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| W o x0T desire sny ot & literary or poeticai il not undertake to prescre, or . return ‘e same, 0 any case whateer. Uur St | 1 suficleatly large to more than supply our | iznited wpace in that direction | Reat, Nawe or WirTss, in ful, st 1o each | and every case SCCOMPADY ALY COLMUNICA- | tion of what nature scever. Tlis ia mot fa- | tended for publication, but for var own satie- | faction and as proof of good falth. 9om Covxrer Famxps we | 202 members. NEBRASKA’S CONTINGENT. The result of the October elections has very materially improved the chances of Nebraska’s Contingent Congressman to a permanent seat in the Forty-fourth Congress. There is now every indication that the Re- publican majority in the next House of Representatives will not exceed ten votes. The present Congress consists of Classifying them according to their vote for Speaker Blaine, 197 were Republicans while 95 were Democrats and Liberals. | Of those who thus voted for Blaine one was unseated in Arkansas, a | Democrat taking his place, and an- Joct whatever of gencral inierest (o the peo- | ple of our tate. Any luforust od with the election. and relst accldenta. ete., will be gladly received. such communicstions, however, must be | brief as possible; and Coey must, in all cases, | ‘o6 writien up™z ope side of the shoet ouly. | PoLITICAL. AL AxKO! ¥ORMERTS of candidates for ofice s, and | o to e | are sde) | arzed as ad- t Editor, are (until nomi simply personal, and will 'e vertsements Al communications £ ROSEWATER, Editor nJ Pul 2. NOTICE. Onand after October twenty-first, 1872, the | ety circulation of the DarLY Rix is assumed by Mr. Edwin Davis, to v seriptions not paid at the offic nd by whom all receipts for = ‘countersigned. E. KOSEWATER, Pablisher WiTH the approach of the inhos- | pitable season the labor problem is | again looming up. ion in military 1 promotion of General Rufus Ingalls to the posi- tion of Quartermaster General, to be preceeded by the retirement of General Meigs into civil life, with the title of Minister Plenipotentiary to the Court of St- Petersburg, Tae Democrats of Milwaukee have been forced to swap bhorses while crossing the strean by with-" drawing Sam Rindskopf, their can- didate for Congress, and substituting a more popular person. The proba- bilities are, however, that Rind- skopPs withdrawal not save them from an overwhelming defeat in November. THE St. Louis Democrat, which 18 now the leading possuni’s reform organ of Missouri, is forced to con- fess that the Republican victory in Towa and Nebraska, by overwhelm- ing majorities, seems to indicate pretty plainly that wherever local questions have not interfered, the hostility to Bourbon Democracy is a8 strong as ever at the West. The BEE nclines to the opinion that the St. Louls possum organ is Kkorrect. —_— THE great battle for political su- premacy is to be fought and won in the Empire State. Flushed with their recent victories in the West, the Democracy are making vigorous efforts to sweep the wavering mass that makes up the floating element by the Democratic tidal wave. The Republicans, on the cther hand, ap- preheusive of the imminent peril that now threatens, gre closing their ranksand dropping all factional dis- sentions preparatory to the fipal on- set. — Apvices trom the National Cap- ital, emanating from reliable sources state that President Grant is be- coming profoundly disgusted with tee third term talk, and has intima- ted his purpose to publicly defins his position on that subject at an early day, He will, it is stated, emphatically disclaim all hope or ambition for a re-election, and will assert his purpose not to be a candidate even if renomi- nated by any political con- vention. (While there is not the remotest probability that the Repub- lican party will commt itself to the third term doctrine, it will never- theless be gratifying to the great mass of the American people to have this great bug-bear definitely disposed of at the earliest practica- Lle day. THE people of Wisconsin are to vote upon the following important