Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 24, 1874, Page 2

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THE OMAHA BEE | OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY. | TO CORRESPONDENTS. Wx D0 xoT desire any contributions whatever of & literary or poetical character; and we ‘will not undertake to preserve, or to return | Desame, in any case whatever. Our Stafl 12 sufficiently large to more than supply our | Hmited space in that direction. | Rzar Nawx or WRITER, in full, must in each ‘ and every case sccompany suy communics- | tion of what nature soever. This is not in- | tended for publication, but for eur own satis- faction and as proof of good faith. Ovn Couxry Frigxps we will always be pleased 10 hear from, on all matters connected ‘with crops, 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 to floods, ‘accidents. ete., will be gladly received. All such communicvtions, however, must be ‘brief as possible; and tuey must, in all cases, be writien up "t one side of the sheet ouly. = POLITICAL. ALz Axwo! ¥CRMENTS of candidates for office 1 —whether made by self or friends, and | whether as not ‘cesor e0n. ciunications to ‘e | Bditor, are (until nominations are made) sisuply personsl, snd will be charged ss 2d- | vertisemeuts All communtestions should be addressed to | & ROSEWATER, Editor and Publisher, Draw- | [228 NOTICE. On and after October twenty-first, 1672, the ity circulation of the DALy Bz is assumed | by Mr. Edwin Davis, to whose order all sub- | seriptions not paid st the offce will be payable. | 2d by whom all receipts for subscriptions will | ‘eount E. KOSEWATER, Publis! G REFUBLICAN STATE CONVENTION. A Republican State Conyc at'the city of Lincoln on We urpose ot 2 @ndldate fur Congress, one ca Bember of Congress contiugent, cas Governor, Becietary of Staie, Tre Fintdodent of Public Tustraction, n Inspector, and Attorney General, and the tra for tor ction of such other busine sy properly cowe before it from each Judicis! District will ne person for District Attoruey, for thelr Tespec- Live Distrscts. The orgreize] counties sre entitled to dele- | sies s he fullowin basis Couaies cast of the steth Principal Me shall be entitled to one delegate for each over five hundred. But each organized county shall be entied 10 st leust ooe M.wc s foliows DELEGATES FOR COUNTIES, | Jotinson. Krox Kelth €8 e 09O 00 0 1 08 100 85 3 00100 00 i 00 08 The counties are recommended to elect al- delegates 10 act in_case the delegates convention is recommended to exclude proxies Sor delegates that do not ruside in the counties they propose to represent: "By order of the comumittee. . M. Jomxsox, C. H. Gz, Chairman. Becretary, Tae Chairman of the Republican Btate Central Committee is still in want of information as to the as- posal of the §1,000 which Postmaster Yost received from Pat O’Hawes for the Republican campaign fand in 18 VicE PREsIpENT HENRY WiL- 80N has been interviewed on the third term question, and he ex- presses the opinion that President Grant has no idea of running for g third term. Of course there were office-holders and other interested persons who would favor the pro- ject, but he believed the President will turn a deaf ear to all their ar- | guments and positively decline to allow his name to be put up before the Convention. Mr. Wilson said it is true President Grant is peculiar in some things and not accustomed to communicate his thoughts very freely upon what he intends doing, but the Vice President has been in- | formed on the very best authorit; outside of putting the direct ques tion to him, that he intends to have nothing whatever to do with trying to obtain suother term of office, and that he rather looks forward to the time when he will retire from his present onerous position. As to the result of an attempt to secure the renomination Mr. V expressed himself without hesit: tion or equivocation. In the first place he considered such renomina- tion exceedingly unlikely, as the great mass of the best men in the Republican party are utterly oppo- sed to any man holding