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THE OMAHA BEE| ER OF THE CITY. W Do o desizo any contributions whatever of & literary or poetical character ; and we will not undertake to proserve, or to Tetarn be eame, in any case whatever. Our Suafl is sufficiently large to more thau supply our limited space in that direction. Raax. Naxx ov WRITER, in full, must in each and every case ACCOWMPAQY 'Y COMMUDICH- tion ol what natare scever. This is not in- tended for publication, but for eur own satis- faction and s prool of good [ait Our CovxTRY FRIENDS Wwe pleased to hear from, on all with erops, country politic Ject whatever of gencral inte ple of our State. Any inforu od with the election. and brief as possible; and tiey must, be writien up " one side of the shect 0 POLITICAL. ALz AXNO NCRMENTS of candidates for office whetber made by sell or friends, whether as ot ‘Sesor con. :aunications Editor, are (until nominations are made) simply personal, and will be charged as ad- vertisements All communicstions should be addressad to £ BOSEWATER, Editor s0d Publisher, Draw- > NOTICE. On and atter October twenty-Srst, ety circalation of the Dary Uy Mr. Bawin Davis, to whose"order all sab- scriptions mot paid at the affce will be payable. 204 by whom all receipts for sabscriptions will cotatersigned. tee and Strickland to visit F' his private residence last n Did they go there to compare notes about that $4,000 business? Carlist brigands receives further il- ble dspatches, nish Republi- Justration by our Over one hundred can soldiers, held as prisoners by Don Carlos, have been butchered in cold blood in the past three days. Tux Acting sippl. appeals for from the Federal army to kecp YVicksburg straight during the im- pending election. The Mayor o Vicksburg implores S kuap to let Vicksburg alone. mailing facilities enjoyed by “Mr. | Pattee, does Mr. Hawley believe | this munificent gift was not well | carned ? And now we come to Mr. Spe ry’s testimony, which can be cor- | PUNGENTISTIC. Dubuque surrounds its dead with | pleasant memories, by laying out a race course around a cemetery. Land can be bought in Florida at | r of Missis- reinforcements | tary Bel- roborated by the pay rolls inthe | 4oy, aore, No family should Omaba post office. Sperry tesdfl? | be without a farm. that he signed the pay roll for $125| o iy o viets who have been 1 month, of which amount he | 1,504 to contractors are anxious to only reccived $100and Yostretained | be re-leased. the balance. Mr. Sperry served | et stills can’t be kept still in ten montbs in the office and the | Maine. The excise officers always overnment was thus deliberately | worm them out. defrauded out of $250. One old maid and a bald-headed Mr. Hawley thinks that was also | man will cast a gloom over a picuic | N in- | party which no pickled oysters or | somewhat lrrL,,.ul‘C\l'A In fn_ct, he in [ Ee\'iled Yiam can aizpal! | clines to the opinion that it would | e E e dho, Tnd hol| been suflicient cause toprevent | The man in Corylon, T 0 s appointment, but inasmuch | 1 on¢ for three days’ harvest work as it was done during Griffin’s ad- | demands an improved currency and | ministration, it is questionable | more o whether Yostshould now be held fo/| According to the marine editor of account for it. a Cincinnati paper, there is nota X % 5 steamboat man on the Western riv- Under this code of morals the | o Sy, )\yo1d no die rather than promotion of a public thief would | & % Sy debar the Government from dis- |y ypaine the other day the light- missing him, providing the theft | ning struck a negro square on the was committed before he was pro- | ti{plc»trlylnu head. f’rrn:,n?:nkfi o | oy | slightly confused for 5 moted. This is a bold and danger- | 4y ) o yted to know “who frewed ous declaration, that a public officer | gt riol 2 ¥nown to be dishonest and eTU| e on ey ook Tike a bog who may still hold a responsible position | pae ben brought up by affectionate of honor, profit and