‘e ascribed to the fact that money 8 too Jow, being quoted st 2} per ®ent. per anyum on call in the Chi- @ago market, with no takers. Ac- _ewrding to the Republican, times ‘will improve as soon as the capi- talists and the people understand | the provisions of the new currency bill. Let us ali study that bill. — THU NSLPLESS MINORITY. “‘The Republican jonrnal of this says the Democratic party is in less minonty in this Btate, that, therefore, the Germans | | | B and should not Join it. The logic of that tion hnotk:x aelen to the ‘maked eye as it might be. Suppose the German vote in this State was known to be united in support of the Democratic platform and ticket, | with the prestige of success, which g fact would give it, what 9 Herald. When the BEE declared that the Pemocratic party in Nebraska, was 8 » hopeless minority, it simply iated an incontrovertible fact. At | ~ the last general election in Novem- ber, 1872, the majority for Grant | and Wilson was over 10,000, ] Jocal elections of 1873 and | 3874 have demonstrated that more * #hem two-thirds of the voters that | Bave settled in Nebraska since 1872 | #re in the habit of voting the Re- | publican ticket. The proportion of | Germans to the other nationelities | that made up the 90,000 people who | have settled in Nebraska since the | last general .election, is much smaller than was the propor- | (tlon of Germmis to the 130,000 | people who made up the population of Nebraska in 1872. The best evi- | dence that the Nebraska Democ- | racy is in a hopeless minority may e adduced from the political com- plexion of the Nebraska press. There are eleven daily papers pub~ lished in Nebraska, and only two of them—the Omaha Herald and Fre- mont Herald—are out-spoken advo- | cates of the Democratic creed. Out | of the elghty-eight Ncbraska weck- lies published in the English lan- guage, culy three support the De- mocracy, namely: the Columbus Bra, Plattsmonth Watchman, and | Nebraska City News. Three or four others, formerly Democratic, mow profess to be independent of all politieal parties. Of the seven Nebraska newspa- ‘Omahs Post, claims :o be Indepen- 1 dent. Al the others are squarely Republican. In other;words, out of | the one hundred and six daily and | weekly newspapers published in Nebraska, the Democracy has just siz, and the Republican party at Jeast ninety-five. No intelligent person will for a moment dispute the fact that this is an overwhelming evidence of the utter hopelessness of the Demo- eratic cause. In these days of steam and electricity the press is the most | powerful engine of political warfare, | and even the Herald must admit that the Demoeracy will enter upon the coming political campaign with a very slim armament. might be Ropublican. Does any | ond ment of a copyright, the Librarian will think for themselves before | they follow the short sighted ad- vice o7 Mr. Phillip Metz. ‘We do not doubt the sincerity of | Mr. Metz. He has invested all his | capital in a brewery, and he wants to prevent the enactment of any law | that would curtail his profits or de- | crease his income. The Germans asa class, sympathize with him, but | they do not consider the beer ques- tion the only vital issue in the Im. | pending political campalgn. But even if every German in N braska was the owner of a brewery, or & beer garden, it would be very questionable whether they could | protect their traffic by joining a | political party that is powerless to | do them any good. On the con- | trary, such a course would only | force the temperance issue upon the party in power. 