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£ L — THE OMAHA BEE | FRIDAY, AVG. 7, 1874) OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY. LA THE OMAHA DAILY BEE s served to subscriters by carrier, 1o a1y part of the city, every evcuing, (Sundays ex- Bty % Bilien cate per week, o $3.75 for hs, and $7.00 per aftium, Wwhen paid B sdvance. 'All compiaints sbout irregularities, addressed “this office will receive prumpt atiention. £ wiil ‘be mailed Tux UMama DaiLy BEE w subacribers st the followingraies, wyableiuva- | It appears that he by the Probate Court, in answer to sar the | & judgment to disclose his property, | and to turn over the same, which he | conven refused to do. The examination was set for yesterday afternoon. 3.75 “ 6. .onths. Tuz Owana Daiiy BEx bu by LABGEST eirculation in the eity, aud is, ereiore, the best and chespest advertising ‘BaThs oF ApVERTISING.—Local notices, 25 ceuts line; local advertisemcots,’ 20 per 2 line; by the month, 10 cents. No o B ent nierted for ess thizn 50 Cente. ‘Botioes, 10 cents per live ; single inser- Dot less LhaD 25 cenis. €% Fvansient abi -Tt iments mast inva.isbiy be { paid for in advance. "Bates for sianding ccutract. Al N , Statements, I:l'll:uhr i, requiring careful revision by copy o s b Banid o O re. se o'clock 4. X. 10 insure insertion the | e o] and Local sdvertiserzeuts belore two ek <M. vertisements Leiore one o'clock P. X A ivements for the WEEKLY BEX must be handed in belore Monday noon, for the same week's isrue. ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF TRAINS. | Sime Casd of the Burlington Route ARKVE AT OMANA, LEAVE OMALL 5 i oo x| e = xcepted. excepted. | 8 3 Fuis is the only line running Pullman Hotel. B iitucoex, HamsxP rvmn 'l Wes. buss. Agt. Ticket Ageat. | > Chicago, 11l ‘Oraaba, Neb. | Union Pacific. ammive. | 3:00 . M. 100 P M. | 45 . M. a & Pacfic. *30:40 P. M. Chileago, Tock Isb 30 A. M. 20 P M. & Councll Blufls 10:00 A. M. 6:40 P. M. Express. ansas City, St.Jo. 530 A M. :50 P. M. tern and Stoux ZISP. M. Omaibuses and Baggage Wagous lcave the oo, corper Farnham aud Ninthstreets, il «ooa mingtes in sdvance of the above Kallrosd me TOADVERTINEES--~¥ne UaRCU- LATION of heDAILY BEK ix more ‘sham double that of any other daily paper publiskicd {n Nebraska. ~Peycke'e Restaurant and Oyster gooms. The leading house of the xind. 207, Farnham street, between Twelfth and Thirteenth. leb2dtf OMAHA BREVITIES. = Lircus to-day. —All quiet at the Poli’e Court yesterday. —Everybody and their families will be at the circus this evening: —An innumerable number of small toads put in an appearance with the heavy shower of yesterday morning. —The matineeperformance of Wil- son’s Palace Circus, are carric. out as full in programme as in the eve- ning. —The two United States prisoners occupying the city cell with three ety prisoners, complain of crowded quarters. —Both old and young should visit Wilson's Palace Circus, the best show in the world, to-day and Saturday, afternoon and evening. —Owing to the frequent occur- rence of the word “Ko-0p” in thes columns of late, some of our com- positors have fallen into the habitof spelling all words beginning with a hard C, with a K. —We would advise that ladies ac- companied by children, attend the afternoon performance of the circus, as at night it is sure 1o be crowded. —A man was fined at the Police Courtyesterdayfor disturbance of the peace by calling a woman a liar! The idea of fining & man for an of- fense of that nature is preposterous. Ten chances to one when a man calls a woman a liar, he is correct. —E. M. Parker, the man who was sent to jail for thirty days by Judge Wilbur, for “steering” a bee- hive peddler