trust. | parents,” said’a kindiy stranger to Against this monstrous and in- | golden-haired child, and the latter, | fms doctrine the BEX enters its | In an excited tone, exelaimed, “Do aanous doctzine the BE% enters b | 55,5 1ok ot my back solemn protest, both as & P | et S5 e 3 | Virginia Enterprise facetious- journal and a representative of the | ly"l’&fl;{'fi'“ T Ciaroon Vali | Republican party. That party ¢an- | [0 it is so hot now that the horned not afford to invent or forge excuses | toads are obliged to carry umbrellas | for public corruptionists, nor will | in_order to guard against sun- | the B lend itself tosuch a suicidal | troke.” ] {usk. Jf Mr. Hawley is disposed to | The Western papers are full o Loxlpei s “The Man with the Branded make the postal investigation | Huu’:l 2 but no attention is puid to farce, nobody can prevent him, but | fhe njen with “brandied” noses, ! let him not attempt to vindicate | though they are as ten thousand to what cannot honorably be vindi- | one.—Boston Post. cated, | At last reports, says the New | York Comumercial Advertiser, In- T STON, | djan Agent Miles had had his scalp ke o LV A nailed on for safety, thrown away A decision Invalving very tmpor- | 115 T BLENIGH ot wnd wan {ant principles touching the Tights | comung east at the rate of a mile a ¢ | of public carriers was rendered in | minute | the U. 8. Cirouit Court of Tilinois, | There is nothinglike perseverance Tue bloodthisty charagter of the = | PERSONALITIES. | Sunset Cox gets up at sunrise | every morning at Saratoga. Aristarche Bey, Minister from | “Turkey, takes his Turkish.bath at | Long Branch. Mr. Henry Bergh, the champion | of dumb creation, is spending the season at. toga. General Butler is at Martha's | Vineyard, where they raise camp- | meetings and convert people. The Cincinnati Enguirer thinks | Matt_Carpenter should . have pro- | posed a law prohibiting hotel regis- ters. Kate Stoddard wants her looking- glass to take with her to the lunatic | asylum. Nothing remarkable | strange about that. | That cold-blooded human _icicle, | Lymau 'L rumbull, is coquetting for | a Domination to’ Congress on the | ‘Anti-Monop ticket.—Hawkeye. Lydis Thompson threatens to | come back to the United States next, season with a new company. The «shape" artists have struck for high- er wages already. Minister Washburne in Paris has | been in very poor health of late, and possibly may come home on sick Jeave next month. Tt is said that he contemplates an earlywithdrawal from diplomatie service. Jones, of Nevada, is at Long Branch. He has a team of four horses, and _a brilliant complexion. Jones handles the ribbons with great success, and thus supplies ina measure the loss of Jim Fisk. presented with_the treedom of the Fishmongers' Company, in recog- nition of his philanthropic efforts on behalf of the oppressed Jews in various parts of the world. Sir Moses will attain his ninetieth year on the 24th of October next. Kemper, of Virginia, stroyed his chances for the Vice Presidency in Ohio by “having no authority” to let the Cinginnat] ex- position_hgve an uld piece of iron owned Ly the Commonwealth. It is an old colonial stove, and with it the Cincinnati managers hope tq fire the Buckeye heart, The Governor ot New York, Gen- | H.' COUNTZE; | SAVINCGS BANKE, Sie Moses Monteire s been | Cortificates of Deposit: | has_de- | The | on Tuesday , in the case of the At- | gnd industry for building up iasting | ral Dix, retains the vigor and bal- BANKING. | T.S.DEPOSITORY | The First National Bank | OF oMAaIXA. Corner of Farham and 13th Ktreets. THE OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHNENT IN WEBRASKA. { (8uccessorsto Kountge Brothers ) L ESTABLISHED IN 1858.