Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 3, 1880, Page 3

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THE DAILY BEE. s, E. ROSEWATER, EDITOR TO CORRESPONDENTS. v CorsTy Famxps we will always be pleased 1o hear frcm, on all matters connected With crops, country politics, and on any subject whatever, of general interest to the pecple of our Btate. Ans information corn=+ted with he eloctiops, and reisting to flocds, accidents, will be gladly received. All such communica- tions however, must be as bricf as possible; nd they must in all cases be written on cne ‘side ot the shest only . us Naws'or Waeren, In full, must i each and vy Gase accompany any_communicati b of “what mature soever. This Is n.t ftended for ERTRA wooRcRREI ot cacaidstes for Offico—wheths er made by el or friends, and whether as no- toom or communications to the Editor, are until nominationgare.made) simply perecnal, wnd will be charged for a4 advertisements. ~o mor desire contributions of & litorary or postical character; apd. v will not undertake e orirescve the same in any case # WM Our stafl is sulicientiy large to o thadfpupgly ouplimited spase. A8 commusications stoud be sodressed to E. RISEWATER, Editor. Sexator Wooprs heads the New York bolters from'the Grant instruc- tions, but it is seldom that one fir a Woodin-head a3 sound. 2 Tr b Sehtorn man is nominated for 1hie presidency at Chicago, the country 1aay yet hear more of a certa'n Gen. Chamborlain, cf Maine, who was a comapicuacus man a short time ago, anc who may yet bscome a8 prominent as hoiding the second place on the re- publican national ticket. S1moN CAMERON'S son, in an hum- e positich such as bie was forced to assume in order to retain the chair- manship of the national commiltee, is anew role for a Cameron to play. When Don Cameron returns home he will undoubtedly be lectured by the <1d senstor, who is unused to this sort of thing. Roscor CoNkuxa was evidently greatly surprised that any man should dsre face him, as Senator Woodin did in the meeting of the New York del- egation. He and his alternate surely had the best of the argument, and the score or more asscciates of Woodin have shown cause wherein lies the “divine right to bolt.” e T cheering news comes that the prospects are that the Irish harvest will bea fine one. The Duke of Féin- Vurgh goes directly to the western districts of Treland where there is dis- tress, to attend to the distribution of supplies to the uofortnnate svfferers. The interval between now and harvest time can certainly be tided over, and Irishman will before long be able to help themselve: Tuskey hes hed cvery reason to expegt extremely ha:sh, bul yet fair, treatment from leading European powers for_het open violation of the of Berlin. The porte has pre- iote o bs promptly dispatched upon the receipt of the impending cir- cular, which is, to be brief, a simple “you're; avpther.” It is an open question whether England cven bas not tired of being tcll ehe lics every time she points out whercin Turkey Was_been direlect in duty and has broken her word. Turkey, at auy rate, has every reason to expect harsh treatment, and England and France may yet insist on her apologiring and #hen doing what she knows sho ought to do. Tax Bex takes occasion to call the attention of its readors to the full re- podts of the doings at Chicago which it furniskes every day. Few journals in the country Have mora complete or raiable information touching the all- absorbing event, the national conven- tion, than this journsl. A compari- son of our reports with those of metropolitan journals even, would by 0 means show any disparaging differ- eoce. At all fimes we shall ever be on the alert to give complete accounts of great events, and can point to our success In_ this line since we perfected our system of telegraphic service sev- eral months since. —_— Tas seventy delegates who were in | e attendancs st the meeting of the na- tional woman's sufirage society in Chi- oago on Tussday found solace ia the fact that the Arkansas delegation to the republican couvention have of- fered to exert themselves in bobalf of ths women, who desice the rights of suffesge. But they should not be t0 e'ated at this espousal of their cause, for the most that could be done any- way by political convention would be the adoption of s resolution recom- mending full citizenship for women, which would be, as Georgo William Curtis ssye, “a polite bow, meaning nothing. —_— Tuzre will be a sensation in the British houss of commons and no little excitement created outside when Parnell introduces his resolution for the