Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 6, 1874, Page 2

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i— .HE OMAEHA BEE OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY. TO CORRESPONDENTS. WE D0 XOT desire sny contsibuticns whatevar | i a Uterary or poetical character ; nin{ will pot undertake to preserve, or to return | be same, in sny case whatever. Our Stafl 1s sufSciently large to more than supply our | limited space in that direction. { Bxar Nawe o7 WITE, in full, must 1n each | snd every case sccompany any communica- tion of what nature soever. -This is ot in- tended for publication, but for eur own satis- faction and as proof of good faith. Ot Covsrar Faixxps we will always be | pleased 10 hear from, on all mattars conected | with crope, country politics, and on any sub- | Ject whatever of general interest to the peo- ple of our State. Any information connect- od with the election. and relating %o foods, accidents. ete., will be gisdly received. Al | such communicvtions, however, must be | briet as possible; and taey must, in all cases, | pe written up™c one side of the sheet only. | PoLITICAL. AL ANNO! NCEMENTS of candidates for offce | —whether made by self or friends, snd | ‘whether as 0ol ‘css0r con..iunications to ‘de | Editor, are (unti] pominations are made) | simply personal, and will be charged as ad- | vertiseme ats All communications should be sddressed to | £ EOSEWATER, Edltor and Publisher, Drav- | o | NOTICE. On and after October twenty-first, 1672, the | eity cizculation of the DAILY Bex is sssumed by Mr. Edwin Davis, to whose order all sub- 'Jpllnulflmpldllmm'fllh”ylhl; d by whom all for tiens wi sy rocelpta for subserip 'E. KOSEWATER. Publisher b i Republica e at'the Sity of Lincoln on Wednesaay, the 24 Say o Sept mber, 1874, at 3o'clock b, m., for he purpose of ylacing in momination’ one candidate for Congress, ope candinate for t Congress contingsnt, candidates for Boviraor, Seteryof Saie Trmsirer e intenaent of Pablic Justraclion, Prison lorpector, and A1 Generl, 1for the transaction of such way p overly come before it. The udicial District wiil momioste a peraor tor Disirict Atlorney, for thelr Tuspes- Bive Distrecta. The orgraized c)!)fln:hl.l":‘ entitiod to dele- s upoa 156 fojlowing basia: B EL s east of tha afiih Principal Meridisn tats , snd from each shell be eniitle! to one te for each 1,000 {nkabitan 3, according to the cengus faken dur- g he curent yest, aod one 10F over five hundred. But sach organi ‘cousty “hall b entitled o at Jeass ome Orgunized counties west of the §th F, al., shali Do entitied to one delegate each, and £o an sdditionsl delegate for each one ts. according 10 the census aforessid, Tor exca fraction over Sve bundred, DELEGATES FOR COUNTIRS. 4 | Johnson. P TR~ E R o 400 00 01t 00 v e B 00 0 o e ke e Be b ke ‘The connties are recommended to elect al- ternate delegates fo act 1o case the delegates “lect fail to #*tend the convention; and the convention ended to exclude proxies hl.r delegates fhey propose (0 represent: iy order of the commitice. C. H. Gerr, Socretary, ——— SHALL we bave another veto on the ordinance abolishing the office of Captain of Police? TrLrox and Beecher again occupy a greater portion of our telegraphic columns, it is to be hoped for the last time. — Tue Chalrman of the Towa Re- publican State Central Committee, after a careful survey of the situar tion, predicts 80,000 majority for the Republican ticket at the im- pending election. — THE bill to put down ritualists and ritualism has met with a seri- ous check in the British House of Lords. Although the bill in ques. tion was prepared at the sugges- sion of the Queen under dictation of the Archbishop of Canterbury, and had been vigorously supported in the House of Commons by Dis- raell, the Lords seemed indisposed to approve the more obnoxious features pointed out by Gladstone. — I~ Nebraska, too, there are those