Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 31, 1874, Page 2

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i, must in each B owpany AUy communics- | e want to know P o boses to sustain himself | efore the Government and the and incontrovertible evidences of | fiction, my eyes tl:ve been nl)_‘pen ire | ¢or the first time in my experience, | X S0 that T can clearly see my sin. It | manufacturing establishments. was when I knew that I was loved, | to suffer itto grow to a passion. | people in the face ef the damaging | :muous woman should check in- something penitent and noble in dear Theo- Theo- | gral Mfough the ministry the Welland canal. e Gaunt, a character of tantly an absorbinglove? There is | POINTS. | nts are employed as laborers on | Philadelphia and vicinity has; | about eight thousand, five hundred | A large number of Italian emi- ‘ Im BANKING. OF OMAIIA. | Corner of Farham and 13th Streets. A new cotton factory, with about | THE OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHAENT A | one thousand spindles, will shortly | be erected in Augusta. IN NEBRASKA. (Successors to Kountze Brothers.) A manufactory for making wheels | pgT A BLISHED IN 1858. | for agricultural implements, located | B astore sourer. This 1a notia- | his offiial corruption. these words, but withai, something | ot Napoleon, Ohio, is to be removed | Organissd as a National Bazk, August 26, 1863 oo for publication, but for eur own salis- | faotion and as proof of good faith. ‘ ovs CousTay Famxps we will always be | with erops, country politics, and on any sub- Ject whatever of general interest to the peo- ple of our Btate. Any information connect- | o with the election. and relating to foods, | Zecidents. ete., will bo gladly received. All | such communicetiors, however, must be | brief as possible; and tiey must, in all cases, be written up " ope side of the sheet only. | Omaha entered solemn pro- roumIcAL. test against his appointment Atx Axxo NCEMANTS of candidates or oic® | ¢y vears ago, and does —whether made by sell or friends, and | whether as 20! ‘casOF con Junications o ‘3e | Bditor, are (until nomipations are made) | simply personal, and will be chsrged as ad- | vertisemeuts | Al communicstions should be sddressed to | £ BOSEWATER, Editor and Publisher, Drav- | r 2. | NOTICE. 1 On and sfter October twenty-first, 1872, the | ety elreulation of the DALY Bxx is assumed | by M. Edwin Davis, to whose order all sub- | scriptions ot paid at the office will be paysable. | s0d by whom all receipts for subscriptions will | ‘coun | E. KOSEWATER, Publisher | EEFUBLICAN STATE CONVENTION. | A Republican State Convention | will be held at the city of Lincoln, ‘ on Wednesday, the 2d day of Sep- tember, 1874, at 3 o’clock, p. m., for | the purpose of placing in nomina- tion one candidate for member of | Congress, one candidate tor pember | of Congress contingent, candidates for Governor, Secretary of State, | Treasurer, Superintendent of Public | Instruction, State Prison Inspector, and Adorney General, and for the trinsaction of such other business as may properly come before it. The delegates present from each Judi District will_nominate a suitabl person for District Attorney, for their respective Districts. The organized counties are en- titled to delegates upon the follow- ing basis: Counties east of the sixth Principal Meridian shall be entitled to one delegate for each 1,000 inhabitants, according to the census taken du- ring the current year, and one for | cial term. each fraction over five hundred. But each organized county shall be entitled to at least one delegate. Organized counties west of the 6th | P. M., shall be entitled to one dele- | gate cach, and to oneadditional del- | egate for each one thousand inhabi- | fants, secording to the census afore- said, and one for each fraction over five hundred, as follows: | DELEGATES FOR COUNTLS. | | | \ [ H H The countles are recommended to | clec: alternate delegates