Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 1, 1874, Page 3

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’—' 5 1 ,JE OMAHA BEL : ALS OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITT. gt gl dird e { TO CORRESPONDENTS. | whatever ton of what nature soever. This is Dot ln- tended for publication, but lor our own sstls- faction snd as proof of good faith. Ous Covwray FaiExps we will always be ‘pleased o bear from, on sll matiers connected with crops, country politics, and on any sub- Joct whatever of general inierest 1o the peo- | our State. Any information connect- od with the election. and relating to floods, | Schients. ste., will be gladly received. All such communicetions, bowever, must be s poasible; and tuey must, io all cases, :tdu-q“nn.flld the shest only. Tur French Assembly refuses to dissolve and McMahon will proba- bly have to turn them out by forei~ ble invitaf THE county are.on themove. A gather- ing of the Ko-op Klan, and all the oppressed industry, will thke place in this - city ~Ssturday. Doctor Johnson has prepared a stirring ad- dress to awaken the slumbering ery and a recognition of his invalu- able services in their behalf. be called by its chairman, Mr. dents of Douglas | other Klans that sympathize with | toilers into a realization of their mis- A m eeting of the Douglas County Republican Central Committee will OCCIDENTAL JOTTANGS. (COLORADO. The red-skin scare is about over. Considerable- activity prevails im the gulch mines of Summit county. ‘Working men_are getting $4 day in the San Juan mines. 2 Grasshoppers are reported numer- ous in various parts of the territory. Thie territorial election tukesplace September 8th. Grading has commenced on the Pueblo and Salt Lake railroad. A party of twenty men left Col- orado Springs, last week, for Bear River valley, to prospect for gold. A large box of silver bullion, which was lost recently from a | coach in southern California, has been recovered. It had rolled down a declivity into a clump of bushes. a2 , Rareorehty pounds each at 3ioad: New mines are being opened, and | the demand ‘for transportation is | constantly in excess of the supply. | The army worms in the beet | flelds of Davisville, heve been erad- ieated by a flock of five hundred tur- | ke ¢rop NOW promises un- | nsmy ‘well—from - thirty to- forty tons to the acre. - The beets will be sent to the Sacramento sugarie this year, but steps have been taken to establish a factory st Davisville be- fore next season. ‘Work on the southern branch of | the Central Pacific Railroad is pro- gressing finely, and the track is now | Iaid to. within a mile and A half of | Kern river. A side-track has been constructed for a few miles on the north side of the river, in accordance | with the Jaw that requires a switch | every ten miles. Next week work will be commenced on a long trestle ! and tridge, and a force of carpenters | BANKING. U.8. DEPQSITORY The First National Bank OF OMAIIA. Corner of Farham and 13th Rtreets. ! THEOLDEST BANKING ESTABLISEmERT IN NEBRASKA, (Successors to Kountse Brothers.) ESTABLISHED IN 1858. Organised as & National Bank, August 26,1863 | Capital and Profits over - $250,000 OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS: E. CREIGHTON, | A. KOUNTZE, President. Cashier. H. COUNTZE, H. W. YATES, Vice Pres't. As’t Cashier. A. J. POPPLETON, Attorney. ALVIN SAUNDERS, 05 LOWE MAX MEYER & BROTHER, OMAHA, NEBRASKA [P Wous wo 9010 0 Sy wondysoe Lt T =55 Purniture Dealers LR T : Nos. 187,182 and 191 Fa1 nham Stree_t. ! STATE i ‘OM.A.EA. NEBRASKA. | SAVINGS BANK, | MILTON ROGERS. will begin work upon the depot building: Passenger_trains will go as far as the river on Monday. The discovery of wild coffee in various parts of the State has crea- ted great ‘interest on_the subject, and the ada) lity of the soil and elimate of California to the growth Chauncey Wiltse, in & few days, with a view of fixing the time for holding the County primaries and S gy the County Convention. When the and will b charged as ad- | call is issued, we intend to make | some suggestions for a better protec. 