Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 11, 1874, Page 2

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| ! | i | i | I || § ! v i e OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY. ® TO CORRESPONDENTS. W D0 NoT desiro any contributiont whatever of 8 literary or poetical character; and we will not undertake to preserve, or o retarn bessme, in suy case whatever. Our Staf s sufficicntly large to more than supply our limited space in that direction. Brar Naxx oy WaiTes, in full, must in each and every case sccompany auy communica- tion of what nature soever. This s not in- . teuded for publication, but for eur own satis- s~ taction and as proof of good faith. OuR Countey Fuimxps we will always be pleased o hear from, on all matters connected with erops, country politics, and on any sub- Joct whatever of general interest 0 the peo- pleof our State. Any information connect- od with the election. and relating o floods, accidents. etc., will be gladly received. All such communicvtions, however, must be rief sz possible; and tey must, in all cases, e writtan up "t one sids of the sheet only. FoLITICAL: AL AwNor NOEMENTS of candidates for office hether made by sell or friends, and whether as nof ‘cesor con. ciunications o ‘3¢ Editor, are (until Gominations are made) simply personal, and will be charged as d- verisements Al communieations should be addressed to £ BOSEWATER, Editor aud Publisher, Draw- r oL FOTICE. ‘Onand sfter October twenty-frst, 1872, the ity circulation of the DAILY BEE 1s sssumed by Mr. Edwin Davis, to whose crder all sub- seriptions not paid st the office will be paysble. 4 by whom all receipts for sabscriptions will ‘countersigned. .i. KOSEWATER, Publisher ————— REFUBLICAN STATE CONYsNTION. Republican State Convention will be beld at'2he Sty of Lincoin on Wednesaay, the 24 2y of Bept wber, 1574, at3 o'clock p. ., for the porposs of ylacing in nomination’ one Ccunaliats for Congress, obe candinute for Imember of Congress contingent, candidates for Governor, Sec.etary of Stais, Treasurer, Superintepdent of Public Tusirpction, State Prison Lnspector, sod Attoracy Genersl, and Jor the trasaction of fuch otber business &8 Jaty proverly coms before it. The delegates Trom wach Judicial District will nominate & eao for Disirict Attoraey, for (heir Fapec- Bive Distraca. ¢ Fie orgraize ! sounties are entitled to dele- s upon the following basis - : shall be entitial to one delcgate for each 1,000 {ohabitants, focording to the consus taken ar- $ig 1he carrent year, sud one for each fraction ey five bundred. But esch organized county “hail be entitied to at. least: one deleg Organised sountios west of the 6th P, M., shall be entitled o one delegate cach, and 1o ons additional delegate for each one_thousand Babitante, acoording 10 the census aforesuid, and one for ewa fraction over five bundred, 3 follo DELEGATES FOR COUNTIRS. r'y € StALe.rrrmnn T counties are recommended "o elect al- {gernate dclegates o act in case the delegates lect fail fo ptiend the convention; and the ‘onvention js recommended to exclude proxies for delegates thai do not r-side in the counties they propose to represeut- By order of the comumitses. F. M. Joussox, Chajrman, ch National Assembly has taken a recess, and France may now have athree month’s respite from legislative recklessness. GQUEEN VICTORIA having secured & 75,000 annuity for one of her cubs, has no further use for Parlia- ment, and therefore the members | were excused from further attend- ance by Royal prorogue. ACCORDING to the Louis Globe the Texas cattle fever is again making its appearance in portions of Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. These reports have, however, so far not been definitely authenticated. GENERAL VIFQU. has set a practical example to those who de- sive to aid the sufferers from the grasshopper invasion. He offers to be one ofa thousand farmers who will donate one hundred bushels of wheat each to the poor homestead- ers. Tae Hastings Journal bas dis- earded its patent