the ofiice President more than two terms. * Even if nominated his elecion ‘would be out of the question. The people would, irrespective of party, rise up and vote against him. He ‘would of course have the support of a | large section of the Republican party, but that would not be suffi- ciently strong to elect bim. The people will protest in this way against the perpetuation of an office to one man; for should any President be elected a third time there would be nothing to preveut his seeking a fourth and even a fifth, which the Vice-President con- sidered to be contrary to provisions of the Constitution, although not expressly set forth in so many words. Mr. Wilson made no secret of his own purpose in the eventof a thira term nomiuation. He should vote against Gen. Grant in that case, for, with the people generally, he held it to be both un- wise and impolitic to allow any man to fill tne President for more than two terms, and he considers that this feeling forms a tacit clause in the constitation. He thought there would be no difficulty in choos- ing a good candidate for the Repub- Jican party. | October election, for the purpose of | calling the Constitutional Conven- | lson | a- | | SoME cf our western Nebraska | contemporaries are still agitating | the proposition in favor of an extra session of the Legislature after the | tion. THE Sarpy Sentinel has changed hands. Messrs. Pomeroy & Kenne- dy retire from the proprietorship, and Mr. J. C. Newberry assumes charge. The Sentinel has made an enviable reputation as as a spicy and reliable journal, and if the new publisher continues on the track of his predecessors, he eannot fail to | receive liberal encouragement nnd patronage. Tise Republicans of Missouri are | having a hot time of it just now. A number of influential Republican | papers favor the possum polic; people’s movement, with a view of dividing the Demoeracy, while oth- ers, with the St. Louis Globe at their head, favor straight Republi- can nominations and a square fight. Tt appears to us that playing pos- sum 1s a dangerous demoralizing game. Itisa confession of weak- | ness which cannot but react dis- astrously to the cause of Republic- | anism. | THE {ing on Colonel Dudley’s plan for | reclaiming the alkali lands of west- ern Nebraska, says : There are many large and beauti- (flll tracts of land in the far west { which have hitherto heen worth- | less 1o all purposes of agriculture on ‘-\(cnnnl of lying outside of what | meterologists call the rain-belt. lands are now beginning to some of them { promise to hecome 3 s flourishing as the banks of the Nile. As an in- stance: L‘u]unulellc\ of the Third A. has bean try- could do in the Creek Valley dur- his detail at Sidney Barraok is more than 400 miles west of | He has writ- ion, and whic | the Missouri River. dent of the State Horticultural of Nebraska, in which he wla forth the results of his expe: ments. of poor and comparatively ignorant migrants have been deluded by agents and induced to settle on these lands, neither the emigrants nor the agents themselves knowing how the soil could be worked, he 5 | gives p glowing account of what he | has, by the ald of 3 littlescience and | giligent care, been able to accom- plish. "The soil of this valley, it ap- pears, is very rich, and the applica- tion of horso manure to #fertilize” it proved a positive injury. The excess of alkali, the Colonel s: properly irrigated. Colonel Dudley Hrorked several acres, and with the greatest success, In the first place nd harrowed. It Is then laid out in ong, narrow beds,with small ditche: between for conducting the water. The water is not permitted to over- run the top of the beds, but is allowed to run ditches a few times during the season, remairing long enough 2oze through the soil as to moist- en the roots of the vegetables. Some kinds of vegetables were found to require less water than oth- ers, and to regulate this all that was needed was a_small piece of board at the end of a ditch or furrow to | keep the water from coming in con- | tact with certain beds. In short, Colonel