1t would be very easy to prediet the final result of such a struggle. | After the battle Mr. Philip Metz and the Germaaus would probably discover that they committed a very setious blunder by flopping | over to 3 political party that is now | and will for years remain a hopeless minority in Nebraska. ——— | | | WHEN the currency bill was be- fore Congress, the leading inflation financiers were frantic in their de- | mands for more currency. They as- | sured the country that the commer- | cial stagnation was mainly owing to f the uupqgual distribution of the na- | tional bank circulation. ! When the new currency bill was | finally passed we were assured | that the West and South would im- | mediately take advantage of the re- | distribution privilege, and new na- | tional bands would spring up like so | many mushrooms. So far their predictions have not been verified, Instead of getting more national currency, some of the leading western banks are cutting down their circulation, and taking their bonds out of the national trea- sury. The following figures show the names of banks and the amount of bonds withdrawn by each up to Monday, July 6th: Third National Bank, New York, capital, $1,000,000; amount with- drawn, $736,000. American Ex. change National Bank, New York, eapital, $500,000; amount with- drawn, $80,000. Central National | Bank, Columbia, South Carolina, | amount withdrawn, $15,000. Sec- National Bank, Lansing, Michigan, capital, $50,000; amount withdrawn, $9,000. Commer- cial National Bank, Chica- go, capital $300,000; amont with- drawn $811,200, (over three-fifths.) First National Bank, Jacksonville, Tllinois, capital $200,000, amount withdrawn $80,400. First National | Bank Grand Rapids, amount with- drawn $99,000. Total contraction | $1,352,200. | Besides the forogojng, inquiries | have been made from other guar- | ters, and two Western banks apply | for $600,000 withdrawal. Thelaw | has been in operation for seventeen days. No currency has been lssued as yet. This proves beyond a reasonable doubt, that the inflation theory is | based upon false assumptions. —_— Copyrightsand Trademarks. The new law relating to patents, trademaiks and copyrizhts provides | that no person shall maintain an ac- | tion for the infringement of his | copyright unless he shail give notice | thereof by inserting in the several | copies of every edition published,in the title page, immediately follow- ing, if it be a book; or if a map, chart, musizal composition, print, cat, engiaving, photsgraph, paint- ing, draw’ng, chromo, statue, stat- uvary or model, or design intended tobe peifected and completed as a work of fine art, by inseribing upon | some visible portion thereof, or of the substance on which the same shall be mounted, the following words: “Entered according to act of Congress, in the year —,by A. B., in the office of the Librarian of Con- gress at Washington,” or, at his | option, the word ‘“copyright,” to- | gether with the year the copyright | was entered and the name of the | party by whom it was taken out. | For recording and certifying any instrument of writing for the assign. | | | shall receive from 'the persons to whom the service is rendered, $1, copy of an - Fg3 Teils 3 L 8 take of August H & aext, | country a large. | invested at $10 in gold | Germans are mot fools, and they | 4,000,000 pounds are already mar- keted. The price ranges from 50 to 47 cents per pound, and the total yield i» almost 1,000,000 pounds | short of last year's. A New York paper enumerates some of the things which the me- tropoiis ouhgt to have, but has not. Among them are wharves and piers, quick transit, uniform pavements, | cheap, pleasant cottages, accessible | markets,andstreets free from booths and stauds. The largest locomotive in_the world Is the ‘“Pennsylvania,” on | the Pennsylvania and Reading rail- | rose. The dismeter of the cylinder in twenty inches; tne stroke twenty- | six inches; the number of driving | be | wheels twelve; the diameters of the | drivers four feet; the weight of