| Organisod as National Bauk, Aagast 26,1863 | Capital and Profits over - $250,000 | OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS : E. CREIGHTON, | A. KOUNTZE, President. (Cashier. H. W, YATES, Vice Pres't. As’t Cashier. ‘A, J. POPPLETON. Attorney. ALVIN SAUNDERS, | ENOS LOWE President. Vice Presdent. BEN WooOD, Cashier. STATE N. W. Cor. Farnham sud 15th Sts., Capital. Authorized Cupit " EPGSITS S ] o soceive tind com pound fotereat ol jowed on tke same. | Advantages OVER IIE WHOLS OR ANY PART OF A DE- posit after remttining in this Beok three | months, will draw interest from d.te of depos- it to paymient. The whole or any partof o de- posit can he drawn at%any ‘aug2s The Oldest Establishea | BANKING HOUSE | IN NBRASKA. | Caldwell, Hamiltoa & Co., BANKERS. | Business transacted same as that of anli rated Bank, Accounts kept in Curreney or Gold m&tw sight check without no- | Furniture Dealers |Nos. 187,182 and 191 Fainham Street. }1 OMAIIA, NEBRASKA. mar2dif STEWART’S COOKING and HEATING STOVES, THE “FEABLESS,” COOKING STOVES, MILTCN ROGERS. Wholesale Stoves TINWARE and TINNERS' STOCEK. |, 0,000 scrs IN NEBRASKA IN THE GEEAT PLATTE ~——SOLE WESTERN AGENCY FOR—— CELEBRATED CHARTER OAK COOKING STOVES, All of Which Will be Sold at Manufacturers’ Prices, With Freightia dded. ap22t Soend for Price I"i . THOR i ST E LN O OO iy postn 40 HARY Y AN | CHEAP FARMS! ©n te Line of the ‘Union Pacific Railroad | A Laz? Grant of 12,000,000 Acres of the best FARMING aad MINERAL Lacds of Ameri Lr THE GARDEN OF THE WEST FOW FOR SALE These lands are in the central portion of the United States, on tbe 1st degree of X e 0 itade, the central tine of the great Temperate Zone of the American Ccntineat, 2ad for e srowing and stock raising unsurpassed by any in the Usited States. ven. and more convenlent to market thaa ¢ | OHEAPER IN PRICE, more favorsble terms be ewhere. { o found | FIVE aad TEN YEARS' eredit givea with aterast at SIX PER CENT COLONISTS sud aCTUAL SETULERS canhuy on Tou Years' Oredit. Laads st ths sa: | rics to all CREDIT PURCHASERS. A Deduction TEN PER CENT, FOR CASH. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR AGTUAL SETTLERS. 2ad the Best Locations for Colonies! |Soldiers Entitled to a Homestead ¢ 160 Acres. | | Froe Tassos to FPurchameras of I.and tor new Descriptive Pamphlt, with new maps, published in Ea Poan. S " . | relations with the busy world. | ance of his mental vigor faculties lantic & Pacific Telegraph Compa- | o U0 oman tn Delaware who | to o remarkable egroc ot ny against Chieago, Rock Island & | o o"once o lonely and friendless | enty-six yearsof age, yet the cares & | Pacific Railroad Company. The | girl. Now she Las a husband and | of governinga great Commonweaith irangers Who are | pojeorann Company accepting the | twenty children. does not_appear ta weigh heavily on ‘mailed free everywhere. | Addr se and Dan (Ada uly2ar 4 A. B. FUBEKMANN & CO., Certificates of Deposit issued pay- | ahle on demand, or at fixed date | bearing Interest at six percent. per | Aapnum, ane ailable in in all parts | prayer of the Mayor scems {o pre- vail. J. A. THORUP, NEBRASKA SHIRY MNIII-'AflTl)RY | S A 59 NEBR. importuned by arabi party will do well to ponder over the following resolution, passed by S voy Grange, No. 63, of Champaigt county Tilinois Resolved, locks with dist phatically disproves of the taken by some of the sending inating al nom: THE Lincoln Journal holds the Bee responsiblo for the fizze of the | telegraph cqmpany appealed to the Umted States Circuit Court for an | Independent meeting at the » Capital Tuesday, Itis charged tha a number of delegates, includin Mr. Root from Douglas eounty, were sent on & fool's errand to” Lin, by the BEE'S announcement th the meeting would be held on Tuaes- day, July 2Ist, when in fact it doc not come off until one we Now the BEE proposes to place {li responsibility w here it belongs, witl the Nemaha Granger. That ps is the official organ of the origina movers of this new departure, the Bex: simply obtained its infor- mation from that sheet., DONES VINDICATION VINDICATE! afore than aaweck before the ar- rival jn Omaha of Special A Hawley, tie Omaha postal ¢ tionists openly hoasted their ab to “box him up.” Mr. Hawle