proposition in the nature of an ament to their State Constitution at the coming election: “No county, city, town, village, schovl district, or other municipal corporation shall be allowed to be- come indebted in any manner or for any purpose, to any amount, inelu- ding existing indebtedness, in the agaregate, exceeding fiye per cen- tum on the value of taxable property therein, to be ascer- tained by the last assessment for state and county taxes previous to the incurring of such indebted- Any county, eity, town, vi lage, school dis ipal’ corporation debtedtiess as afo) or atthe time of doing o, provids for the collection of a direct annual tax sufficient to pay the interest on such debt, as it falls due, and also to pay and discharge the principal thereof within twenty years from the time of contracting the same.” —_— DANGEROUS ENEMY TOSOCIETY.” The Nebraska City (hronicle with several *ifs,” “buts” and “hopes,” goes after Robert W. Furnas in the following : “The office of governor could nev- er be prostituted to more dangerous purposes than in the improper exer- cises of the pardoning power. A governor who would liberate forgers and swindlers from the penitentiary when it is well known that indief- 10ents for grave crimes are pending against them in the criminal courts, becomes a dangerous enemy to so- jety, instead of being the ehi el guandian of public morality an public virtue."— Herald. Now if our loeal Democratic con- temporary will take the pains to examine the files of the BEE it will discover that the ardcle above quot- edis an extract from an editorial leader that appeared in the BEE Monday afternoon, just one day be- fore the Herald had made any allu- s1on whatever to the Webber pardon outrage. The Nebraska City Ctron- dcle simply republished the BEE'S comments, and the Herald will do well o give credit where it is due. other, General Banning, a Liberal, of the Second Ohio District, has re- turned into the Republican fold, which leaves the actual Republican majority in the present Con- gress at a round one hundred. In order to obtain & majority 1n | the next House the opposition will therefore have to gain fifty-one members. The elections so far held in Au- gust, September and October have resulted in a net Democratic gain of sixteen members, which would still require a gain of thirty-five to give them control of the House. It is conceded by well informed Republican leaders that the Democ- racy are likely to gain from fifteen to twenty-five members in the No- vember elections, which would, therefore, reduce the Republican majority in the next House to about twenty, with a possible further re- duction to ten in the event of unex- pected Democratic gains in New York. ‘When Congress re-assembles in December, the exact political com- plexion of the forty-fourth Congress will be fully determined. Judging from the present outlook it is very reasonable to anticipate that a bill looking to the proper adjustment of our Congressional representation will reccive favorable consideration. ‘When it §s furthermore borne in mind that Hon. Pat. ©. Hawes, Nebraska’s Contingent Congress- man, is an indefatigable worker who eannot be intimidated or dis- couraged by ordinary obstacles, the prospect for his ultimate admission is decidedly promising. ‘WitH all dug respect for the es- tablished reputation of Warden Woodhurst as a man of honor and probity, the BEE must pronounce the explanation produced by the Lincoln Journal, touching the War- den’s action in the Webber case, as decidediy unsstisfactory, if not ab- solutely disgraceful. THE Government Commissioners charged with the final inspection of the Union Pacific Railway have, in their report to the President, paid a merited compliment to Superintend- ent Clark and hjs assistants and subordinates, for the ahle and effi- cient administration of the compa- ny’s affairs. The concluding por- tion of the Commussioners’ report must be highly gratifying to the stockholders, as well as the manag- ers and officers of the great trans- contimental railway. It reads as follows : “We consider the road as built a