who think the old parties corrupt— the Republican as well as the Dem- ocratic. o they called a people's convention. It met at the State | bunal to discuss this question, and | any direction. ANUTHER NEW DEPARTURZ. } The last number of the Zemper- | anee News, (August 1st.,) contains & call from the Central Commitiee, | of the total Prohibition Party, tora | | State Convention, to be held at Lin- | coln, on Wednesday, August 19th, | for the purpose of putting in nomi- uation a full Congressional and | Btate ticket. The Committee ap- peal to the friends of Prohibition, | anti-monopoly, and anti-class legis- | lation. Those in favor of a radical | change in the manner of electing President, Vice President, snd Senators; and all voters who can heartily endorse he platform of the | National Prohibition Party, are in- | parture.” The frieuds of this movement are assured that the slate is blank, and the Convention will be free from all | former party ties. The call concludes with the admonition: “Gentlemen peace.” in temperance refurm through strin- gent sumptuary laws or prohibitory legislation, it will nevertheless moral courage. it seems to us, how- ever, that they are altogether pre- mature in their attempt to bring their peculiar doctrines to a square issve before the people. | ‘The State of Nebraska is just now mental law. The Legislature of | doubt, call a constitutional conven- tion to amend and revise our present constitution. Even if the Prohi- ‘bitionists were positively assured that they can elect their ticket in October (and we consider this an | utter impossibility) they would | have to renew the struggle for su- | premacy in the constitutional con- | vention, | That convention is the proper tri- | through them the issue can be | squarely put before the people when | the new constitution shall be voted | on. They can then submit the | question of prohibition, local option and license as separate articles, and | let the people pronounce at the bal- Jot box which of these propositions megts their approval. | ‘When the people in their soverign | capacity have adopted a fixed policy | makers to shape their legislation ac- cordingly. After this policy has been fairly tested by experience the people may, if they deem it best, | amend their constitution to suit | the exigencies. In view of | the fact that a constitution- al convention to reconstruct our organic law will be in session within sixty days after their ad Jjournment, the Legislature of 1875 will hardly attempt to transact any business except what is absolutely necessary. After electing a succes- sor to Senator Tipton, agreeing up- on a constitutional convention bill, and passing the appropriation bills, they will find it inexpedient to at- tempt experimental legislation in 1t is, therefore, apparent that the intrusion of the prohibition question into the issues of the pending cam- | paign could serve no good purpose. If the Prohibitionists expect to ac- complish anything by organizing a new politleal party they are, of course, at liberty to proceed. With- | out entering intoa discussion of the merits of their cause, we oan safcly predict that their anticipations will not be realized. | HARTFORD has just made the startling discovery that there are more rogues thun honest men in their community. The Hartford street railway company had, with commendable care, provided their cars with patent “fare boxes” as a check against dishonest ingenuity. The facts just come to light prove, however, that honesty is the only sure preventitive. The fare is seven cents. A .arge number of passeng- ers have been in the habit of com- muting with the drivers for five cents, instead of putting their fares in the box, the dishonest passen- | \ sir. vited to participate in this new de- | hyg firyt name Is Mathias not Mat- do your duty, or forever hold your Now, while the BEE has no faith | cheerfully accord to the leaders in | | this