recall of Sir Bartle Frere from command of the British forces in south Africa. Nearly a year ago the same thing was done and Sir Robert Peel, son of the old premier, waked al] England by his assertion that the only rexson why the officer held his posi- tion was because he was a crony of the commander-in-chief of the army, who Lappensto be Queen Victoria's cousin. ‘When efforts were made to gag him be told some unwholesome truths about the intermeddling of royaity, and reyived sll the discontent that ‘has been occasioned by certain un- populsr acts of the queen. Thereis +* every réason to believe that Parnell will tevive, all this, and create a pro- found wensstion, for he cin not be sccused of being even 50 great an ad- irer ofroyalty as Sir Robert and hs will ‘not stand on any fi‘gmu or loyalty. Itisae h fact that Sir Bartle Frere .m- Cape whenit had § ..- plainly - demonstrated :: he not a capable commander, and his 86 ';'m his post has had every d “a fling from royalty TrE parallel between the. o tions of 1860 and 1880 more than ope pPromi Seward's supporters were as gonfidet in 1860 of their favorite's naminaticn 01 the firs: ballot s Grant's hench- meu are to-day. There was then the same ext-avegant claims of a clesr msj rity on the opoving ballst as thers is now. The'e was then the same birter oppesti n of the mint ity condidates. As to day, the leud- ing candidatc had whipped in every posible vo'e from outsile Colg.tims a7 o wntedona solidwajority,ulich. nacdel 1o resgrve vetos La aun the contest. On the opening day of the convent 1860, so shrewd.a polit icsl cbserveris Horace Greely te'e- graphed 't New York that Seward's nomination sesmedinev table. Jtwill L at xn ABOD Bap Rocky mountain chain known as he 40 exLau:tzd bis strepgth on the first | ¢ Luins ™ pos estes for mast por, ballot thathe wasonly able f0 draw [ giod soil, and will, €0 tosn as the foar wore ¥otes to his suppertion the climatic ¢ & 1o ¥ going ou.furaich second, #nd Lincolu's nomiuation f 1. | the required amout "of misfure, b Py capable of sustainiog as dense a popu- L tion as any part cf the continent. Another paral’el. If there are portions of the moun- the delegations from ths tainous regious that are ard and unfit the magnetic influence of the Seward “, " lont beom reached Chicago,they weretreat | to a tract of 640" acres when he shall «d to a cold water bath. Everywhere ziformed the necessary amount the air rang with shouts for. Lincoln, [ thehotels, the strests, the public meet- ings would talk of nothing elee. The ““spontanecus boom” fir Mer. Seward did not se-m to baye reached Chicago and the oppesition” there manifested to his nomination, did much to pre. veut any recruiting from the ranks of these delegalions either uninstruc' or pledgel tosupport on the first Lot o less prominent candidate. failed to_ discover any indica- 91 the exstence of at e R merican_people. 91, wkd.‘lhuae lands wero fotally un6t £rpresent or futu-e cultivation, there would bauo ciuse for thepersistapt effort that is being msde Yo wonrp - lize them; for the cat:le autcrat l ready hes 1he privilage of grazi' ¢ his berds upon the public domatw, o ng as it is vot neede | by 1he homestead sertlor—which would never be —if the plea upon whichh the scheme is foud- elbetrue. Itis brue, actusl ownes shp of ths lwd would enab'e et kg o the peor . mw fow head of cows from his brcad pastutes, by dic precess of law, ths roult, !owever, le too frequ nly ccomli hes, by prestize of his we 1th, in Cofiance of ail laws for the p tion «f individual rights. Tbe reg of country Lingto the cast of the | In 1860 when ious scc there aro avy considsrable porli the public domaip 2 present time for purgoses, 4 cazanta of farpin g paetur- aga for stock let ¢l nas public domain, 5> that the pocr man may at lesst have ths legal right to use them. 1 see it ted that the Professor Hayden clique of scientists, nho have been trying for some time {o get con- gress to make large appropriati-ns to to pay them for huntiog “grasshop- pers” in the west, ara lending their wonderful ecientific knonledge to the Tiie scene in the, rooms of the New York delegation, on Tuesday evening, must }ave been decidedly interesting. A United States senator threateoing land speculator's scheme, by testifying that the lands in question arc and ever remain unfit for agricultural pur- poser. Those erudite gentlomen who insist on_being paid for telling the people what taey know about *‘bugs,” bad better a'tend to the question they already have under cuns'deration, as it s iofinitely nearer bring Cookling's efforts in | proportioned to the