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THE OMAHA BEE OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY. Wi D0 x0T desiro any contributions whatever | of & literary or poetical character; and we | will not underiake to. preserve, or to return hesnme, in any case whatever. Our Siafl | s sufficiently large to more than supply our | limited space in that direction. | Brar Nawx oy WaiTER, in full, must in each | and every case accompany any communica- tion of what nature scever. This is Dot in- tended for publication, but for eur own satis- faction and as proof of good faith. | OUR CouNTRY FiENDs we will slways be ‘pleased 10 bear from, on all matters connected | with erops, country politics, and oo any sub- | Ject whatever of general interest to the peo- | pleof our State. Any information conpect- d with the election. and relsting to Soods, accidents. ete., will be gladly reccived. Al | such eommunte viions, however, must be | brief as possible; and tuey must, inall cases, | e written up e one side of the shest only. | | POLITICAL. ALL AXNO! NCEMENTS of candidates for office | —whether made by self or friends, and | whether as 0l ‘cesor con. caunications o ‘Se Editor, are (unt!l nominstions are made) | simpiy personal, and will be charged s sd- | vertisemeuts All communications should be addressed to £ ROSEWATER, Editor snd Publisher, Draw- | rom. NOTICE. On and after October twenty-first, 1872, the | eity circulation of the DarLy Bk is assumed | by Mr. Edwin Davis, to whose order all sub- | scriptions not paid at the office will be payable. | 2 by whom all receipts for subseriptions will | coun E. KOSEWATER. Publisher REFUBLICAN BTATE CONVENTION. A Bepublican Stato Consention will be held af the city of Lincoln on Wednesaxy, the 24 day of Sept mber, 1874, § wio k p' m, o the purpose of o nomination’ one esualiat for ¥ one” candinate for ‘mewber of Congress contingent, caudidates for Governor, Sec etary of ‘bisle, Tressurer Superintendent of Public lustruction, State oon Luspecior ad attoraey Generdl, aud Sor the transaction of such other business as sy p-overly cowe before it The delegatcs | from each Judicial District will pominate 8 ‘person for District Attorey, for thelr respoc- | Live Distracts. The orgr entitled 1o dele- gates upon the followis ; ng basis ‘Counties east of the stxth Principal Merldisn ‘bl be entitled 1o one delegate for each L) inhabitants, according to the census taken dur- ing 1he current year, and one for each fraction over five hundred. Bat exch organized county shall be entitied to st least one delegate. Organized counties west of the 6th P. AL, shall be eutitled to one delegate each, and to one sdditional delegate for each one thousand in- habitants, ing to the census aforesaid, snd one for esch fraction over five hundred, s follows : izel counties ar DELEGATES FOR COUNTIES, The counties are recommended to elect al- ternate dglegates to act in case the delegates elect fall 1o gttend the convention; and the | convention is serommended to exclude proxies dor delegates that 4o pot reside in the counties ¥hey propose to represent By order of the comumiltee. F.M. Jomxsox, C. H. Gere, Chajrman. Socrelary — ACCORDING to our telegraphic ad- { vices from the Indian Territory, ac- tive hostilities have commenced, and are now in progress, between the U. 8. troops and the Comanches and other hostile Indians that infest | that region. The indications are that this is the beginning of a gen- eral Indian war in the southwest, | OxE of Postmaster Yost’s white- washing apologists yery kindly vol- unteers an explanatiou in his behalf through Redfield’s postal organ, touching the excess of pay drawn by Yost from Uncle Sam. How about that arrangement with Sperry; how about Pattee’s branch office, and” how' about that | swindling operation in filching $75 from a wail contractor? 