movement a high degree of | on the eve of changing her funda- | boldness mot of earth, denounces ; Great and eternal goodness! As 1675 will, beyond u reasonable | posr an opinion as we have of the | | the zale of 1,000 extras, and the pub- 1t will become the duty of the law | °0¢ of nests has become prover- - | bial. | for such services, “Just as yousay,” | turn found all their patients had re- | shot him dead, Rockaway Valley PERSONALITIES. Mrs. Abraham Lincoln is now re- siding in Paris. Chief Justice Waite is now in Toronto, Canada. Sunset Cox has been ruralizing at Zanesville, O. Mr. Bayard Taylor is expectad home in September. Mr. Cyrus Fieldis on hisway to Tceland, to make himself a guy, Custar might as well be recalled | atonce. Wendell Phillips is pre- paring a lecture on the Indians. Senator Carpenter is quoted as | authority for the statement that | thew. The Hon. John Sherman of Obio bas started on a canvassing tour of | several weeks in Tows, Kansas, and | other States. The following is said to be a very popular song in Duluth. “Beefsteak when I'm hungry, Whisky when I'm dry, Greenbacks when I'm hard up, And heaven when I die.” The oldest settler in Wyoming is John Kobertson, better known as | Uncle Jack Robertson, of Ft. Brdg- | er. He has lived in the Rocky Mountains since 1832. | Esther Shaw, of Davenport, Iows, | has worked thirteen years in a fam- ily without asking for a cent; it | was a very large family which she | worked in, and it boarded in the | Btate Prison. The New York World, with a Theodore Tilton as “koprophagous!”’ man, we could never have suspected him of that.— Courier-Journal. PUNGENTISTIC. Tilton and Betsey are out—on a foul. incription over the door of a Detroit saloon, An assault upon the city elitor of the Nashville Banner resulted in lisher s invited the assaulting gen- tleman to call again. Beecher has evidently read the Bible with profit. He got the best of lilton_in much the same way that the Philistines beat Sampson. “They ploughed with his heifer,” Mr. Beecher, in the last New York Ledger, has an_srticle on robins and robin-neses. His knowl- Sing Sing Official—If you have any trade, prisoner, state it, and we will put you to work at it.” Prisoner (just Loss, I was brung up a bar-tender, and T'd like to go to workat that.” “What’s your business?” said a magistrate of a police court, the other morning to a prisoner, *‘I'm an observationist, your wnrshi?.” “An observationist ! what is that ?” “One who looks around in the day time to see what he can steal at night, if it pleases your worship.” Men who shoot cther men for tampering. with their .wives are called 1msane and acquitted, and men who, like Tilton, don’t shoot other men tamper with their wives, are called insane also. This is logic, Everybody is insane. ¢Straight, if | you please.” At the funeral of his sixth wife, Mr. B. proffered the officiating clergyman a two dollar greenback. | The minister declined it, saying he | was not accustomed to accept pay coolly replied the mcurner, “but that's just what I have been in the habit of paying.” They tell a queer story about the doctors in a certain Texstown who all went last summer to attend a° medical convention. They were ab- sent two months, and on their re- covered, the drug stores had closed, the nurses opened dancing schools, the cemetery was cut up into build- g lots, the undertakers had gone to making fiddles, and the hearse had been painted and sold for a cir- cus wagon. His name is Jem Brown, and he lives in Rockaway Valley, Nevada. | He says to Alf. Warner: “Come over, Alf,; the old woman is dead, and you see I don’t know much about running this funeral busi- ness.”” And Alf, he says: “Jem, feel forye, and I'll see that the old woman_ is_planted as right as a hangel.” But he went off and got drunk, and when Jem met and said it was a case of justifiable homi- cide. “Free lunch at 10 cents" is the | entered)—“Well, | weqther and short crops, the raven- who | destruotion on | not long in laying waste thousands | this place was cool, and its red-hot ; be ‘guessed” his prices were reason- able, and it costs a year's income to stay with him three weeks.”