against a red and black game, is very sick, and at one time during last night, it was thought he would die. His wife is also very sick. —A Granger while viewing that excellent large photograph of Joel 7. Griffin, on exhibition in Currier’s show-case, remarked Wednesday, “Well, I'll be hanged, if he wouldn’t make a slick looking picture for a postage stamp.” —Inan article entitled*‘A Mission- ary Tour,” which eppeared in Wed- nesday’s BEE, a slight mistake was made in the name of the principal hero. Instead of E. D. Pratt, it . should have been D. H. Pratt. The initials D. H.—which sometimes stand for dead head—are much more appropriateunder the circumstances. —The next excursion to St. Paul, Minneapolis, Minnehaha, and oth- er points of interest in Minnesota, will leave this city August 17, un- der the management of George W. Gratton, passenger agent of the Bioux City and St. Paul railway. Mr. Gratton has put up in the win- dow of his office, in Caldwell Block, | large photographic bulletin board, | exhibiting the beautiful scenery of Minnesota. It is attracting consid- erable attention® —A drunken man, while stag- gering along Tenth strect through the mud yesterday, found James Stephenson’s diamond horse-shoe breast pin glittering upon the ground. ‘Taking it to McLoughlin’s pawn shop, he Inquired its value, ‘when the proprietor recognizing it as the one lost by Stephenson, took it and returned it to Mrs. Stephen- son, in theabsence of her husband. ‘handed over $20, the the return of the mineral Ninth street, had his arm badiy cut | Wednesday by the bursting of a soda water bottle, which he was charging. yesterday | Dave Burley, for contempt of court. 1100 A M. | offiec Thiondays exeepied. | (g o - | appear, 1 egelke, proprietor of a water manuiactory on | Ir. —A boot and shoe Louse, on | Farnham street, whose proprietor | has been in business in Omaha for about eighteen years, was closed up | on hand, but the temperance people Wednesday by Eastern creditors. | yton was arrested Harry Cl | Deputy Sheriff | was called upon | —-While Mr. Max Schroeder was sitting Wedhesday at the door of his | Then came place, in the basement of the State ectisements 1 specisl ! I — vapecsl | bk, reading a newspaper, some malicious devil threw an oyster can, filled with a nasty mixture, down the The contents spilled all over Mr. Schroeder, spoiling his clothes, __Sheriff Turner, of Dodge coun- | ¢ din the city Wednesday in , whom ty, charge of two horse thiev he captured at Juuetion City, Kan- Romo weeks ago they hired a v from Turner’s liv- mont, and failed to return the outfit. Mr. Turner went west with his prisoners yesterday sas. te ery stable at F n and bug morning. —Reuben Munger, who w amined and committed to United States Commissione) as ex- il by nith, |in default of $1,000 bail, to await his trial on the charge of having in his possession a $20 counterfeit Ll 3ANM | G intent to pass the same, was | examined by the same $5 bill. —The City | some provision for the policemen tc | uniform themselves, As they now they are anything but or | mental, although they may | sionally be useful. | can go to | form, but they are 3 half the bill. g to foo | \e case of G. K. Wright, of | Coungi} Blufls, vs. D. Cooper, of | Omaha, which was tried and de | ed in the Pottowattamie Circui Court, of Council Bluff, in favor of damages for fulse imprisonment { 7 | on the petition of both parties, been transferred to the States ('iryuil Conrt. ha morning at about 4 6'clock, continu: ing until 6, wa | the torrents of rain being accom thunder, an terrific lightning. A i learn of morningon a business trip to Ogden. Dr. Pierson, of 2 the Grand Central. Hon. J. M. Thayer, is