to act in case the delegates eloct fail to at- tend the convention ; vention is recommended to exclude proxies for delegates that do not re- side in the counties they propose to represent. : By order of the committee. F. M. JOHNSON, Chairman. C. H. GERE, Recretary. Wio is tobe the coming Gover- Don’t all spesk at once. — nor? AccorpING to Doctor Johnson, the Ko-op corpse will be in full mo- tion within thirty day FRANCE is to be called to account by Spain for giving aid and comfort to the Carlists. That the French Republic should conspire to break down the Spanish Republic is an avomaly. Our latest telegraphic advices represent Mrs. Tilton sitting on a piano stool singing Home, sweet home.” Beecher wasn’t sitting on the floor measuring the circumfer- ence of her ankle. It will take eight hundred men | three years to quarry the granite | that is to be used for the east front | of the new State and War Depart- | ment buildings at Washington. | How long it will take tofinich these | structures under Mullets supervision | not even the most gifted prophet could safely prognosticate. | Tae: Iatest circular of the United | States Centennial Commission 13 | now on our table. Itcontainsa list | of the members and alternate mem- | bers of the Commission, in which | we find just one man of national | reputation—Gen. Joseph R. Hawley | —and five of some local note. The | others might as well be John Doe and Richard Roe for the guar-| antee their unknown names give. The “Centennial Board of Finance has a good President—Wil- liam Welsh, the Episcopal Indian | Commissioner who exposed the con- | duct of the Indian Ring. The Centennial Board of Finance con- | taips within itself, however, a Board of Directors, twenty-five strong. We should be glad | to know how responsibility | for the money that will be stolen is | to be brought home to anybody. | The “Commission™ system of divid- | ingand so annulling responsibility | has been carried to & fine art here, | Circular No. 62 contaius rules for exhibitors. It also contains various | attempts to make it appear that the government is running this show precisely as Francedid the Exposi- tion of 1862, and Austria did the signed by a few personal friends pleased to hear from, on all matiers connected | and hangers on can blind the de- partment into the belief that he is a proper person to retain a posiiion | life. It is is no Hester ing in her breast a secret which the | flaming scarlet letter on her bosom | only helped to conceal. Neither is | she a Catherine Gaunt, resolute, | wrong-headed, fanatical, but pure. | She is simply an emotional woman, | his department. and the con- | | specific purposes, or did he earry | assured th Does heimagine that a petition | & that he has so shamefully disgraced? Does he not remember that an over- | whelming majority of the people of really believe that his corrupt prac- tices in office can be endorsed by any honest man—Republican or | Democrat? If Casper E. Yost had | defrauded the Government out of { one hundred thousand dollars, we | might pardon his crime, on the | ground that the temptation was | irresistable, but when, in spite of his lucrative income, he resorts to | the very smallest kind of pilfering, we must brand him 2s & man whose | dishonesty is a disgrace to human nature, Nothing could possibly be more contemptible in the eyes of an | honest community than the insig- nificant theft of postage stamps | sworn to by Sperry, nor is there | anything in the culendar of postal | iniquity more disreputable than the | admitted acceptanceof silver plate bribes from the lottery gambler, | | who was permitted to convert his | lottery shop into a branch postoffice, 3 But says honest John Furay, you have no right to punish Yost now, for frauds committed by him as As- | sistant Postmaster under Griffin. | Shame upon such pleading for offi- ciul rascality, If this doetrine had | | prevailed in the Impeachment trial | of David Butler, the Legislature