1 PoLITICAL. { Az ANNO! SOEMENTS of esndidstes lor office sther made by sell or iriends, and whether 8 ol ‘eesor conunications o ‘e There were shipped from West Las Animas, during the weekyends ing last ‘thursday, six hundred heads of ‘sheep, three carloads of cattle, and about eighty thousand pounds of wool. The Greeley people are in trouble BEH LN ONOOD nvpEu | Onand after Octobs twenty-frst, 1672, the | tion against fraud in the primaries. AT the last meeting of the Repub- because they can’tget water enough for their crops.and their town; | grasshoppers are vexing thesouls of the Boulder county farmers; the shade-trees of Denver are shrivel- of the genuine article. Tn Monterey county Mr. Watersis expenment. | ing on its growth at his farm in | Carmello vailey. His plants this | N. W. Cor. Farnham aud 13th Sts., Capital.... $ 100, Authori % 1,000,000 40 $4R¢ MOBNTANY ‘ANVH NO~ AILNVISNOD $48VO MOHS 40 )OLS CHEAP FARMS! On toe Line of_the sity eirculation of the DAILY BEE is assumed by Mr. Edwin Davis, to whose order all wub- scriptions not paid st the offico will be paysble. 04 by whom all receipts for subacriptions will ‘count 'E. KOSEWATER. Publisher year are not looking so well as they | | have done, owing to their exposure to the sea breeze; but this fact does | not shake his conviction that under | more favorable conditions the coffee | tree can be made to fiourish and | yielda handsome crop. ' Mr. Davis Devine, of San Jose, Who -knows | something of ‘coffee culture, wrios | to the Auburn Herald that he bes | heves the coffee trep “‘will flourish | in Placer,El Doradoand other coun- ties on the foothills of the Sierra | Nevadas, after you rise 1,500 above the sea level, and from that to 4,500. IWherever you find the wild coffee you may be assured the tree will | Hlourish finely. OREGON, Oregon and Washington Terri- | tory will have a wheat surplus of | 120,000 tons this year. | | Albany will be the big manufac- | turing eity of the Willamette Val- | ley in another decade. So says an exchange. A eou:guny has been organized in Qorvallis, Oregon, for the purpose of constructing & narrow gauge rail- road from Corvallis to the navigable waters of Yaquina Bay, to connnect there with ocean steamers and sail- ing vessels. Immense business is now being done in the canning of salmon among the fisheries on the lower Columbia. The warehouse at As- toria is jammed full of cases, ready for shipment. MONTANA. The Jefferson river is now so low that miners in the Canon Distriet are busily engaged in constructing wing dams to work their claims. The Bozeman Courier of July 11 says: “We are credibly informed that rich river mines have been dis- covered on the Missourl opposite Nave’s, and about eight miles from Radershurg. Twenty-five cents to the pan have been obtained. The river prospects well from the Three Forks to Nave’s, and the greatest | excitement prevails in the settle- | ments contiguous to the river. The country around Camp Lewis lican State Central Committee Mr. P. O'Hawes stated that he had for- warded $1,000 to C. E. Yost during the campaign of 1872 for the benefit of the Republican party. Not one cent of thismoney ever came into the hands of the committee, nor have they ever been ghle to Jearn what disposition was made of it. Now, inasmuch as the committee is still in debt to various parties for le- gitimate expenses, it might be of general interest to know what be- | came of this money? Dsrnsn_s Jar seco v jowed on the 5 ing in the drought. Del Norte was all excitement last week. The cause of the stir and commotion was the reported dis- covery of several gold-leads at the head of the south- fork of the Rio Grande river. Specimens of top rock were exhibited which assayed $1,000 per ton. A stampede was theresult. At lastaccountsseventy- five or & hundred miners had started for the new mines, UTAH, | Thirty