at the Me: tropolitan. ow York, is al at the Metropolitan. Geologist, is regis tropolitan, accom NG agent of the Michigan Central and Great Western railways, arrived in town yesterday morning. ed at the Me- as, and W. L their trip to Colorado. Salt Lake yesterday morning. sale grocery house of Whitne Bauserman & Co., left for the East yesterday afternoon on bus mbert Tree, of Chi and Central. He is on oast to spend Judge T is at the Gr Ius way to the Pacifi his summer v J. H Mountain, general travel- ing agent for the Chicago & North- western railway, returned from Chi- cago yesterday morning. proprietor of an exten- sive coal mine at Seranton, Penn- ylvania, isat the Grand Central, accompanicd by his family. They will go west to-day. Frank Ramge and wife left r the C. B. &Q. fora ir through the East, in- will be absent three weeks. The following are the arnvals at the Wyoming: W M White, Hastings; G W Bar- {holomex, Plattsmouth; Robt Burn- idge, Paris, 1il; O H Wheelock and fami Ste % John Brand and 153 R Gray Williams, Few York; n, Adel, Tows; J H Mitchell, Minneapolis; Mrs Terree and two children, Decatur; J N Ward, do; Jesse Collins, Minneapo- lis; Thos Rasmusen, Cineinnati; W H Tucker, Marion, Tl; F Dean, Council Bluff; H L Cooper, Chica- 30. ensc FOR TRADE. ACRES OF LAND with GOOD IMPROVEMENTS, situated in CANAAN TOWNSHIP, city or county property. Apply to W. H. Nagle, care Max Meyer & Co. augstl. ICE CREAM! ICE CREAM!! H. L. LATEY's is the place to go or on the charge of having pass- | He was | Council ought to make It can hurdiy be | | expected that on $70per month they expense of 3 new uni- the plaintiff to the amount of $1000 | | and which was given a second trial eachi and gvery proposition. United with —Thestorm which began yesterday a most violent one, ed by heavy wind, deafening yet, however, we have failed to any serious damage being | done. It extended as far west as Kearney, where the wind was so strong s to blow two cars off the k. Tersoual. Andy McAusland left yesterday Congressman Crounse is stopping Samuel Lughey, of Lincoln, State Treat, Western traveling Dr. Miller, Ben Wood, J. C. Thom- ms, composing a \ave returned from Mr. G. D. Kughler, father of W. D. and James Kughler, who bas been visiting in Omaha, left for Samuel Bauserman, of the whole- ago, | Long | Branch, and New York City. They | Junetion; Witliam | and wife, San | Wayne Cor, Ohio; will trade for | The Temperance Conventio: LixcoLy, August 6, 1874 | DITOR BEE: | Nine o'clock this morning was the hour set for the assembling of the Temperance Convention at the Opera House. At that hour we were | were not. Half an hour, however, brought some ten or fifteen men and women, and with J. A. Fair-| | banks in the chair, they proceeded with the great work of organizin, party. In several days and hours less time than that other illustrious | tion took to declare this na- | tion free and independent, B. D. | Slaughter reported the prohibition- ists’ plan of salvation, and the new | party breathed the breath of life. | THE RESOLUTIONS | that was to be their war-ery, by El- | | der Dnngan. They were in’ sub- | stance as follows: That neither | | party is competent to benefit the | temperance cause, because of defec- | tive orgamization ; that as conscien- jous men we can no longer support avor lo- s local prohibition. These resolutions were agreed to without a dissenting vot Then Omaha’s champion —arose | and gave them a sound drub- | bing for not opposing these reso- | lutions, that they “might di cuss them. He asked several | | questions that would sugeest them- | selves to any Vhat are | | here for? | the fizzl | my mon | tnis, and will | something? Sheldon = | not from luck of advertising; he did everything that Le could, and was | hot to blame. Slaughter hoped some one would have said enough | to gppose these re: convention. Ji was | had an extemporaneous sp { mitted, pug was only waiting to hur! it at some unfortunate man, who should differ from him. That | man soon came in the person of J. M. MILLER, of Ashiland, No soonerdid heflearn ’ | What had been done—Dbzing absent | Wwhen the resolutions were adopted | Zhan he stepped to the front and | pronounped the adoption of those | Tesolutions a “set up joh.” He did | 1ot think it took much skill for four or five men (o meet before the rest were through brenkfast and pass a lot of resolutions—when all had | been agreed to before. He did not aror the resolutions, nor did he i think & gajority of the temperance ¢ | people of e State yowd endorse ed with makinga Ford to spend t | | them. H concl h lumliun to reconsider. Elder Dun- t | gan thought Miller v unjust, and ¢! denjegd the charges in toto, and de- )| clared {hat by wps emphatically opposed to the motion. e tho zht | he could demonstrate the {ruthh of Me: and Kev. Alexandel filier, and after much d | sion the motion prevailed. | Phey next Jaunched intoa discus- . | sion of the resolution deglaring both | parties incompetent to benefit the - | temperance cause. B | then took an active part in the dis- cussion. He denied that the Re- % | publican party was incompetent to redress the wrongs of the people in the future, as they had done in_the past; he spoke at length to prove his positlon on that point, and many good things for Republicans. It was with pecular satisfaction that { wo_ljstened to Miller, Alexander and Hardy ghampion so ably the cause of the REPUBLICAN PARTY. Dr. Scott, Rickets and others en- gaged in the diseussion of the reso- - | Tution, but before disposing of it they t | adjourned for rest and dinner. After dinner the discussion was | renewed with much vigor, and was - | finallyadopted by a small malority. By this act they severed all party [ ties, 5o of course, the second resolu- | tion, “that as conscientious men they could no longer support any party,” was carried by the same vote, being but a counterpart of the other resolution, Then came the L LOCAL OPTIO! 1| proposition, which elicited fully , | as warm a discussion as the former question. The resolution: that we are opposed to local option, only as it means total prohibition,” Miller moved to strike the latter clause, leaving it to counties. The same livision upon this as upon the other questions, and after a tedious discussion those favoring affil with the Republican party were de- feated again. To-night a heavy man (averdu- pois) from Indiana, is addressing quite an audience at the Opera House. After the convention_closes its labors, will inform the BEE of its though its efforts are virtu- illed by the resolutions adopt- Suftice it is nothing that will Republican vote. GRIMES. s | Hard, Iy ed; also of the leaders, &e. it lo say, | divide the | The Life Association of America, is the only company doing business in Nebraska whose policies are abso- tutely non-forfeitable for non-j ment of premium. second page. | Saroox for sale cheap. | at Bex oftice. Inquire -t ATTENTION, KNIGHTS! | Meet for drill at the Castle Hall to-morrow evening, a: 8 o'elock, sharp. augé 1t Falls of St. Anthony and Minnehaha. Last excursion of the season to the Minnehaha Falis, Taylor's Fa Mineral Springs, the charming a | beautiful scenery of the St. Croix | river, and the thrilling pas the Dalles, Lakes Superior and other summer resorts in Minnesota. Tickets for the round trip, to St. Paul or Minneapolis, $16.50—Du- leave MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1 | from the Union Pacific depot, at 7 | o'clock p. m. Tickets for sale by company’s agent, 225 Douglas St., Republican building. aug62weod GEO. W. GRATTON. LACKAWANA COAL at lowest market price, by the Iowa CoaL CoMPANY. Office 13th street, (i ‘merly Union Coal C TV | sun, and | on saturda, | demanded her re: | the fact, and ex { to adverse cire ho is responsible for | beautiful fishing lakes of Minnesota, i sage of | luth, $24.00, good for 30 days, “-m‘ | SHE WASN'T A MAN AT ALL.