of | this State could have never re- | moved him from office for misde- | Does any sane man suppose {hat | such technicalities would shield a | public thief from just punishment | ina court of justice? Isnot strict | integrity the very first principle | which must govern the public ser- vice? We have a right to assume that the Postmaster General pro- | poses to employ only honest men in The question for him is not when did Yost steal, but did he steal, and if he did he can- not claim immunity from his acts. Assuming even that the Postmas- | ter General may by misrepresenta~ tion of corrupt whitewashers be in- duced to dismiss the charges against Postmaster Yost, the ques- tion arises, does Senator Hitcheock propose to disgrace the Republican party by keeping such a notoriously corrupt officer in his position? Ishe not in honor bound, as the official representative of that party, and of the people, to secure his removal and recommond the appointment of a man ofunquestioned integrity and capacity? MR. FURAY'S CASE. 1] | Mr. Fmay appears to be indig- | nant because the BEE has so far | fafled to exonerate him from the charges of corruption and bribery | preferred aganst him. Now, the BEE has no disposition to wilfully injure the reputation of Mr. Furay | or any other public officer. Mr. | Furay knows as well as we do that | the investigation of his case by Special Agent Hawley was a com- | plete farce. | Instead of examining all the Wit~ | nesses who could throw direct or In- | direct light upon the transaction | with which Mr. Furay is charged, | hesimply concluded toconstrue the verbal explanation of Pattee and Strickland as a complete vindiea- | tion. Neither Pattce nor trick- | 1and were under oath, and if they | | had been, they certainly would not have acknowledged that they had deliberately committed a States | prison offense. Pattee simply ac- | knowledged he had pad the |$4,000 to Strickland, and | Stiickland declared that he put that | money in his pocket. Did he de- | liberately steal the money entruste 1 to him by a client for certain out Pattee’s instructions? Wi did Furay notify Pattee that his lottery mail would be stopped, and | why was that threat not carried out ? | The answer to these questions must | be sought elsewhere, and we take it for granted that the| truth ean only be arrived at from | cumstantial evidence through dis- | interested witnesses. Now, we are | reliable parties are rea- dy to swear that Pattee confide ally informed them that he had Fu- ray fixed; that Furay was pledged | to let his lotteries alone in any place | within his district. One witness we areinformed, is ready to testify un- | der oath that Pattee called upon him since Hawley’s departure from | Omala, and enjoined upon him to keep mum about Furay, as he (Pat- tee) proposed to run another lottery in Kansas, and Furay would be very | useful. With such information be- | declare that Furay is vindicated. | THE latest attempt to hold an In- dependent State Convention at Lin- coln, has proved a greater fizzle than the first. A St. Louis Globe special from Lincoln, under date of July 28th, says: “Delegates to the new party eonvention of Independents, expected to meet here to-day, failed to arrive. But oue county was re- presented by two delegates. Thisis the second attempt t> hold a con- vention, and it will probably be the —_— THERE has been much greater so mawkishly sentimental that we | woman who uttered them, but to | the philosophy that was taught her | and the atmosphere of her daily | | offe meanors committed prior to his offl- | b | story building, in a central location fore us we cannot conscientiously { up & bumble bees’ nest? 00k for the explanation not to the plain Prynne, carry- given to rhapsodies, who fell inlove | with & great preacher, to whom a husband’s jealousy imputed the | se of a Dimmesdale, or a| Brother Leonard. And yet, much as it grieves us to say this, she is the feeble counterpart of both these