—Bos- | ton Commercial Bulletin. A Macon negto philosopher, dis- cussing the reiations of the races, | said, “You know de turkey, he | roost on de fence, and thie goose, he roost on de ground. You pull de turkey off de fence, and he will git up agin ; you crop him wings, but somehow or nudder he’s gwine to gitback on de fence. Now you put de goose on de fence, an’ he will fall off; he don’t belong dar. De tur- key am de white man; he’s down now, but he’s gwine to git up again. De nigger am de goose; he better | stay whar he belongs.” | Think not the eat hath not a | friend. The Adantic Monthly re- | cently attended to a case ina gentle | and entertaining manner, but it re- | mained to an_English 'doctor to | write of her with enthusiasm. He tells, in book specially devoted to ber, all sorts of tales of hersagacity, fidelity, and humanity, and par- ticulacly lnteresting 3 tis concern- ing the tabby of a Scotch plowman. her wedding Ting to buy the last. But what to do for meat? O, most exeellent cat! brought a fine rabbit and laid it be- side her suffering master. And not | once dud she do this,but every night bird; when, the man having got well and gone about his work, she ceased her puryeying. Let the tra- | ducers of cats read and blush. | — ! Dry Weather, Crops and Grass- | hoppers. | LANCASTER Co., Ang. 3, '74. | Eprror Be: | Much uneasiness has been among | the people of Laneaster, Saline and | Seward counties, especially the far. | mers, in the past thirty days. ground is now dryer than for years, and many are deprived of the neces- saries of life by the extreme dry weather; many wells are about dry, uplands. The potatoe crop is comparatively a failure, nearly all are worthless, except late plantings, and vegeta- bles are very scarce. The wheat and oats, now being threshed, will not yield as abundant as was anticipa- ted, the grains are smaller and dried up,fowing to the fast ripeniug, Prospects for corn were never bet- ter in the State than this season un- til the commencement of harvest, when it was caused to wilt from the extreme heat of the sun, and now only the early planting, witha few exceptions, will be good. Late corn will not fill, and the stalks are so small, and the most thrifty blades on the stalks are dead or burned. With the embarrassments of dry ons GRASSHOPPERS made their appearance, if possible, | to devastate the land. They made their first appearance In South Lin- coln on Saturday eye, July 25th, and by Sunday noon they were to be | seen all over the county. They | came down like snowflakes, and continued to come until Monday. At _first they did not appear to trouble vegetation, but looked for a location where they might open out in full force, they commenced their onday, and were of acres of corn, as well as all kinds | of vegetation. ~They remained in full foree until Friday . afternoon, when a strong wind from the north took a greater part of them south. They are yet to be seen in every di- rection, and on vegetation, Farly corn was severely injured | by them, and late corn will be an | entire failure in many places. The green leaves, husks and silks were first stripped, and in many places the stalk was eaten, They did not stop at fruits in young or- chards, but took the leaves and ten- der branches often. Turnips, rad- dishes and cabbage were a favorite dish; after eating the tops they would bore for the roots. Water- melons and cucumbers were totally destroyed in many places, and ail kinds of vegetation was severely damaged. Grasshoppers appeared worse in the bottoms near streams of water. Salt Creek was unusually thronged, from its source to its mouth, but as they feasted particu- larly on large