St. Louis bowels, and comes to us now entirely made up at home. This is a marked im- provement, and the people of Adams county will doubtless give proof of their appreciation by a liberal sup- port. SEsD Republican delegates to Linecln who are in favor of return- ing Crounse to Congress and nomin- ating Hov. F. Welch for Governor. — Burtonian. Does our Tekamah contemporary bonestly believe that both of these candidates can be nominated, and 1f not, why does it counsel what it knows cannot be accamplished ? ‘WHEN Governor Furnas made his tamous requisition for arms on the War Department, the Herald | promptly secured a telegraphic re- vocation of the Indian bugaboo | through the Omaha Merchant’s _ Club. Now when J. Sterling Mor- fon issues his flaming grasshopper proclamation, the Herald wants the Merchants Club convened to aid the ambitous whopper in spreading the grass-whopper scare all over the ‘country, Tak twenty political reformers that made up the mass Convention of Douglas county Independents last Saturday, may, for aught we Kknovw, be perfectly sincere in their desires for ameliorting the condition of the industrial classes. At the same time they should not deceive themselves into the belief that they “have so far succeeded in convincing ten persons out of a thousand in this ity that anything practical can be accomplished by their movement. | There is no doubt that Don Carlos The fact is that out of the twelve | and his brigands have 1ecelved a persons designated by them as the | larger portion of their arms, muni. City Ward Committee, not more n four have ever thought of affil- th them. So much for aof the movement in SEFATCR HITCHCOCK AND HIS PO3T- MASTER. Federal patronage when judicious- | Iy distributed may become a mwost powerful lever in the hands of a | skilled political leader. On the | other hand this prerogative may | stowed on improper or unworthy persons. Such evidently seems to cock’s most lucrative gift, the Oma- ha postoffice. When Senator Hitchbook firet or- ganized the postal pool by which Griffen and Yost were to share and divide Uncle Sam’s most luscious | sugar plum, he could not possibly | have foreseen that this plum would turn to ashes in their unhallowed | hands. Time has demonstrated | what the Senator will doubtless ad- mit that he committed & very grave blunder when he saddled Yost upon | Griffin, and that he committed the when he saddled Yost upon himself. | Nobody knows better than does | Senator Hitohcock that Griffen’s troubles, beginninz with Yost, were aggravated and precipitated by | Yost. stupidity in sustaining the outra- geous policy inaugurated by Yost against the BEE, und Senator Hitch- cock must inevitably fall & victia tosustain Yost in his officjal corrup- tion. In his personal attachment toa political ally &the Senator is apt to lose sight of his duty to the public. It was risky enough for him to ap- point an unpapuiar officer to ¢ne of the most important positions within his gift, but when he attempts to brave public opinion by sustaining that officer after he is publicly con- victed of grave offenses and flagrant violations of honer, he simply com- mits politieal hari karl. 1t is immaterial whether Speclal Agent Hawley sends in a white- washing report or whether he con- firms his public dealargtion, made n the presence of responsible wit- nesses, that all but one of the caarges brought against Yost have | been sustained. - The people of Oma- | ha and Nebraska have read the | sworn testimony snd farmed their own verdict. They cannot be bribed, nor can any honest or honorable | Republican journal attempt to ex- onerate the officer who, according to his own admissions, is gujlty of themost disgraceful offenses, Even the Omaha Republican, Yost's personal organ, has not dared to face public indignation by at- tempting his defence. The silence of the Demoeratie press at this stage of procedure may readily be ex- plained. They want nothing bet- ter than the retention of Yostin the Omaha postoffice to give the lie to the professions of