un- | fortunate heroines, and stands to- day the justitication ot fictions whi well nigh droye the world mad with | their unrealities, A study of Charles Reade’s novel reveals the dual life of the devout | woman floundering between her | strong love of her church and her | unconscious love of her priest. It| is a singularly well drawn picture | which the novelist paints. Father Francis, a coarse and burly ecclesi- ustie, yielded place o’ Brother TLeonard, who “locked and movea like a being who had come down | from some higher sphere to pay the | world a very little visit.!!” "Mus, | Gaunt at first could make nothing | of him, and complainéd to her hus- | band that he was a “spiritunl ma- chine;” while that genial gentle- man answered, “Well, I am of your mind : he is very poor company compared with that Jovial old blade, | Francis, But why so many words | Kate? You didn’tuse to bite twice at a cherry; if the wmilksap 1 nat fo | your taste give him the sack, and | be damned to him.” But Brother | Leonard was rually a great preacher | and the first time she heard him, | Mrs. Gaunt t d, enrap- | tured, melted.” Ehe soon became the priest’s Madonna, iilling his rooms with flowers when & ab- | sent and caring for bim in secret. | And he, in turn, preached only for | ly under- all the time something whisy her that perhaps Leonard admired her more than was safe cr prudent. This spell was on her, however, and t was not eusy to foresee the real danger. His fervent eloquence had appealed at once to her imagination and her religious aspirations. From | an interest in the preaching it was only a step to an_interest in the | preacher; but in all things she treat- ed him simply as a holy man, her spiritual guide. He was so_devout that she forgave him for keeping her glove, which he picked up in the wood, and for painting her por- trait for his own delectation. She even obeyed him when he told her to dismiss her Proteestant servants andemploy Catholics in their places. Busy and malicious tongues told part of this to her Lusband, and he, as a matter of course was furious. She failed to understand the road she had taken. In a short time she became so zealous in_good works that she withdrew from soclety, surrendered her judgment to her spiritual dictator, and no longer took an interest in her hustand or her husband’s affairs. There was separation and grief, and aftermuch suffering that reconciliation which is necessary to give & novel s happy ending. The story, we begin to suspect, is not an uncommon one. Here wasa woman, albeit a character of fiction, | as Mrs. Tilton says, who never thought to wrong her husband; but the devotion she owed him asa wi‘e she permitted to be absorbed by an- other, and not only became the de- fender of the poor, sily priest, but allowed her husband to go from her, in the blindness of herown folly and devotion. “The sin was Leon- ard’s,” said Father Francis to the erring woman, “but_the fault was yours.” That this fault was Mrs, Tilton’s, she admits in her remarka- ble letter; that the grave sin was Mr. Beecher's, seems the deduction of his statement. The Brooklyn story is the story of Catherine Gaunt over again, only the Plymouth pas- tor was no silly ecclesiastic, as the novelist calls the other, and it was hardly priestly in him to take a pleasure in the ‘‘paternal affection” which is now the gravamen of the charge agalnst him. This, we are i ed to think, is the whole story, ch Mr. Tilton’s heated imagin- ation has distorted into a terrible crime, and the lesson to be learned from it is that deduction which stands out with such startling prominence in Mrs. Tilton's letter —a yirtuous woman should check instantly an absorbing love. The Mennonites. From Mr. Frost, formerly super- intendent of the B. & M. Immigrant Home, we learn several interesting particulars concerning the colony of | Mennonites now in the city e | states that the whole membership | of the church is divided into com- munitics, each community having all property in common and man- aged by an elected pastor or leader whose word is law with them. Tk are very devoted religionists and spend considerable time in their | ily prayers. Mr. Frost informs | as soon as they make a se- | the; us tl lection of their land: once proceed to build S, will at e Lwo sufficiently large to accomiodate the whole colony where all willlive | together as they haveon the Crimen for the last four hundred years. It | is stated that they have deposited to their credit in a New York bank $120,000, besides quite a large | amount of money with them.