amount of men- tal acumen displayed by the self. conceited ca Hoping thit Tat will confifiue to puncture all raceally schomes as the *laud ” with its most venomous stings, I remain, W. F. Drarer. and bull-dczing twenty-throe mem- bors of a state delegation bacause they refused to follow his personal dictation! Mr. the direction of unifying the delega- tion, were not very euccessful. Sea- ators Sessions, Robertson and Woodin have no favors to ssk of the sanator, and propose to use their efforts to de- fest his boasted contzol of New York and his attempted subversion cf the wishes of & majority of the repub- licaus of the empire state. - The twen- ty-three delegates who refuse to yield to ths wish of Ssnatcr Conkling, hold party euccess of more importance thon | Only thros Canadisn roads, agare- pereom] aggrandizement. — With the | gating 228 wil 5, now retain the 53 avit rule broken, with an un‘etiered f"flT!hw"gE- i of tho Ot : : i 3 inic 0 main live of tl ntral resenting state sentiments, Sentor “wd,y“pom]w Couklipg will find it impossible to oast | v Cv L et tobs pu the{seventy votes of New York for | on the York Central for day travel General Grant* to Niagera Falls and Canada. A railroad Tine is talked of from Benton Harbor, Mich,, via Niles and Edwardsburg to Goshen, Tnd. Leadville, Col., is making great parations to celebrate the opening of direct railrvad commuication. The new passeng Bcin £Allroad aco pajated brighteed, fo the disgust of tarkeys and cows alorg the lize. The railroad from Burlingame to Manhatéan, Kau., 13 progressing rap idly, and the cars will reach Alwa n tho 4th of July. During the last ten years thcre bave been laid in Eogland and Wales 233 wiles of railroad at a cost of hoarly 15,000,000, exelusive of cquipment. Railtoad covstruction is now gojng onat arate of over a hundred miles a week, and 1,264 miles of track have been laid thus far Lhis yeor, against 93 miles for the same time last year. An ordor has been given by thé Norihern Paciic failroad company for S om1 | the _construction of Gfteen new locc- schools very uabealthy for the boomt | 0 consteastion of Eficen new locc- Having failed to appaar in any but | gompletion and delivery of several f three republican states was it not in- | theso by July 1, troduced iuto two of these under cir-| The expross buin organiz-d cumstances of such outrageous violence | it the United States in 1839, between a8 to absolve all intslligent voters from | Boston acd New York, and thero are 3 : 3 different organizations en allegiance to it Can the thing bo gol- | gaged in it, represonting o capital of vavizad into such & semblance of life | over $30,000, as 4o, appesr before the Chisago on- | Tho Northern Pacific company has T SR L acceptsd from the conteactors the 17 it passes through the convention | OmPleted third quarter of the firet 1 it e : 5 coutract beyond the Missouri, making peore "ot mansgers’ hande | 75 miles of finished road. Tracklay. Sririe ing on the remaining portion of the into ity original aolid and gs:0u8 | firgt contract is procacding at a rats of Which is mora repulsive to honest | °¥eron® mile a day. republicans, the fact of the second | A car-tracing association has been RAILWAY NOTES. style aro prowised naxt fall. The 50 milc-an-hour engine on the Bound Brook route is a succes: Sexator CoNkuing finds his delrga- ticn harder to mansgethan the average congressmen, and less easy o get aws from than the Narragansett shot-gun. Oup Simon Cameron, will rcarcely have an opportunity to addrass his s with ““Well Don(e) good and Faithful sarvant.” Roscor may plant and Logan ma water, but a freo and unbridled majority will knock down the presi- dential persimmon. THE GRANT BOOM. To the ditor of The Bee: Will you permit from an old repub- lican a fow questions respecting the ““Graat boom,” so called? iro not high latitudes and froo ey lo, N. Y. Fourteen foads are slready If ““twobad ierms descrve anoth- | represented it the organization, which ” willnot four bad terms deserve a plr‘“mue-fh: o useful oue, the 86h 1 object of which is to bo ablo at an What is the meauiog of the word | time 0 inform the offeials of auy oad ¢ gpcntaneity,” as used m_connection ul: the :luucntilonhlhe whereabouts of with the boom ? their cars and the mileage they are Which is the higher duty, partison- | making. ship or patriotism! The Cavada Southern is making ¢f- Will intelligent men, content to bo [ forts to securo a cut oft lineto ran the servant of party principles, con- | from Nisgara Falls to Welland, right sent to be the slaves of patty leaders? | across the country, adistanca of