the | engine alone issixty tons. A Venetian founder named Gior- dani has discovered 8 uew process of easting, by the operztion of which at a single flow of the liquid metal, not only large statues, but groups of the most elaborate eom&)lexlx can at once be produced, and wil so fine a finish that no supplemen- tary chiseling is required. He has east, It Is said, a statue of Leda with perfect success. A young lady in Coneord, Mass., says there is profit in the poultry business. She commenced with about G0 fowls in the spring. From these she raised 450 chickens. pur- ing the season she sold eggs to the amount of $90, and from September 20 to January 27 she got ready for market 150 pairs of chickens, which she sold for $260, making in all The Harrisburg Car Manufactur- ing Company has closed a contract with the New York Central Rail- road Company for the manu- facturg of four hundred cars. A force of 350 or 400 men will he employed to do the work, and four or five cars will be turned out dally. The resumption of operations at these extensive works, will be good news to the many employes of the shops fu eastern Pennsylvania, who are idle from necessity. Tt is gratifying to find copper smelting added to the varied indus- tries of Pennsylvania. The Schuy- kill Works at Pheenixville are, we learn, making satisfactory progress in thatline, having already smelted ores from Chili, Cuba, and Spain, as well as from Texas and New Mexico. The article produced is so good that the Philadelphia Mint, hitherto supplied entirely from Lake Superior, récently purchased 15,000 pounds. ' The success of this enter- prise renders it probable that the United States will yet steadily ex- port copper to Europe. It is not generally known that steel can be made so hard that it will pierce any substance but dia- mond. Many jewelers and lapida- ries experience great difficulty in getting the points of their drills hard enough to pierce an amethyst. For their benefit, as well as for that of miners and -others using drills requiring a very hard point, the following method of treatment is recommended : The drills should be held, if small, by hot pincers or tongs while heating. The tool should first be heated to a | white heat, and then pressed into a stick of sealing wax, left there for 8 second, and then removed and jn- serted into the wax in another place, This operation should be repeated until the instrument is too cool to enter the wax. A Hartford letter states that the subscription book business was bad- Iy bit by the panic. Of 12,000 or more agents who started_out, the majority ate out of employment, and instead of tl.e expected sale of | 250,000 copies of the new Hartford books, the aggregate sales only reach 60,000 to 70,000 copies. Hart- | fordexpects to produce somet | like over a million and a half worth of booksa year (retail prices), and the present de“=it is a severe blow to her, if a benefit to the It js sincerely to be hoped thut the suspsoted pei- manent wane in the subseiption | book business prove a fact, for ex- cept asan entering wedge for better books, its gaudy and padded pro- | ductions are usually far from com- mendable. England has now 36,000,000 spin. cles in her cotton mills, with nearly 400,000 looms, and 650,000 work- men. Next comes the United States, with 8,000,000 spindles; France, 5,700,000; the German Zollverein, 4,300,000, of which Al- sace possesses 1,700,000; Russia, 000,000; Switzerland, 1,800,000 Austri0, 1,400,000; Spain, 1,400, 000; Belgium, 600,000; Ttaly, 500, 000, and over 2,000,000 for other countries. According to the of M. Alean, made in 1867, the number of spindles used in cotton spinning was 58.850,000,whieh num- ber has increased now to 63,700,000 Estimating the amount of capital spindle, we find that $637,000,000 is investea in the