weeds, principally wild sunflower, the damage was not s0 severe to crops as on the uplands. There will be a scarcity of all kinds of grain except wheat, of which Nebraska will have more than ever before. Almost every farmer will have encugh for bread and to spare, ApD. r— GOING HOME. The man was il and poor. | The doctor ordered meat and | | wine, and the good wife sold That very night she | for a month, now & rabbit, now a | and water for stock Is searce on the | | CULLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. aultf U.S.DEPOSITORY | The First National Bank | o3 omMaxxa. Corner of Farham and 13th Rtreets. THE OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHRENT IN WEBRASKA. (Successorsto Kountze Brothers.) ESTABLISHED IN 1858. Organisod as » Nationsl Bank, August 26,1863 Capital and Profits over - $250,000 i | | i OFFICERS AXD DIRECTORS : E.CREIGHTON, | A. KOUNTZE, President. Cashier. H. COUNTZE, H. W. YATES, Vice Pres't. As't Cashier. | A. J. POPPLETON, Attorney. | ALVIN SAUNDERS, ENOS LOWE President. Vice Presdent. BEN WooD, Cashier. ST ATE SAVINGS BANEK, { N. W. Cor. Farnbam aud 13th Sts., AL DOL- lar sece ved and compound ipterest al- lowed on tke same. Advantages OVER Certificates of Deposit: | FVHE WHOLE OR ANY PART OF A DE- | L posttafter remaining in this Benk thres | ionths, will draw interent from d.te of depos. 1t to payment. ~The whole or any partof . de- posit can he drawn aifany tce. | aug2sis BANKING HOUSE IN NBRASKA. | Caldwell, Hamittos & Co., 1 BANKRRS. | Business transacted same as that | of an Incorporated Bank. Accounts kept in Currency or Gold subject to sight check witheut no- Certificates of Deposit issued pay- able on demand, or at fixed date Interest at six annum, and available in in all parts of the country. Advances made to customers on lppmved securities at market rates of interest. Buy and sell Gold, Bills of Ex- change, Government, State, County, and Cif) Bonds, e give special attention to nego- tiating Railroad and other Cotrf:»- rate Loans issued within the State. Draw Sight Drafts on England, Ireland, Scotland, and all parts of Europe. Sell European Passage Tickets, Presiden OMATETA Cashier. Cor. Dougias and Thirteenth Streets. OMAHA, - ~ NEWLRASKA. Capital..... Surplus snd Prois. FINANCIAL AGENTSFOR THE UNITED ED_DEPOSITORY FOR ANT DESIGNA DISBURSING OFFCERS. THIS BANK DEALS in Exchange, Government Bonds, Vouchers, Gold Corn, s e LBULLIONand GOLDDUST. | : * And sells drafts and rakes collections on all parts of Europe. AE-Drafts drawn payable in gold or curren- cyon the Bank of California, San Francisco. | ICKETS FOR SALE TO A of Europe via the Cunard u Steamship Lines, and the Hamburg-Amer‘can Packet Company. The Oldest Established | percent. per | EZRA MILLARD, I.'. H. MILLARD, | NATIONALBANK | DEWEY | & ‘: STONE,| FurnitureDealers iNos. 187,182 and 191 Fainham Street. OMAEA, NEBRASKA. MILTON ROGERS. | maraw A0 SANVD N CHEAP VI‘ARMS! FREE XOME On tae Line of_the ‘Union Pacific Railroac | | ‘Wholesale Stoves A Lax” Grant of 12,000,000 Acres of the best PARMING and MINERAL Laxds of | TINWARE and TINNERS' STOCE. || 400,000 ACKFS IN NEBRASEA IN THE GREAT PLATTE VAl { THE GARDEN OF THE WEST NOW FOR SALE | ——SOLE WESTERN AGENCY FOR—— growing and stock raising unsurpassed by any in the United States. |STEWART’S COOKING and HEATING STOVES, | OHEAPER IS PRICE, more favorableterms 1 be foand THE “FEARLESS,” COOKING STOVES, CELEBRATED CHARTER OAK COOKING STOVES, | Allof Which Will be Sold at Manufacturers’ Prices, With Freightadded. These lands are in the cantral portion of the United States, on the ist degree of Nu:th itude, the centrul line of the great Temperate Zoue of the American Ccatinent, aud for gx aad more convezient to market then ¢ ers. FIVE and TEN YEARS' credit gives IX PER CENT OOLONISTS azd AOTUAL SETULERS canhay on Ten Yoars' Oredit. Lands st the o wrice to all OREDIT PURCHASERS. A Deduction TEN PEK CENT. FOR CASH. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR AGTUAL SETTLERS. 2ad the Best Locations for Colonies! . |Soldiers Entitled to a Homestead Ao b interest a: | i " _Send for Price Lists. ' Port Calhoun Mills. ! Froe XFamses to mors of T.and e Descriptive Pamphlet, with new maps, poblished in_English, German, ‘malled free everywhere. | Address . vE Land Ce v maha, | FEOUR, TEED & MBAL|S == | Manufactared with Great Care from the Best Grain. A. B. HUBEKMANN & CO,, Cieneral Depot, Cer. 14th & Dodge Sts, PRACTICAL | Mtanuractures sy, OMAXA. | WATCHMAKERS,|OF JEWELR T = uzlas 3 WHOLESALE CANDIES S. E. Cor. 13th & Dougzlas Sts, | Tam ) cw inanutacturing all varieties of candies ; W. ATCHES & CLOCK 3 | and will sella BaAsTERN PrRicEs JEWELRY AND PLATED-WARE, Dealers in this State ueed not want to go East for CANDIES. A trial is solicited. HENRY LATEY, Douglas St Cor-12th, =+ - - _mebn_ ELAM CLARK. AT WHOLESALE OR RETAIN. ‘Dcalers Can Save TIME and FREIGHT Ordering of Us. ENGRAVING DONE FREE OF CHARGE! IEPRESE! Omaha | W. B. RICHARDSON. $&-ALL GOODS WARRANID TO BE 48 OMAZEIA e NEBRASIXA. ¢ Tansi-t PITCH, FELT AND GRAVELROOFER. - _ , : povtrs Seerm e e R 8. C. ABBOTT & CO., ALSO DEALERS IN e | Bookseuers E Stfi%i@fie A TED. Roofing, Pitch, Coal, Tar, Rog:;:‘ll&:nnxfi r:::;flf]el}mkzzv adjoining States. Office opposite the Gas Works, on DEALERS IN Tl e — | WALL PAPERS, DECORATIOIN C. F. GOODMAN, ano WINDOW SHADES, J No. 188 Farnham Street. Cmaha, K| Publishers’ Agents for School Books used in Vebracka. WHOLESALE DRUGGIS And Dealer In PAINTS, OILS AND WINDOW GL! Omaha. Nebraska. s GEO. A. HOAGLAND, Established 1858. A.T.SIMPSON'S i CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY 588 & 540 Fourteenth Street, 08 (Offco upstaire) Omahs, Nebrasks, Carriages B Fartiular stinion puA 56 Repaie B Farticular attention ing. apr2s-t BYRON BEED. LEWIS 5. REED M. J. McKELLIGON, " Wholesale Lumb IMPORTER AXD JOBBER OF FOREIGX AND DOMESTIC ——OFFICE AND YARD— WINES and LIQUORS, ¥ EFRt 0o 00 E Tobaccos and Cigars, et No. 142 FARNHAM STREET, OMAHA, NEB. WM. M. FOSTER. 01d Kentucky Whiskies a Specialty. - ** YWholesale Lumbag WINDOWS, DOORS, ELINDS, MOULDINGS, &( Plaster Paris, Hair, Dry and Tarred F anite #2-AGENT FOR THE ELDORADO WINE COMPANY, CALIFORN July21y FPPorter’s Ale, of Joliot. Ill. , Cards, | ger thus saving two cents, and the company getting nothing. The trick | Detroit Judge to Daniel Smith: Disountantad Wisconal Wikee bagoes—Their Exodus out of Zp & ‘e Do, BYRONREED & C0. ! The Oldest Established capital on the 28th ult. 1t consisted of two delegates—two of the worst er, "Wlay, GRAY, = Z E El = Q. a < g =, ard. Most of them confessed the offensa, gave up what remained of the plunder, and farnished lists of the dishonest passengers. The Com- pany’s lawyers huve a list of from three hundred to five hundred per- s0ns, many of them men of good so- loafing around, clothes in rags, eyes red, nose red, boots out, pockets empty and feathers in his hair, T wonder why the lightning ever strikes any one else. Take him back, §Bijah, and when the Maria starts make him waltz up lively.’— [Free Press. Says the Detroit Free Press : “An old stagers in the business of poli- | Was overdone, and the company, | “Whisky is what ails you, sir, and g T = SR g fies. Nince that time the people’s | finding their receipts dwind- | if some good kicker would ge: hold LT Real Estate Agency | 2 g Lo % Sole Agentsfor Bear Creek Lime end Loasville Cemeat ; movement has been (l::x;wtgu;id- ling to nothing, investiga- f:f .vm;( f“‘é boot 3-8:’ lrrmn “Eltg!‘l’l-l e B as El & failure in Nebraska, Can't the sol- 83" | tramek to Springwellg, It would do - N £ PR, 4 emn twain be invited to cometo ‘el the ~ matter and - ar-|more good than a run of the fever. | About one hundred Indians, fn-| p = < 03 'Sg S5eS | 0u U P Toaek, bt Furaowand b sn JOMAHA, = D issomi and help forun the pes. | Fested all the car-drivers at a haz- | When I see a young man like you | ¢10ding squaws and children, of the | E5P,%, Gmriete Atstrct of Tite u 3% Ei writ number brought down from Wis- aP4 LR i | = = = @ ple's movement here?