inches of rain has fallen in Utah this season. Twenty inches, evenly distributed and timely, usu- ally insures good crops. Wagons are now hauling coal from Weber, Salt Lake is thus | showing her determination to be in- dependent of the Union Paclfic rall- road for coal. ‘The Mormon authorities at Frank-- | lin, in_ the northern part of Utahy are arranging to have their Sho- shone Indian converts vote at the | eleation in that eity. Ann Eliza Young delivered her first lecture in Salt Lake City on the evening of July 20, at the Metho- dist Church, which was crowded. Six of Brigham’s daughters and many other Mormon ladies were present. Salt Lake has commenced an ac- tion of agninst the com- mander and other officers of Cagp Douglas for breaking into the city {;!l and foreibly releasing a soldier, virtue of the autuority of the Seeretary of War. _ During a heavy storm on the af- ternoan of July £8 inSalt Lake City, the Catholic church was struck by lightning and badly damaged. there was also a cloud hurst, - flood- ing the streets and private resi- dences, Nearly a doz:n stones, remarks the Salt Lake 7iibune, have been placed on the new temple this sea- son, at a cost of about a thousand dollars apiece. This building figures up this way : Twenty years ago the foundation was laid. To-day that Wholesale Stoves A el AS SMALL, AS ONE DOL- compound pterest al- l 'Union Pacific Railroa 5 A a2 Grant of 12,000,000 Acrwof the best PARMING sad MINERAL Laads of Amer! TINWARE and TINNERS' STOCE. | 1,000,000 ACKFS IN NEBRASKA IN THE GREAT PLATTE VALLY THE GARDEN OF THE WEST NOW FOR SALE These 1ands are In the eantral portion of the United States, on the 4ist degree of Noirh 1 ude, "American Cntient, and for gra) itude, the comral nnm“z::pmwnz&n#u.: ‘merican Ccntient, and fo R IN PRICE, von. and more ooavenlent to market thia ¢ | OHEAPER IN PRIOE, more taversblotarms given, wa Advantages OVER Certificates of Deposit: HE WHOLE OR ANY PART OF A DE- positafter remaining in this Benk three | months, will draw interest from d.te of depos- | it to payment. The whole or any partof a de- | L “we. H % SR _Tha)ldest Establishea BANKING HOUSE| p————————— REFUBLICAN STATE CONVENTION, ——BOLE WESTERN AGENCY FOR—— STEWART’S COOKING and HEATING STOVES, THE “FEABLESS,” COOKING STOVES, CELEBRATED CHARTER OAK COOKING STOVES, R rcon L commigen 1o T 0 ALl of Which Will be Sold at Manufacturers’ Prices, With Freightadded. 2ad the Best Locations for Colonies! |Qoldiers Entitled to a Homestead | 160 Acres. ree XFassos to cohaners i Send for pew Deseriptive Pampliet, with new maps, pobiished fn Exclich ¢ % erywhen. D et Omamisionss U P. BB Co. A Republican State Convention will be held at the :lly of Lincoln on WI‘dnflflly. toe 24 Suy of Sept. mber, 1574, at 3o'clock P m-, for the purpose of ylacing in neminstion one cspdidste for Congress, one candinste for et Congress contingent, caodidates for Governor, Secetary of State, Treasurer, Superintendent of blic 1nstructlon, ' Inspector. Gepers) lor the transaction of may p-operly cowe before it. The g cs. from esch jwflk'h\ District "ifl :‘:Imln“ s wirict Attoracy, for helr Febpee- S e %= r. Yostwasnota memberof any neamErmizet couniies o entiled Lo dole | Republican Committe, either Coun- ‘Countics east of the sixth Principal Meridian | % 3 et . delegais Jor sach 100 | 151 State or National. Can Mr. m'db-'u-r-,mum o the couses taken dur- Hawes inform us how this money Corfouy 3 AT, and ome Jor ity — - :"‘I! five bundred. d county at least one delegate. Organized counties west cf the 6th F. M., shall s entitied to one deiegate each, and 10 one ! :aw-l m = :f:.