1t is very kind indeed for this mu- tual friend to advise the public to abide by bummer Hawley's report, when everybody knows that Haw- ley was an unmitigated white- washer and scalawag. “Corn is a failure in Nebraska. The grasshoppers have taken every- thing, corn and all vegetables, throughout this State and Kansas. They are now going East by the | mililon.” Sach is the tenor of a special dis- patch from Omaha to the Chicago Tribune. Now everybody convers- ant with the facts know that this is | & base fabrication. ‘There are at least twenty counties in Nebraska that have entireiy es- caped the grasshopper scourge, ‘while many other counties were but slight sufferers. The corn crop in Nebraska will doubtless be very light, but there will still be several millions of bushels harvested. In the river counties there will be quite a surplus of both corn and vegetables. Even the reported mi- g ation of the koppers toward the east is untrue, as everybody knows that their passage was southward, PARTIES who claim to be well in- formed about the political move- ments at the State Capital, report that a new combination has been concocted under the inspiration of Senator Hitcheock, which is to de- feat Judge Crounse for re-nomina- tion. The programme, as we are informed, embraces a flank move- ment on the part of the Welch brigade, by which the Norfolk Brig- adieris to abdicate his Gubernatorial aspirations in favor of Captain Gar- berand becomea candidate for Con- gress. ‘We apprehend, however, that this brilliant piece of strategy will prove & complete fizzle when the ateempt is made to carry it out. Judge Crounse is altogether too strongly entrenched in the esfeem of the honest Republican masses to . be dislodged, even if all the poli- | the Trades' Assembly was published | Parcel while denouncing the Re- | sent honest workingmen and de- | recently investigated the subject: | ready seven of these vessels plying DOES REFUTATION REFUTE! At a regular meeting of the Ne- braska Trades’ Assembly, held last | evening at Machinists and Black- smiths’ hall, the following pream- | ble and resolution was adopted : i HALL OF TRADES' ASSEMBLY, | OMAHA, August 24, 1874. | ‘WHEREAS, A certain_article ap- peared in the evening BEE of this date, purporting to come from “Many Members of the Trades’ As- sembly,” wherein a certain mem- | ber of the Trades' Assembly is charged with misrepresentation and hypoerasy ; therefore, be it Resolved, That we, the Trades assembly, do denounce the senti- ments therein contained, and do hereby pronounce them = false in every particular, and recognize it | as an attempt of the BEE to under- | mine the influence of the Datly Union in its efforts to advance the Interests of the workingmen. ‘W CARNABY, President. C. E. PARCELL, Secretary. In order that our position in this matter may not be misconstrued, we shall make a plain statement, whien we are able to back up byjun- impeachable evidence. The communication “purporting?’ to come from many members of at the request of a prominent mem- ber of the Assembly, who will, in | due time, publicly avow the author- ship of the article. Furthermore we are authorized by him to declare that Mr. Carnaby, the President of the Assembly, | had personally urged him to publish the fact that Charles E, publican party in the Assembly aud charging it with wholesale corrup- tion, had through misrepresentation secured a postal appointment at the hands of that party. And now, in- asmuch as Mr. Parcel, for whose special benefit these resolutions were passed, desires to put the BEE into afalse attitude before the commu- nity, we reiterate that he did make anti-Republican speeches in the Assembly within the last sixty days, thus seeking to prejudice its members against the party. Fur- thermore, that his appointment was secured mainly under representa- tionst which, interpreted into plain English, would say that he carried the Trades’ Union in his pocket, and could transfer and deliver it at pleasure. Now we are just as anxious as anybody to enlist Workingmen un- der the Republican standard but we desire to do so upon principle, and not by corrupt barter or hypocrisy. ‘We believe that the aims and objects of the Trades Assembly are of ahigher order than the mere ap- pointment of its members to postal clerkships The intimation that the BEE was actuated solely by a desire to undermine a oontemporary is absurd. Any paper that pretends to repre~ fends and upholds our postal