now here, and, much as we regr it, we are, unfortunately, 1 the conclusion that he is effectually boxed. From the very outset the pretended investigation conducte by him in the interest of the ernment has proved a transy and disgraceful sham. While the party that preferred the grave charges against Messrs. Yost and Furay was counsel in examining as the attorney of the accused. Instead ofun impartial investiga tor he assumed the role of vindie: tor. In fact he openly sought to ¢ culpate the accused by the most in- | chise so sought to be granted. gemous sophistry. While conceding Mr. Hawles’s | The Mennonites at Castle Garden. | merit as a vindieator of postal ras- cality, the BEE doubts _excecding whether his_style of vindication will vindZeute before an unprejudi- ced poptlar fribunal. In order that our readers 1 comprehend Mr. Hawley's peculi views of official honor and inte ty we shail cite a few of his log arguments. When Mr. Wim. Bam- ous members tate er is | to such mili nt denied the privilege of witnesses, Mr. Hawley has throughout acted graph lines, and to sccure to the government the useof the same for | postal and military, and other pur- | posei,”” commenced the construction ofa line along the route of Rock Island Rail Road, between Chicago snd ~ Qmaha. - | The railroad company ordered the | telegraph company to desist after & » | few poles were sst. Therefore the injunction restraining the ratlroad | company from interfering with the construetion of their lines, claiming | that, as the Rock Island road car- | ried the United States mail, it was |'a post road and came under the « | provisions of the act of 1866. Tt was claimed in behalf the rail- . | road company, that the act in ques- | tion applied only to roads travesing public domain. That the right of 1 | way which had been condemned 1 | and purchased by the rallroad under .. ; the State the railroad company, and under the fifth amendment to the Consti- tution, could not he taken without compensation. Judge Prammond in his declsion | held that the act of July 24, 1866, ¢ | limits the powers therein conferred ry and postal roads of t | the U ) | exclusively controlled by the gov- ¢ | ernment. That the aot does not . | include railroads which have been 1| designated as post routes by other acts of Congress, over which the government exercises no con- but simply contracts for o the carriage of the mails 1/ of the United States. That neither under the act of 1866 nor under any other act can Congress take or authorize the taking of the private property of a railfoad cor- poration for the purpose of erecting 1d maintaining & telegraph line without compensation for the fran- d | e | trol, Among the emigrants now at Castle Garden, are about 600 Men- | nonites, 1 these are a_fair sample | of those who are to follow, we may expeet the great body of emigrant Menuonit about to come to the d States from Russia, to rival cthren in Pennsylvania and nd, and the States of the t, whose ancestors came here before the Revolation. Most readers will recall the singular his- act of Congress of July 34, 1866, en- | of theironder to orgunizen Granger's | o o ooy to ad in- erouting tele- was the property of | berge had testified that Postmaster | torical fact that eveu Frank- Yost had converted Pattes’s lottery | lin ~ opposed the establishment into n buanch post- | oF these beople to the Province of Roa ae Mirmtftiny Baties th pbtn | b i T JOVNE D s : | day the bone and sinew of that Ius own mail and cancel the stamps, | great commonwealth. The so-called Mr. Yost acknowledged the fact, | Scoteli-Irish, though proverbilly a emigration | and Mr. Hawley promptly remark- | ed that this was somewhat irregular butinasmuch as Pattee was a liberal patron of the postoflice there could be 1o harm in letting him cancel his stamps sinee it saved the clerks in the postoffice much labor. Now we defy Mr. Hawley to # single instance where the Post- office Department has ever graited a permit to