first-class railroad, fully complying with its charter, and with the re- quirements of the law, and in ac- cordance with the instructions of the department furnished tous. The shopsand round-houses are of brick and stone; its machinery all of the iatest and most :lippm\'ed pattern ; its locomotives and roling stock am- ple and in excellent condition ; its passenger trains are well appointed and first-class, giving ample accom- modation to the trayel; its struc- tures are fast becoming permanent, iron being substituted for wood and stone, and if the present policy of the road is continued it will be buta short time before the maintenance of the road will be reduced to a min- imum. TIts cheap fuel and tne ef- forts being made by the company to develop the resources of the country through which it runs will develop the local travel and u-nm;lc and add largely toits tonnage and earnings. The condition ot the road, its order, discipline, and the evident close at- tention to the details not only show great ability on the part of the gen- eral officers, but reflects great credit upon the local management of its superintendent and assistants. e NEBRASKA RELIEF. Cieveland and Philadelphia. [Cleveland Herald, October 19(h. | ‘We publish elsewhere in this issue of the Herald an appeal to the peo- ple ot Cleveland in bebalf of the starving settlers in the western por- tion of Nebraska, to which we would call the earnest attention of every reader. The terrible grasshopper plague, combined with protracted drought, bave utterly destroyed the erops of some fifteen of the Western counties of the State and_brought their in- habitants, at the begiuning of win- ter, upon the actual verge of stary- ation. Other portions of the State have done all within their resources for the starving people, but the de- mands upon them have been more than they were able to meet and the Stace Relief Society has been con- strained to call upon the people of the wealthier eastern cities for ad. For this purpose Gen. James 8. Brisbin has arrived in Cleveland, bearing letters of authority from the Governor of Nebraska, Gen. Ord, and others. His urgent appeal to the gencrosity of our vitizens ap- pears elsewhere. For the first time since her settle- ment Nebraska has been compelled to rely on outside help for mainten- ance. The State has grown rapidly and has been prospered with abun- dant harvests. 1n her um;:{ pros- perity her generous people have not forgotten others less !E‘vored, and after the great fire in Chicago she respendel most nebly to the appeals of the unfortunate, Omaha alone sending $20,000 ju cash within a few hours afler the news of the disaster ‘was received. Nebraska is now herself the suffer- er from & more grievous visitation than fire, and we know her appeal will not bein vain. Gen. Brisbin, in response to inquiries as to where he would be likely to get the most liberal responses to appeals for aid in the East, told General Ord that he knew of two cities where an ap- peal would meet with a generous re- sponse—*Philadelphia, and Cleve- land, Ohio.” We know thathis confidence will not be ABORIGINALITIES. The subdued Modogs are pitching pennies. That old Indian with a yariegated narrative, better known as Spotted Tail, has decided to resign his chief- tainship of the Brule Sioux. Justiniando Roxas, sged 122 years, the venerable Mission Indian, is still alive and enjoying the hospi- | tality of the Sisters’ Hospital in Santa Cruz. Recently, Indian Jim, of the ‘Washoe tribe, with some of his fol- lowers, killed an old she grizzly weighing about 600 pounds, and captured two cubs of 200 pounds each, in the mountains above Ran- dolph, Sierra county, Nevada. A party of mounted Indians re- cently appeared in one of the affairs that have taken place near Little Colorado, and as none of the hostile Tontos or Apache-Mohaves are mounted, the supposition is that these are either Navajoes or some of the bands that have left their res- ervations in New Mexico. Crazy Horse, a disagreeable and “rambunctious” Ogallalla, who has quite a large following of Sioux lodges, and has heretofore