some What ia the proper fanetion of party | seven or eight miles, and which will machinery, to reflect popular opinion, | save some fitteen or twenty miles of or to force and ga; travel cn passenger and freight on ‘ml::‘ ;n;g ;l:-gen wel- con- u;-t road destined fcr tho Eastern a mbling so long as | States. grumbler vote the ticket? The Ohio Falls ) car works havese In some dieeases is not the surgeon | curad a contract to bui'd 400 freight 2 bettor friend than the physician, and | sary for the Ghicago, Milwaukeo and or this party excrescence called | S¢ Paul road. This com; L pany hae, f‘r‘-,;-: kzhn there any remedy 80 good | within three weeks, contracted for Should mot the man who. proposcs | Zyor oyl oA o d“.‘,"‘f h (ent to vote for the nominee, “‘whoever ho | more: to be. plased s theor wem ) may be,” soek the shelter of his closet | {auisus an i oo pemee 0 oY X whea the fool killer comes around! v e Ths Philadelphia, Wilmington and Which is the greater foe to Ameri- can liberty, a repontent rebel or ram- | Baltimore Railtosd company has se- Pttt cured contrel of the Westchester and Wers Washington and - Jeffersoo | Philadelphia railroed by buying two- really such hypooritical, sniveling | thirds of the stock. This action will sueaks as the boomers represent them. | Prevent: the contemplated new Jine Does Grant belong to the republi. | from Baltimore to Philadelphia from can party or the republican parky t | Scquiring pomsession of the road, for Grant? L N Frux. | which it was making overtures. One of the singular revolutions brought about by the elevated rail- waya m New York city is that they have largely increased the bustoess of ths down-town hotels. Country mer- chants buying goods aud travelers re- maining in the city for only a day or two prefer to Jo’ge or dine in the SPECULATOR'S LAND GRAB. CrxrAL Civy, D. T, May 31, 1880. To the editor of The Bee: Roaliziog, as I do, that terror to evil doers, and Pullman sleeping cirs of a now |s torm or the principle of the third | organized, with hesdquarters at Buffa- | Teq that its “stings” are iuyaviably put where they do thé greatest amount of good, I am- encouraged “to enter an busiuers district, going up to the theatres, ete.; in the evening by the rapid transit lines instaad of coming down to business. - It is often difficult humble but earnest proteit. through | now-a-dsys for people arriviag late at your columos, againet that fmo.t | Might to get ‘h:fl)m at any of the S "% | hotels near A now hotel of nigaitons effort ‘that <ia1iow. Reig { g firac cluws 1o’ mow. beisi talked of made by a riog of ‘“public robbers,” | oa the corner of Chambers street, to secure the passage of a bill by, con- gress, granting. the disposing of the public domain in the west, in Jarge tracts, ostensibly for the ression that those lands are not atable, but in reality to enable the cattle lord and money shark to secure hrp bodies of land that w; the near futura pmn;xhuble rlgrn- work a tatle s quoted from Prof. Sturmer, of Bromberg, which shows the length of railways in several of the chief countries in the world, and its propo:tion to the popalation. The origial table gives the leogth of line in kilometres, and it may be as well to preserve thiv, as the proportion is the most interesting poiut 1n the table. In Europe it appears that or: the aver- In a recently publithed tcchnical| th Asia it appears that culy 016 kilo- metie is averazed to every 10,000 i n's; and in Af-icy the prop rtion i3 (nly 0.17. Tu the United Stat s the proporiion is heavy —32.9 19,000 of the people; while the while of Ameri the aversgs of 17.2 and in Australia the proportion iy, a'- y10 6 Thethnly p opl dcout- arily come to the froat in thiv n-tance:-bat-the table is of soma itarcst as sh flect falr.c or small lergth mpatiy ahy of this vature, 'aud alu ti g the comparstive d s At i Union of Railroad Interests. Fan Franeiseo Cbricle. Theelcc ioa of T. Jefferson Coolidg a dicector and I the Chicago, Burlington_aud Quincy, the presidency of the Atcbluon. ‘opeka and Santa Ke, in p! Thomas Nickerson, who d re-election on account cf i'l heslth, is an assuranco that the friendly r. s heretofure subsicting betw these two great corporations will Le ntained and poseibly sirengthened in the future. It is_not supposed, however, that there will baany chavge inthe policy of the Atchison road 1o- wardts connections. The Burlington and Q at Atchison and Ksnsas Ciy, Y, St. Joseph and Council Bluffs, a share of the traffic coming over tho Atchison; and probably all it asks for or expe:ts is that this ehall be assured toit horeafter. It is manifestly