—Zin- | coln Blade. | | Boys and “ Bumble” Bees. (Evansvills Journal.) Did you ever undertake to break Three boys tried it yesterday with disas- trous results. ~ They got long rods and made an attack on the nest, which was located a short distance from a railway track. In a minute out came the bees, and the boys started off on a rup. One of them stubbed his toe and fell, with his head on the iron rail of the track, leavin, ex (hrougi ts, through which three bum! stung him tili he howled. The other boys ran and yelled lustily, as the bees buzzed around their ears, and stung themx in revenge for breaking up their home. The woundsinflicted thro the hole in those blue pants that boy from sitting down with any comfort for a fortnight, and the ears of the other have nearly idle, and the proprietors ad- | that she | mit that American makers have at- | | log | was especially kind, and as she was | been the recipient of his marked at- to Muncie, Ind., Judge Sample hav- | ing donated several acres or land. The glass works in Europe are | tained a_degree of excellence that | has practically cut them off from this market. Manufactuiing prospects in New Jersey are growing brighter. New- | ark, Trenton, and Patterson are g1 ing unmistakeable signs of new life. | A number of factories that had been closed for several monthshave been | opened, and several others are go- ing on full time. from 50,000 to 100,000 plows, the { Moline (1ll.) Plow Works of Deere | 1 | & Co. use 900 tous of iros 600 tons | of steel, 200 tons of casf | 1,000,000 feet of hard wood lumber. The lot on which the brick shops | are located is 300x300 feet in dime: sions. | The lir¢ mill at Marion, Iowa, | manufacturing flax tow, flax moss, and flax cotton, has been in opera- tion for seven months, during which { time its orders from the East have | increased so rapidly as torequire the | putting in of a doubie set of m: chinery, and the employment, ot double force, T'he Rev, George describes an Arkansas saw-mill: «I walked out south of the village ore day, along the creek, and came | upon a little saw-mill, where a | circular saw, somelhmgllnrgcr than | a Mexigan dollar, was slowly eating | its wyy through a pine log sixteen | inches in diameter, It took tws men to manage that little Jog, and | each had time to enloy a short but | refreshing ‘cat-nap’ “while the saw | was lahsriously eating its way from e end to the ather of the ten-foot | og. | Harding thus | “fhen the machinery would be | stopped,and the twobony andsinewy | as to the best metnhod of turning the | They’d squint at it out of one | eye, squirt tobaceo juice, go_around | to another point of observation, | squintat it with the other eye,squirt | tobacco juice, compare notes, argue | | and finally arrange tor scaling the | | other side. Then the saw would be | started, and they would take an- other nap. I timed the saw and men, and made a calculation as to | the amount of lumber they would | cut ina day, but I'm afraid to_pub- lish the estimate, lest I should be ac- | cused of lyin; Poor Workingmea. There is, perhaps no one in this world more to be pitied than the | poor man—the man who hasgot in- to the habit of saving untilhe saves from sheer delight in seeing his wealth increase, and of counting every dollar of expenditures as though its loss was something that could never be repaired. Yet it is the duty of every