kept him- self and his constituency at a re- spectable distance from the Red Cloud Agency, has formally served notice on the agent, Dr. Saville, that he will soon come in and draw his rations regularly, hereafter. Red Cloud, the present chief of the Ogallalla Sioux, is under a cloud with his young warriors. Back-pay, or want of back-bone, or something or another is the matter. We do not prelend to know what it is. But itis something, Young-Man-Afraid- of-bis-Horses is looming up into no- toriety. He rides welll and he fights well! and Young-Man-Afraid- of-his-Horses is a formidable com- petitor of Red Uloud for the ehief- tainship of the tribe. The old war- rior watches the progress of this young hoodlum of an Indian, in winning the esteem and confidence of his dusky companions, with a Jealous eye. The red im&u is said to be friendly to the whil Sitting Bull has held out until holding out has ceased to_be a vir- tue. Heis “a heap big Injun” a Brule chief; but he finds it does not pay to be obstinate just because he knows how to be, and he has now become tractable and q%rmhle. He is going tolocate on Hat Cregk with his troops, draw rations until spring at least, and most probably bea can- didate for office against old Spotted Tail before many moons. Bitting Bull has been playing injured inno- cence among the Indians, but thinks better of himself now. He wants to beelected head chief of the Brules, vice Spotted Tail, and is willing that the choice shall be fairly made by the warrlers, The Plegans at and near Black. foot Agency have had & high old time of it for the last few days in the mutilating business. The vic- tim was a Pen d’Oreille Indian who went into that locality to stea] horsgs. He had driven Al the loose horses (some forty In number) out of the corral of a small camp of Pie- gans in the nelghborhood of the agency. When returning for an- other lot of animals he was discov- ered by the Piegans, and one of their number shot, killed and scalp- ed him. They then chopped off his hands and feet, threw a lariat round his neck, and dragged the body fo the agenoy, a distange of five miles, where they severed his head and arms. Then followed a war dance around the body, which was made a target for each warrior to shoot & bullet into. The sayage carnival lasted until late Into the night. INDUSTRIAL POINTS. Appleton, Wis., s to have a sew- ing machine manufactory. The fall trade in shoes is once more promising at Ljynn, Mass. The Pgoria Glass Manufuetory has gone the way of many new born en- terprises. The new elevator just completed at Duluth has a capaeity of 240,000, and cost $60,000. According to dental estimates it costs the American people $5,000,- (}oo. year to keep their teeth in of- der. The Jackson, 0., Standard, claims that the first furnace in Ohio for the manufacture of iron was built on Bru;h Creek, Adams couaty, in A lightning rod which was put up under the_personal supervision of Benjamin Franklin in 1762, remains still upon a hotel in New Hamp- The new rolling mill at Terre Haute, Indiana, is now running on full time with about half force, the most that has ever been employed since its compietion. In consequence of thelong drouth Mr. Sullivant, a wretched old far- mer in Ilinois, will have this year only 850,000 bushels of corn, 40,000 bushels of oats, and 5,000 tons of hay. A gentleman from Massachusetts is now at Lawrence, Kansus, in- nYecling the water power at that place with a view to the establish- ment of a cloth factory. The yield of gold in this country in 1873 was $80,287,000, and the to- tal yield for the last twenty-five years has_been $1,583,614,000. Of thisoniy $125,000,000 has been re- tained in this country, tne rest hay- ing been attracted abroad The tobacco industry is making fair progress in Califoraia. A com- pany at Gilroy have planted several hundred acres of plants, and re- cently sent to New York for the first time & consignment of 60,000 cigars, and 8,000 pounds of tobacco. A German now at work oa the Napa Branch Insane Asylum has, during his leisure time, invented and perfected a clock that at a set