industry, and some $160,000,- 1000 is annually paid to 1,200,000 | Statement is. that as far back as Lansingburg, N. Y , has for a cen- been celebrated, for its of | getting Into the Senate. There are | POLITICAL NOTES. | Col. John B. Mead, of Randolph, | Vi, is a candidate’ for Congress against Judge Poland. George H. Brown has declined theoffice of Chief Justice of the Su- preme Court of Rhode Island. Montgomery Blair is said to have | to be doing three times as much [ a good prospect of being sent to Congress from his district in Mary- land. The electorsof Arkansas have de- cided to hold a Constitutional Con- timated at 60,000. You might as_well undertake to row up Niagara Falls with a knit- ting-needle as to elect a temperance | ticket in most States.— Milwaukee A correspondent of the Manches- | Sentinel. The Hon. John A. Kasson has ar- | rived home at Des Moines. He says he stands by his letter and is not a | candidate for renomination. | Bill CrutchZeld, Republican Con- | gressm: | ¢ivil rights lull was not cause the east wanted to keep some- and west. | At the MeLean county, Til., Anti- | Monopoly Convention, Monday, the { politicians succeeding in outvoting the farmers, much to the disgust of | the latter, and the followiny ticket was nominated : For State Legisla- ture, T. P. Rogers ; for Sheriff, John Hickey ; for Coroner, Michael Saltz- man. The ranks of the Massachusetts Congressmen are fast thinning out. | Besides Dawes, Hooper, and the thelr own withdrawal, the Wor- cester Spy, opines that Crocker, | Gooch, and some others will be | dropped, and it is hoped Butler will | iten. A Weatern paper s of the opinion that the ‘more ambitious Congress- |.men of that section who desire to be re-elected will not go junketing around the country during the heat- stituents and learn to hold calves, sleep in clover field—in other words, becomea Granger. The Cincinnati commercial re- the politicians understand_that he would not be re-elected. No party | is strong enough to egrry him # third term. Influrntl;: men and newspapers in the Republlcan party would revalt, as they have already revolted at the mere sug.estion of a third term.” Candidates for Senator Fenton's seat in the United States Senate are already getting numerous, if the Albany Erpress is rightly informed. That journal finds on the Demo- exyGovernor Hoftman, Samuel J, Tilden, Clarkson N. Potter, sand | Sanford E. Churgh ; and on 1{1uulmn side Governor DIx, ex- | Governor Morgan, Judge Robert- | the Hon. Lyman Tremain. ' The Express prefers the latter gentle- man. A most entertaining “scrimmage” has begun in Missouri. It isa three- | cornered fight between the Kepub- licans, Democrats, and Grangers, or rather it is a tussle to see which of the former organizations shall get hold of the latter. The chances now seem to favor the | Republicans. The Democrats | several weeks ago announced that | they proposed to fight all future battles on the old issues of 20 years ago. and that their ehief aim and desire wgs to secure revenge for | past defeats. As they were largely. | | in majority at the time, they were | confidec. uf winning an easy vie- | tory. | There are indications that the | sdoption of the new Ohio Constitu- | tion will be made a partisan ques- | | tion, The Democratic committee | | of Wayne county has declared against it, and the” Cineinnati En- | quirer ealls upon the Democracy in | | all of the other counties to follow | the example, adding: “It has Leen | clearly shown to be a partisan Con- | stitutjon—the design of which is to | | give the Kepublicans the majority | in the General Assembly for all time to comie, even when they are large- lyin the minority. The Legisla- tive Apportionment with its une- qual system, no Demociat can sus- tain either in policy or principle. There