—5¢. Louis Globe. This invitation should by all me2ns be promptly accepted, and the BE® would suggest tha¢ the in- vitation be extended to the solemn author of the Jong winded resolu- 'N. I D. SOLOMON, WHOLESALE PFPAINT 6“3 AND WINDOW CLASS, eonsin last spring, and placed upon thie Winnebago Agency in Nebras- k, came across on the ferry yester- day morning, and filed down to the depot to take the train, on their way back to Wisconsin. They brought their ponies and ail the paraphernalia they gen- “tote” around with The Beatrice Hvdraulic, Cement, —AND— PIPE COMPANTY, WOULD INFORM THE PUBLIC THAT 'ECIALTY Letter AP Bill-Heads, GEO (1)} i At BOTTOM PRICE! tion passed by the solemn sixteen | cial and business standing, who i erally = —_— & Douglas County reformers. Will be called on to ‘isquare up” | piogaand bis wife who came in | them when upon a march. _Gener- | DEAUETE SEVERT o7l ey ‘bt usy JAS. M. M°VITTIF,| JACOEB cisSxH, with the Company or besubjected to zoad 5 ¥ - | ally speaking they looked rough. A | sadinanyauantity eltherat ~~WHOLESALE DEALER IN— — DocTor JoHNsoN, chief maste artizan of the defunct castle builders and grand master of the kollapsed Ko-ops, has issued another card through the twilight Ko-op organ. He takes this mode of protesting against the BEE'S captious conduct in conneciion with the Ko-ops, and particularly in attempting to classi- fy him among poiitical bummers. The Doctor assumes that he is a very hard working, iu- dustrious farmer, whose bowels of compassion have been visibly moved Ly the oppressive wrongs upon the producers of the country. The Doc- for omits to tell us whether his farm prosecution. —_— WiTH the arrival in our midst of | Mr. Thomas J. Whitman, an ex- perienced water-works engineer of ing saw about thirty backs at the door of the depot, and about thirty hackren shouted ‘hack’ at them. The nan took itall as a high com- pliment, and turning to the old la- dy he said: I tell you, mother, they think we're something great, or they’d never had all these carriages St. Louis, the water-works question receives a frash impetus. The B has, as is well known, been an un- comprosing adyocate of public im- | provements in Omaha. The Br: w.s the only Omaha paper that | gave an unqualified support to the | last water-works proposition whicl/ in spite of wet blankets from old fugies carried the city Ly a very | handsome majority. Since then a change in public sentiment has down here to meet us. 1 wonder how they knew wewascoming?’ " The boys of Pittsburg have held a. mass meeting and resolved: ‘We will go in swimming when we darn please and wont hair iry to sell the tolks at Lome, and that we will have shirts to wear so that the big fellows | won’t laugh at us when we are un- dressing;"we will willingly do the square thing by our nts, but ain’t cut for tending babies, and we wont do any labor around home that does not properly come within large majority of them were very scantily attired, while some of the children were ‘clad in less thana smile. Some of them had a little money by them, whils others hadu't a cent. They all appeared very anxious to get back to Wisconsin, some of their number giving .~ as an excuse for leaving the Nebraska Agency, that it was too qulet over there; that hunting was too poor and fishing not good. In that portion of Wis- consin where they formerly were, they subsisted almost whotly upon the game they killed and the fish caught by them fiom the numerous streams which abound there. Others said that they didn’t like the agency white folks in Nebraska, and they concluded,_to return to_their old haunts agdin, which it is but reason- fn Omabs, They slzoare pre all Kinds ofCEMENT PIPING Jor SEWERAGE, DRAINAGE, ETC, Also manufacture ali styles of CHIMNEY WORK. WE GUARAN- EE OUR CEMENT TO BE EQU AL TO ANY HYDRAULIC CEMENT MANUFACTURED INTHE UNITED STATES. 