any merchant, batker or journalist to put wup, stamp and cancel bis mail on his own premi and without the personol super- vision 'of- & sworn postal clerk. Much less ean Mr. Hawley cite an instance where the Postoflice De- partment has granted such extraor- dinary privileges to a lottery mana- ger. Again, the same witness te tified that postmaster Yost had hs ‘bitually turned over all inquiries eoming to him Ly mail concerning the character and relia y of Pat- tee's lottery to Mr. Pattee, and Mr. Hawley declares there is nothin wrong about that, “I might have done the same thing.” Was notstich an act-ai emphatie endorsement of the lotfery swindle? Angain, when Yost acknowledged that he had received and accepted a set of silver service from Pattee, Mr. Hawley thought there was nothing improper about thiat. Taken in con- pection with the extraordinary € | new supply with special and hearty thrifty race, had no chance in eon- vith the steady industry ymy of the Germau relig- ionists, and to-ay many of the most magnificent farms in the State are owned by the Mennonites. One ot as significant as it is remarkable h a thing as poverty is,and been, tmknown among theni. A poor Mennonite is harder to a rich gambler. The | i of this is that they teach « children industry and frugality | as a rehigious duty, and laziness and | thriftlesness, are among - them, | to be particularly avoided. | ¢ are not what the Yankees telligent,” neither are they te,” but they are extreme- | honest, eminently active in for their own Interests, withe detriment to those of their ibors, and so_industrious tha. not ‘only enrieh themselves, < they have inereased in num. bers and wealth they have conferred incalculable blessings upon the whole country. They do not be- | lieve in war, but if all men were like | them in developing the natural re- | sources of the soil by honest toil the country would soon_become so rich that” nobody could afford to fight. They aren simple, earnest, industrious and frugal peo- ple, and, though opposed to warand | taking no part in politics, thera are | are no better or more useful citizens. | We have had five orsix generations of Mennonites born in this eountry, | and the stock has proved so satisfi. | tory that we cannot but receive the | out | welcome.—New York Herald, July A Toledo man on recovering from his Fourth of July patriotic exer- | tions, announces that he don’t so | much mind the loss of his pocket- | book and watch, but If the finder will bring back his set of teeth he'll be everlastingly grateful. The Rochester Democrat notes the fact that three of the Hamilton Col- | lege gradustes havegtered Journal- ism, and goes Gn to say that “it isa hopeful sign that so many journal- ists regard a liberal education as a necessary preliminary ta thelr pro- fessional duties, The Danbury man says: “One English dinner in the inexperienced American will produce that night— twelve cross-eyed hons ; eight bears, with calico tails; eleven giants, with illuminated heads; one awful dog, with twelve legs, and fourteen | bow-legged ruffians chased by a host of piratical cauliflowers, mounted on sagdles of beef, roasted, Any respectable chemist wiil corro- borate this statement.” An accident sueh as we hope may oceur often happened recently at | Nashville. Retributive justioe vis- | ited a haggage smasher. " He drop- ped n box 1n_the manner of those gentry, and the nitro-glycerine that it happened to contain spoke for it- self. He now repents in bandages. | Tt is all very well to say the explo- | sive lias no husiness there, |it will be there occasionally and will teach them to handle baggage gently we shall overlook the offense of the sender. A hater of tobacco asked an old negro woman, the fumes of whose pipe were annoying to_him, if she thought she was a Christian, “Yes brudder, T spect T is.”” Do you know that there is a passage in_the Seriptures that declares thatnothing unclean shall inherit the kingdom of heaven !”” it “Well, Chioe, 