are other things equally ob- Jectionable in it. It will be a dark day for the Democracy of Ohic when the new Constitution is put upon them.” | | apparently successful strides toward the United States Senate that Henry 8. Foote has thrown himself in the way, bound to defeat him at any hazard. Foote’s first prociama- tion to the people of Tennessee has | been l-uogm A. J., aceording to Foote, is neither a statesman nor an orator: has never originated a wise | state or national measure; has | | no scientific or literary cul- | ture; doesn’t know the history of his own or any other coun- never delivered a speech that | would bear rigid criticism, has but | eng sperch op) hand; and that by fn.:}umntrepeflflon, has become stale | an ting; that his lauded | speech in Memphis was, from the beginning to the end, crude and shallow in thought; grossly errone- ous in most of its statements of fact; feeble and inconsequental in Its reasonings; awkward and | bungling in its diction, and replete | with dangerous doctrinal sugges- | tions and recommendations, both in | reference to our present natfonal,in- | debtedness und to that of the State | of Tennessee. Foote makes some | palpable huts, but Moses has as good | as crossed the Red ses, and Pha- rach, in following, can hardly es- cape being swallowed. | We find an_extraordinary state- | | ment in one of the most recent and | miost authentic biographies of the | famous Jones of Nevada. We would | .h;nlly believe it but r"L :Ihc fact | | that it appears jn the Welsh paper | | #Dryeh,'” (Jones 1s & Welshman) | | published for the benefit of Welsh- | Americans, at Utica, N. Y. { | | 1855, or 20 years ago, Jones told his } | cousin that he meant yet to be elec- | | ted "’“"J‘;“"“‘ StatesSenate. For | twenty long years, according to the Dryeh,he worked for this honr, | | keeping it always in his eye, and | at last he reached it a few “months ago. When Jones formed this fixed | determination, the State of Nevada, which he represents, was not in tical existence, and the place not even been erected |into & Territory. We are not told as to whether Jones fore- | saw, twenty years ago, that it was the then non-existent State of Ne- vada which would have the honor of gratufying his ambition ; but we EEamiple o youtetal - acpiranin you ts, they be Welsh or anything How did Jones set about the ? Jones got hold of a Ne- | mine. The mine made hima | . The fact of his being | & millionaire was the means of his | | | other mines to get hold of. There are other States to came into ex- istence. There are chances for oty e Lo vention by a majority, which s es- an of Tennessce, mys the thing in hand to divide the south | | brothers Hoar, who have annouced | tice. ed term, but remain with their con- | turn grindstones, toss hay, and | fuses to admit the probability of | a third term. It says: “Gen. Grant | will not be renominated, because | through the storm of opposition to | cratic side ex.Governor Seymour, | he Re- | son, the Hon. A. F. Cornell, and | | rasouDEst BANKING ESTABLISHWENT Aundy Johnson is making such | W' | VAN DORN’S MACHINE BANKING. | | ALVIN SAUKDERS, _ ENOS LOWE President. Vice Presdent. | BEN Wo0D, Cashier. AVINGS BANK, j N. W. Cor. Faspham sud 13th Sts., -8 100,000 | Capital. 