Republicans, that dishonest and corrupt officials are | promptly removed. The editor of the Herald has publicly declared his intention to wrestle Douglas county from the Republicans by parading the fester- ing postal sore during the impend- ing campaign. He that hesitates is lost, is & maxim that might} well apply to Senator Hitchcogks in this instance. Let him hesitate between duty and personal friendship and it does require the gift of & prophet (orof 4 lottery gambler) to forsee the result. Tue BEE Is just as anxious as any other journal to make the coming | State fair a success, but it cannot approve the questionable method resorted to by Mr. Morton in his late grasswhopper pronunciamento. If we have to send the exaggerated grasshopper invasion reports broad- cast over the land for the purpose of | drawing a full attendance to the | Ject altogether. In the first place the area of the anticipated suffering will be almost entirely confined within the settle. ments in the Loup and Republican valleys. The number of families that will need immediate relief is comparatively small. A greater number will need sup- plies for themselves and their stock during the winter, and seed for the spring. The most effective organ- ization for their relief is the Grange, and we apprehend the men who have contributed so liberally toward the relief of the Louisana sufferers will not hold back when the call | comes f2om the people of their own State. The people in the towns and | cities wiil also do their share to- ward ameliorating their conditio: All these measures will recelve | our hearty support. We are, how- ever, inclined to the opinion that Mr. Morton’s proclamation will do more damage to Nebraska than has | been Jone by the grasshoppers. THE active sympathy and friend- ship displayed by the Emperor of Germany toward the Spanish Re- public, s after all not quite as disin- terested as one might suppose. Ac- | cording to a French account Kaiser | Wilkelm is negotiating with the | Spaniards for the cession of the town of Santana, in the province of | Santander, to the domain of impe- { rial Prussia. The Germans propose, should they obtain the place, to erect a second Gibraltar on its site. Does Germany need a Gibraltar? | What ean a country which personi- fies unity at home and peace and | good will all round the world want | to do with such an ugly looking | fortress? I now looks 8s if Germany was | trying to provoke a war between Spain and France through the pre- | text of aetive Carlist sympathy. | tions and veernits in France, but this was notoriously through French yoyalists and contrary to the ex- pressed orders of MeMabon and bis | prove his greatest curse when be- | bee the case with Senator Hitch- | | greatest bluader of his political life | Griffin fell victim to hisown | to his awn generosity if he attempts | fair we had better abandon that pro- | y/ | hundred and twenty-five thousand BTATE JOTTINGS. —Decatur is getting lively. | —The Platte bridge at Schuyler is | not in & passable condition. { | —The new plow factory at | is booming. | The Cuming County Fair will be held September 10, 11 and 12. Crete —Ashland is to have a sworn | public weighmaster. —Wahoo has a temperance dra- matic elub. hotel. bank experiment. | —The Platte bridge at Kearney will be completed within two weeks. | —The boundary lines between | Dodge and Washingtor: counties are | to be readjusted. | —Ashland is_projecting an oil mill, providing $10,000 in precinct bonds can be raised as a bonus. | —Cozad is putting on_metropol { tan airs. They had a shooting af- | fray last week. —The new Saunders county court house at Wahoo will be completed by November Ist. —It costs 27 cents to transport a bushel of wheat from Ashland to Chicago. —Tekama proposes to put on Me- | tropoljtan ajrs by grading her prin- cipal thoroughfares. | Seward and other southwestern counties. | —Two horse thieves were caught | by the sheriff of Dodge county last | week, —Some of the Mennonite colo- nists are locking up lands ln Gage and