“:_;;""“ 1‘: PosTMASTER YosT had better put Eaie for sacu fraétion over five bundred, | money in his purse, by dismissing L that special ambassador, who is to R L | go to Washington, to plead his cause. This is pot a matter that can be whitewashed by corrupt agents, or covered up by diplomatic pleading. It is & matter that interests not ouly citizens of Omaha, but is viewed with much concern by the people of the whole State. An officer who holds the most lu- crative position within the gift of Senator Hitchcook, Js publicly charged with, and convicted of, grave and disgraceful misdemean- ors. He attempts, unsuccessfully, to cover up his corrupt aots through whitewsshing detectives and influ- ential personal friends. He may, by such a course, temporarily mislead the Department Officers at Washington, but there is no escape from the popular verdiot. That verdict will reverberate in thunder tones throughout the State, and even Senator Hitehcock, with all the backing at his command, will FIVE and TEN YEAES® crodit given with iatereet a: SIX PER CENT OOLONISTS and sCTUAL SETULERS canbuy on Ten Yoars' Credit. Lands st ths ve srioe i all OREDIT PURCHASERS. A Deductica TEN PER CENT. FOR CASH. A such other business as IN NBRASKA. Caldwell, Hamiitos & Co., BANEKERS. Business transacted same as that | of au Ineorporated Bank. ! Aceounts kept in Cnrrency or Gold | subject to sight chock without no- | Certificates of Deposit Issued pay- | able on demand, or at fixed date | bearing interest at six percent. per | annum, and available in in all parts | of the countr | Advances e to customers on | a};proud securities at market rates | of_interest. | Buy and sell Gold, Bills of Ex- | hay Government, State, County, | ln% Bonds. | e special attention to nego- | tiating road and other Cnrgp:: 2 rate Loans issued within the Stato. Ireland, Scofland, and all f Europe. 5 B | Port ca]ho | | i | | | ap27%1 Send for Price Lis: B J. A. THORUP, NEBRASKA SHIRY ANI]PASTBBY of Tian 1 | Manufaocoturor FARNHAM ST, FARNHAM ST, NEBRASKA. OMAHA, WA _ | SHIRTS AND GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, &C. &0, | I~ Satisfation guarrantsed. "8 Shirts ofall kinds made to order. aprilyleod \ - un Mills. &% MEAL, | Dealers Can Save TIME and FREIGHT § Ordering of Us. ENGBAVING DONE FREE OF CHARGE! $&ALL GOODS WARRANID TO BE AS REFRESENTE! s 1ansi-tf FPRACTICAL | WATCHMAKERS,|OF JEWELR S. E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. WATCHES & CLOCKS JEWELRY AND PLATED-WARE, AT WHOLESALE OR RETAIL. Draw Sight Drafts on_ England, Sell European Passage Tickets. | COLILECTIONS PRONPTLY MADE. au EZRA MILLARD, | J. H. MILLARD, President. | hier. OMATETA NATIONALBANK Cor. Douglas and Thirteenth Strects. OMAHA, - ~ NELRASKA. ? remomsounBaseeecunneSoasons FLOUR, FEED Manufactured with Great Care from the Best Grain. i Cleneral Depot, Cor. 14th & Dodge Sts,“ woy, OMAXA. ‘ WHOLESALE: CANDIES, I amr + cw inanutacturing all varieties of candies ’ serna slect fafl 0 attend the convention; sad Convention is recommended to exclude proxies for delegaies that do not reside in the counties they propose to represent By order of the committee. ¥, M. Jowwsos, Chairman. ELAM CLARK. C. H. Gerx, — J. Cavurmn, s.C be unable to resistit, foundation is twelve feet above the ground, and the $2,000,000 collected is alive with Crow Indians, their whole force being mustered there to Capital. = ,900 00 Surplus and Profits ¥ 30,000 00 and willsella **8. C. ABBOIT & CO., abroad for the building of the Tem- o have found their way into Brig- ’sbag. He holds the bag. NEVADA. ‘Wood is retailing in Austin at $10 to $11 per cord. Eureka, Nevada, is to heve gas works, receive their annuities, which have been forwarded to that point for dis- ribution. The Mountain Crows had also begun to arrive, and reported that all of their bands were enroute from the Crow Agenoy. The entire absence of the ws from their Ageney 1 doubtlesstho resson why the Sloux have recentiy been so — LiFEon the Locomotive is full of thrilling incidents and Lair-breadth escapes. Another heroic deed, no- bly performed, occurred last Mon- day on the West Wisconsin road. Hewasa fireman. The train was INANCIAL AG] FOR THE UNITED STATES. — { ANT DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY FOR | DISBURSING OFFCERS. THIS BANK DEALS | in Exchange, Government