'you smoke and heaven, because there is nothingso unclean as the breath of the smoker. What do you say to that?” “Why, Ispects I leave my breff behind when I go dar.” NATURAL CURIOSITIES. | In Ceylon the monkeys are eating the cinchona bark. A twenty-five pound porcupine was kiiled in Eleventh ward, Salt Lake City, the other day. | There is a tree in Florida, at Lake Harris, which yields 7,000 lemons annually. Natural curiosities, gathered on PugetSound, are awaiting shipment, | at Olympia to a Museum in Vienna, | Austria. A rattlesnake ten feet or more in | length and as thick as a man’s arm, hasbeen seen near Frenchtown,Cal- ifornia. A remarkable instance of longev- | ity is that of Mrs. Josefa Valmaseda, { who recently died at Springfeld, Tuolumne County, California, aged 111 years. ‘The San Jose Putriot is informed of a remarkable herb growing on the foothills of Santa Clara county, that is a certain cure for small pox. = The first doze cures it A “peerless” potato is on exhi tion_in Marysville, which grew in the foothills in 83 days, and weighs 13 pounds. Another instance show- ing what the foothills can do. Mr. W. H. Dall has found on Amaknak Tsland, in Onalaska, a cave containing human skeletous of a great age, with many implements of bone, ivory, stone, and carved wood. There were several layers of these Temains formerly belonging to distinet periods of time, each lay- er being covered by a separate mass of gravel. We regret to say that the most recent and thrilling zoological story is tragical. A cat in Massachusetts bereaved of her young adopted a set of liftle muskrats. When their eyes were opened, and they saw what kind of & mother fate had be- stowed nupon them, they so loudly complained that the benevolent cat became both hungry and indignant and ate every one of them.” Abraham Cooper, who died last ;ree:’i.n San Fr?:l.;lm, ‘was noted gormaudizing i having some time befn;’:pzz xmei1 den demise performed theinteresting feat of eating at one meal of a half hours duration a fourteen pound turkey and a loafof: bread, ' Upon another occasion he consumed five glasses of lager beer, one glass of whisky, two bottles of claret, two glasses of gin and one of brandy— J 19, in all aggregating in liquid measure » gallon and a quagter, But if “Yes, I've heard of you cannot enter the kingdom of him, slthough he will soon be an ootogenarian, The edltor of the Mattoon (TlL.) Gazette introduced Colfax at the 0Odd Fellows' celebration, at Mat- toon, last Tuesday, and undertook to apologize for the vart the dis- tinguished orator took in the little | Credit Mohilier affair. It is said | that Colfax blushed deeply, and Jooked very penitent, The ladies all took out thelr handkerchiefs, aad there wasn't a dry eye in the crawd, Minnie Myrtle Miller, once the | wife of Joaquin Miller, the wander- | ing poet, left Choos Bay for San | Francisco last week, in company with her mother, who is in very poor health. 1t is supposed that | Minnie Myrtle is accompanied by | the three children, whom she calls her trinity, The oldest of the girls, Maud Miller, thirteen years of age, is remarkably handsome and at- tractive, possessing rare intelligence for one so young. ! Do it Circumspectly. | | Watierson's Advice to Murat Halstesd.] The drums are rattling on_the Champ de Mars. Helmess glitter on the Bridge of Marengo, The fan Fields are aflame. M. s<anoix s twirling his baton be- hingd the Palace of Industry, and half a hundred fat girisin false jew- elry are bawling the ballads out of M. Le Cocqs last extravaganzo to the Arch of Stars. The naiads around the obelisk in the Palace of Harmouy bob their bronze heads ~ through the mist of the fountaips, and the river runs ap taward Auteuil, where Armand Duval and Violetta sought a rustic dwelling, keeping its secrets passing well. Tho Moulin Rouge is not far away, nor the Mabilie either. Mr. Halstead pays his money and takes bis choice ; and we shall not be kept waiting long to see how he