Jefferson counties. —The great salt reservoir in the square at Lincolu, has been turned intoa bath tu for bulis lately. | —Otog gounty was rejaforged last week by a number of thriity Ger- man immigrants, who iuve just | come across the big pond. | —A& portion of the >eanonites | who recently arrived at Lincoln have gone to Dukota, where they have friends and relatives, | —Touls Baxter, a Bohemian [ blacksmith, residing near Crete, went out on & hunt last week, Sun- day, ard is since missing ~—Governor Furnas hs3 issucd a clroular to prominent cit every county in the State asking for a statement of the exact damages done by the grasshoppers. —Sixty Pawnee warriors have re- | turned to their reservation from a grand buffylo hunt in the Republi- can Valley: They were very suc- cessful. —Afarm house, oceupied by a | German family, ten miles north- | west of Crete, was struck by light- nin; destroyed, last | week, —Ezra Masters, while driving a team across the track of the Elkhorn Valley road near Hooper, was caught by the coweateher of the engine and seriously injured. His wagon was completely demolished. —Settlers in Loup Valley are go- ing to exehange their plows for bea- ver traps and shooting irons. They expect to make up their losses by the grasshopper scourge in hunting. and trapping. —Seventy-six Lodges of Good Templars have been organized in tiis State since December lust. There are 17 lodges in Nemaha, 15 in Richardson, 10 in Johnson, 13 in Otoe, 8 in Gage, and 13 in Pawnee. —The Clark bridge company, have | received the contract for the build- ing of a bridge across the Republican | river at Riverton and Franklin | county, the contract price being $7,900 'to be completed in ninety days. —The B& M RR Company have just received two large forty-ton Manchester engines, direct from the shops, to be put on the road be- tween Plattsmouth and Kearney. They are named, respectively, No. 15, Omaha, and No. 16, Kearney. —Upon the recent re-organization of the Beatrice Cement Co., the fol- lowing officers were elected: H. Parker, President; A. 8. Pad- dock, Secretary; J. E. Smith, Treas- urer; 0. C. Camphell, Omaha Man- ager; Fordyce Roper, Beatrice Man- ager. —RBetween Hastings and Kear- ney, a distange of forty miles, ten thousand head of caftle may be seen from the car window. One head of cattle are grazing on the prairie in anarea of twenty miles square between Hastings and Kear- ney. p— NEBRASKA POLITICS. —Governor Furnes has come to the conclusion that he cannot afford to be his own successor, —H. C. Lett is continzent cand date for the U.S. Sena'e, contls gent on a Democratic Legislature. —Henry Atkinson s «ald to be preparing his feet for the Seaatoriul slippers of his father-in-law. —Gosper, he of the woc.en leg, is a candidate for re-election, and the Ashland.Republican backs him. ~—The Pawnee County Repnblican {‘,on\'enuou will be held at Pawnee ity —Deputy Treasurer Bartlett is a candidate for the succession to Koe- nig as State Treasurer. —Thomas P. Kennard & Co., have a candidate in training for the State Treasury. —Candidates for theState’s prison ——TInspectorship are preparing their diplomas. —The State Convention of Inde- pendents js called to mest gt Lin- coln August 12th, at 1 p. m. —Capt. Bilas Garber, receiver of the Lincoln land office, is talked of as the coming Republican Guberna- ‘ tional candidate. —The Republican Central Com- mittee of Gage county meet at Bea- trice Wednesday, August 12th, at 1p. m. —The Total Prohibition State Couvention is called at Lincoln, Wednesday the 19th of August, at 1e M —Colonel Henman Rhodes is talked of in connection with the candidacy of float member from the 14th representative —J. Sterling Morton is training his favorite cl ‘Granger and Monogoly, for a two horse lo:‘:l g legislative circus, providing publicans shall be in the minority. —Brigadier General A. K. Val- entine, one of the Governor's staff, is said'to aspire to the contingent Bea of State—contingent —West Point will soon havean | agricultural implement factory. | —Fremont