corrup- tionists, undermines itself and proves conclusively that 1t eannot be relied on when important prin- ciples come into collision with money in the hands of public thieves. Prominent workingmen assure us that the resolutions above quoted could haye never been adopted if a majority of all the members of the Assembly had been present. TaE reported failure of experi- mental steam canal boating is flatly contradicted by parties who have “The steam canal-boats on the Baxter patent, carrying freight on the Erie Canal, have surpassed the most sanguine anticipations of the advocates of steam-navigation in artificial channels. There are al- between Buffalo and New York,and half a dozen more are constructing. The round trip from Buffalo to New York and return, occupies fourteen days on an average. They bring from 100 to 150 tons of merchandise from tidewater and take down over 200 tons of grain. The bed of the canal offers some obstacles to rapid travel at present from the accumulation of mud, but, even with this disadvantage of increased consumption of fuel and retardation of the boats, the Buffalo Advertiser thinks that grain can be profitably carried from Chicago to New York in ten days, and at absurdly low rates. Thix allows six days for the canal part of the journey, but as the obstacles in the way of travel dis- appear, it may be reduced to four, or even to three days. The Ohio Constitution. The people of Ohio have, by (he 1€jection of the proposed new Con- stitution of the State, given very emphatic expression to their de- termination to leave well enough alone. The $200,000 spent to get up that document the State may charge to profit-and-loss. ‘I'he de- bates of the convention, of which 3,000 copics were ordered printed, and which were to appear in four volumes of from 1,200 to 1,500 pages each, will now, it is under- stood, be consigned to the waste- basket. the the Northern road, the failure of Jay Cooke, and the panic, there has been no such instauce of unproductive consump- tion and waste of capital. Never was there a smaller return to so large an investment. Never was the labor of 150 men, the total number of delegates to the Convention, or of eighty-cizght lawyers,the contingent to 1t of the legal profession, reward- ed with meaner results. The fact that the present Chief-Justice of the United States presided over the de- liberations of the convention from the time it met until he was ap- peinted to the mest prominent place in the judiciary of the country went for naught. The Convention met on May 13, 1873, and for a whole year devoted their best.effortsto produce a lasting monument to their political wisdom. They chose a dull season and an “oft” year, that they might devote themselves to the theirlabor of love undisturbed. .~ How thoroughly everything was debated at their meeting may be learned from the length of time 1t took them to de- cide whether the same legal fees should be charged in the cities and ticians in the State should plpt and in the rural districts—viz., a whole month.—Chicago Tribune. EDUCATIONAL. | Session of the Teachers’' Ni m’mllY Institute at Fremont. FREMONT, August 25. Eprror BEE: Pursuant to call of the State Su- perintendent of Public Instruction, the Teachers’ Normal Institute for the North Platte convened in the High School building at this place August 18th. The opening was truly auspicious. Forty-seven teachers were in at- tendance the first day as workers, and the attendance for the past weelk would average about forty-five. Our efficient State Superintendent, aided by an able corps of assistants, is making this one of the best (and, it I may be favored the assump- tion,) the best institute ever held in the State. ORDER OF DAILY EXERCISES. Morning—Botany, condudted by Superintendent McKenzie ; regular opening exercises, singing and prayer; Arithmetic, instructor Prof. Nicholson ; History, instructor Prof. Nicholson ; Physiology, instructor State Superintendent; Language, instructor Chaneellor Benton ; Vo- cal Masie, instructor Prof. Worley Afternoon—Drawing, instructor Miss M. Gilchrist; Spelling and Reading, instructor State Superin- tendent; Geography, instructor Prof. Nicholson ; School Economy, in- structor Chancellor Benton; Pen- manship, instructor Mre. H. G. Wolentt; Music, instructor Prof. | Worley; Grand discussion on meth- ods presented during the day. Added to this regular work classes in algebra and geometry for teach- ers either holding or desiring first grade certificates arp formed, and for the past week were in eharge ot Superintendent Rush, of Douglas county, and Professor Shoop, of Bellevue. The Institute is regular- 1y classified and the exeroises eon- dueted with this oLject in view, viz: To present the best methods of ‘class Arill. The Chancellor’s daily lec- tures on “School Economy” being full of plain, practical ideas of or- ganization,classification and govern- ment, are of themselves worth the time ‘spent here. The citizens of Fremont are showing an increasing interest in our work. The attend- ance at evening lectures has been unusually large, Prof. McKenzie delivered an in- teresting leoture on_arithnietic, on ‘Wednesday evening. Friday eve- ning the Chancellor, in_his lecture, “The Teacher's Work,” presented to teachers not merely suggestions and advice as to preparation for the work, but the thoughts perva- ding the entire discourse seemed to be in perfect harmony with the pro- gress now being rapidly and con- stantly made in this great work. The lecturer’s ideal of the charaoter of the true teacher was a perfect model; was everything that it should be. The Chancellor will lecture to- night—Subject, “Teacher’s Qualifi- cations.” Thursday evening Prof, Kinney of the Deaf and Dumb Asy- lum, will lecture. Friday the Institute will close witha sociable and concert. The work of the Institute will elose with an examination open to all who de- sire to apply for first or second grade certificates; said certificates to be granted by the State Superintendent and be good throughout the State for one and two years respectively. Prof. Worley, whose marked ability as an instructor in musie, is intensi- fied by his enthusiasm, is doing much to awaken a lively interest in this work. INSTRUCTORS AND TEACHERS EN- ROLLED, Hon J M McKenzie, State Supt., | Lincoln ; Hon_Chaneellor Benton, Lincoln ; Prof H H Nicholson, Nor- mal School, Peru; Prof DB Worley, Overton ; John Cayton, County Supt Dodge county; F A Cogswell, County Supt, Madison county; John Rush, County Supt, Dougias county; C M Whitney, County Supt, SBaunders county ; H E Heath, Republican City ; C A Gordon, Fre- mont; G A Campton, Elkhern City; ‘L Campton, Elkhorn City; M V Miller, Kenesaw; E H Mason, Pleasant Valley; W H Talcott, Fre- mont; A Radtke, Pebble; J H Lynch, Columbus; W F_Bechtel, ‘Waterloo; 8 Plunkett, Fremont; J W Lewis, Platteyille; J G San- born, Columbus ; J M Taggart, Pal- myra; Prof. SBhrop, Bellevue; Jos Raycroft, Dodge county ; J D Pat- terson, Bellevue; C L Hill, Colum- bus; Z T Wileox, Douglas; J F Rausom, Osceola, Iowa; H H Fonts, Hooper. LADIES. N E McCarn, M J McDonald, A E Whelpley, Ella Wrelpley, A' M Clark, Evline Clark, Lulu Black- man, J C Harris, C Parks, Annie Abbott, Ella F Kittle, M S Gilchrist, May Marvin, E Van Ands, A M Inlay, Maggie Vance, Carrie 1 Hayes, C S Talcott, Fremont; ¢ Fifild Columbus 8§ L Echler, Norfolk; Vagner, Logan; E M Reed, Blair; L Doyle, Bell Creek; M M Hawes, Omaha ; M J Tobias, Webster; A'F Gale, Webster; A C Watt, Jamestovn ; 'Anna Herron, Omaha; L A Miller, Omaha; P Glover, Sarpy county ; HG Wolcott, MorthBend; AnnaMcVicker,North Bend; C Balcombe, Omaha; Villa Ear], Fontenelle ; M E Carles, Fon- tenelle; E Jackson, Platte county ; L A Miller, Dodge county, Ycurs truly, — The Mineral Deposits of North- western Nebraska. [Oakdale Journal.] Every season it becomes more avd more apparent that Northwest- ern Nebraska is exceedingly rich in wineral deposits of different kinds. C. Since the.collapss of | 3: C; Bradeen, of this county, has Pacific Rail- | Just returned from an extensive trip, which was made for the purpose of gaining a personal knowledge of the mineral resources of the upper country. He explored along the banks of the Verdigris for a_consid- erable distance. Here he found a fine quality of limestone, soapstone, and sandstone in large quantities. He