to the intereat of the Alchison company to be on good terms with all the con- necting I'nes, and to give to eacha fair proportion of the business p s3- | ing east, recoving in return from them west-bound traffic. As we showed last week, this west-bound traffic on tho Atchison road is lar and much more profitabls than the east bound freight ; but the eastward movemen®, though smal'er last year 305,235 tous, against 40 836 t)ns moved west—mus: :1ways be an inxreasing quantity as the conotry through which it possas bycomes b, ter settl d. There is one contingency in whi closer vnion of these two corpcr. may be found desirable. If the Union cific stould evor become t50 closely identified with the Wabash or any other systemt e.8t of the Mis-ouri river and seek to control the covrze of traflic going either ewtor west, 1he Burling'on and Quincy and the Atchi n, prompted by melf interest, weild probably tind it advan‘ageous to com bive forces in order the mcre eff. wely to resiet and opposs the common foe. Thers would thus ba formed a strong line extend ing from Chlcigo o the Pacific coast uld long ago saw thet sum“omhmmm might bs amonz the p ssibilities of 1h> futtire; and it was for this reseon, no doubt, thit he made strenuous efforts to obtain a footho'd in the new Atlantic and Pa- He was unsuccessful, and the ves'od can, nmer-uv if ths neccautios of the situation force it, be tirried cut. But the ability to d> a [ ten tantamonat to doing it, and the Burl'ngton and Qaincy and the Atobison may rever be called upon to counteract undus agzrzssion in the direction indicited. al Ths U. P. Coal Monopoly. Salt Ik Horahiy the only eompetitor with the Union Pacific for the coal carrying trade we t of Nebraska. 1t mil compete for the controlled b tho U. P, dud will com pel the latter to surrender many thousands of dollars yourly now ex- tractod from the people of alt Lake Valley. |, For those teatou® the Union Patific lias made agrand and expon- © mistake in refusing to deal justly, ifnot generouslyr with its pations hére. Had it not been for tne greed of the U.P. the Utah Eastern would have slumbered for many years yot, as the Sslt Lake com munity is nor abaipus to build “aud opefide a railtoad fir which thara eheuld be no neccssity. This mistake on the patt of the Union Pacific is not one of thoee that can be easily corrested hereaftar. Were the Utah Exstera a private uhidertaking, 1o matter i rich the owners might be, the great corporation would soon bo able to capture the road by squeez- ing its owners; but as the enterpriso has been arzanged tho aqucezing game will not work, as it caiinot resit in swa'lowing up the road; which miist rentain a freo siid independont line. Nobody regrets the necesity for the construction of the Utah Basterh tfiort than we. Tl people ought not to be uired to put up the money that it will take to build the road. But the necessity having been croatad for the road nobody is more heartily in sym- pathy with the enteFprise than we. Agricultural Weaith. A writer to the International Review says that in 15 yests the production of wheat and tarley in the United States has trebled; corn, cotton, and tobaceo mere than doubled; oats in- creased nearly 140,000,000 bush, potatocs nearly doubled, and hay in. creased more than oue-third. He 1865 aond 1879, according to wl the production of wheat has ivcrease from 148,553,000 bushels in the form- er year 10 448,776,090 in the latter. corn from 704,427,000 to 1,554,899, 000; ocats from 225,252,000 to 364,- 254 000, rye from 19.,654,000 to 22 - 6000; barley from 11,391,000 to 40,- 4000 potatoes from 101,631,000 to 181 369,000r hay from 24,538,000 ;g;la:n 00%-. ,648, 300 tobaceo from 7,000 pounds_t> 059, and_cotton from 2, m%fl nne‘):og} 5,020,000. The remarkable increase in_ the production of cercals has been largely owing to the settlement and develcpment of the western and northwestern states. Within the present generation the centre of corn production has shifted from the south to the west, and of wheat production from the middle states to the far west. In 1849 59 per cent. and in 1859 52 per ceat, of the corn crop of the coun- try was produced in the eouthern states. In 1877, 850,000,000 bushels were grown in Ohio, Indiana, Tll'nois, Towa, Missouri, Kansas and Nebraska, while the production of all the rest of the Union amounted to 494,558,000 bushels. increase of the tobaces crop has been chiefly in the south, where the production increased 100, 000,000 pounds from 1870 to 1878, Duriog the same period the yield of cotton increased from 3,012,000 bales in Axk-otu and Dy of “the 7 ‘former state swelling from 111,000,000 pounds in 1870 to 308,000,000 in 1878, and that of the latter state from 157,000,000 pounds in 1870 to nearly Texas, the writer already cited, only about 9 per cent._ of our entira grain crop is | exported, including 26 76 per cent. of ths wheat and 649 per cent. of the corn_produced. The exporis have ge there are 4 9 kilometres of railway ebraska, and Deke. | 15 every 10,000 inhabitin's. Greeco ta—explored portions of Montans, Ids whose pnul- Be 1s, “‘help yourselves ifyou oan,” has the lem proporiion, havieg only ¢ ho, Wyoming sud Colorado—snd have 4 0,08 kilometrs toevery 10,000 of the ! rapidly incressed in the past few i }meued from 39,000,000 _bushels ii ikt il €Ol compounded, ¢ | aftor years of scientific plodding, of Thy ', the total exports of all 1868 10 1ssoofoh cent. ' of 4 - Sl petc:nt in 1878, the. exporfation Taf whith co'n ort’ y are. GUILTY OF WRONG. ome jo have a fehion of confusisg ex: cilons 17 i i ey o gty g fi { men8-d1 B. Bop titters, THE wece | & oxcaon 1 use e Bitkers In foMt ach a'waga foand them to be e Tt aime o7 — FROM TUE CHASE COUNTY “LEADER.” Corroxwoon, CM-Co Kaness. s the name{ a Pile Hemedy in- | his section of the State upm _ the tried. i dulls one that clested a pormner sent lm wlet to ““All the health I enjoy, and even my life T may say, is in consequence of Sim- mons® Regulator. I would not take one milliondollars for my interest in that medicine. ‘W. H. Wrzsoy, ““Welborn, Florida.” LAz an Jy 's a common complaint in bot weather, It you Seel 80, get & of Kidney: Wort and take it and you will at once feel itatonic power, It Keeps up the Beatthy action of the Kidneys, T T treugth to the weary YOU NEVER HEARD A DENTIST eay that SOZODONT was not & good | article to preserve thetesth and gums. Tlllu fact is not to be sontroverted. gives it such prominence asa or materisls calouluted to _harden the | &x gums, romove the septic acid, and | b Gepg.l.d INTER OCEAN L M o2 A D, ANDREW EORDEN, Cnief Cler, AYER'S HAIR VIGOR, .|To Its Natutal Vitality bealthy activety, and Cxmes. loewy, plable. o irengihenod Dair re M. R. RISDON, g'@ A!fll‘» FIRE) ERIDE A AMAICs ARS R NCECo 1,3 NEWARK FIRE IS €0, A AMERICAF C.NTRAL, Atwets. St fod e pomn & o ox A nm.n Flany ar w20 6m 'HOTE!, Cheyenne, Wyoming. Fine Twge Sumple Koom, cuo iepot. _ Traim sicp from 20 minutes hours for dinner. Free Bus to and from Rates $200. 250 aod € 00, according . ngle meal 76 centa. . BALCOM, Proprietr. irsbool b, <k from d 2003 Kentucky, -lowa of T. H. Leavitt, of Lincoln, Nebraska. A ‘above what s ordinari o 11th. This will undoabledly be ESTORING. GRAY HAIR | bl b chiopeing o“The Hamilton, Ky., and Kausas Show Herd,” F 250 EXEAD, At the Transfer Stock Yards, Co- eil Bllfl's. Towa, June 9, 10 and 11.0 From the celobrated Hamilton Herd of Mt. Sterling, K*ntucky, and t will be offered this season west of the and Nebraska SHORT HORNS prrcentage of thave are ¥ offered at publi the largest and most at s River, e prchacers ma Oglon Hous. Lo ML “Auctioncer. xa, T H. Leavitt, Lincoln, , $100% ity and ofher fodds Wil fariish ¢xcurslon Faies r;«:- m39 1w and Color. " THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED BANKING HOUSE IN NFBRASEA. SALDWELL HAMILTONSCO. BANKERS. Adravcing sears sickness, care, dis. appointment,” and hereditary _predis- position uf 2 tam Ciher ot Fre o cliue it to shed pre- Business transectod same as that ot an Incorporated Bank. Accodute kept i Qurrepoy or yold sublect to sight check without i ificates of deposit lssued pay- able In three, six and twelve mon! bearing Interést, or on demand with” out interest. Advances made to cuszomers on ap- immetliatay; often renews the growth: Wl always puroly restores ita color, when faded oy e dimaiais the mutriive rres both the , weak ot sickly hair be- Tost alling haic thickens beauty. Th i ively expromion e and stablished ; thin hi DOUBLE AND SINGLE ACTING POWEH AND HAND PUMPS , Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, IEI.TIIG HDSE. lASS Alfl IRON FI'ITIIGS, HP! STEAI PAGII& HALLADAY VIIIID-MILI.S CHURCH AND ¢ SCHOOL BELLS A. L.. STRANG, 205 Farnbam Stroet. Omaha, Neb? | avoid putrefaction. ved securities at ma-Eet rates of their original col sad taded gr gray halr resima iginal proved ¢ WHO LESALE GRGCER! So all ladies say of SpALDING'S GLUE. They uso it to make Lovers stick, Thero is no use in drugging yourse't to death, ana viying 3 1he vile Mdieinee or Interastums when you can ve curel of tover & d agus, dumb acve, billious dizonders, faundics, 5 Al d'sord s, ahd aliments of the Iiver, nd_stomich, by wearing 0ae of Pro. Guilmeticn Frooch dver Fade, which 188 sure c . 