is to have a Bohemian | —Hastings is open for another | | —Thehog cholera is ragingin | | duct and toeory aud the broad guage | friends; and they who undertake to —The members of the committee meet at Hastings Thursday, August | 20th, for the purpose of apportion- | ing delegates and holding the dis- trict nominating convention. | —A Republican delegate conven- { tion of the Ninth-Senatorial Dis- | trict, (Platte. Colfax, Butler, Mer-" rick, Hall, Cheyenne, Lincoln, Daw- | son, Sherman, Valley, Greeley, Boone, Antelope), will be held at Grand Island September 8th. —The Republican Central Com- | mittee of the 14th representative | distriet (Lancaster, Saunders, Paw- nee, Johnson and Gage countues,) meet at Lincoln on Thursday, August 12th, for the purpose of call- ing a delegate convention of their | distriet. —The Buffalo county Republican Convention will be held at Kearney | Junection, | August, 1 P. M., to nominate 1 | county commissioner, 3 delegates to | the State Convention and dele- gates to the Representative and Senatoria! Conventions. —The Lancaster county Republi- can primaries are called for Wednes- day, August 16th, and the conven- | tion for August 20th. The conyen- fon will be composed of sixty dele- | gates, of which Lincoln' elects. 25. The convention will nominate 14 delegates to the’ State Convention, 1 County Commissioner, 2 Repre- | delegates to the Fourteenth Hepre- | sentative District Convention and Eleventh Senatorial District Con- | vention. — GRASSHOPPER POINTS. from the scourge. | Franklin county was badly clean- | ed out out by the hoppers, Saunders eounty lost two thirds of her erop by the invaders. more than half a crop. Jefferson county was evacuated by e Grasshopper army last Thurss ay. cious invaders made their appear- ance in Pawnee county last Friday. before they left.—[Burtonian. still lingering in Gage county, but on the whole the damage is not as great as was at first reported. | The west half of Cass county near the Weeping Water and Right Mile Grove were overrun by the hoppers last week, with but slight damage however. | Partles from the country state that the corn so badly riddled by the G-hops is likely to make some= thing yet. Many will have enough to feed their stock. — [ Schuyler Register. The reports of the grasshoppers in | Otoe county having destrayed. the crops is to a great extent a ‘“ca- | nard.” We have the word of R, | Hedge, of Syracusc, that the datu. age is not 50 bad a3 represented.— | [Nebraska City Chronicle. Clouds of grasshoppers have been | passing Westward this week. Thoy | have not detroyed the craps in this | county to any great extent, and we trust our farmers may be spared | their visitation.—[North Platte En. | terprise’ The erop of nativegrasshoppers in this county is much _larger this season than ever before known, and are doing considerable damage to gardeus, but as yet the highflyers, the immigrant grasshopper, is not here yet, but we have every reason | to expeet them at any hour. They are near. On Monday they were ju | Pawnee and Johnsou counties, near | our western county line, and com- ing this way.—[Brownville Adver- tiser. We hear a great many exaggera- ted reports of the damages that grasshoppers have done in Polk, Hamilton, York and Butler coun- ties, which are hardly creditible, and it is no earthly benefit to give thern currency. In fact we believe ie is damaging to the future pros- pects of the different localities for the citizens to start such stories; although this plague may not come next year, still the impression will gain’ cre | deace in the east that some of these | sections of country are doomed to suffer from grasshopper visits con- tinually, because people will not stop to think that this is but a chance occurrence.