will come out of it. But, whatever he does, let him first down on his marrow-bones and beseech some good Frenchman to show him, if sin be must, how he may do it cir- cumspeetly ! A Colorado Pony. Yesterday, says a Southern Colo- rado paper, we saw a man, a wo- man, a good-sized boy, two babies, five or six blankets, a buffalo robe, and two strings of chili on a single pony. Every available inch from his ear to the root of his tail was “taken.” The poop animel was very small; thin as a towel rack; of a sickly pale calor, and one fore ieg | was about five inches shorter than the other—the knee joint of his leg was very large, and we suppose that the missing part of the leg was driven in there by the weight above, so that when it was re- lieved the leg would stretch out again like s turtle’s head. In fact, nearly all his legs was short, and the ecrookedest convention of legs that we ever saw. Incred:ble as it may seem, the wiry little animal d us on a trot. ~ When he came down on the short leg, and the fam- ily “kerplumped” with it, it would | have made the oldest man living laugh. Both the chilldren were sleeping soundly, for the motion of the horse served all the purposes of a cradle. — A Dead Dog’s Power- (Springfie'd, Mass., Republican.) A Woreester boy was engaged in nocturnal cherry-stealing a short time ago, and was observed by the owner of the fruit, who, unnoticed | by the young robber, placed a large | stuffed dog at the foot of the tree, and retired to watch the result of his strategy. The boy about descend- ing, observed the dog, and tLen the fun commenced. He whistled,coax- ed, threatened unavailingly, the an- imal never moving; and finally tbe | youth, accepting the inevitable, set- | tled down to passing the night in | the tree. After some hours had passed, wearily enough to the lad, moning dawned, and the proprie- tor of the “tree, coming from the house, asked him how he eame to be in the tree, to which the boy an« swered that he took it to save him. | self from the dog, who had_chased him quite a distance. It lsn’t healthy for & smalier boy to say stuffed dog to that youth now. B That noble old veteran, Hon, Gerrit Smith, is always exhibiting his philauthropio qualities in prac- tical manner. His last gift of one thousand dollars for the relief of the Minnesota sufferers by the depreda. | tions of the grasshoppers is but an- | otherreminder of the blessed chari. | Surplus and Proits | INANCIAL AG of the country. H Advances made to customers on | :};proved securities at market rates | interest. Buy and sell Gold, Bills of Ex. ::‘d Government, State, County, Wi f‘fllnndsi. 1l atf e give special attention to nego- tiating Railread ard other (‘nr’i’m- rate Loans issued within the Statc. Draw Sight Drafts on England, | Ireland, Scotland, and all parts of Europe. Rell Enropean Passage Tickets. COLLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. antt H. MILLARD, EZRA MILLARD, Cashier. President. | OMAIIA | NATIONALBANK | Cor. Douglas and Thirteenth Streots. OMAHA, NELRASKA. Capital... D DEPOSITORY FOR OFFCERS, ANT DESIGNATI DISBURSING SBU THIS BANK DEALS in Exchange, Government Bonds, Vouchers, Gold Com, [BULLION ana GOLDDUSL] And sells drufts and raakes collections on all parts of Europe. B Drafts drawn payable in gold or curren- cyon the Rank of California, Sun Francisco. ICKETS FOR SALE TO ALL PARTS of Europe via the Cunard and National Steamiship Lines, and the Hamburg-At Packet Compny. BYRON REED. BYRON REED & €0. The Oldest Established Real Estate Agency Established 1858. A.T.SIMPSON'S & Y Y CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY 538 & 340 Fourteeuth Street, (Otfice up stairs,) Omaba, Nebrasks. Carriages {00 Suegics on haad or iade 1o Snie. N. B.