poor man to save something. The possession of a few | dollars often makes all the differ- ence between happiness and misery, and no man, especially with | family dependent upon bim, can | be truly independent unless he | has u few dollurs reserved for | the ume of need. ‘While extreme carefulness as to the expen- diture of money will make a_rich man poor, a wise economy will al- | most as certainiy make s poor man rich, or at least make him, to a con- siderable extent, independent of the caprices of employers and of the | common vicissitudes of life. Noth- | ing is more important to the poor | man than the habit ot saving some- thing; but his little hoard will sur- prise and gratify him. Every work- ingman ought to have an account | in some savings bank, and should add to it every week during which he has full empioyment, even if the addition be but one dol- lar at a time. If he does this he will find the dollars growing into tens, and these tens into hundreds, and ‘in a little time will be in pos- | session of a sum which is coastant- ly vielding an addition to his in- come, which secures him a_reserve fund Whenever one is need=d, and will enable him to do many things which, without a little money, he | would' be powerless to do.—Pitts- burg Pos How a Nashville Barber Created | a Sensation at the Springs. A few days since a young barber of this city put his best garments in a hand valise, and hied him away to one of the popular summer re sorts in Tennessee, within less than a week’s journey of Nashville. He was fair to look upon, sported good barness, used pomade and things | with unsparing hand, and had ac- | quired quite a reputation for agili and grace in tripping the light fan- tastic. Upon arriving at the Spring in | question, he moved through the | throng like a conquering hero. Sus- | ceptible school-girlsand even senf mental maidens of two ‘‘seasol fell before the charms of those am- | brosial locks, that graceful bearing | and polished manner, and withinan hour after his arrival our knight of the lather-brush was master of the situation, and had no lack of part- ners for the dance. One young lady | one of the most ati the springs, our di uppreciative barber sought eve opportunity to enjoy her society. This stafe of affairs continued for about tweaty-four hours, when the young man’s “profession” was dis- | Ccovered, causing a change to con over the spirit of his dream imme- diately. The young lady who has | ctive ladies af | tentions lost her interest in the so- clety of the springs, and departed | for home on the first’ train.—Naah- | ville Union and Diamonds in Beston. (\ (licago Lady in Bo ton to the Home Journal ), 1 borrowed Cousin Mirlam’s dia- { | mond rings, but Fred won’t let me" Wear more than three large ones at | a time, and T do not feel satisfied, for {here is one lady who wears six | of them down to breaklast every | morning, and puts her-elf to all | manner of trouble and inconveni- | ence to hand me things when the | %inl is standing right behind my | Ghair; and, of course, all she does it | for i to out-dazzle me, and I despise her. She is not a Boston lady: Fred says they have too much taste. to flash their jewels ac the breakfust table or in the horse-cars. T suppose intellect will not consent 1o be outshone by paltry stones, but l still I don’t believe the strongest minded . female living could girJ | herself up to the refusal of a dia- | mond if offered her. Now I am | sure that if sister Thuse were in | great affliction and trouble just one of these glittering jewels would | destruction of life and limb by wa- Weltausstellung of 1873, ter lately than by the distileries, been enlarged to the size of = f afford her more real consolution than s whole week of fasting lndl prayer, z r | Capital and Profits over - E. CREIGHTO | H. COUNTZ yeomen would hold a ‘consultation | t | Europe. | Hydraulic, Cement, | | PITPE COMPANTY, riminating and | D v-| T 250,000 OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS ZE, Cashier. | ident. Pre ) Vice Pres't. A. J. POPP! Cashier. ENOS ice Presdent. | Cashier. President. BEN WOOD, STATE | | In their anuual production of | SAVINGS BANKEK, | N. W. Cor. Farnham aud 13th Sts., | s 100,000 | 21,000,000 | | " ALL AS ONE DOL-| Jaraece v and compoand interestal” | | lowed on the same. | Advantages OVER | rtificates of Deposit: ART OF A DE- | in this Benk three | from d.te of depos- BANKING HOUSE| IN NBRASKA. DEWEY The First National Bank | OMAEIA, mar2dtf NEBRASKA. MILTCN ——SOLE WESTERN AGENCY FOR—— STEWART’S COOKING THE “FEARLESS,” COOKING STOVES CELEB |{CHARTLR OAK C ROGERS. MAX MEYER & BROTHER . OMAHA, NEBRASKA BEELNOOD By 40 sa%y ) CHEAPV FARMS! FREE EOMES | WhOlesalfl Stoves ‘Union PamciEc Raih'oad' A Laz? Grant of 12,000,000 Acvescf the best PARMING and MINERAL Laads of Ameries ’ TINWARE and TINNERS’ STOCE. | 1,000,000 ACkrs IN NEBRASKA IN THE GREAT PLAITE VALLET: and HEATING STOVES, RATED ODOKING STOVES, Caldwell, Hamiltoi & Couy | armof weic Wit he Sold at ¥anufacturers” Prices, Witl Freightadded. BANKIZRS. Business transacted same as that | of an Incorporated Bank. | Accounts kept in Corrency or Gold | subject o sight check without no- ice. Certiflcates of Deposit issued pay- | able on demand, or at fixed date | bearing iuterest at six percent. per | aunom, and available in in all parts | | of the conntry. Advances made to customers on | arproved securities at market rates | of _interest. | Buy and sell Gold, Bills of Ex- | change, Government, State, County, | and City Bonds. We give special attention to nego- | tiating Railroad and other Corpo- | rate Loans issued within the Stato. | Draw Sight Drafts on England, | Ireland, Scotland, and all parts of Sell European Passage Tickets, CULLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. RA MILLARD, ] J. H. MILLARD, President. Cashier. OMATIA NATIONALBANK | Cor. Douglas aod Thirteenth Streets. | OMAHA, - « NELRASKA. Capital.. rplus 200,000 00 30,000 00 | )R THE UNITED | ANT D) ES TED TORY FOR DISBURSING OFFCERS. 5 THIS BANK DEALS in Exchange, Government Boods, Vouchers, Gold Coun, G EITEEG ]:11 ULLION and GOLD DUST. | ;| ap22t Send for Price I/-l-'isA = J. A, NEBRASKA SH FARN:?\; ST, (A OMAHA, SEIRTS AND GENTS' r2¥-Shirts ofall kinds made to order. Sati: aprilyleod Fort Call:} y FLOUKR TH IR oun Mills. FEED Maspufactured with Great Care from the Best Grain. ion guarranteed. @ & MEATL Cleneral Depot, Cer. 14th & Dodge Sts, may 9-1¥. OMAIZA. ELAM CLARK. WH L ESALE CANDIES| o T ar [ncw inanutacturing all varieties of candies and will sell a EAS TERN PRICES Dealers in this State need not want to go East for CAND A trial is solicited. meh11t! And sells drafts and rakes collections on all | parts of Europe. ! B@Draits drawn payable in gold or curren- | eyen the Bunk of Cal:fornia, San Francisco. ICKETS FOR SALE TO ALL PARTS of Europe via the Cunard and National Steamship Lines, and the Hamburg-Amer‘can it Established 1858. | A.T.SIMPSON'S A % CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY 588 & 540 Fourteenth Street, (Office up staire,) Omaha, Nebraska. Carriages and Buggies on hand or wade to order. 'N. B.~-Particular attention paid to_Repair ing. pr2s-t1 BYRON REED. LEWIS £, REED BYRON REED & C0. The Oldest Established Real Estate Agency IN NEBRASKA Keep a complete Abstract of Title to ail Real The Foatrice —AND— T, Ty ¥ .ither at the factory, whic cb., or at the Pipe works and in any q is located ut Beatri 82-0RDERS FULLY SOLICIT] ADDRESS, | BEATRICE MYDRAULIC CEMENT ! & PIPE 0. ROM DEALERS RESPECT- | ). | 1 NEBRASKA. JOHN H. GREEN, | STATE MILLS | DEALER IN GRAIN, FLOUR AND FEED, | axD COMMISSION \IERCHé.\'T. | | FomN PaAaRK. | 255 Harney street, between 14/h and 15th. | | | | | | Carriage and Wagon Making In all it Branches, In the latest and most approved pttern. HORSE SHOEING AND BLACKSMITHING oyl repairing donie on ahort notie. VAN DORN’S MACHINE | SBEOF. Al kinds of light and heavy MACHINERY MADE & REPAIRED. B@All Wok Guarantee." 