| AT SPECIAT. NOTICES. NOTICE.— Advertisements of To Let, For | A Girl Dresses in Male Attire, | sale, Loct, Wants, Found, Eoarding, ac. MOND AY AUG 31 1874 ‘ ad Works in a Harvest | Zeienel UGN OB 20 foiorton, ’ 2 ) i Field Two Weeks Be- fore Her Sex is Discovered. | Col. J. . Meyers, owning an ex- tensive farm about seyen or eight miles west of Omaha, employed sev- eral harvest hands two or three ccks ngo, at $2.50 perday each. mong the number thus engaged | was a young, rather good-looking and smooth-faced chap, who attrac- ted some attention on account of his v ymmetrical build. He worked e e faithfully from morning till night, in the harvest field beneath the hot | irly earned his money. ¢ last Colonel Meyers | was considerably upon accidentally discovering that | the supposed young man was a girl | dressed in male attire. He at once | ed her of being a female, and son for thus un- She acknowledged | ined that owmg | ustances, and her to obtain work at any | onuble compensation while at- tired as a girl, she had donned th garments of a man. and had then | ac ing herself. inal ment at a rermunerative price. This | was not her first appearance in a | harvest field, mor was it the first | time that she had done the hard | work of a man, Further than this | he would not explain, refusing to .g ¢ her right name, her home, or [ any other facts concerning herself. | or under the circum- stanees | continue her in his employment, as the among the farm hands. He aecord- ingly discharged her in the kindliest manner, paying her in full for the labor she had done. She then bid her employer good-bye, and took her departure to scek work else- course, ttended Trinity Church ng, slie might have heen benefitted by that portion of Dr, Garrett’s sermon, which strongly condemned the practice of young people donning the costume of the opposite sex, either for amuse- ment or other objects. That habii was one that originated among the earliest heathen, who practiced it in their idolatrous orgles. OUR NEBRASKA CITY LETTER Furthex Information Concerning the Coal Bed Discovered by | Enterprising Omaha Crry,Aug. 3, '74. Sinee writing you last month, T have been toOttoe City,seven miles from town, and visited the coal fleld so ably secured by your Oma- gentlemen, and should consider that { with the prospegt there shown, and with a continuation of the entgr- prise so fur exhibited by Omaha in securing the control of the property | and developing of tLe field; that { this company has secured an in- dependence, and has rendered Ne- braska safe for the future against the extortionate prices which she has been heretofore paying for goal. I have carcfully examined the ground and found coal in great abun- fance, and have also had an inter- view with the State Geologist, who e a thorough examination nis property, and who, I will here stop to suy, is & gentleman of great information and sound under- standing. He expresses his opinion this point is the centre of the great coal basin between Des Moines and Wyoming, and it has all the points to sustain his opinion. The Company here are only boring for the second strata. They have been waiting for the grading of