Dudley 1nvites the entire Horticultural Society of Nebra to go and see for themselve garrison at Sidney Barrac of about 150 men, and they have more corn, onions, beets, squashes, peas and beans than they want, and bushels of cucumbers are going to waste. The Kearney Junction and the Re- publican Valley Railroad. KEARNEY, August 21 EprTor BEE: After a long, and we think profit- able, discussion of the pros and cons of a railway from this town to the Republican Valley, by our people for some weeks past, the thing took form and shape last week in the adoption of articles of incorporation, in which the very long and taking name of the “Omaha, Kearney and | Republican Valley Railroad | pany,” appears, and by which it is known eyermore. One facetious | chap remarked that it would be | known as the O. K. road, which might indicate its future popular | management, and insure its speedy constraction. The incorporators are among our olid men, who always mean | ness when they put their name to ny document. The capital stock is 00) with power to increase ares placed at $100 d is to commence at i town and run in a southeasteriy | \d strike the ey of | n in Harlan county, | the Republic: | and run up the valley through Fur- | Wiliow counties to Hitcheock count all of this fel by this road, and | , its wheat, corn, oats, oultry, butter, ' ege: ticles seek Om: nas and Red | Culbertson in | Thus will n valley be r all its tr rye, barle | beef, and othe will as bet veen the Ul P. rail- road and B. M. railroad for the hon- or of transporting these to your city and thus the farmer reap the bene. fit of it, and realize all in fact, and in advance, what heis trying to ac- | complish in his grange: Republican Valley is practi- | solated from other parts of | »—her only communication teams over a long and | ie of fifty or sixty miles. The movementis gotton up to rem- edy this. We think that Omaha ought to be sufficiently interested in this road to give it both its moral | andjsubstantial support jPerhaps you and ber good people may think dif- | ferently. Ifthey do, we venture the opinion that they are in the wrong. ‘We know full well, that in these times of destructive raids of hoppers, some people will apply very significant terms to us, not flattering to the soundness of our intellects, if we even talk railroads, Still we know what we are about, and have not taken hold of this matter, without understanding it in all its bearings. At least we can make a good beginning. The West- ern part of the State is not ravished by the pests, to the extent first re- ported, though it is bad enough. ‘sections here have thus far escaped the blight of these raiders, and we shall have at least 30 per cent of the corn planted saved. Potatoes are not all cutoff. A good crop of wheat was saved, and though seriously injured, we can go through the winter, and be ready with stout hands, and strong hands, to plant and sow in the spring, with an abiding faith, we shall reap in the fall. KEARNEY, and | ew York World comment- useful, however, by means | n a long communication to the | After stating that hundreds | S | of sclentlfic no detriment so long as the land is | the land has to be thorougly plowed | into and fill the | ile | for amarket. A healthy competition | ANALOGIES. BY 1DGAR FAWCETT. | |From the Atlantic for September] Tlounge sgainst my garden gate; On one side heaven the sun habgs low ; Down one side crawls the exhausted storm That flashed and crashed an hour sgo, T icunge and see with musing eve, Two roses and a butter y. One s a sump tuous, lnn That bows its head, lovel While each fresh petal’s velset curve Burns with the same deep drowsy red; Circe her subtle self (who know. Plotting new sorceries in a rose! rore, head, One isa pate, pure bloom) with le o satin i ber lusters mild, Bt osed, ab fainter fuched tnan looks The chaste palm of & little child ; Or pink as some late sunsets are, That yearn to meet the evening star ! ves ¥'s quick quivering wings th ar eac dings of such hucs As lurk in some old tapestry’s Dim turmoils o , crimsons, blues