continued his explorations along the course of the Nio- brara, and followed the course of Eagle creek, in Holt county, for a considerable distance. Along all these streams he reports to have found inexhaustible quantities of liméstone. A large amount of tim- ber is also to be found on these streams. Mr. B. left in our office specimens of the limestone brought from the Verdigris, which he says is the finest he has seen in Nebras- ka. He also left with us specimens of petpré?,e:n b“honmol bones. They were e in appearance, Yet were as hard as flint. g Mr. McEverly, of Holt county, informs us that he has not only seen limestone, soapstone, etc , on Eagle Creek, but also fine quality of slate- stone is a sure indication of coal. At the present rate thatthis country is settling up, it will not take lon; ere this problem is practically pos 3 ved. We Lave not the least doubt but that coal will be found along the | Niobrara and its tributaries in suffi- cient quantities to supply this coun- try for years to come. The fuel ques- tion has been a much mooted one in Nebraska, but we think with the timber we have along our streams, with the certainty that coal exists in many places, ‘with our late peat discoveries, we think none need be seriously troubled on this question. Build- ing material has been considered & draw back to Nebraska, but this is not mear so bad as many people would suppose. Gen. O'Neill, who returned a few days ago from the pine_regions at the headwaters of the Elkhorn, assures us that all the reports of pine in that countty, thus far made can be relied upon. When once the Elkhorn Valley has a rail- road intojthisjsection of country, we can in all probability, be supplied with lumberat a price greatly be= low what we have to pay at present} PUNGENTISTIC. The grasshoppers have devoured nearly everything in Kansas except- ing the politicians. In a Montana newspaper appear- ed the following: A number of deaths are unavoidably postponed.” Give us your pestilence, famine, even another civil war—anything but such another detestable bore as this Beecher business has become. Lo! the poor Indian; whose untu- tored mind sees scalps in the hair and smells whisky in the wind, is much agitated by the Custer expe- dition. The success of Josh Billings is exceptional. There are thousands of young men who do not know how to spell, and yet they are not worth $250,000. A Milwaukee dry goods clerk has struck for ten hours sleep. - He read that & man who does brain work requires more sleep than one who performs simply physical 1ahor. Ohio that the sounds of a fond mile when the wind is right. A California newspaper chronicles the fact that a defaulting county treasurer from that Islands, where he has a plautation and a flock of native wives. Our readers will please excuse the scarcity of reading matter this week, as the grasshoppers came in and eat umlflt of aur type, and we have not been able to replenish our stock a8 yet.—Zoup City News. A young lady came to the city the other day to have her picture taken. When the artist showed her the “proof,” and asked her how she liked it, she placidly remarked that he “put too darn much mouth on it to suit her.” Maud—*0, Uncle Georgee, I can see at least three gray hairs on your head!” Uncle George (with senti- ment)—“Ah, my dear, all my hair will be gray soon.” Ethel—~Nev- er mind, dear Uncle George, there's 8o very little of it that it won’t mat- ter much,” These lines are by a Saginaw (Mich.) poet, and were composed while the writer was floating down Flint River in a dugout; ‘Won'st the red Injun here took their delights, Fish't it and bleo, Now most of the 1nhabitants is whites, Wik nary red. 3 A Portland letter says: “Port- landers have an affection for root beer. We saw groups of young girls awaiting turn at street corners, where the venders of the liquid lo- cate We summoned courage, pur- chased, drank, and slunk away with # pain in our middles, and woe and misery in our eyes.”’ An Irishman found g Government blanket recently, and rolling it up put it under hisarm and walked off, saying: “Yis, that's moine—U for Pathrick, and § for McCarty; be me sowl this learnin’ is a foine thing, as me fayther would say; for if | hadn’t any edication I wouldn’t have been afther findin’ me blan- ket.”