Boods, Vouchers, | Gold Coin, |:B ULLION and GOLD DUST. | A HASTERN PRICES| Dealers in this State need not want tv go East for CANDIES. A trial is solicited. HENRY LATEY, AND now it transph es that Treas- urer Spinner and Secretary Bristow are not, and have never been, at Booksellers Stationer : DEALERS IN WALL PAPERS, DECORATIONY aAaND — Nowhat we are to have a Brevet Congressmai{ie g jon natural- Douglas St. Cor. 12th, Omaha 1y arises, who is o be exalted to this supernumerary contingeney ? — \ GEx. SHERMAN has returned to Washington from his tour through. Virginia, and is now ‘making active preparations for the contemplated removal of army headquaiters to 8t. Louis. 2, — L THe idea thit the defection of any German Republican can alie- niate any considerable number ,o.( Germans . from _ the ranks, is very effectually exploded by Mr. Charles Bankes, who briefly reviews the political situation-in our local columns. —_— GoVERNOR GENERAY, WELCH is beginning to muster his forees on e o o8 Hipublean Blate Convention:~ Politieal scouts have been dispatehied to the South Platte * gountry to nbsetye ‘'the movements of the enemy. — P Pomeroy bribery case, which was set for trial on July 29th, has again been put ofr. 5 Poiperyaiat: torneys succeeded in obtaining & change of venue, and the ease goes over unti] after election sidv”’ has evidently. no anxiety to clear himself before the courts. [ p— OLD PROBABILITIES is now puzzl- ing “bis brain over the uuforseen storm thet déluged “Pittsburg DTE’ £ Itappears at the ‘burg signal had noticed no indications of an approaching sterm. beyond & slight change in the rushing along at the rate of twenty miles an hour, and was just turning a eurve when the engineer discov- ered a child upon the road-bed, un- nscious of impending peril. The es were whistled down, but so near was the locomotive to the child that it Would assuredly have been crushed had not James Bassford, the fireman; seeing the child’s danger, ran Gut upon the engine and down upon the cow-catcher. His intention wasto jumpto the road-bed, catch the child, and leap from the track. But there was not sufficient time ; so that it fell between the ties, and hurled down the embankment. The child was found unharmed under ‘the fire-box of the en- gine, and Bassford escaped with some slight contusions. ‘Bassford’s bravery deserves the highest praise, and it is tabe hoped will meet with substantial recogni- tion, - ——— UNCLAIMED PACKAGES. A very important decision has just been rengered by the Suprema Court of Pennsylvania, declaring the public sale of unclaimed packa- Judge Mercur, who delivered the opinion of the court in a test case, said: “The first and second sections of the act of the 14th of December, to sell the property, aul sed the company to ‘expose’ it to The fair sale at public .auction. meaning ol['- 'r:poaa‘ in this statute, ‘exhibit,’ ‘to bring view,! ‘display,’ ‘to point out op show to the bystanders.’ Seiling the trunks with the goods locked up the con- with] from 1 knowledge of the character or value of the contents, and ' clearly was not within the meaning of the law which direets d deseribin; own. in them, & tents a8 unl the bidders »w.m'lnnerofnlm " This manner of selling goods he could only knock the child over when he was struck by the cateher - g . 6 and 7, un= ler which mfia‘t‘flfh erm;m of y valueds unjust to the owner. It ver for a corporation to say this method its sales in the Several of the millsin Gold Canon, (Gold Hill, have shut down for.want of ore. The building fever continues to rage in Gold Hill, on the Divideand in Virginia. Rich placer mines have just been discovered on Bartlett Creek, sixty miles northwest of Winnemueea. Destructive fires have been rag- ing in the forests near Cornelian Bay, Lake Tahoe, and are supposed to be the work of incendiaries, or evil disposed persons. The Virginia and Truckee rail- road offiee in Virginia now furnishes through tickets to Omaha and 8t. Louis—first-class’ to = the