Wings where dull, smolderin; Lit richly with two p rit, loth 0 part fragrant ch h That blood-drop warm fre And ® T One raio-drop sparkles, likea tear ! | EDUCATIONAL NOTES. A Kansas school superintendent says emphatically that there is a | great deal of rubbish in text-books, | There is a call for a school of de- | | sign on the Pacif : | an art school, butit is devoted chief- | | 1y to drawing and painti The three Boards of Trustees of public schools and the Board of Hrustees of schools for colored chil- dren in the District of Columbia | have beew consolidated into one reported that the plan of ]\ullun" funds to poor students at California Univers \\hl(h we mentioned last wee do awny wi | 1abor hitherto pra versity. d at the Uni- son, Kan- school teachers s ause their wages aver- | idering that of the highest and professions, the pay doesn’t seem as s it might, outside of Kan- | The Crampion, of Ate sas, thinks th | | | | The authorities of the University of Georgia made several | changes in gement. Hereafter n nt will be admit- ted to the University except under he will not join any | :ty, and all society medals have been abolished, on the ground that they have become merely the | rewards'of personal popularity. The Sehool of Natural History at nikese will close August 20. The Balf of the term hys been very ne of the ve bocome able to make | original investigations, and a con- | tinvalty growing interest in pursuit knowledge has been shown. The students are mostly professors and_teachers, and have | numbered 43—22 gentlemen and 21 | ladie The forthcoming report of the Bureau of Edueation will resom- mend domestic arts as proper sub- jects for instruction in schools. The Pittsburgh Commercial lays special stress upon teaching cookery, de- | claring that it is only a decided minority of American” housewives who know how to make either good bread or good coffee, a deficiency which may fairly be supposed fo | imply equal absence of skill in the | separation of many it not most other articies of diet,” At the commencement of the | Maine State College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts, one young 1 graduated with the glass, with the rest the degree Dingley made a ing to her ex- approval of the the girls an h the boys to gain | a practical as well as liberal educa- tlon, saying that from the specimen heard that day he was confident that the latter would have to look to their laurels or they would be ex- celled on their own ground, pressed his hear | s Here is an instance of school discipline in San Francisco, show- ing one of the most ridiculous re- sults of the modern system. The Post notes that in one of the primary schools the other day a whole class | of young children was kept in for haif an hour because _some of the little things, in theif eagerness to answer questions, had abandoned the required position of keeping their hands behind them. The “discipline” was made more stupid and druel by the fact that the little children were kept in fixed positions without oceupation for either body or mind, A report on German schools by Prof. Young,in the National Teach- er, declares that “(he routine com- | mon school work of the Germans, | great effeet in Kk |1 comparatively s doveitar perpetuating the st | King distinction between them and dltivated classes. The draw- 1 Listory in {ing, geometry, matu German schools generally go for more than they are worth with many Americans in their compar sons of the sy roun- tries. While tt e not to be disparaged in themselves,they | are so el the inf ned is 1 connected Institute in struction to 863 in these de- 1. Mechanical— machinists, metal-workers, pat- | tern-makers, founders, blacksmiths, amateurs, &e.; 2. Architectural For carpenters, masons, wood-worl lers, amateurs, &e.; 3. Art- < For general designing, free- handdrawing, perspective, erayon, &c., for painters, plasterers, design- carvers, cabinet-makers, ama- n\uh, &e. The rates of tuition are $3 a term, paid in advance. In the | sehool connected with the Univers- ity tuition is free. The number of pupils