—[Danbury News. “Well,” I declare, said youn Smithkins, of London, as he g.mfi upon Niagara for the first time, “Yeth, it's awful,” murmured Eprigs, his traveling companion; “but don’t you know, Smilt 1 think they ought to utilize all this wet by building a mill, or something of that sort, you know.’ Complaint 15 made that colored gentlemen who sport white aprons at the summer rasorts conduct themselves this year as though Nen- T ator Sumner’s last elvil rights bill was already a law. One at Long Branch charged twenty-five cents for bringiug a lady a glass of water, and when remonstrated with said: “You wouldn't bring it to me for at.” Apropos of thé President’s recent visit to Hackensack, the Republican of that villagesays: “There was one man who lives in_the county, and happened in town for the first time in quite awhile. He wanted to know what all the bunting was dis- played for. He was informed that it was in honor of General Grant’s yisit. ‘General Grant ! who's he? ‘Why, the President, of course.’ “The President of what? *The United States.” ‘Oh P In a recent breach of promise case in England it was in evidence that the defendant told the girl that she might use his tooth-brush until his return, In this country when a fellow tells his doxy that she may bile her clothes in the same kettle with his'n, the proof is overwhelm- ing, but it 1s not near as striking an instance of affection as this English one, The jury very properly found for the plaintiff, and gave her dam- ages enough to keep her in tooth- fil;ubhf.s during the remainder of her fe. One of the least flattering tributes ever paid to a rising young artist has been paid to & Cincinnati daub- erby a Western critic: “ He pos- sesses some merit as an artist, but it is hard tc say whether it lies in Iandscape or marine paintings; you never can tell his cows from his ships, except when they have their tails exalted, when the absence of 8] betrays their character. Even then they they may b> mistaken for schooners scudding under bare poles. I once owned a pet alligator about ten or twelve inches long, and had him fixed up nicely, his domi- cile so arranged that he could take it wet or dry, just as “Sator” pre- ferred. One day I caught a mouse and concluded to turn it over to my pet, and I siood by to watch the re- sult. The mouse was put in the water and was swimming around the “Gator’” advanced to the attack and seized the mouse, which in- stantly acting on the defensive lunegnpmthsnngn:r ting 1 biting it about the eyes and face, causing it to relinquish its hold and beat a hins- ty retreat. The alligator conld not again be induced to come up to the scratoh. That the alligator is & nat- coward no one can deny. Ficayune, ural —New Orleans The weather is so dry in central | mother whaling her only son with | the boot-jack caa be heard a full State has | “turned up” in one of the Fiji | | | EZRA MILLARD, H. MILLARD, President. LI Cashier. OMATETA NATIONALBANK | Cor. Douglas and Thirteenth Streats. | OMAHA, - NELRASEA. | [ O — Surplus'snd Profits FNANCIAL AGEXTSFOR THE UNITED | ANT DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY FOR DISBUBSING OFFCERS. THIS BANK DEALS in Exchange, Government Bonds, Vouchers, Gold Coin, | tsw,umvana oouwvsr.j And sells drafts and raakes collections on all parta of Europe. BF-Drafts drawn payable in ey on the Bauk of Califorula, San Franeisco. CKETS FOR SALE TO ALL PARTS of Europe via the Cunard and Nationsal Steamship Lines, and the Hamburg-Amer'can |* Packet Compeny. 