—[Seward Re- porter. Statutory 'hmpe:nce. The gathering of a temperauce mass meeting at Lincoln this week has provided an ogsasjon for sundry expressions of views an the temper. ance subjeet (which is now taking on a political aspect), the drift of which in this community may be gathered from our report of the speeches made in last Sunday eve- ning's meeting, and from corre- spondeuce to be found in another column. If these correctly repre- sent the sentiments of the temper- ance reformers of Beatrice, the views lu-ld?vre reducible to this pro- posi‘lon ; e arg opposed to every= body fur office \vlmp is nota lae'f)- taler in practiee and to all meas- ures relating to the subject of temperance (or intemperance) “which have not for their object the total prohibition by law of the sale | and use of liquors as a beverage, The people are solemnly informed that this is temperance and nothing else; and that he whose creed de- viates from this must expect to be alassed with drunkards and tosuffer we know not what lively torments. Between this straight line of con- rod of intemperance and crime, | there is no neutral ground, say_our | find one will be faken by the throat by publicopinion and planted where their heresies justly consign them— | among the minions of saloon keep- ers and the murderers of wives and orphans. - It is either total absti- nepee or drunkenness; choose which you will. ‘We say this is the tenor-of the enunclations to be found in our col- umns this week, but it is not equal- Iy clear that there is perfect unanimi- ty among temperance reformers throughout the State on the subject. How comesit that the leader of the BSons of Temperance, Mr. Slaughter, of Omaha, dares to substitute for the principle of total prohibition the device of high license? Andif our Beatrice friends are orthodox, how happens it that Prof. Mil- ler, the head and front of the tem- perance hosts in Nebraska, has the temerity to advocate the adop- tion of & local option law? A local option law affirms no principle. It would simply do in another wa; ‘hat the power granted to a uoug wi of Couns now does—gives the of the Twelfth Senatorial aistrict | Saturday, the 22d day of sentatives to the Legisiature, and | Webster county suffered severely | Dodge County will eseape with | ‘Fhis advance guard of the vora- | Grasshoppers did not damage the | oaterop in the Logan Valley, and | only here and there g field of ‘corn | A few straggling grasshoppers are | | and Ci cussion of this subject of liquor | drinking and selling is to be con- | fined to the propnsition first above | set forth, we think there will be no | lack of disputants on the negative | among those who have heretofore | considered themselvestolerable tem. perate, even if that position does ostracise them from the ranks of | those who are ambitious to get up a little - public ~ opmion _ terrorism. There will be no lack of men who are not altogether sots, to affirm | that the plan of enforeing upon | others total absuinence by statu- tory enactment is not alto- gether startling for its movelty, | and that, indeed, it has been so long before the people without having re- | deemed the world that a doubt s to its divinity is_permissible. Under the shadow of this doubt our Bea- trice friends will have no difficulty | in finding even teetolalers seeking | for some more practicable plan,had | | we are sorry that they cannot ‘con- sent to diseuss with heretics of this | | kind any aspect of the temperance question less momentous than that | enforcing individual morality at the | { point of the sword.—Beatrice Ex. | | press, O OMAZIEIA. 1IN YEBRASEA. | (Successors to Kountze Brothers.) | | Capital end Profits over - A. J. PQPPLETON, Attorney. ENOS LOWE President. | ——r——— | ALVIN SAUNDERS, | | BEN WooD, Cashier. STATE | N.W. Cor. Farnham sud 1th Sts., Capital.... involved in the ancient device of | NOS. DEWEY Furniture Dealers 187,182and 191 Fainham Street. OMAEA.,. NEEBRASKA. e U.S.DEPOSITORY The First National Bank | Corner oi Farham and 13th Rtreets. THE OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHMENT | | ESTABLISHED IN 1858. | Orgaaed s Nl Bua, ogest 20,1863 | QTEWART’S COOKING and HEATING STOVES, 250,000 OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS : | E. CREIGHTON, | A. KOUNTZE, President. Cashier. H. COUNTZE, H. W. YATES, Vice