8&~0RDERS FROM DEALERS RESPECT- | FULLY SOLICITED, ADDRESS, BEATRICE MYDRAULIC CEXENT & PIPE CO. OMATA - - my218in Mrs. D. A. MOFFETT, Fashionable Dressmaking, 564 Fourteenth St., §e80 Sm. A, NEB. TOEIN FPaRIX 255 Harney sireet, betweep i4th and 15th, NEBRASKA. 261 Farnhaw St., Bet. 14th & 15th COAL OIL AND HEAD_LIGHT d e R e e ‘v FAIRLIE & MONELL, 'BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURE Stationers, Engravers and Printers. NOTARIAL AND LODCE SEA City Meat Market. Masciie, 0dd Fellows and Knights of Py Cla ried Cider. 135 and 186 Farnham Stre t. ENOCH HENNEY, | Justice of the Peace | Office over tao State”Bauk, corner cf Farn- ‘am and 13th screets. QUAILEY’S U. P.Soap Factory! Situated on the line!of the Union Pacific Railroad, near the powder house. Manufac- —— T S i e | emmEn Y BRnos. UNIFORMS. Keep constartly onband 4 LARGE SUPPLY OF B!I , POHR STODDARD & HURLSUT, BOOE BL. KS, D o Market Garduers ! LL KiNDS OF . VEGETABLES AND Orders sddressed. | LODGE PROPERTIES, JEWELS, B EASTERN PRICES A 282 Douglas Streot, - < 4 v i ble to suppose must appear most plants, for sale. o us t is located at the Elysian garden or | taken place in favorof water works. | boy’s sphere,and not that if it inter- | & ! = MUTTON, 5 = - fers with the he ] like home to them, some of the In- at our garder | at David Schwenk’s beer hall. It (If after investigating the subject, | 121} Gemanda boye. should haer. | dians having been born and raised o It anel LA Siraee POULTRE, amg | CARPEN BUTUILD isiudeed a sad state of affairs when | Mr. Whitman shall confirm former | vis,: Between 7 o'clock in the 4. a, | it _Wisconsin. s sdaadiind S B e [0 (il —axp— | horny-fisted farmer cannot wear | stimates about the probable cost of | and 9 in the P. M., With ng upon arriving here and making vEG > % e e e el T e | '";‘Tal’“ ““!‘T"‘P'y inguiresthatthey bad not”sutl Schueider & Burmester | Y ESETABLEs o week days without being suspected | have not the slightest doubt that | 214 Hove oy offeet In this teper, | Toad fare through to Prairie. du [N, COPPER AND SREZET WILLIAM SEXAUER. | I des the pecple of Omaha will vote the | il | Chien. After conferriny ther | 1a all it Branches, i the Istest and most | LY» AT SaFET IRUX = of sowe arttul design, lion. If they try that game, it will g toge Svproved pettern. WARE. DEALERS IN 25T mbamStreet, - - Omah < It is & melancholly e of | necessary bonds by # overwhelm- | be good-bye John, for errands, and :c,zm&'; c‘;‘m‘,'” with '_h_'fr' rted | gorse smoEING AND BLACKsMITHING | Cooking and Heating Stoves. e the degeneracy of our when | Ing majority. \k\; d!:l‘ “ever ::nlyu ."’fluts the | 70 es, leaving. me?'r el wP.: s peiriog doe on shors sotice Tin Booing, Sponting 12 Gttt g on —WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DFALER 1¥— g 4 ’; a mnmaxhtl’;f«i - can- =L— = "“'m "’""h e 2 = by-rail. Others sold some of Lo nept24 ) m Bmmme ET¢C. % H not enjoy life, ACCORDING to the Washingion | ;s the landlord many guests AN PORN’S mACHINE |~ v e | o= ; pursuit of happine Chronicle, the onlinary expenses of | haicl oIl yen oo tho sy i - i » CHINE| VICTOR COFFMAN, H. C. WALKIR, = corners of Omah sons | the Government for the fiseal | “he has, and xinds '._,, —~MANUFACIV o L] of political tofl, year, ending June 30th, 1874, were | One Gan see; fariie ‘guessed” he had R A o S e . ICIAN and SURGEON, A AN DRSERRRE S a MACHINERY REPAIR| cused of corrupt # d polt. | 857155,78.17, being sea1210 good , 204 1t a8 strong 28 becanse - 'l:". ED, DEUG sTORE,) BOOTS & SHOES | .. 1.5, 1aws, Cemeteries CharehlrondsZaa: ublic Par weal for the previgs™ fiscal : G 5 X0t | 04 s Betven Furshem tad Dougies Offca and Shop - P e a OMA #incere Sy, 11th Street bet. Farnham and Harsey, aprisd

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