11 yout druzglst does not kecp AHEUE S 1,50 i lttar 15 Fronch Pad Con Toledo, 0., and it will be s-nt sou by fal, 1t is the boly pad ¢ ware o It is well known that s relationshi its between hat xle-, lpquon Ginennaaland*Hivee Arouhy Woekes iaveda mm thn acts on. general system and restores health by gen. The Utah Eastern railroad will be | & trade of one of the largest marke's | gives the figures for the chief crops in | & & t0 5,216,600. The increase was maioly | 000,000 in_1878. According to | A tly mdiug uatvre's internal process, sept26dlew INVYALIDS ARD OTHERS SEBKIKw HEALTH, STREN_GTH and ENERGY WITHOU Q REVIEW; AN ILLUSTRATED JOUR- NaL, WHICH 15 pHHLISHED " FOR FREE DISTRIBUTION. o MEALTI, HYGIENE, and Phi. cal omplte eacyclopedin of o maton ot fvalite and those ¥ o Ferwone k.‘:“..nn.;;amm o Dt “Erery s ""‘r"‘ Tatess and i‘.m, iy Ly e i estions of =¥al i ...m uemr ReviEw uym«lhennmmglwd 7 quacks and m impost i o n1dfr!l| ""'{"'a'."!v e g gop et CH PULVER! % GALVANIG 60., “0R, EIGHTH and VINE STS.. CINCINNATI, 0. THE 'I‘.AILOR s socsived o, ok o B ou e bt o g A e e e vt ‘o AM STREET. 1530 FARNEL. Ask the recov-. ervd dyspoptics,bil- ious mufterers, vie. JEYINAV] tims of fover and el agus, the mervurial P diseased ow ooty ot heaith, * cheerfal e ot "oy S i ing St e g s ok ] dhn-\ and Best Family Med- orl YSPEPSIA, cons'nnnnn, Jaundlos F Bilisan Sinck nfcl EAD, et IR R urn, Tnls ..nriund outhor Remedy la warrnted oot to contam of e, o & singie any Injurious mineral su Purely Vegetable, dxmmswht:-m Roots dnd Hetbe, Baced the Liver and Bowels. - J % S MPTOMS of Liver omphm are 2 bitter or bad taste in the mouth; Pain in the Bsck e o Jontaofion misiaked forRhotme: tism] Sour Stomach: Loea of Appetite; Bowsls trmtely cosin Memory, T comothiog AR gt dose: DabAy, lnv!w: a thick yellow skin a - T ks or Gonsmmmption » 7 ‘Sometimes many of 1 the discase, at others ve largest organ in the of the dis ase, and it suflring, wictchodoese attend Tow ot e Livers the lemm discano of the Liver, Hearivure: and Drecy Simmone’ Liv-r Regaistor. Lewls G. 1625 Master Strcet, Assistant Post Mastet, Philadelpr'e, inedicine vo triod forty other Temedies betore Eimmons’ Liver Regaistor, bus iota ol bom gore;us et Tefs but the egulutor not only Televed. bat Gired ws Ealior Tebsgeepn. 30d" Memebgety Macon, Ga. on. PHIUAD! Erice, 6100 Scld by oll Drugrita, ‘sep SANTA CLAUS FOUND. Greatest Discovery of the Age. ‘Wondertul discoveriesinthe worldbavebsenmade Among other things whero Santa Claus sta; ik oft aak f o mskes good O 0% 11 realy ho lives in 3 mountaln of smow. o dear o the Pole addealy drop Where womies of Sowtors they found mew ks While tairy-like befngs a on sach hand. ere wers mowntains like ours, With more beautifal And far brighver akies than ever wero soen, Birds with the haes of a rainbow were found, e fowers o exguiste ‘were grow wonder in doubt, Kot lobg wers they eft to A beiug s0on came the, Bt be took: them on bowsd Ho howed them ail over his wondertal sealm, And ‘goods for women snd men, making Purriers were B T Bance the s they wereSendig s ol K11 Kingle,the Glove Makor (08 tho 4 ouses 11 our Gloves we are sending to Bunce, Santa showed them suspenders and many things: more. s, Saima Claus then years, and are likely to incresss in the fature, especial'y if the cost of | transportation shall he reduced, a'n'am als all humors, and_keops ¢ db-n-nuhuflpm.u,mn praised for its grateful 2nd valued for the soft lustreand richiessct to it imoparts. Practical and Analytical Chemists. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALER SHOES MADE TO ORDER PIANO TUNING Competent New York Tuner. wYRARE Postoffice, promptly attended t OMAHA AND FORT OMAHA «:|OMNIBUS LINE. hr«s VIIIEGAR WORKS ! e ket 1 g M JUNO. G. JACOBS, UNDERTAKER o o1 17 Parnham 8t., Oid 8Liild of Jacob Gis D, B. BEEMER, COMMISSION MERGHANT "'"'*’E." NEW GROCERY! people of North Omaha with OHOICE CROCHRIES at mod- srate prices. (ive ts & call, duco. Goods delivered free (4 4n¥ part of the city. FHONTIER R HOTEL, The Inlnr‘l resort, ‘room, atteution given %o trave T H. Wfi*m ™ eneatey s MEAT MARKET, Fresh aniSait Meats o’ all kinds constant on band, FEVEB AND AGUE. ration is sure and harmless. s cure scalp ‘and soft—undor which conditions Buy and se gold, bills of excho, Government, State, County and Bonds. Draw Sight Drafts on England, Ire- 1ana, Scotland, and all parts of Europe Sell European Passage Tickets. COLLEGTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. augldtt U. 8. DEPOSITORY. '~ dresming for Idies hair, the Viaon I and ible FPREPARED BY Dr. J, C. AYER & CO,, Lowell, Mass, N MEDICIN THE ONLY PLACE WHERE YOU can flid & good assortment of BOOTS AND SHOES At s LOWER FIGURE than at ‘any otber shoe house In the clty. P. LANG'S, 236 FARNHAM ST. LADIES’ & GENTS, OF OMAHA, Uor. Farnbam and Thirteenth Ste. OLDEST BAHKING ESTABLISHMENT N OMAHA. (SUOUKSIORS TO EOUNTES BROS., BoTABLRERD 14 1858, Organised a3 » National Back August 30, 1668 Oapital and Profits Over $300,000 LR A U. 8. 