former place,”$90 ; to the latter, $105; in currency. It is rumored that a Vigilance Committee has been organized in Reno, and that the gamblers and Hoodlums have been notified to leave. Nothing definite is known except that quite a number have left: The Nevada Democratic State Central Committee adopted resolu- tions in favor of laws regulating railcoad freights and fares, and tax~ ing railroad pi at_its oash value, The test for voters at the primaries is' opposition to Grant’s administration. In the early days of smelting in Nevada, says the White Pine News, it was found necessary to obtain a substance forliniag pur- poses which would resist theintense heat tequired in smelting, and the Pancake sandstone was the result of explorations to discover the same. Since that time fire brick has_been imported from St. Louis, Phila- delphia and other points with which to line up furnaces, but, after & short trial, it 'was found that nothing would so well fill the billas did the “Pancake.” - T A % a large traffic bas sprung up ‘in’ line of business, and orders are re- celved fromall neighboring districts, as well a8 from Omahs sid San Francisco. Al furnaceamen agree that no other sione has’ ever yot been found the equal-of that now in use. CALIFORNIA. . Sacramento is tohavea fire alarm telegraph. . Marysville is putting in a elsim for the location of the Lick observa- tory. The oil vre;h being sunk at San Fernaudo, show esecellent indica- tions. v B A diamond i half carats has. Velley, s Yuha Gout | the head and neck, sufficient, in bold and troublesome in that quar- ter. Benton still maintains her supre- mecy as “the head of navigation,” on the Missouri. The arrival of the Josephine, one of the finest boats that ever ascended the Big Muddy, has surprised many, for it was gen- erally predicted that she would not be able to reach a point above Cow Island, on account of the low water. Her ‘successful trip—the second of the season—demonstrates the fact that navigation on the upper Mis- souri- for five or six months in the year, is not to be counted among the impossibilities. — Shocking Murder at Elm Creek. (Grand Island Times.) The dead body of a stranger was found near Elm Creek on Sunday night who had doubtless been bru- tally murdered by some of the gangs of ruffians, dead beats and thieves who continually infest the line of the Union Pacificrailroad, He was found by a settler, lylug on his face about fifty yards east of the eastern end of the switch at that place, and had apparently been d from 36 to 48 howrs.” His features were very much swollen and be was mition. Not a thing was found about hisclothing or upon his person to indicate who he was, or where he came from, His hands were folded under his face and one of them a pistol, a fact that would indicate that ke endeavored togell'hislife dearly. His pooket- book was fouud empty and his waltch remained urm 'his person un- touched, The fact that five bullets had plerced his person, utterly re- futes the idea of suicide. The conelu- sion only remains that a brutal and ceowardly murder has been commit- ted by some y or parties un- known, and who have made good thelr escape. The murdered man 'was well dressed, hadchin whiskers, and was apparently about thirty yearsof age, We hope every effort will he made to ferret out and bring J this high- handed and brutal erime. To this end the governor should offer a reward at once for the ar- rest and convietion of the murderer or murderers, or for information that would lead to their detection | and punishment. The Kearney Press of the 27ih furnishes us with the following re- sults arrived at by the coroner's jury: "8a the 27th day of July, 1874, we, being duly subpcenaed by Dr. J. T. Brown, coroner of Buffalo mmo hold an_inquest over a dead body found st Elm Creek, Buf- falo county, Nebraska, evening, July 26th, 1874, we with the coroner examined the body, about six hundred yards east of the station and about fifty yards south of the Union