ranges from 300 to about 400 annually, There was at the last acounts about 120 pupils in the wood- carving department of the sehool. ‘ The School ot Desig: | with anies’ | At the meeting of the German- American teachers at Detrolt last week, one of them said “that the way to maintain the German lan- guage in the American schools is samply by not overwhelming the American schools with too much German at once. A gradual intro- duction, will result in its accom- plishments. Another teacher dc- clares himself totally op sectarism in sehools,ang argued um the Americans are rdinate to the religious views of the majority, and in that respect their own ene- mies. Free-hand drawing, the model to be either theblackboard or a large wall chart, was advoeated. A committee was seleeted specially to attend to the question of the erection of a natural seminary for the education of German-American | Rock Island, Illinois, as a site for a | theological seminary. | pany headed by Re | work which the Wesleys began | within her communion. instructors, RELIGIOUS. 1t is affirmed that the handsomest | Universalist Church edifice in Amer- ica has recently been built in Lynn, Mass. Archbishop MeClosky is likely to be our next Cardinal should His | Holiness decide to confer the red hat on an American. The salary of the bishops of the | Methodist Episcopol Church, South, | has been fixed at $3,000 each and travelling expenses. Preparations for the assembling of the National Unitarian Confer- | ence at Saratoga, September 15th, | have been completed. The twenty-second General Con- ference of the Free Will Baptists of | North America will be held at | Providence, beginning at the Roger | Williams church. October 7. The prevailing church in Iceland is the Lutheran. They have 321 | { | | churches and 189 ministers, whoare | so poorly paid that they are forced to do secular work to get a living. The Sweedish Lutherans have bought eighteen acres of land at | They have raised $40,000 as an endowment fund Two sets of translators, one com- R Brown and the otherby Dr. Nathan Brown, are engaged in translating the riptures into the Japanese lan- guage. The Presbyterian Chureh, which numbers half a mllion members in the United States, raised about $10,- 000,000 for benevolent purposes dur- ing their last church year. The hishop of Lincoln has issued an address calling upon the Metho- | dists of England to return to the | mother church, and to help In the | Seventeen Methodist preachers belonging to one family—two great grandchiidren, ten grandehildren | and five children of tho late Luther | Peck, of Syracuse—are to have a gathering at the residence of Mrs. niqmp Peck, in that city, on Octo- bet Tm- Free (Episcopal) Cisureh of nd recently held thewr annual tion in London, and ad. journed til the fall, when they will mity of weleoming ishop Cummins from this country. This Church has been in existence | twelve years,and has already organ- | ized seven dioceses, with forty-three | houses of worship. The gathering of the various Methodist bodies at the Round Lake camp meeting islikely to have more important results than was antici- pated. It has been said that it has done more to bring the northern and southern Methodists on good terms than all the efforts that have been made for the past thirty-five years, i i The largest German Lutheran i the General Ger- man Synod of Missouri, Ohio and other St 1t comprises five dis- triets, with astors and 130 lllun the Fullwmu Ohio Synod, with 120 pastors 225 chure es; then the two Lutheran Synods of Minnesota and Illinois, with 90 pastors and 100 churches. So that the whole association . embraces | about 800 German pastors, 1,200 churches, andsome 150,000 commu- nicants Spurgeon’s advice: “You minis- ters who have got to be fine and | intellectual, clear your throats and | preach Jesus Christ; pull the velvet out of your mouths, ye gentlemen who use fine words, and speak so that the people can understand you; and mind Christ, and Christ cruc fied. Ye Methodists who are ge ting to he very respectable, get tobe as red hot