the June- tion Railroad to commence, asthe road-bed will expose the coal the en- tire three miles, at a depth varying from fifteen to fifty feot in their \z along the river bank, therehy uncovering and expos- ing to view thousands ef tons of coal and affording a market with- out ‘he expense of hauling. The company intend to lay, or rather relay the old town site of Otoe City, which by the way Is the oldest town site in the State, which 1t Is reason- able to presume, that with the means, railroad and excellent river frontage and landing, will at no very distant day, become a town of some importance, and, as we may say, “a daughter of Omaha,” for it will be through Omaha enterprise that it come info existence. The company purpose commenc- ing shipping coal to St. Joe, Lin- oln and Nebraska C ty in the next 60 days. 8o much for Omaha. You J.W.D. BEILEVUE GROVE, twelve miles from Omaha, on the line of the B. & M. R. R., and 100 yards from the depot, has been improved for pic nics o parties ND & MARTIN, All engegements for the grove will be made through ANDY MCATUSLAND, 242 Douglas Street. handsome fire | fe. Cheap calling | | For Satr—A roof dwelling house for e May be seen b I | | at the office of the Life Asseciation of America Aug. 3, tf. | DvyrING, ceaning and repairing done in the neatest manner, at the STEAM DYE WORKS, 10th St.,bet. Farnham and Douglas ‘ apr2st f. Tudian Curiosities at No. 170 Farnham street, corner 11th street. may 7-tf. DR. POWELL, oftice 215, Farn- ham street. tume23-tf v Biyle of silk hats just re- | MAKES tP—by 3. E. Lattim, at Foxararm | AT A T ! surprised | ¥ no diflicuty in securing employ- | « <, Col. Myers could not longer | overy had begome known | l Immense Reduction! CEF 1S "pir Tine. Bever less thas FWENTY he first_in FIVE 6 miles west of Omaha, on the Military ON JEFFERSON SQUARE. Texas cows and 2 calves. Owner will WAIT!! WAIT!!! % or address J. 1."1m:3.‘;‘..u,fi.u.‘ FOR THE BIG SHOW, )—A girl to dog: house on west side of 16, bet ' Mnseum, Aquarinm, Grecian Cireus - and Grand Roman Hippodrome, JAS. A. BAILEY & CO., Proprietors. o. 10, ard L will be paid. C} augsdzt [ 5o ugraiery and i6th and_ Howard Sts. augddst A World's Fair on Wheels! o Nothing Like It! Ever Seen in Nebraska ! COMPRISING UNDER A CITYZOF TENTS! A Grand Menagerie of 500 Living Animals; A Museum of Rare Won- drs; an Aquarium of DeepSea Am-~ A gitl to do gener. ] bousework. bet. 20 and p Cozzens NE IR Nebra " CIRCUS TROUPE On the American Continent, comprising Fifty Great Performers, appearin in Two Separate and Distinct Rings, under the same Tent, thus giving TWO PERFORMANCES SIMULTANEOUSLY, introducing at each exhibition, the most wonderful of all living performers. House ¢ bou the other half on_three 1o good busines for that 1 easor | ivesit | FOR REN iy " suloon and [ | Two rooms ups' FORSALE | Four frame Buildig: I on groun v ‘on Jackson St. ith Lease : MUSEUM, BEAUTIFUL AQUARIUM, | | | | | | JOR RE | B jvens TWO SEPARATE AND DISTINCT RINGS, | Tn order to introduce all the Great Artists at one exhibitic pare ot confound * The International with any of the Pigmy shows ad- Vertised in this locality, for it soars as high above such as the Eagle does above the hawk. It isan Tnstitution of Wealth and Worth, traveling e: Sth ncar Cass street, ATTAYLOR & CO. | N ANTED—A yirl 1o couk at We ; ! W e R ad 150 Dovgias st ¢ y by its own conveyances, requiring to transport it over Seven WA (e @ Wagons, C: ans, (‘I_mrlul.