hour will 1ift the chimney off the lamp, light it, put out the match and replace the chimney. He is now at work on something else, supposed to be a clock that will get up in the morning at daylight, go down stairs to the kitchen, kindle a fire and make the coffee, and then rllltle off an alarm’to wake the fam- ily. Natchez, chief of the Piutes, after learning that the Indian Commis- sioners would visit Nevada during the summer, had all the Indians of his tribe earefully counted, and they number, men, women and children, 2,455. Ofthis number but 253 are on reservations. They de- clare they will not be forced upon reservations, though they are wil- ling to work. They say white men are allowed to live where they please, and Indians should be allow- ed the same privilege. They ai waiting to have a talk with the Commissioners, A quarter-inch rod of the best steel will sustain 9,000 pounds before breaking ; soft steel, 7,000 pounds; iron wire, 6,000; iron, 4,000; infe- rlor bar iron, 2,000; cast-iron, 1,000 108,000 ; copper wire, 8,000; silver, 2,000; gold, 2,500; tin, '3,000; east- zinc, 160; cast-lead, 50 milled lead, 200. Of wood, box and locust the same size will hold 1,200 pounds; toughest ash, 1,000 ; elm, 800 ; beach, cedar, white oak, pitch pine, 600 chestnut and maple, 650; poplar, 400. Wood which will bear a heavy weight for & minute or two will break with two-thirds the force act- fug a long time. A rod of iron is about ten times as strong as hemp cord. A ropean inch in diameter will bear about two and a half tons, byt in practice it is not safe to sub t it to & strain of more than about one ton. Half an inch in diame- ter, the strength will be one-quarter as much; a quarter of an inch, one- sixteenth as much; and so on. Rubber overshoes for horses are a recent invention. The shoe ismade and lined in precisely a similar manner to the articles of apparel worn by the human race, and, in fact, present no points of difference save in its shapeand in its manu- facture of the best quality of India rubber. Itis designed asa subs tute for the iron shoe, and as means of preventing the many m: adies to which horses’ feet are sub- ject. Horses suffering with crack- ed or contracted hoof, and similar painful hurts, it is said, are quickly cured by the substitution of the rub- ber covering for the unyielding metal shoe. The device is easily removed from or puton the hoof, and hence, while sianding in the stall or turned out to pasture, the horse may be left barefooted. As compared with iron shoes, the cost of the rubber is ahout one-third more, and their weight is forty per cent less, while they are very dura- ble. Sixteen sizes are manufactur- ed, so that accurate fits may be ob- tained, —_— IMMIGRATION TURNING. Timid Mennonites. The Rev. Mr. Neumann, pastor of a German congregztion in New York city, writes to the Westbote, 8 newspaper of Allentown, Pa., con- cerning two parties of Mennonites with whom he had been brought into contact. One of the parties consisting of some hundreds, had Just arrived at Castle Garden, in the ‘Hamburg steamer from Russia, and the other party, of how many we are not told, have just arrived at the same place by train from the West. These latter had landed m New York only five-or sx weeks before, having sold their property at a sac- rifice in Russia, and, immediately after arrlving in New York, had gone to Dakota, where they were notpleased. In Nebraska they had seen the desolation caused by the oppers. Every- where they had met with people out of work, aud consequently in need and misery. All this filled the new-comers with feaggangulsh, tar- ror. They therefore straightway turned their faces backwards to- wards the East, and got into Castle Garden just in time to meet their countrymen and co-religionists as they disembarked. The latter, filled with glowing hopes, were naturally & good deal put out by such a greet- ing as they Teceived from their re- treating brethren, and could not make out what it meant. However, they all seem, though with some misgiving, to have set out on the journey westward, Getermined to see things