—Purticalar attention. paid to ina, ora The Beatrico Hyvdraulic, Cement, —AND— PIPE COMPANY, QULD INFORM THE PUBLIC THAT they are now vesdy to furnish HY- DRAULIC CEMENT, of thie very best quality, and in any quantity,either st the factory, which loeated at Beatrice,Ne, or at the Pipe works n Ouaha. They alto sre’pro to furnish all eindacCeMENT PIPING or SEWEBAGE:. DRAINAGE, ETC, Also manufacture ali siyles of CHIMNEY WOKK. WE GUARAN- CEMEN" UPAC INTHE UNITED STATES, TRURED, B3 ORDERS FROM DEALERS 4 FULLY SOLICITER, ey X finnfi = 2 & HYDRAULIC CE IV o Py OMATA NEBRASKA. my2Zidm Grreat Western BREWHERY Corner of Cumiogs and Twenty-second dtresta The finest lager beser con stantly on hand? = i Jers-gw CHAS. WEYMULLER, Prop. JOHN H. GREEN, | SflPATE- MILLS GRAIN, FLOUR AND FEED, D FARNHAM ST, NEBRASKA. | FARNHAM ST, OMAHA, SHIRTS AND GENTY L~Shirts ofall kinds made to order. Satisfation guarranized.“B& aprilyleol i Fort Calhoun Mills. FLOUR, FEED & MEAL Manufactured with Great Care from the Best Grain. 1 Cieneral Depot, Cer. 14th & Dodge Sts, OMAIZA. 1AM cramk. W. B. RICEARDSON. ONM AIIA NEB ASKA PITCH, FELT AND GRAVEL ROOFER. Aud Manufactarer of Dry an Saturated Roofing and Shemhing Felt. ALSO DEALERS IN Roofing, Pitch, Coal, Tar, Etc, Itc. (OOF:NG inany part of Nebraska or adjolning States. Office oppositeZthe Gas Works, on | 12thy treet. Addrees P. 0. Box 452. WHOLESALE CANDIES 1 amc now :nanutacturing all varieties of candies ‘ and will sell at | EASTERN PRICES | Dealers in this State need not want to go East for CANDIES. | A trial is solicited. HENRY LATEY, | R & J WILBUR, Books and Stationery, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, | Fourteenth Streer, Omaha., Neb may 9-1¥. Omaha | GENERAL AGENTS FOR ALL SCHOOL BOOKS | ard-imy C. F. GOODMAN, WHOLESALE DRUGGIST, And Dealer In PAINTS, OILS AND WINDOW GLASS, | Omaha. Nebraska. je19te. PrRACTICAIL Manufacturor WATCEMAKERS,|/OF JEWELRY S. E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. WATCHES & CLOCKES JEWELRY AND PLATED-WARE, AT WHOLESALE OR RETAIL. Save TIME and FREIGHT Ordering of Us. ENGRAVING DONE FREE OF CHARG N'PED. Dealers Can $@-ALL GOODS WARRANI~D TO BE AS REPRE: o 3. CanriEs ""8. C. ABBOTT & CO., Booksellers = Statione: DEALERS IN WALL PAPERS, DECORATION! AaND WINIDOW SHADES, No. 188 Farnham Street. Omaha, N- Publishers’® Agents tor Schiool Books used in Nebraska. GEO. A. HOAGLAND, Wholesale Lumb« —_OFFICE AND YARD— COR. OF DOUGLAS AND 6TRSTS,, U. P. R. R. TRACR. OMATETA NEK WM. M. FOSTER. C. a YWholesale Lumbe WINDOWS, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, &€ Plaster Paris, Hair, Dry and Tarred Fe Sole Agents for Bear Creek Lime and Louisville Cemeat OMAHA, _ N. I D. SOLOMON, OFFICE AND YARL ) P. Track, bet Farnhaia aud Douglas Sts. | M. J. MK BLLIGON InroRTER AND JoREER OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC (WHOLESALE PATN WINES and LIQUORS,? OILS AND WINDOW CLASS: Tobaccos and Cigars, FARNHAM STREET, OMAHA, NEB. 01d Kentucky Whiskies a Speeially. | 2-AGENT FOR THE ELDORADO WINE COMPANY, CALIFORNIA 83 FPPorter’s .Ale, of Joliet. T1l. No. 142 Julyz1y 2, et, Faroham anq ¢ g, s &g, | GR4 Y, LEADING w. | 3 Twelfth Sty,, 8 PRINTE 30 51 GEO At BOTTOM PRICES. ’.a'oxu" AR, steeet, between Mth and 15th. In all it Branches, In the istest and most approved pattern. ties he hasstrewn along his pathway of life for the benefit of his fellow- | HORSE SHOEING AND BLACKSMITHING JAS. M. M°VITTIE. -~WHOLESALE DEALER IN— Cla ried Cider. 135 and 186 Farnbam Streit. H. C. WALK R —MANUFACIUKEY AND DEALER IN— BOOTS & SHOES 261 Farnham St., Bet. 14th & 15tk 3 °d repairing done on short sotice. opls v 13 510 13th St. Between Faroham and Douglas apisyl UNDERTAKER| | | | | l[car?P 1 11th Street bet. Farahaw and Harney, | |GOAL OIL-AND HEAD-LIGHT § OMAHA FAIRLIE & MONELL, BLANK BOOK. MANUFACTURF Stationers, Engravers and Printers. NOTARIAL AND LODCE SEAI Mascie, 0dd Fellows and Knights of P} TUNIFORMS LODGE PROPERTIES, JEWELS, BOOKS, BLAN EASTERN PRICES AND EXFRESS.“S1 oM AIXA, T 282 Douslas Streoot: - ' THUR BUCKBEE. , ENTER, B'UII-D,' —AND DEALES IN— ORNAMENTAL HONTI NOUT CHEAP, DURABLE, and Pubiic 0} For Yards, Lawns, Cemeteries Church Grouds Office and Shop: apridit