* and Carriages drawn by nearly 400 Horses, and emplo n its various departments, 366 Men, Women and Children. er looked upon its like before, so await the advent of the chable Internationr], and save your money for something TWO MILES OF GLITTER AND NOVELTY! | Free Street You have ne | great unappro worth seeing. street, —128 Do o s street. Tn: WEBB ) S'ml:i T0 1 | & B | quiro of it in the streets: ights and Ladics gn 1 ® | neap mrm i ex . Address, Farmer, [ Wnd v us, the e G o Erbonis to Lars Christ in Book N, of Mor secure the pay! by the authorit Mo J+1, 1874/at O Of gentlemens furnis] all the shelving and Aixtiire terest In said premises, ‘Rouds togothur wit ‘nd Lease bold in- | OMATF:A, ant | CONTAINING | SINGER. SINGER, of tke SEWING MACHINE WOIID s pre«ninc SALES FOR 1873: In Rocund Numbers 232,444 Machires! The Realums o Fin: THE SINGER MANF'G CO. : W. N. NASON, Agent, NO. 212 DOUGLAS STREET, OMAHA. J. J. BROWN & BRO., WHOLESALE GROCERS, N Agents for the Criental Powder Co. mys-ly STEFLE & JOHNSON, WHOLESALE GROCERS! 538 and 540 Fourteenth Stroet, BET. DOUGLAS AND DODGE OMATFTA, el Tzy PPl NEB MORGAN & GALLAGER. —SUCCESSORS 70 CRI HTON aND MORGAN— ‘WHOLESALE GROCERS, No. 294 Farnham Strect, ONTAELA. - NEB. aarsiy WHITNEY, BAUSERMAN & CO. e WHOLESALE GROCERS No, 247 Douglas Street, NEB 3 ,\(H‘L\T.\‘EEII"'. DUPONT POWDER CO. | CLARK & FRENCH, 'WHOLESALE GROCERS ! AND DEALERS IN | meb27y1 ] HCe‘nlned Goods, Dried ‘Fruits, Green Fruits in Season. | Je SRUERS SOLICITED . ND PROMPTLY FILLED. | 8 A E.SIMPSONN, | - MANUFACTURER AND WHOLESALE— DEALER IN CIGALS. 532 FIFTEENTE ST, CREIGEHTON BLOCK. m6 SHERIFF Manufa 1 ° * (s, RAUFFMAN'S Centeanial Band eous Uniforms, the entire retinue forming a Scel worth Fifty miles of Travel to See. SXHIBITIONS at 1and 7 P. M. | Remember the Name—g=5=THE GR don’t confound it with any other Cirgus— — - - ‘Omaha Shirt Factory. mEwird e B PLATZ & NELSON, MILLINERY, NEPTUNF, or FISH.-FLOWERS, B e | OMAHA, UNTIL MONDAY, AUG. 31, 1874, eryware, Showcases, of ‘said Court, recovere Co., sguinst the sai AL Omgha, Avg. 6, William Ma on Mason, has this day be Dew will cos GRAND CENTRAL EEOoOTEIs. x GROCERS (anogr a0 And General Provision Dealers, | yuama, - . . NEBRASEA 8. W- Cor. Jackson and 13th ts ks ot between Chicago ep oe T and San S e a3 gz - ‘Opened n tem] th, 1573, than any other house in Omala. Pt GHO. THRALL. Proprietor. 10th St., bet. Farnham and Harney, B. C. ¥ HAMANN, TAILOR. (71 Cor. tarnham and Eleventa Sts. All kinds of TAILORING, Cleaning and re- iriap ot sensooable Fate s A Ao 10t of FURNISHING GOODS constantly on band and sold chesp. et et e e el 100,600 ACRES! | RICH PABMING LAND IN NEBRAGKLY | 500 Hanscom Place Lots! ‘SNI9 ONV STIONVYE ‘SN g, Proprietor. oAl ‘VEI'WINO Se[3N0 % WrYuIeq ‘i0q 4eens YIUGNNO 11g ¥ Free Buss to and om all Trains. | 1raent X1 sux1vHQ F1VS: OUSES AND LOTS m the city of Omaha, for salechean and on £ood terms. Passengers for otker s or private Resi- BOGGS & MILL Qences, carried for 25 cents. Real estate brokers,office over Mackey's store, on Dodee st opo eoiice > apsom | BEN .D.JONES| _MA¥! PACTUER OF AND DEALKR Ix- Lambrequins and W.ndow Skades, CHROMOS, ENGRAVINGS AND PICTURE FRAMES. ‘ZAAASTHM . ‘ANOTTIIA »® XIATIA NNV Unitéd States COR. DOUGLAS AND T treet. corner Fifteenth MEAT MARKET, e e G W | £ === | & keer oy maxo, mee pet | ILLINOILS 11()USE.1 P.N.GLYNN " WHOLESALE AXD EETAIL DEALER IN ‘l.l S Alw‘uhlarzl:-r stock of ]r;mlch biu:u' | v ! i) Farnha Sroot | . . e L ey | Wines, llquo\rs,msiegars, | ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED. | [ C.L. A ELATTE, : MERCHANT TAILOR, 288 Todge Street, 2d Door East of 16th Street. k of Broad Cloth, 2 e styles od d the § T keep co ! o the mo | which I am pre | st e Dowest pos ntly on b est st 1o i BUISHED - | PUNDT, MEYER & RAAPKE, Teas, Spices, Tobacco and Cigars. 212 Farnham Street, Omaha, Neb menlodvk KurTz Mo Co JOBBERS OF DRY GOIDS, HOSIFRY, GLOVES and NOTIOXS. 