1,000,003 Authorized Capidil EPOSITS AS SMALL AS ONE DOL- | lar sece ved and compound injerest al- ed on the s ame. | Advantagoes OVER Certificates of Deposit: HE WHOLE OR ANYPART OF A DE- outha, will dree. Mt y hole. it to payment. The w posit can he drawn atfan | . The Oldest Estatishea BANKING HOUSE IN NBRANKAL Caldwell, Hamilto; & Co.,l BaANZXBRS. - Business transacted same 2s that | of an Incorporated Rank., | 3 Accounts kept in Cui or Gold | subject to sight check wi it mo- | abte on demand, or at ieeed 2ae | | bearing iuterest at, six per | annom, and available in in | of the country. g Advances made to customers on arpmved securities at market rates ' of interest. Buy and sell Gold, Bills of Ex- t 'y G ent, State, Count e give s) att 1 tiating hl‘:‘ud ard otler.l)rp- rate issued within the State. Draw Sight Drafts on h'hl:; Ireland, Scotland, and all parts n P; Ticketa, Europe. Sell Enropea . CULLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. P Certificates of Deposit | ‘MAX MEYER & BROTHER, OMAHA, N Furniture Dealers |Nos. 187,182and 191 Fainham Street. OMAEIA,. NEBRASKA. MILTON ROGERS. Union Pacific Railroad A Laz’ Graat of 12,000,000 Acresof the best FARMING aad MINERAL Laads of America TINWARE and TINNERS' STOCE. |, (00,000 AckFs IN NEBRASKA IN THE GREAT PLATTE VALLEY THE GARDEN OF THE WEST NOW FOR SALE "nese lands a1 porti the United States, on the dist degree of Nu.th Lat Lot et i of ‘he eat Tomperate Hue of the American Ccatibent, and or grai o ing wod Sock raliog uneuspassed by any 10 the United Statas o venieat to market then oa OHEAPER IN PRICE, mare hun\l‘a'fmfl:. x ‘more cen’ margdit CHEAP FARMS! FREE XOMES On te Line of the t ——SOLE WESTERN AGENCY FOR—— STEWART’S COOKING and HEATING STOVES, THE “FEABLESS.” COOKING STOVES CELEBRATED CHARTER OAK CUOOKING- STOVES, Allof Which Will be Sold at Manufacturers’ Prices, With Freighta dded. FIVE and TEN YEARS' credit with interest at STIX PER CENT COLONISTS and AOTUAL SETULERS canbuy on Ton Yoars' Credit. Lands st the vam | orice to all CREDIT PURCHASERS. A Deduction ~ TEN PER CENT. FOR CASH. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR ACTUAL SETTLERS. #ad the Best Locations for Colonies ! w? . Semnd for Frice Lists. 3 FZRA MILLARD. President. | OMATIIA |NATIONAL BANK | Cor. Douglas and Thirteenth Streets. OMAHA, NE} WRASKA. H. MILLARD, | 5 Cashier. . $200,00 00 | 00 0 | FOR THE UNITED | | ANT DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY FOR DISBURSING RS, | THIS BANK DEALS in Excliange, Government Bonds, Vouchers, | Gold Com, Iblf ULLION and GOLD DU R And sells drafts and saakes collections on all parts of Europe. | Dratts drawn pay: for: | o ia gold or curven- | | ey en the Bank of Cali nia, San Francisco. ICKETS FOR SALE TO ALL PARTS of Europe via the Cunard and National Steamship Lines, and the Hamburg-Amer‘can | Packet Company. | | | U.S.DEPOSITORY | | The First National Bank OF OM AIIA. Corner of Farham and 13th Rtreets. | 1IN NEBRASKA. (Successors to Kountze Brothers.) ESTABLISHED IN 1858 Organized as a National Bank, August 26,1863 Capital and Profits over - $250,000 | A. KOUNTZE, Cashier. H. W. YATES, As't Cashier. A. J. POPPLETON, Attorney. The Beatrice Hydraulic, Cement, | —AND— grz?z con ® ‘OULD INFORM T% I PUTLIC THAT ish HY- | they are now re-dv to iurai | DRAULIC CEMENT, o/ uhie vory best quality, | and in any quantity.«’herat the factory, which | is located at Beatrice, Seb. or at the Pipe works in Ouaha, Ther aitosre prepared to furniah i + MENT PIPING for SEWERAGE, ETC, _Also manufacture ali i ‘ADDODRESS, BEATRICE MYDRAULIC CEMENT & PIPE CO. OMATA my2i-3a NEBRASKA. EH.a.PAacH, CARRIAGE, BUGCY aud WaGON MANUFACTURER. N. E. (ORNER of 14th ana HARNEY STS, OULD respectfully announce to the pub- W iR ors o iy ah'a on- iracts o the above lines with neatness and dispatch. Be-Express wagons constantly on hand and or sale. BANJT.D.JONES -MAX' PACTUREP OF AND DEALKR IN- Lambrequins and W ndow Shades, CHROMOS, ENGRAVINGS AND PICTURE FRAMES. 