for themselves. No doubt they will do well, aud, in the long run, haye no reason to regret their change of abode. From Mr. Neuman’s repart the runaways appear ta be people too timid and simple-minded to be away from home anywhere without a guardian. “We caunot stay in thisland,” they said to a clergyman, and gave the reasons. “Here,” said they, “the people curse; in Rus- sia people pray. Here the children do not remain German; in Russia our children continue German. Here is a veritable religious Babel; in Russia ene knows what (of what religion) one is. Here one cannot earn even one's bit of bread. And 80 forth. The good people finglly said No, no; we go back, we would live in our faith, in our faith die; in Russia would we be buried. *Dear, good, pious hearts” they seemed to the pastor, and it is not unlikely that religious fears for their descen- dants in this profane land had most to do with their flight. Who dare say that faith is dead. — PERBONALITIES. Mme. Tussaud has added Mr. Beecher to her collection of wax fig ures, They say Vinnie Ream isn’t a sculptor—only & “persuasive curly- head.” Speaker Blaine has returned from his Western trip to his home in Augusta. Dr. Ayer, of Lowell, will leave hie handsome daughter $2,000,000 fn greeabacks which is a sugar-coated pill worth taking. Gen. Braxton Bragg is now chief engineer of the Galveston and Santa Fe railroad, with headquarters at Galveston, An ex-rebel general, 0’Neal, who served under Stonewall Jackson, is shoveling dirt on the Chicago, Bur- :’lngwn & Quiney railroad for §1 per lay. There is evidently a very brilliant future before Weston, but the gen- eral opinion is that he won’t begin to realize it much until somebody saws off his legs. Senator Ross, of Kansas, who fig- ured prominently in the impeach- ment of Andrew Johnson, is sub- editor on a_country newspaper in Lawrence, Kansas. Dr. Newman, in looking around Palestine, had his devotional feel- ings :egmd deal stirred up, as is ev- idenced by his pathetic dispatch to the State Department, that he could die happy if he could only get home with some Jerusalum mud on his boots. Regan, once the retel Postmaster General, says that when Jeff Davis and himself were in prison, if the world had been & mass of gunpow- der, he would have unhesitatingly thrown a firebrand into it. It must have heen a season of great discour- agement. Edmund About is said to be so quick and restless in his movements that one wonders where he gath- ered even the fat he carries. =His face 1s said to be of a Russian type, and if he Is not exaotly handsome himsel, e has five haudsome chil- ren. Mrs. Lincoln was unable to attend the ceremonies at the dedication of the monument to her husband’s memory at Springfield on account of ill health. She has been con- fined to her room in Chicago for the past five months by a _severe sick- ness, from which she is now recov- ering. The merriest monarch in the world is Victor Emanuel ; the finest looking, Kaiser Rilly; ' the most stuck up, Alexander II., of Russia; the thnkesbheaded, Francis Jo- seph, of austria; the most Republi- can, Leopold, of Belgium ; the rich- est, Peter 11, of Brazil; the most amiable, Christian IX., of Den- mark; the most productive, Queen Vietoria ; the dirtiest, the Emperor of Chiua’; the most married, Ab- dul-Aziz-Khan, of Turkey. BANKING . 8. DEPOSITORY, st National Bank U. Fir OF OMAHA, CORNER FARNHAM AND 13TH STS. THE OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHMENT IN OMAHA. SUCCESSORS TO KOUNTZE BROS. Established in 185. Organized as a National Bank, August 20, 1853. Capital and Profits Over $300,000. DIRECTORS: CrEtGToN, Pres. | A. Kouxtz,24 V. Fres muAN Koustz, = | H. W. Yatss, Vice Presidént. ‘Cashier. A. J. PoPPLETON, Att'Y. This Bank recelves deposits without regard to amounts, Tssues time certificates bearing interest. Draws drafts on San Francisco and principal clties in the United States, also Loudon, Dublin, Edinburgh and principal cities of the continent “sfflxm"ung.' Tickets for Emigtants by I ets for Emigrants by Inman Line.” custt EZRA MILLARD, President. OMATEIA NATIONALBANK Cor, Douglas and Thirteenth Streets. OMAHA, NELRASKA. . MILLARD, Cashier. 