as Methodists used to be; ye Independents, be like the old Puritans; and ye Baptists, who seem to he damped with cold water; or worn out, pray the Lord to bap- tize you with fire, and that will be the Very best thing that can happen to you.” Took at your chapels, half full ; your congregations, half aslesp; your “preacher, often reading from his book, and not preaching at all, or, when preaching, preaching as though he were not awake much lower down than his neck ; his heart Il aslecp, and only his mouth is talking,” MATRIMONIALITIES. Adams, of Boston, niece of Francis Adams, is about to t the American legation at a prominent officer in the Bri- tish navy. The Leavenworth (Kan.) Com- mercial notes the arrival in that city of a newly married couple that came 1 irom Holton, the bride- groum being fifty-five years old and the bride tw The bridegroom was on his sixth matrimonial v ture, and is the fatherjof thirt th ildren, of whom twenty- three are living, Hamburg, Conn., has had a curious love af broihers eourted the same girl, she rc\cml\ - herself to the younger, | but as the time set for the marriage drew near the youth had difficulty in ob aming a “certificate. Mean- whiic the girl transferred_her af tions to the older one, and, he h: iag urm ed himself with a marria e, they were marr the very day set for the marriag with the younger brother. The report about Millie Chris- the two-headed nightingale, ;, is that she is on the point ringe, the happy man being | a very rich Englishman. The mar- riage, it is said, is to take place at Avignon. Will not the bridegroom render himself liable to prosecution for bigamy 2 _the courts having de- cided that Millie and Christina are two separate and distinet individ- 1 the recent suit brought by Orleans Railway Company to recover the price of an extra ticket, the agent of the two-headed night- ingale having insisted upon paying for only one. A timely warning to attractive | young ladies is offered by a story that comes to us from North Caro- lina, says the Arcadian. A Mr. James Goforth had been courting a Miss Susan Poindexter, and, as she flatly rejected his offer, he grew fiuntic, and run up and caught her ear in his teeth. Her shrieks soon | brought all the family to her assis- tance, but the girl's father had to insert the pot-hooks between Go- forth’s teeth and make the old wom- an hit him on the head with a door- pin before he could be forced to loose his hold. Goforth’s disposi- tion 10 go for the young lady’s ear was, doubtless, of a similar nature to that which leads somany lovers to declare before marriage that they are so fond of their fiances that they could eat them. "Matrimony, however, seems generally to change this appetite, though we once knew a man who declared that before mai he was so fond of his wite that he thought he could have eaten her, but the ceremony had not been u: the | nest-hiding with a widow*of his | Organized as a National Bank, August 26,1863 | | NATIONALBANK performed a month before he wished 10 heaven tbat he had, IMPIETIES. What shall we do when this cru- el scandal is over? An application has just made for a patent for a machine lo | regulate the magnetism of clerg; men. A profane man was admonished | | with the text, “Swear not at all.”” | Hesaid: “Idonot. T only swear | at those who offend me.”” The Dubuque Zimes suys: Dav- | enport clergymen are striking for higher wages since the Beecher bus- ieess ruined pastoral calls. Free lunches and clerical tit-bits are no | more to be had. | Out in Clay county they duck the mibisters in a goose pond, and.amake | him piomise to preach from the | text, “Thou shalt not commit ad- | ultery,” for the simple crime of flock. But then, probably, he does | not get $75,000 a year. A New York boy asked for a ticket to the poor children’s excur- sion of the Christian Association. He was asked if he was a Christ- | ian, ana promptly said he was. | “Are you an honest boy 7 «Yes, | r. “The phrenologlst of the force | lifted the boy's hat to examine his bump of conscientiousness, when out fell a ticket for the excursion. “Would my little Ezra,” asked a fond mother, “like to be a mi-sion- ary, and go preach to the suffering heathen 2 Tears—bright pearly drops of foelmg—blhluml in Little Ezra’s eyes as he murmured : “No, I wouldn’t; but I'd like to be on the perlice Jong enough to put a tin roof ou the big lummux that stuck shoemakers’ wax on my seat to-dy at school.”