21t U.S.DEPOSITORY | The First National Bank | OF OMAZEIA. Corner of Farham and 13ta Streets. THE OLDEST BAIHH“’HBTABLISHIE" IN WEBRASEA. (Successors to Kountze Brothers.) ESTABLISHED IN 1858. Organized as a National Bank, August 26,1863 i Capital and Profits over - $250,000 | OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS: E. CREIGHTON, | A. KOUNTZE, President. Cashier. H. COUNTZE, H. W. YATES, Vice Pres't. As't Cashier. A. J. POPPLETON, Attorney. ALVIN SAUNDERS, 0S LOWE President. Vice Presdent. BEN woop, Cashier. SAVINCS BANK, N. W. Cor. Faruham aud 13th Sts., Capital. Authorizad Capiti {T)EPOSITS AS SMALL AS ONE DOL- r seceived and compound Interest al- Advantages OVER Certificates of Deposit : HE WHOLE OR ANY PART OF A DE- posit after remaining in this Benk three months, will draw interest from d.te of depos- it to payment. The whole or any purtof u de- posit can be drawn attany time. sug2 1"he Oldest Established BANKING HOUSE IN NBRASKA. Caldwell, Hamiltoi & Co., BANKERRS. Business transacted same as that of an Incor ed Bank. Accounts kept in Currency or Gold subject to sight check without no- ice. Certiflcates of Deposit issued pay- able on demand, or at fixed date bearing interest at six percent. per annum, and available in in all parts of the country. Advances made to customers on | urproved securities at market rates of_interest. Buy and sell Gold, Bills of Ex- change, Government, State, County, and City Bonds. glve special attention to nogo- We tiating Railroad and other Corpo- rate Loans issued within the State. Draw Sight Drafts on England, | Ireland, Scotlaud, and all parts of Europe. Sell European Passage Tickets, CULLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MA! aultr Established 1858. A.T.SIMPSON’'S P o XX CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY 588 & 540 Fourteenth Street, (Office up stairs,) Omaha, Nebraska. Carris and Buggies on band or Fade to order. - N. B.—-Particular attention paid to Repair ing. apr2s-t1 TOEIN PARK. 255 Harney stroet, between 141h and 15th. Carriage and Wagon Making In all it Branches, in the latest and most approved pattern. 1 HORSE SHOEING AND BLACKSMITHING od d repairiog done on short notice. U. P. R. R. MEAT MARKET, 16th street bet Catifornia and Webster. W E, KEEP O HAND THE BES V supply of FRESH AND SALTED MEATS. 8, large siock of Fine Sugar Cured Hams and Breakfast Bacon, at_the low- st rates. WA AUST & KNUTH, 1y Proprietors. 100,000 ACRES! RICH FARMING LAND IN NEBRASKAN 500 Hanscom Place Lots! | ‘OUSES AND LOTS im the city of Omahs, for salecheap aud on good terms, GS & HILL Real estate brokers,office over Mackey's store, on Dodge st. oppositenew bostoffice: ~ apdms Thoe ¥Peatrice Hydraulic, Cement, } —AND— PIPE COMPANTY, ULD INFORM THE PUBLIC THAT they are now. b HY- DRAULK NT, of the very best quality, and in any quantity,eitherat the factory, which is located at Beatrice, Neb., or at the Pipe works in Owabs. They also are prepared to all Kinds ofCEMENT PIFING for SEWERAGE: INAGE, la,llrulu‘l TEE OUR CEMENT TO BE EQU AL TO ANY HYDRAULIC CEMENT MANUFACTURED INTHE UNITED STATES. S¥ORDERS FROM DEALERS - FULLY SOLICITED. JTRLT AD DR ES BEATRICE HYDRAULIC R & PIPE CO. OMATA my2-$m VAN DORN’S MACHINE sITor. All xinds of light and besvy -, CEMENT NEBRASKA. MACHINERY MADE & REPAIRED. I‘ AL Work Guarantee. <94 gold or curren- | | Nos. 187, 189 and 191 Fainham Street. | OMAEIA, NE BRASKA. mar2dtt MILTON ap22tt ROGERS. Wholesale Stoves 'Union Pacific Railroad TINWARE and TIN NERS STOCK. % SOLE WESTERN AGENCY FOR—— STEWART’S COOKING and HEATING STOVES, THE “FEARLESS,” COOKING STOVES, CELEBRATED CHARTER OAK COOKING STOVES, | | Allof Which Will bo Sold at Maaufacturers® Prices, With Frelghtjadded. STATE | Send for Price Lists may $-1y. Fort Calhoun Mills. FLOUR, FEED Manufactured with Great Care from Ceneral Depot, Cor. 14th & Dodgo Sts, OMAXA. Best Grain. ELAM CLARK. OMAEIA 12thy treet. Addreas P. O. Box 452. W. B. RICHARDSON. NEBRASIKA. PITCH, FELT AND GRAVEL ROOFER. And Manufacturer of Dry and Saturated Roofing and Sheathing Felt. ALSO DEALERS IN Rocofing, Pitch, Coal, Tar, Etc., Etc. ROCEING inany part of Nebrasks or adjoining States. Office opposite the Gas Works, on f PAINTS, OILS C. F. GOODMAN, WHOLESALE DRUGGIST, And Dealer in AND WINDOW GLASS, Omaha. Nebraska. Jetoti. Juyaty M. J. McKELLIGON, IMPORTER AND JOBBER OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC Manufacturer of Ladies’ and Gents' MILLINERY, 2 NEPTUSE, or : FISH-FLOWERS, Nice Ornamenta for Ladies. ORDERS PROUPTLY FILLED. R, 13T WEth Stye,, a3 g PRINTE LEADING ‘Farnl 30B b GEO Ww. GRAY’ NG Circulars, Cards 'Y MADE PRINTI) Tags, Etc., Letter Heads, ing Shippi ABPEC!AL;A At BOTTOM