2200,000 00 %0 00 INANCIAL AGENTSFOR THE UNITED STATES. ANT DESIGNA' D DISBURSING THIS BANK DEALS In Exchange, Government Bonds, Vouchers, Gold Cotn, DE] OFF [: BULLION and GOLD DUST. And sells drafts and roakes collections on all parts of Europe. ADrafts drawn payable in gold or curren— cyon the Bank of Californis, San Francisco. CRETS FOR SALE TO ALL PARTS of Europe via the Cunard and National Steamship Lines, and the Hamburg-Amer‘can Packet o= The Oldest Establisheu BANKING HOUS IN NMRASKA. Caldwell, Hamiltoa & Co., ANKEBRS. Business transacted same as {hat of an Incorporated Bank. ccounts in Currency or Gold subject to sigl tice. it eheck without no- Certificates of Deposit issued pay- able on demand, or at fixed l:lu{n bearing Interest at six percent. per annum, and available in'in all parts of the country. 3 ‘3;::5“ mn‘g!z m. customers on securi valmemL 'S at market rates Buy and sell Gold, Bills of Ex- ol Gove .::ngle., M\:flr‘nmnt, State, County, We give apecial attention to nego- fllflmlvecmld and other Corpo- rate issned within the Stato, Draw Sight Drafts on England, Ireland, Scotland, and all parts of Europe. 2 Sell European Passage Tickef :/‘Il]!ll:'I.L!XX'IUNS PROMPTLY HAD”‘E ALVIN SAUNDERS, _ ENOS LOWE President. Vice Presdent. BEN wWoop, Cashier. STATE SAVINGS BANE, N. W. Cor. Farnham sud 13th Sts., Capital.... Authorised Capitil... — | TDFEVSITS A5 SMALL &s ONE oL Seceivd an, und intery lowed on the same. Lo Pierest el = Ee R Advantages OVER Certificates of Denosit: THE WHOLE OR ANY PART OF A DE- posit alter remaining in this Benk three E?:":y‘ 'mtd"'l"h in'fir‘]fi. from d.te ol'd!po:- et Toe whowor sny et < e Posit'can he drawn aieany 1ime. ©mngh i JOHN H. GREEN, STATE MILLS DEALER IN GRAIN, FLOUR AND FEED, axp COMMISSION MERCHANT. NEW SALO HENRY, the popular Saloon Keeper, bas re- fitted up the basement of old Herald building, "~ EDWARD KUEHL. MAGISTER OF THE DEPARTED. No. 498 10th 8t between Farnham & Harney. Will by the aid of gusrdian spirits, o fos any one 4 view of tiie past, present an ture, "No fors churged in casds c{ sickness, . J. 0. SLATTER. Dealer in Staple and Fancy GROCERIES, Flour and Feed. Highest Price paid for Country Produce, Jacob's Block, 667 16th 8t, bet Dodge & Cap-:Ave* octdtt. OMAHA, NEB. VICTOR COFFMAN, PHYSICIAN and SURGEON, (OVER ISH'S DRUG STORE,) Farnham Streeot, 8dt1. ~IAXEIA BEES! BEES!! BEES!!! T the American and Buckeye patents. Strony SWaTIIS 8t sLX 10 cight dollars cach, with ectas cost of hive aded. ~Light swarms, from four to six dollars each. I hiave more bees, than the location will support, and must sell. Address: Undersigned has sixty swarms of na- and Ttalian be:s for sale, in hives of HIRAM CRAIG; Fort Calhoun, Neb sept11ddxtm J. M. YERGA, ‘Wholesale and Retail Dealer in F ASND SALT MEATS Hams. Sausage, Lard, Poultry, &e., &e., &e. No. 179 Farnham St., Bet. 11th « maf Oppo-ite Pioneer Block. 2 ot R. A. HARRIS, 537 Fifteenth Sreet, bet. Donglis and Dodge. BEEF;, PORK, Mutton and Veal, Fish, Poultry, Game, aug6 1y AND VEGETART.RR. e MAIA. NEBRASKA. Furniture Dealers Nos. 187, 182 and 191 Fainham Street. MILTON ROGERS. ——SOLE WESTERN AGENCY FOR—— THE “FEARLESS,” COOKIKG STOVES, CELEBRATED ap22d Send for Price Liimte. Wholesale Stoves TINWARE and TIN NERS' STOCE. STEWART’S COOKING and HEATING STOVES, CHARTER OAK COOKING STOVES, Allof Which Will be Sold at Maaufacturers’ Prices, With Freightja dded. Fort Calhoun Mills. Manufsctured with Great Care from the Best Grain. OMAIRA. may $-1y. FLOUR, FEED & MEAL Ceneral Depot, Cer. 14th & Dodge Sts, ELAM CLARK. W. B. RICEARDSON. oM AEA And Manufacturer of Dry and Saturated Roofing and Sheathing Felt. ALSO DEALERS IN Roofing, Pitch, Coal, Tar, Etc., OOFING inany part of Nebraska or adjoining States. Offias opposit RO et R ¢ sty weinins s NEBRASIKA. PITCH, FELT AND GRAVEL ROOFER. Etc. :Gas Works, on MAX MEYER & BROTHE 8 10 1010) 0) DpwIg oY 0N 12 NO ATLNVISNOD SSVO M BRI E LN OO D . navpogine 10L8HH Y MOHS ANV ANV R, OMAHA, NE @ Ky ABE DIANGS A A - (X o MELODEONS™x ORGANS § 1,000,000 ACKFS THE GARDEN OF THE itude, the ec srowing and stosk orice to all OREDT A Doduction TEN P Aad the Free Fammo Send and Dun’ alviidar mphlet, with A £ new Descriptive . mailed free averywhere. OHEAPER TH PRIOE, more favorableterms ziven, n e found Elsewh WEST NOW FOR BALE are. FIVE and TEN YEARS' credit given with interest at SIX PEK CENT OOLONISTS und 40TUAL SETULERS canhuy on Ten Years' Oredit. Lanls 2% the vay T PURCHASERS. EN PEE CENT. FOR CASH. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR AGTUAL SETTLERS. Best Locs Soldiers Entitled to a Homestead :f Acres. to FPurchanmors of L.and tions for Colonies ! new maps, poblishad in_Enlish, ddrass = vand Commissioner PRACTICAL WATCHMAKERS, S. E. Cor. 13th JEWELRY AND C. F. GOODMAN, And Dealer in Omaha. Nebraska. WHOLESALE DRUGGIST, PAINTS, OILS AND WINDOW GLASS, M. J. McKELLIGON, IMPORTER AND JoBBER OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC Tobaccos and Cigars, No. 142 FARNHAM STREET, OMAHA, NEB. 01d Kentucky Whiskies a Specialty. B¥ AGENT FOR THE ELDORADO WINE C*MPANY, CALIFORNIA."§a July21y Forter’s Ale, of Joliet. Xl1. WINES and LIQUORS, ENGRAVING DONE s@ALL GOODS WARRANT.D 1ang1-tf Dealers Can Save TIME Ordering of Us. A. B. HUBEEMANN & CO.. Manufacturer - OF & Douglas Sts. PLATED-WARE. AT WHOLESALE OR RET:ii. and FREIGHT FREE OF CHARGE! TO BE AS REPRI nd mors convenient to market thaa ea JEWELRY WATCHES & CLOCKS CHEAP FARMS! FREE HOMES On tne Live of the Union Pacific Railroad A LazZ Grant of 12,000,000 Acres of the best FARMING sad MINERAL Laads of Amerio, IN NEBRASKA IN THE GREAT PLATTE VALL Thesa lands are in the cantral portion of the United States, on the 41st degree of Nucth Lae ral line of the great Temperate Zone of the American Centin ising unsurpassed by any in the United States. t, and for grais .- § C. Amsorr WINDOW CHARLES H. PLATZ Manufacturer of Ladies’ and Gents’ 3 NEPTUNE, or Nice Ornaments for Ladies. Omaha Shirt Factory. MILLINERY, FISH-FLOWERS, ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED! ct, ‘lay, ees Doy, FriNTING Circulars, Cards, g Tags, Ete., GRAY ;X At BOTTOM PRICES. LEADING o8 PRINTR L1Y MADE tter Heads, Lef Shi Farobam ang 6131‘u~dfih St 1A, ipping 73 GEO w. petwe” Business OMAHA, NEBRASKA. Be~Send Stamp for Circulars. G. R. RATHBUN, Principal. College.| SAFES! (Late Diebold & Kienzle) FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF, in Chicago, also preserved the contents in every. Independence, Iowa, places have stood the test—without failure, UNION MARKET |All Sizes for Sale and Made to Order. Old Safes Talen in Exchange. -ALSO YALE, BIAK AND SWALL LOCKS- D.S.COVERT, Gencral Agent, Chicago. A.E.STEVENS, Agent, 512 Thirteenth St., Omaha. Tie Celebrated Diebold. Norris & Co.’s | Have the best record of all, not One Lost in the two great fires | instance at | also at Central City, Col, and at all | | | I 3. A S. C. ABBOTT & CO., Booksellers = Statiorers DEALERS IN WALL PAPERS, DECORATIONS, AND SEHADES OMATETA WM. M. Sole Agents for Bear Creek OFFICE AND YARL: ) On G. P. Track, bet Farnuam snd Douglas Sts. | e FOSTER. Lime and Louisville Cemeat ] OMAHA, NEB OMAHA N. I D. SOLOMON, WHOLESALE PAINTS OILS AND WINDOW CLASS, COAL OIL AND HEAD-LIGHT OI _ NEBRASK FAIRLIE & | NOTARIAL AND | B2 EASTERN PRICES 282 Douslas Stroot. MONELL, LODCE SEALS. AND EXPRESS.“@a may it —AND— CHEAP, DURABLE, [IORNAMENTA L Office and Shop } ARTHUR BUCKBEE. [CARPENTER BUILDER, —AND DEALER IN— N0y —anv— HONHI NONT REV AT For Yards, Lawns, Cemeteries Churoh}Groadsgant;Publi: Parks, { MAIA. . NEB. € OMAHA { < Wholesale Lumber) WINDOWS, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, &C Plaster Paris, Hair, Dry and Tarred Felt. by § No. 188 Farnham Strezt. Omaaa, Nehl Publishers’ Agents for Schoo’ Rooks wsed in Nehraska. GEO. A. HOAGLAND, Wholesale Lumber —OFFICE AND YARD— COR. OF DOUGLAS AND 6THSTS., U. P. R. R. TRACR. | NEB, 1 ] ; BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS. Stationers, Engravers and Printers. § 1Mmc:xic, 0dd Fellows and Knights of Pythias] UNIFORMS LODGE PROPERTIES, JEWELS, BOOKS, BLANKS, ETC., AT !