Pacific railroad, lying on his face with a small Derrin, io'his. right hand. On nnm%g:; ',hgfl[::dy we found one bullet hole in the left breast- which penetrated the:left_lung near -the heart, “also let holes in the right side of our opinion, to cause : He was dromed in good black | And sells drafts and oakes collections on all g o justice the author or authors of WFULLY ‘BEATRICE HYDRAULIC CEWENT | & PIPE €0. | MACHINERY NADE & REPATRED. parts of Europe. BF-Draits drawn payable in gold or curren- cyen the Bank of California, San Francisco. ICKETS FOR SALE TO ALL PARTS | of Earope via the Cunard and National | Steamship Lives, and the Hamburg-Amer'can | Packet Comp*n: Jy2at Established 1858. A.T.SIMEPSON'S meb11t! W. B. RICHARDSON. OMATEIA PITCH, FELT AND GRAVEL ROOFER. And Manufactarer of Dry and Saturated Roofing and Shemhing Felt. ALSO DEALERS IN Roofing, Pitch, Coal, Tar, Etc, Etc.| art of Nebrasks or adjolping States. Ofice opposite the OOF:NG fnany p 12th treet. Address P. O. Box WINDOW SHADES, No. 188 Farnham Street. Omaha, Publishers’ Agents for School Books used in Nebraska. GEO. A. HOAGLAND, Wholesale Lumb —OFFICE AND YARD— NEBRASKA. es Works, on 588 & 540 Fourteenth Street, (Ofico up staurs,) Omaha, Nebraska. (8 ugpics on hand or e 1o S 5§ N. B—Particular attention paid to Repair ing. serii ‘BYROX REED. Lxws. 5. REED || BYRON REED & €0. 1 The Oldest Establistied Real Estate Agency IJ N NEBRASKA d Keep tomplete Abstract 5f Title to all Reak { Estatein Ora<ha and Douglas count. The Peatrice Hydraulic, Cement, —AND— PIPE COMPANTY, OULD INFORM THE PUBLIC THAT' sher are now rady lo furuish HY- DRAULIC CEMENT, of the very best quality , and b any quantity,either at the factory, whic:h is located st Beatricé,Neb., or at the Pipe wor ks In Ouaha, They alsoare: prepared o fura’ sh mupdmcmh%rwnhzi}i ORDERS FROM DEALERS RESPECT- SOLICITED. ADDRESS. OMATTA JOHN H. GREEN, STATE MILLS VEALEE IN GBAIN, FLOUR AND FEED, awp COMMISSION MERCHANT. TOEN PAaARK. 258 Harny siceet, between 14fh and 15th. NEBRASKA. | YAN DORN’S MACHINE | SEOF. All Kinds ofelight and eavy s Al Work Guarantert @R | uwnm . OMAHA. | C. F. GOODMAN, WHOLESALE DRUGGIST, And Dealer In PAINTS, OILS AND WINDOW GLASS, Omaha. Nebraska. COR. OF DOUGLAS AND ¢TH ST8,, U. P. B. R. TRACE. IOMAETA NH WM. M. FOSTER. Wwholesale Lumbd Jotott. M. J. McKBELLIGON, IuPoRTER AXD JoBBER OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC WINES and LIQUORS Tobaccos and Cigarsy No. 142 FARNHAM STREET, OMAHA, NEB. 01d Kentucky Whiskies a Specialty. 9@ AGENT FOR THE ELDORADO WINE COMPANY, CALIFORNIA. %3 July21y FPortex’s Ale, WINDOWS, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, & Plaster Paris, Har, Dry and Tarred F¢ Sole Agents for Bear feek Lime and Loulsville Cemeat ; ot p. O A i eud s JOMA HA, et of Joliet. Xll. 2 GRA Y, w. LEADING o PRINTE 3 Twelfth s, B v sag e GEO 308 pl petwee® (] Cards, At BOTTOM PRICES. OILS AND +mow CLAS \ | COAL OIL AN{HEAD-LIGHT T S NEBA ‘ FAIRLI1& MONELL, “BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURS Stationers, Efravers and Printers. NOTARIAL ATD LODCE SEA oy He; ABPECIAL! V) Bl i -TYl E P! ipping | Mascsie, 0dd Fellos and Knights of JAS. ‘M. M°VITTIE. .~WHOLESALE DEALER IN— Cla ried Cider. 135 and 156 Farnbam Street. H. C. WALKIR _MANUFA CYUKEY. AND DEALER IN— BOOTS & SHOES 51018t St. 'Between Farsham and Douglas’ apisvl 0 cor b (SRR TR NG PR O U 1 2y WILLIAM SEXAUER. 225 Frnham Streot, Omahs, Hob —WHOLRSALE AND RETAIL DEALER 1X— ENOCH HENNEY, Justice of the Peace Qffies over tho State’Bank, ‘corner of Farn- bam and 13th streeta. E ES, JEELS, BOOKS, BLAX EXPRESS. &t | LODGE PROPERT! $EAS ODIAZIA.T) STERN HCES AND 282 Douslas Stxpt, ARTH/R BUCKBEE. ARPENJER, BUILD XD DEALER IN— =] City Meat Market. e Keep constantly on’band 4 LARGE SUPPLY OF Baun» Ponx MUTTON, , POULTRY, GANE —aXD— vEGETABLES ~AND- RNAMENTAL CHEAP, DURABLE, Office nd Shop. | 410 Btreet bet: Farabam ) apristl

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