231 Faranham Street, NEB. J. J. BROWN & BRO,, ! —WHOLESALE DEALERS IN— - STAPLE AND FANCY DRY. 600DS | Notions. and Boots and JOHN T. EVGAR, —JOBBER OF-- Shelf: Heavy Hardware¢ IRON, STEEL, NAILS, WAGON STOCK,* —AND— mys-ly 10eS. TOB'C O California W THE OMAHA | WEEKLY BEE Ce suf | Owaba, Neir ntral House ‘ ¥o. 630 Sixteenth Street, | 1 JOSEPH DOVE, Prop’r. reasonable rates. to the house. The Sioux City and Pacifie E: ton with the Ia c SIOUX CITY & ST. PAUL RAILROAD, Is 62 miles the shoftest route from Omaka DY TO | 5 ACKNOWLEDGED BY EVERY B be the BFST PAPER | Published in Nebraska, 1t Contains More Reading Matter and Less Advertisements than any Newspaper Published in the West. Emoracing a choiee selection <)f‘: Day and week Boar i lass a4 bar attached | California. House. | FRITZ HAFNER, Prop'r- ' Douglas Street, corner 11th, Om ha, . Toard by thé day or week. | | | | | | | and Counell Bluffs to St. Paul, Mineavolis, Stillwater, Anoks, Duluth, Blsmarck, and all | points In Minnesota. v Train leaves Onraha da at 6 o,clock p. m., and Co LINDLE HOUSE. e tacellanous matter Fith | on 5, bet. Forahon end Harsey Seat, | 4203002 3 SO L P00 live Editorials on all important top- | ] 45 reen seiires miie! s [ Gimg Xk e 0 jes; complete and reliable telegraph- | board's: $150 per da | Fareas LOW and Time a5 QUICK as | jeand local market reports to theday | c' V. & s- MI HARRYM‘ | iy oAher Vines | Proprietors. iy Southern ko Frontizg on 4th, 5th end Walzatste, St. Louis, Mo. Laveille, Warner & Co., c Propriotors. = Wood! Wood! Wood! | i s it ood! Wood! Wood! | et iz, ot it Taptoved elera‘or laling from the Srit oor e per one, Eailroad and steambost i e el of issue, and a variety of State, East- ernand Western correspondence that together make up a newspapersel- | dom equalled and never surpassed. | Every article going into the col- | umns of the BEE is carefully seru- tinized, and everything that can of- fend the most scrupulons, rejected, | PULLMAN PALACE SLEEPING CARS ON ALL NIGHT TRAINS. Be sure your ticket reads VIA Sioux City. thus avoiding circuitous routes and wmidnight transfers. Tickets can be rurchasel at the offices of the g0 & Northwistern Railway in Omaha “ouncil Blufs. St. Paul, Mina. F.C Gen'l Pass. and Ticket Agt., S City, lowa. GEO. W. GBATTON, Agent. 163 Farnham Street, Omaba, Nob. | July 20,40 £ T 5. P. BRIG § YARD, CORNER OF 1ah and Chi sgo Streels. Good iard 00d $7 00 ; Soft §5 00. . Stove Weod to suft ‘aumber of stove yery cheap, #plSil | and atjavent to itsrai Smwous & epublican Valley. C. . SCHALLER, Agent B. & M. Tand Office ACRICULTURALIMPLEMENTS, it THRESHERS, HARVESTERS, REAPERS, MOWKRS. DRILLS, SERO/ CORN-PLANYERS PLOWS, CULTIVATORS, HA Y- KES AND WAGONS. mehtsy 246 Douglas gt,, Omaha, Nebraska, HENRY HORNBERGER. —DEALE YW Ligoors, Creas, dec LO. Fise 011 Kentucky jWhiskics and Jmportelsioods a Specially. CMAMA INEF N 239 DOUE! 2,1 Caliweli Block,) ' § gyl HOMES and F IN NEBRASEZ el Gl Al B A T tinn SR Tois prevatac of 20 per ceat. on the amount of ¢ 1 1wo years from date of purchase. ad Missouri P % dwihab The Burliogton - laod 18 custivated, ereditaté pe_ cor purchase, if Balf LARGE DEDUCIONS FOR CASH PAYMENTS. North of Platte, Joup Fork and Elkhorn Valley il sel” ahoat 1,600,000 acres of splen i1 erazingtand agriculturalland - t e o g it c uiry, at trom $L7L 1o $7.00 South of he Platte - Comy omy ownesa large body o the bestland ju Nebrasks, Intersected by, numeroas rh The Comysnz owness lare body 108, P2l et develope pact o the Sts'e 28 4l 1 e reulass and full iafor mation apply 1o The B, & 1. a welifwater Corner Ninth and Farnbam Sts.. Omaha Or General Land Depaitment, Lincoln,Ns e