770 Farnbam street, corner Fifteenth Bayarian Beer Hall! | 198 Douglas St, | Oprosite Metropolitan Hotel. Finest braufs of all classes of Liguors and semn. Frel. L constantly on hand, eassm CHAS. HART, Prop. P. FALLON, DPress Goods, Silks asd Trimmings. No. 263 Dodge s “veet, between J4thand 15th. Dmsn%dm:hhnng nese an patch. Orde: sdlicited. SBEOX. AD kinds of light and heavy MACHINERY NADE & REPAIRED. Al Wo-k Guaraniee’ ~S4 -wnlnm - JOHN H. GREEN, STATE MILLS ’ J.A.T NEBRASKA SHIR | 361 Farmham St Set. 14tk & 10 | Opened ew Soldiers Entit}%% to a Homestead ct Acres. es to Furchamsors of I.and Pamphlet, with new maps, peblished in ‘fi‘. German, Sweed Adiress o, B fimfi' S | Froe Fa Send for new Deserip and Dan ulyzidar HORUP. T MANUFASTORY AR 159 FARNHAMEST, | o i e oo e e /> NEBRASKA. ‘WATCHMAKERS, OF JEWELRY S. E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. WATCHES & CLOCKS. - JEWELRY AND PLATED-WARE, AT WHOLESALE OR RETAIL. Save TIME and FREIGET by Ordering of Us. ENGRAVING DONE FREE OF CHARGE ! Tand Commissioner U. P. FARNHAM ST, OMAHA, SHIRTS AND GENTY FURNISHING GOODS, &C. &< C9rShirts ofall kinds made to order. Satisfation guarrantsed. &g aprilyleod Fort Calhoun w_nus FLOUR, FEED &;’MEAL . Mawufactured with Great Care from the Best Grain. Dealers Ceneral Depot, Cer. 14th & Dodge Sts, OMAXEA. W. B. RICHARDSON. PITCH, FELT AND GRAVEL ROOFER. And Manufactarer of Dry aniSaturated foofing and Sheathing Felt. ALSO DEALERS IN Roofing, Pitch, Coal, Tar, T ke R ¥ WHOLESALE CANDIES T ac now :nanutacturing all varieties of candies WINDOW SHADES’ eI piealiat | No. 1SS Farnham Street. Omaha, Neb' EASTERN PRICES | Publishers’ Agents for School BJoks nsed In Nehraskn. Dealers in this State need not want to go East fu CANDIES. TO. A trial is solieited. "GEO. A. anA‘Gi.rND, HENRY LATEY, Wholesale Lumber Douglas St. Cor- 12th, ——OFFICE AND YARD— R&J WlL'BfiR, COR. OF DOUGLAS AND 6TH 8T5., U. P. R. B. TRACK. ; OMAHA NEB, Books and Stationery, WM. M. FOSTER. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, Fourteonth Street, Omaha.,, Neob Wholesale Ilumber Gl Ao ALL SCHOOL WINDOWS, DOORS, ELINDS, MOULDINGS, &C. Plaster Paris, Hair, Dry and Tarred Felt. Can may 9-1y. ELAM CLARK. ™S. C. ABBOIT & CO. Booksellers = Stationers DEALERS IN WALL PAPERS, DECORATIONS, aND S C.a -~ Ete., Etc. G inany part of Nebraska or ad,oining States. Office opposite jthe Gas Works, on treet, “Addrecs P. O, Box 452, Oomana C. F. GOODMAN, WHOLESALE DRUGGIST, And Dealer In PAINTS, OILS AND WINDOW GLAS| __ Omabha. Nebraska. M. J. McKELLIGOI, WINES and LIQUORS, Tobacces and Cigars, No. 142 FARNHAM STREET, OMAHA, NEB. 014 Kestucky Whiskies a Speelalty. FOR THE ELDORADO WINE COMPANY, CALIFORNIA. FPortex’s Ale, of Joliet. I1I. —— % JAS. M. M°VITTIE. i(}ln.:rifiet'l C:ider. 135 and 156 Farnkam Stre. t. Sole Agents for Bear Creek Lime and Louisville Cemaat | OMAHA, NEB OFFICE AND YARL ! On U. P. Track, bet Farnhiam aud Douglas Sts. § apent "N. I D. SOLOMON, WHOLESALE PAINTS OILS AND WINDOW CLASS, 'y oo COAL OIL AND HEAD-LIGHT OI] OMAHA _ NEBRASK FAIRLIE & MONELL, BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS Stationers, Engravers and Printers. NOTARIAL AND LODCE SEALS. Mascsie, 0dd Fellows and Knights of Pythi: 254G “ ' July21y Established 1858. -T2 —— = ~WHOLESALE DEALER IN— H. ¢y WALKER, | —MANUFACTUREF AND DEALER IN— k@ EASTERN PRIC BOOTS & SHOES 208 Dousiae Stroer. i ey - CARPENTER, BUILDE ‘GRAND CENTRAL —AND DEALER IN— EOoOTEI. | Jmams, NEBRASKA The largeet and best hotel between Chicago raneisco. nd San iember 30th, 1573. GEU. THRALL. Proprietor. CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY 588 & 540 Fourteenth Street, uod or wade 0 amise: Carriages . JACOB CISH, 51013(h St. Between Farvham and Douglas avv1 (Ofice up. E.l_.r-:'—nn-u- BYROX BEED. LEWIS £ KEED BYRON REED & (0. The Oldest Established Real Estate Agency CHEAP, DURABLE, ORNAMENTAL g For Yards, Lawns, Cemeteries Chureh Grouds sse Public Parks, ) GRAIN, FLOUR AND FEED, axp COMMISSION MERCHANT. IN NEBRASEA Keep 5 complete Abstract of Title to il Real Eettain Oaba a0 Dooglas coust. ! UNDE OMAH

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