9% “W STREETL, - OMAHA. | 225 Fernham Street, - - ONMATEIA < HENRY LATETY, Douglas St. Cor. 12th, = = = W. B. RICEARDSON. Omaha nEB A PITCH, FELT AND GRAVEL ROOFER. And Manufacturer of Dry ani Saturated Roofing and Sheathing Felt. ALSO DEA Roofing, Pitch, Coal, Tax, (OOF:NG inany part of Nebraska or adjoi 12th treet. Addrecs P O. Box 452. LERS IN ping States. Gfice o posite the Gas Works, on | C. F. GOODMAN, OMAHA - = WHOLESALE DRUGGIST, = wwmrosm=e | And Dealer In PAID T8, 0ILS AND WINDOW GLASS, WATholesale Lumbe Omaha. Nebraslga. sero. M. J. McKELLIGON, DirorTeR AND JonBER 0F FOREIGN AND DoMESTIC WINES and LIQUORS, Tobaccos and Cigars, No. 142 FARNHAM STREET, OMAHA, NEB. 01d Kentucky Whiskies a Spee BZAGENT FOR THE ELDORADO july2 1y LEADING ’ Portexr’s .Ale, of Joliot, Xil. y. WINE COMPAXY, CALIFORNIA."83 , Cards, rculars, Shipping Tags, Ete., Letter Heads, it BOTTOM PRICES. A SPECIALTY MADE PxINTING Bill-Heads, - JAS. M. M°VITTIE. .~-WHOLESALE DEALER Cla ried Cider. 135 and 156 Farnbam Street. H. C. WALKIR, —MANUFACYUKEY AND DEALER IN— BOOTS & SHOES | 510 18th St. Between Faroham and Douglas apisvl WILLIAM SEXAUER. Omaha, Neb —WHOLKSALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN— FURNITURE. BEDDING. ETC. ENOCH HENNEY, Justice of the Peace Office over tho StatelPank, ‘corner of Farn- bam and 13th streets. 13 R 4 JACOEB CISH, | 261 Farnham St., Bet. J4th & 15th | These lands are In the eentral portion of the United S itude, growlng and stoc OHBAPER IN PRICE, more favorableterms given. snd more convanient to market thia ca oo ound Ein (COLONISTS and ACTUAL SETULERS canhuy on Ten Years' Credit. Laads 3t tas wam _. | Soldiers Entit{ed to a Homestead i ¥Froo and Dan’ va, mailad free everyw bore. | alyzidar FARNHAM ST, =macwicaxn | NEBRASKA. WATCHMAKERS,|OF JEWELRY FURNISHING GOODS, &0. &C. 'WATCHES & CLOCKS Dealers Can Save TIME and FREIGHT by Booksellers Z Static WALL PAPERS, DECORATION 4 No.188 Farnham Street. Omaha, N& mte, =te. W holesale Lumbe On U. P. Track, bet Farn WIIOLESALE PAIN COAL OIL AND HEAD-LIGHT OMAHA - BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURE | Masczie, 0dd Fellows and Knights of Pyt LODGE PROPERTIES, JEWELS, BOOKS, THE GARDEN OF THE WEST NOW FOR SALE the centrul line of the great Temperate Zoue of the American X raising unsurpassed by any in the United States. sew here. FIVE and TEN YEARS' eredit given with interest a: orlos to all OREDIT PURCHASERS. | A Doduction TEN PER CENT. FOR CASH. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR AGTUAL SETTL pad the Best Locations for Colonies! Acres. Passos to Purchameors of Taand 4 for now Descriptive Pamphlet, with new riaps, peblished in i Soaa o, - - diress DA TES Land Commissioner U. P. .1t Co. Omaha, N A. B. HUBEKMANN & CO., Manufacturor S. E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. JEWELRY AND PLATER-WARE, | AT WHOLESALE OR RETAIL. ¥ Ordering of Us. ENGRAVING DONE FREE OF CHAR “OODS WARRANTIoD TO BE AS R 1an31-tf 3. GaturmL. 8. C. ABBO DEALERS IN AaND WINDOW SEHADIS, Publishers® Agents for School Books used in Nebraska. GEO. A. HOAGLAND, ——OFFICE AND YARD— COR. OF DOUGLAS AND 6TRSTS,, U. P. B. R, TRACR. NEH WINDOWS, DOORS, ELINDS, MOULDINGS, &C Plaster Paris, Hair, Dry and Tarred Feifg i Sole Agents for Bear Creek Lime and Louisville Cemeat OFFICE AND YARL N. I D. SOLOMON, apr2tt OIL3 AND WINDOW CGLASS, mhan! g NEBRA FAIRLIE & MONELL, Stationers, Engravers and Printers. NOTARIAL AND LODCE SEAL UNIFORMS XPRE OMAZEIA.TT EaEASTERN PRICES AN D 282 Douslas Streot, - [ i | UNDERTAKER City Meat Market. — SEEELY BROS. Keep constartly on band 4 LARGE SUPPLY OF B = , P oORX MUTTOS, POULTRY, ——axp— vEGETABLES GAME CARPEN EAP, DURABLE, x o Office and Shop: 1 ’ 11th st::‘n bet. Faraham and Harvey, | syl ARTHUR BUCKBEE. TER, BUILD —AND DEALER IN— ORNAMENTAL HONHI NOUI For Yards, Lawns, Cemeteries ChurchGroads ana Pubiic Pai ‘ oM

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