PRICES. Bill-Heads, BYRON REED. LEWIS 5. REED BYRON REED & C0. The Oldest Established IN NEERASKA Kecp a_complete Abstract of Title to sll Roa Estate in Ow-ha and Douglas counts City Meat Market. sl ue] SHEBLY BROS. Keep constantiy’onthand 4 LARGE SUPPLY OF BII = ¥, PO R X MUTTON, 2 )ULTRY, GANE —axp— ryFEGcETABLES JAS.” M. M°VITTIE, ~~WHOLESALE DEALER IN— Clarried Cider. L 7 and 156 Farnbam Street. VICTOR COFFMAN, PHYSICIAN and SURGEON, (OVER ISH'S DRUG;STORE,) Farnham Street, OMAHA. Real Estate Agency ' - JACOB CISH, 261 Farnham St., Bet. 14th & 15th jnLAN i | ER | Schueider & Burmester ‘ Manufscturers ot IIN, COPPER AND SHEPT IR0N | 282 Douslas Streot. - WARE. DEALERS IN Cooking and Heating Stoves. Tin Booing, Spouting and Guts short moties aud iz the best seanpen. Jiltaen troet sent2s 41 REDMAN & LEWIS, | Cor. 16th and Tzard Streets. | Cottonwood | LUOUMBER, On hand and SAWED TO ORDER. je281m ! F. A. PETERS, Saddle and Harness Maker, | AND CARRIAGE TRIMMER, No. 274 Farnham sr. bet, 15th & 16th ng promptly attended | D guarranseed. MEAT, MAX MEYER & BROTHER, 2 OMAHA, NEBRASKA e, " =V VLSNO) §ASVO MORS 40 DL 60 4910 07 opElY uOYIdpR Kioazy SEEILNOOD OHSTANY ‘aX Navpegine 0 ARy | CHEAP FARMS! FREE HOMESZ On tae Line of the | A Laz2 Grant of 12,000,000 Acres of the best PARMING sad MINERAL Lands of Ameta 1,000,000 ACKFS IN NEBRASKA IN THE GREAT PLATTE VALLE' | | itude, the central ling of the great Temperate Zone of the American Ceatiuent, and for graid | arowing and stock raising unsurpassed by any in the United States. OEEAPER IN PRICE, more hmb{:mm | and Dan’ vy, ulyzday THE GARDEN OF THE WEST NOW FOR SALE Thess lands are in the cantral portion of the United States, on tbe dlst degree of Nu:th La ‘more convenient to market tham . 1 ] g FIVE and TEN YEARS' credit given with Interest at SIX PER CENT 00LOX ;TS asd s0TUAL SETULERS canhay on Ten Years' Oredit. Lands ¢ the vam } vrioe to all OREDIT PURCHASERS. A Deduction TEN PEE CENT. FOR CASH. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR AGTUAL SETTLERS. Aad the Best Locations for Colonies! Soldiers Entit}%c(l) to a Homestead cff Acres. Free FPasses to FPurchamers of Liand } Send for new Descriptive Pamphlat, with new maps, peblished in Enclish, German, Sweod here. ~ Add: . DAVIS e A CraminionG U AR 8. S | | | | | WATCHMAEKERS,|OF JEWELRY $&rALL GOODS WAREANTI.D TO BE AS REPRESENTED."% A. B. KUBEKMANN & CO., PRACTICAL Manufaocturor { S. E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. WATCHES & CLOCKS JEWELRY AND PLATED-WARE, AT WHOLESALE OR RETAIL. | Dealers Can Save TIME and FREIGHT by Ordering of Us. ENGRAVING DONE FREE OF CHARGE ! g' { Jansi-t! ““S. C. ABBOIT & C 8.C. J. Cavurmice 0s, ‘Booksellers T Stationers! DEALERS IN ‘WA.I.L PAPERS, DECORATIQONS, WINES and LIQUORS, Tobaccos and Cigars, No. 142 FARNHAM STREET, OMAHA, NEB. 01d Kentucky Whiskies a Specialty. B3AGENT FOR THE ELDORADO WINE COMPANY, CALIFORNIA. G Forter’s Ale, of Joliot, Ill. Omaha Shirt Factory. CHARLES M. PLATZ | No. | ; \ OMAEA AND WINDOW SHADES, “ 188 Farnham Street. Omaha, Neb ; Publiskiers’ Agents for School Bm)_lj used in Nebraska. GEO. A. HOAGLAND, Wholesale Lumbe —OFFICE AND YARD— COR. OF DOUGLAS AND 6THSTS,, U. P. B, R. TRACK. NE | ! wolite l | | ‘'Wholesale Lumbe 216 Douglas St., Vischer’s Block, Omaha, Neb. , WINDOWS, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, &C. [ ‘! | | On T. P. Track, bet Farnham and Douglas Sts. ‘WM. M. FOSTER. 7 | ! | Plaster Paris, Hair, Dry and Tarred Felt. £ Sole Agents for Bear Creek Lime and Loulsville Comeat , JOMAHA, - NEB N. I D. SOLOMON, OFFICE AND YARL: apr2tt WHOLESALE PAINTS OILf3 AND WINDOW CLASS, [COAL OIL AND HEAD-LIGHT OI} 0 MAHA NEBRAS FAIRLIE & MONELL, K BOOK MANUFACTURERS Stationers, Engravers and Printers. NOTARIAL AND LODCE SEALS. Mascsie, 0dd Fellows and Knights of Pythias UNIFORIMS | LODGE PROPERTIES, JEWELS, BOOKS, BLA\'I_{& ETC., AY $EASTERN PRICES AND EXPRESS. MAA.NER mayitf Office and Shoy | 18 bot Pacabamard Harsey } CHEAP, DURABLE, THUR BUCKBEE. | —AND DEALER IN— AR ic43.:?:!1:2«":':!::!!., BUILDEZ ~AND-— [ORNAMENT AL LAMOId aAN10Y HONHA NOYI For Yarls, Lawns, Cemeteries Chureh Grouds ana}Pablic Parks, oM