? | U.S.DEPOSITORY The First hqt-lonal Bank OF OMAZIZEIA. Corner of Farham and 13th Rtreets. THE OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHmENT IN NEBRABKA, (8uceessors to Kountze Brothers.) ESTABLISHED IN 1858. Capital and Profits over - $250,000 | OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS: E. CREIGHTON A. KOUNTZE, President, Cashier. H, COUNTZE, Vice Pres't. H V. YATES, As’t Cashier. BEN Wo0D, Cashier. STATHE SAVINGS BANE, N. W. Cor. Farnham aud 15th Ste., | Capital.. Authorizei Capiti POSITS AS SMALL AS ONE DOL- D) v and oo ot wed on tke same. s 100,000 | 1,000,000 Advantages OVER Certificates of Deposit: [VHE WHOLE OR ANY PART OF A DE- this Benk three | est from d.te of depos- holeor any partof o de- | posit cin he drawn aiFany e, g2 i The Old;ast Establishea BANKING HOUS IN NBRASKA. Caldwell, Hamiltoa & Co., BANEKERS. Business transacted same as that | of an Incorporated Bank. i Accounts kept in Carrency or Gold Xflnjectw sig it check without no- ce. Certiflcates of Deposit issued pay- able on demand, or at fixed date bearing interest at six percent. per annom, and available in in all parts of the country. Advances made to customers on lerored securities at market rates interest. Buy and sell Gold, Bills of Ex- change, Government, State, County, and City Bonds. We give special attention to nego- tiating Railroad and other Corpo- rate Loans issued within the Statc. Draw \i' Drafts on England, lnllnd, sooihml, and z2ll parts of Europe, Sell European Passaze Tickets, COLLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. avitl EZRA MILLARD, | J. H. MILLARD, President. | Cashier. OMAEIA Cor. Douglas and Thirteenth Streets. OMAHA, - <« NEI,RASKA. Capital 200,600 00 Surplus and Croi 30,000 00 INANCIAL AG OR THE UNITED T™H s in Exchange, Goverument Bonds, Vouchers, Gold o, rl) ULLION and GOLDDU: *. * And sells drafts and saakes collections on all | of Europe. B®~Drafts drawn pavable in gold or curren- cy en. the Bank of California, San Francisco. ICKETS FOR SALE TO ALL PARTS of Europe via the Cunard and National | Steamship Lines, and the Hamburg-Amercan | Packet Compeny. | The Beatrico Hydraulic, Cement, —AND— PIPE COMPANTY, OULD INFORM THE PUBLIC THAT | they are now realy to furnish HY- of the very best quality, her at the factory, which | Neb. or at the Fipe works | are prepared to furnish le\u for SEWERAGE, GE, ETC, ‘manufactare all u«u'\l\r: WORK. WEGUARAR: T TO BE EQU AL TO ANY NT MANUFACTURED INTHE UNITED STATES: BI-ORDERS FROM DEALERS RESPECT- FULLY SOLICITED. DDORESS, A BEATRICE MYDRAULIC CEXENT & PIPE CO. OMAZA NEBRASKEA. | my2i-3m VAN DPORN’S MACHINE SEHOF. All kinds of light snd heavy MACHINERY MADE & REPATIRED. RAL Work Guarantee’.~ @& 20d in any quant is located at Beatrice,N been | | City Meat Market. | | Furniture Dealers my OMAITA, NEBRASKA. MILTON ROGERS. ‘Wholesale Stoves TINWARE and TIN NERS’ STOCE. ——SOLE WESTERN AGENCY FOR—— STEWART’S COOKING and HEATING STOVES, | THE “FEARLESS,” COOKING STOVES, CELEBRATED CHARTER OAK COOKING STOVES | Allof Which Will be Sold at Maaufacturers’ Prices, With Freightadded. Taiss: e Sond for Prioc Fort Calhoun Mills. FLOUR, FEED Manufactured with Great Care from Best Grain. Ceneral Depot, Cor. 14th & Dodge Sts, OMAIA. may 9-1y. ELAM CLARK. | W. B. RICEARDSON. |lonmaxa - NEBRASKA. PITCH, FELT AND GRAVEL ROOFER. And Manufactarer of Dry ani Saturated Roofing and Sheathing Felt. ALSO DEALERS IN | Roofing, Pitch, Coal, Tar, Etc., Itc.| Ruolh.