Pres't. Aq't Cashier. Vice Presdent. SAVINGS BANKE, | marzan MILTON ROGERS. CHEAP FARMS! FREE XEONMES On tos Line ofZthe ‘Union Pacific Railroad . A Lez’ Grant of 12,000,000 Acres of the best FARMING aad MINERAL Londs of America » | | TINWARE and TINNERS' STOCXK. | 1,000,000 ACkFS IN NEBRASKA IN THE GREAT PLATTE VALLEY [ L 2 bt THE GARDEN OF THE WEST NOW FOR SALE SO IR L CIR G == | These lands are in the cantral portion of the United States, on tbe 41st degree of Nu:th Lat itude, the central lize of the great Temperate Zoue of the American Cugtinent, and for grain 3rowing and stock raising unsurpussed by any in the United States. OHEAPER IN PRICE, more favorabloterms given. and mors convenient to market then o e found here. ‘Wholesale Stoves , THE “FEARLESS,” COOKING STOVES, | CELEBRATED |CHARTER OAK COOKING STOVES, | Allof Which Will be Sold at Manufacturers® Prices, With Freightadded. FIVE and TEN YEARS' eredit given with interest at SIX PER CENT OOLONISTS and AOTUAL SETULERS can huy on Ton Yoars' Orodit. Laads st the sam orice to all OREDIT PURCHASERS. A Deduction TEN PEE CENT. FOR CASH. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR AGTUAL SETTLERS. 2ad the Best Locations for Colonies! _!Soldiers Entitled to a Homestead <f 160 Acres. . F'ree Fasmses to FPurchamers of I.and Send for new Descriptive Pamphlet, with new maps, poblished in Enalish, German, Sweed and Dan’ v, mailed free everywhere. = Address . DA. = alvzidas o Uand Cowmlssioner U. P. R.K. Co. Omaha, Neb. A. B. EUBEKMANN & CO., ap22t " Port Calhoun Mills. for Price Lists. FLOUR, FEED & MEAL Manufactured with Great Care from the Bes® Grain. Certificates of Deposit : Hjnths, will draw interest from d.te of depos it to payment. T Posit can he drawn at " The Oldest Establishea IN NERASKA. BANKERS. Business transacted same as that of an Incorporated Bank. Accounts kept in Currency or Gold subject to sight check without no- Certificates of Depositissued pay- annam, and available in in all parts of the country. IPpNVed of interest. Buy and sell Gold, Bills of Ex- change, Government, State, County, Bonds. We give s tiating Railroad snd other Corpo- rate Loans issued within the Stato. Draw Sight Drafts on England, Ireland, Scofland, and all parts of Europe. Sell European Passage Tickets, COLLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE, EZRA MILLAR! ] J. H. MILLARD, Cashier. President. OMAETA Cor. Douglas and Thirteenth Streets. OMAHA, - .« NELRASKA. Capital. Surplus FOR THE UNITED ES. ANT DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY FOR DISBURSING OFFCERS. THIS BANK DEALS in Exchange, Government Bouds, Vouchers, Gold Coin, | | i -Drafts drawn pa; ey en the Bank of Califoruia, San Francisco. ICKETS FOR SALE TO ALL PARTS of Eurape via the Cunard and National Steamship Lines, and the Hamburg-Amer'can 3 Established 1858. A.7.SIMPSON’'S 0% R ] I 588 & 540 Fourteenth Street, (Office up stairz,) Omabs, Nebrasks. and Buggies on hand or wade to order. N. B.—Particular attention paid to Repair tng. wrzett The ¥Peatrice —AND— PIPE COMPANY, OULD INFORM THE PUBLIC THAT {hey are now resdy to furuish BY- DRAULIC CEMENT, o the very best quali el and in any quantity,eltber at the factory, whi is located at Beatrice,Neb., or at the Pipe works in Quaha. 'l'h:é also are ynrnd to furnish all kinds of CEMENT PIPING for SEWERAGE, DRAINAGE, lléh of CHIMNEY WORK. GUARAN- TEE OUR CEMENT TO BE EQU AL TO ANY HYDRAULIC CEMENT MANUFACTURED INTHE UNITED STATES. 83 ORDERS FROM DEALERS RESPECT- FULLY SOLICITED. ADDRESS, BEATRICE HYDRAULIC CEMENT & PIPE CO. OMAIZA - - NEBRASKA. mrziam SBEOX. ie of a community the right to the sale of liquor or not, as theysee fit. Unless we have mis- | taken the intent of the language | here, the above gentlemen will on Frank Welok's failure to defeat Crounse, used need a little straightening out. 1f it Is indeed true that Mdb-' Al Kiads of light and heavy MACHINERY MADE & REPAIRED, | B AL Wovk Guaranteec.