4 PER CENT. FUNDED LOAN. OFFicKRS AND DIRECTORS 48 ertec 8t gustaniees. 1 Hicee vy usson Hxmuan Kovwrss, President. "Avourtys Kov Koray, Vice President. B W. Yares, Goshler. a . rorrmol. Attornoy joRx 7 2 Davm: dwrt Cosnter AND REGULATING BY A ired snd regulated. Crders left at )OX BTORE, 690 Fiftecnth St., r:’:r Mhn.l T - l-u- au.u the Uit Bsten, A and ke principal ‘iiee of fo tickota tor NEW TIME TABLE or il ol REAL ESTATE BROKER A 10 " Rear ESTATE AcENcY. 15th & Douglas Sts., Omaha, Neb. This age does STRICTLY & brokerage busi- ns. e ot Specrinie, nd therefore any bar. o o s books are nekred o e patrous, 1n stead of being gobbled up by the agent Boggs and Hill, REAL ESTATE BROKERS No. 250 Farnham Street OMAHA, - NEHBRASKA, 01 orth Side,ovp. Orand Centra Hote Nebraska Land DAVIS & SNYDER, 1605 Farnham St. Omaha, Nebr. RUNDAYS hVSlY TWO HOURS. + 43 Cents, Jones, Bet. 9th and 10th Sts , OMAHA. ity disilod Wine Vinegar o custorn pricga st -T.fl—n. i " (Formerly of Gish & Jacobe) DERS BY TELEORAPH mucn dty propert 0¥ DAvIE, _late Land Com'r U. P. by sTRON REBD. 1w 8. zxm0 Byron Reed & 00-. REAL ESTATE AGENCY IN NEBRASKA. Beep a completo abstract of title to all RealE: ate in Otnsta and Douglas County. mayltd THE ORIGINAL BRIGGS HOUSE | Cor. Randolph 8t. & 6th Ave., (/RICAGO ILL. P it , Hams, Ba r::’..m,m- S 16th and Cuming Sts. We propose supplying the &. 1. BERGEN. 2#-Cash paid for Cutintry Pro- ~ aplTdm Wyotning: accomiiiodatising, es reasonable. Bpecial H.C. nn.fmxn, Proprietor. GITY MEAT MARKET, ahd il Mosty By Vil U, P Block, 16th St. S o t PRICES REDUCED TO Ioagensbi. Vogsiabls in sons delivered o, ny part of mimuuh Finst Nationa Banx| ___ 1218 Farnham St., Omaha. TO THE LADIES AND GENTLEMEN : PROF. GUILMETTE'S FRENCH KIDNEY PADI A Positive and Permanent Cure Guaranteed. In r1l coses «f Grave’, Diabe'es, Dropey, Bright's Disease of th Ridneys, Incontinene ard Ketent'on of Urive, Inflamation o the Kidrieys, Catarih of the 1 la 1t cures by absorption: no pauseous ines being required. We bave bundreds of testl. es by this Fad whex, all else had far'ed- you wre suflering {rem Femalo Weakness, Loucor- ses peculiar to f maes, or in fact any diseose, sk T drorg st fof Prof. Guilmette's Fronch Kidne nd. take 1o other. 1f e hos nok 1ot it. send §2.00 aod you wit receive t o Prd by return mail. Address D, 8. Branch, FRENCH PAD CO., Toledo, Ohio. ke, Hilious Fever, Jau e o doumas of s I s besepdion, aad e perema sk sour driggat or th's 52d and take no othe 18 he Fisssmot keop it sebd g1 50 e D'L0., (U. 5. Braueh), Toledo, € hio. and reseive it by return mail KUEN & C0., A nts_Omaha, Neb. == GARPETINGS. Carpetings| iomach and Bioed” “Fi ! Carpetings| J. B. DETWILER, Old Reliable Carpet House, 1405 DOUGLAS STREET, BET. 14TH AND 15TH (ESTABLISHED IN 1868.) Carpets, Oil-Cloths, Matting, Window-Shades, Lace Curtains, Etc. MY STOCK IS THE LARGEST IN THE WEST. 1 Make a Specialty of WINDOW-SHADES AND LACE GURTAINS And have a Full Line of Mats, Rugs, Stair Rods, Carpet- Lining Stair Pads, Crumb Clothes, Cornices,- Cornice Poles, Lambrequins, Cords and Tassels; In fact Everything kept in a First-Class Carpet House. Orders from abroad solicited. Satisfaction Guaranteed Call, or Address John B. Detwiler, 01d Reliable Carpet House, OMAHA. " ——— Couneil l!lllml. Towa On i of Stres. Railway, Omaibusse ) e TR Parior oo, §5.00 pe Sy sacomd focr, $2.60 per. days third Soor lnfil“ bo‘ the citv. m Omana, N3 IRA WILSON, - PROPRIETOR. ATTENTION, BUILDERS AND G TRACTORS. The owner of the celebrated near LOUISVILLE, NZB. bas now ready at u:edepot ‘at Louisvills, on the B.& XL railroad, . to fill any onler at ressonable Par. o pricen. desiring a white front m‘"' -mao-'n?m e e BXOBLSIOR PEBSON AL Machine Works, oMmAmA, NEB. What ot Yo ol queeion, e that v J. F. Hammond, Prop & Manager TA;;;E:'::;\:::::’A;;:::, 'n- ‘most llm lprul;ula.ib::] com plete T'V'n‘!;;. Alu'fllx;‘e‘ N Mh':‘k‘nf M‘ 5 very description manufact. o - . e UPTON HOUSE utting, ete. ] now Meachaaical Drace] Schuyler, Neb. B NONVOISTN, | A7 Jarmy 0 0 et FUR TANNER |Seiitanas FURS BAUCH RAY tllmn' i RUTT A

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