‘ylfrcmémnfm:'i! \¢|nm){:|v\ ad_oining States. Office opposite the Gas Works, on | C. F. GOODMAN, f WHOLESALE DRUGGIST, And Dealer in PAINTS, OILS AND WINDOW GLA Omaha. Nebraska. M. J. McKELLIGON, INPORTER AND JOBBER OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC WINES and LIQUORS, Tobaccos and Cigars, No. 142 FARNHAM STREET, OMAHA, NEB. 01d Kentucky Whiskies a Specialty. £2"AGENT FOR THE ELDORADO WINE COMPANY, CALIFORNIA. o FPorter’s .Ale, of Joliet, Xll. SS, jetati. | julya1y Omaha Shirt Factory PLATZ & NELSOIN, MILLINERY, ‘ Manufacturers o Ladies’ and Gents' 8% 2 NEPTUNE, or FISH- FLowsn:s, Nice Orzaments for Ladies. ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED. Purnishing Goods. 216 Douglas , Cards, Circulars, GRA Y, LEADING Y MADE PK)NTING 'l‘nga. Ete., Bh\ppm ads, Letter Heads ASPECIAL! g BYRON REED. LEWIS 5. REED BYRON REED & C0. The Oldest Establiched Real Estate Agency y IN NEBRASKA Keep 3 complete Abstract f Title to all Rea it in Ow-ba and Doutlas county. JACOB CISH, 261 Farnbam St., Bet. 14th & 15th | i — | | | | | | ST smEELY BROS. IM Keep constantly on hand Schueider & Burmester Manufacturers of , COPPER AND SHEET IROV WARE. DEALERS IN Cooking and Heating Stoves. A LARGE SUPPLY OF Baxxr Pomx MUTTON, P )ULTRY, Tin Roofing, Spouting and G: R S R P S A jifteen d] | TvEGETABLES JAS. M. M°VITTIE, --WHOLESALE DEALER IN— Clarried Cider. and 156 Farnham Street. VICTOR COFFMAN, PHYSICIAN and SURGEON, (OVER ISH'S DRUG STORE,) Farnham Street, REDMAN & LEWIS, | Cor. 16th and Izard Streets. Cottonwood LUMBER Jegs T3 224 SAWED TO ORDER. i | F. A. PETERS, Saddle and Harness Maker, | AND CARRIAGE TRIMMER, No. 274 Farnham st. bet, 15th & 16th | LLor and repairing promptly attended | 10 and satisfaction guarraziced. ymad, OMAZEA Arm paid for bides, aydoyl Nos. 187, 182and 191 Fainham Street. | | Booksellers E | Ne. 188 Farnham Strest. Omakha, ot |COAL OIL AND HEAD-LIGHT OIL OMAHA ‘! LODGE PROPERTIES, JEWELS | 11Stree bet. Far: Iopratt, MAX MEYER & OTHER OMAHA NEBRA‘RA BEE LN NOD CHEAP FARMS! FREE XEOMES On toe Line ofZthe ‘Union Pacific Raflrogd | A Laz2 Grant of 12,000,000 Acres of the best PABMING and MINERAL Land 1,000,000 ACRFS IN NEBRASKA IN THE GREAT PLA'TE VALLER | ‘THE GARDEXN OF THE WEST NOW FOR SALE | These lands are in the contral portion of the United States, on the 41 itude, the central line of the great Temperate Zove of the American (<o growing and stock raising unsurpassed by any in the United States. OEEAPER IN PRICE, more Inonhltwrl- be found {ran. and more courex Isowhers. FIVE and TEN YEARS' credit given with Interest at SI* COLONIETS snd ACTUAL SETULERS canhuy on Ten Years' Crec vrice to all OREDIT PUBCHASERS, A Deduction TEN PER CENT, FOR CASH FREE HOMESTEADS FOR AGTUAL SEJ Aad the Best Locations for Cuiv |Soldiers Entitled tp a Homestead Acres. Froe Fassos to Purchaners Send for new bescriptive Pamphiet, with new maps, pabiished in /. maled freo every where. o, ®. ct of XIaancd ‘fiid TAB KUBERMANN & CO.. rPrmiacTIiIcAaAl | Manufacturerx | WATCHMAKERS,|OF JEWELRY S. E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. WATCHES & CLOCKS JEWELRY AND PLATED-WARE, AT WHOLESABE OR RETAIL. Dealers+Can Save TIME and FREIGHT Ordering of Us. ENGRAVING DONE FREE OF CHAR( fl'\LL GOODS WARRANT.D TO BE AS REPRE: by 'S c. ansorr S. C. ABBOTT & CO., Stationers WALL PAPERS, DECORATIONS aAanND WINDOW SHADES, Puhllshers’ Agents for School Books used In Nel ran- GEO. A. HOAGLAND, ‘Wholesale Lumber ——OFFICE AND YARD— COR, OF DOUGLAS AND 6TRSTS., U. P. R. R. "RAC O AETA NEB, : WM. M. FOSTER, Wholesale Lum WINDOWS, DOORS, ELINDS, MOULD:! Plaster Paris, Hair, Pry and Tar cd Sole Agents for Boar Creek hime and Louisville bosgiensie ] OMA LS N I D. SOLOMON [ WEHOLESATLE PAINTS OFFICE AND YAR P. Track, bet Farnham a OILS AND WINDOW CGLAST NEBRASKA FAIRLIE & MONELL, BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS. Stationers, Engravers and Printers. NOTARIAL AND LODCE SEALS. Masciie, 0dd Fellows and Knights of Pythias UNIFORMS BOOKS, BLANKS, AND EXPRESS. 6@ MAXEIA, qu’a. 8@ EASTERN PRIC | 282 Dousglas Streot. ARTHUR BUCKBEE. CARPENTER, BUILDER —AND DEALER IN— A ANNOY 1 —AND— [IORNAMENTA L (9. 1 [ CHEAP, DURABLE, 57 For Yards, Lawns, Cemeteries Church Greads ana Paul Office and § ihor } 24 OMAHA

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