~@% uwm - OMAHA. i 0 — _____ | Ceneral Depot, Ccr. 14th & Dodge Sts, TR ACTICAL | Manufaoturex DA et onpoinn st | | OMAIA, | WATCHMAKERS,|OF JEWELRY I £ I e - ELAM CLARK. . (== - T R S. E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. Advantages W. B. RICEARDSON. TUE WHOLE OR ANY PART OF A DE- posit after remalning in this Benk three | BANKING HOUSE ‘Caldwell, Hamiltos & Co.,‘wnfl LES ALE n RUGE]S f8rALL GOODS WARRANIGD TO BE AS REPRESENTED-%a able on demand, or at fixed date | bearing Interest at six percent. per Advances made to customers on securities at market rates | ial attention to nego- | NATIONALBANK | | Faruishing Gaods. | 216 Douglas St., Vischer PITCH, FELT AND GRAVEL ROOFER. And Manufactarer of Dry ani Saturatcd Rooflng aad Sheathing Felt. N JEWELRY AND PLATED-WARE, AT WHOLESALE OR RETAIL. Save TIME and FREIGHT Ordering of Us. ENGRAVING DONE FREE OF CHARGE! ALSO DE | Roofing, Pitch, Coal, Tar, Etc., R Etc. Office opposite the Gas Works, on Dealers Can by NG inany part of oipiug States. Addre 5 ' C. F. GOODMAN, And Dealer in - | PAINTS, OILS AND WINDOW GLAS Omaha. Nebraska *“8. C. ABBOTT & CO., ' Booksellers = Stationers jelo. s e —— = DEALERS IN M. J. McKELLIGOIN, WALL PAPERS, DECORATIONS, InrORTER AND JoBEER 0F FOREIGN AND DONESTIC AND "'WINES and LIQUORS, Tobaccos and Cigars, No. 142 FARNHAM STREET, OMAHA, NEB. 01d Kentucky Whiskies a Specialty. £2"AGENT FOR THE ELDORADO WINE COMPANY. CALIF FPortex’s .Ale, of Joliot. Ill. WIINDOW SHADES, No. 188 Farnham Street. Omaha, Neb' Publishers’ Agents for School Books used in Nebraska. GEO. A. HOAGLAND, S s e Wholesale Lumber ‘Omaha Shirt Factory. | PLATZ & NELSON, MILLINERY, axo NEPTUSE, or FISH-FLOWERS, Nice Orcaments for Ladies, ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED. 1aea Julyz1y ——OFFICE AND YARD— COR. OF DOUGLAS AND 6THSTS,, U. OMAEA - WML M. FOSTER. Wholesale Lumber, WINDOWS, DOORS, ELINDS, MOULDINGS, &C. TRACK. P.R.R - NEB, Manufacturers o Ladies’ and Gents’l Bleck, Omaha, Neb, Plaster Paris, Hair, Dry and Tarred Felt. VAN DORN’S MACHINE | ol SO e B [[BULLION and GOLDDUSL.| | St alen s bt bt Andsells drats and jazkes collections on all Tarts of Europe | — | Lle in gold or curren- CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY | aminge | Re21 Estate Agency Hydraulic, Cement, | City Meat Mérker,.i % 3 Sole Agents for Bear Creek Lime and Loalsville Cemeat OMAHA N. I D. SOLOMON, WHOLESALE PAINTS QILS AND WINDOW CLASS, OFFICE AND YARL ) P. Track, bet Farnham avd Douglas Sts. § 1 Circulars, Cards, Tags, Ete., ER e, PRINTING o 5 T r Heads, LEADING oB ERIN 3T welfth s, Forubam aa 51 petwees Shipping Tette CIAL1Y MADE GE0 V. GRAY At BOTTOM PRICT: J A‘SPE | Bill-Heads, 'COAL OIL AND HEAD-LIGHT OIL JACOB CISH, BYROX BEED. LEwIs <, RzED | | Bemr Pormx | i et i | MUTTOS, : Cooking and Heating S ROUUIRY, | ot ostrgumioigis C ARPENTER, BUILDER AME'| short notice and ir che best mauner. —AND DEALER IN— St Jitteen " treet st di VEGETABLES | o T T - = T BGRTABLES “prnyAN & LEWIS, | W 3 = JAS. M. M°VITTIE. cor. 16th and Izard Streots.| @ - = ~WHOLESALE DEALER IN— | Cottonwood - Ez-' g c ider. 0 U M B R 2 4 ‘ Cla ried Cider L UMBER 3.2 P 135 and 156 Farnbam Street. [ jes1m = = e — | @a = VICTOR COFFMAN, 1 F. A. PETEHS, 5 é : | PHYSICIAN and SURGEON, | Saddle and Harness Maker, = e = rmn ISH'S DRUG STORE,) o e T .| For Yards, Lawas, Cemeteries Church Grouds ana Pubic Parks, '‘arnham Streeot, lino;uanmmmu”nmpuymm.a | Office and Shop - 3 SF = e O)IAHA yasau, OMAZIIA. L0 81 ;ld[-‘ ‘.ldz‘urfll!l-.d;“" i ll;:g;luul bet. Farnham aod Harney, § OMAHA 2 ~ NEBRASKA FAIRLIE & MONELL, BYRON REED & (0. The Oldest Established | 261 Farnham St., Bet. 14th & 1500 IN NEBRASKA Stationers, Engravers and Printers. NOTARIAL AND LODCE SEALS. Keop a complete Abstract of Title to all Rea | Estate in Or-ha and § v e SEHEELY BROS. Keep constantly on_sod A LARGE SUPPLY OF UNDERTAKER LODGE PROPERTIES, JEWELS s5~EASTERN PRICES | 282 Douslas Stroot. Manulacturers of | TN, COPPER AND SHEET IROXN WARE. DEALERS IN | "ARTHUR BUCKBEE.

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