Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 15, 1880, Page 2

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THE DAILY BEE B. ROSEWATER, EDITOR TO CORRESPONDENTS. Do CovnTay Prmmms we will always Le pleased %o hear from, on all matters connected with crops, country polities, and on any subject whatever, of general interest to the peopic of our State. Any Information conn=-ted With the elections, end relating to floods, sccideuts, wili be gladly received. All such communica- tlons bowever, must, be as brief as possible; nd they must in all cases be written on one shect only. S o Wl . cach s ‘every case sccompany ary communication of | what nature soever, This is not intended for publication, but for our own satistaction and asroof © good faith. PoumokL. ‘ & xmouNcRRENTS of cavdidates for Office—whetha er made by self or friends, and whether as no- tioce or communications to the Editor, are ‘awtl nominations are made) simply persoucl, | e nd will be charged for as advertisements. %o §or desire contributions of a lisrary or poctical character; and e will not undertake %0 presenve or reserve the same in any caso atever. Our staff i suffciently large to an supply our lited space. All communications should be sodressed to — NATIONAL REPUBLICAN TICKET. | FOR PRESIDI JAMES A. GARFIELD, of Ohio. FOR VICE-PRESIDENT, CHESTER A. ARTHUR, of New York. Dr. Misien telegraphs from Utica the important fact that the editor of the Herald has had another interview with Horatio Seymour. Horatio, according to the Dr., is superannuat- ©d, and won't be a candidate at Cin- clupati. —_— Tux democrats at Washington are eaid to be delighted over the nomina- tion of Garfield, and think he can be easily defoated. There has not been & repuhlican nomination since the time of Abraham Linsoln cver wkich the democraey have not been equally delizhted. Electing his opponent, however, has proved to be a very differcnt thing. MODEL TENEMENTS. The question of improved dwellings for the poorer classes is engaging the public attention at present to a greater degree than ever before, The noble exaryple of George Peabody and the Baroress Burdette Coutts in London has ot been wasted, and the alarm- ing etatistics presented by the health, officcrs in .our crowded cities are ealling loudly for some prompt and effeciive action. A band of phileathropic New Yorkers have lately organized themselves into a company whoeo object it s to build a number of model tenements for the working clames of the city which will be fur- nishcd with all the eanitary improve- menis of the age and will beat the same time comfortable, home like and attra tive. The separate cottages for andividual workingmen will be built of th> best materials, well lighted and wventilated, while the tenement houses sre cqually comfortable and healihy. New York, however, is not the first American city which has attempted the problem of cheap and healthy | dwellings for the poor. Five years ago Mr. White, a Brooklyn philan- thropist, determined 10 make the ex- periment of founding a system of model tenemwent houses in that cily. The result has been a surprising suc- cess, and from the first beginunings a large settlement of Mr. White's cheor- ful Jitde buildings has sprung up on the corner of Hicks and Baltic streets. The New York Times, which has beon in- vestigating the workings of Mr. Whitw's buildings, finds them admi- comful. The buildings include cot- tage houses for individual working men, and large tenement houses, Thero are 8 houses with 9 rooms each, and 26 houses with 6 rooms in each building; besides these, 4 tene- | tion. ment dwelling with 6 rooms each, 22 | that increased population tends to di- tenoments with 5 room, 143 dwellings | minish rather than t> decrease the re- with 4 rooms, and 45 with 3 each, be- | sources of a country and who hold wides 18 stores and shops, or 269 total | with Malthus that population should dwellings. So successful end at-|be refused, are likely to receive a severe shock to their economical ideas. The San Francisco Chronicle states the matter thius: general belief that the census now under way will show a total population not lsss than 49,000,000 and probably 50,000,000, In round numbers the population of all the states and terri- tories in 1870 was 38,500,000 If we have 50,000,000 now the increase in ten years was 11,500,000, or very neatly 30 per cent (29.87). Lot us call it 30 per cent. increase upon so vast a capital as 38,- 500,000, and if it can be kept yp en years, the United States hed 65,000,000, the population and TItaly combined. But th and producticn tractive have these tenements been that on May 1, 266 were already let. There has been during the year in these improved dwelliogs over one thousand tenants, with an average of 210 persons in each tenament, snd 5718 in each cottage. The great body of the teaants are of the laboring and wrtissn classes. The rooms are all separate suites, with separate closets; they have in goneral no dark bed- xooms, and are capitally ventilated; many aro (cheerful and sunny apart- meats; all have firo-proof stairways, drying rooms on the roof, chutes for garbage, cellars, and are under scrup- wulous moral snd sanitary supervision. | population of the The ‘refuse is collected from the | will in 1890 have reacl cellars by carts privately employed by | which is astmuch as the_landlosrd. Water is admitted | of France everywhere, and eome of the houses | our increase in weals have an agreeable open place or garden | 3s far greater. within the quadrangle. Mr. White | 000 miles of railway, hasnot as yot published the death-rate in his houses, but therois little doubt that it will not excoed that of the healthiest rosorts in this country—say $15 per 1000. All this large settloment of hiouses represents a capital of $250, 000, and yot so well has it been managed that the rents alone for the past year have amounted to $28,639; agaitist this have been charged $3,664 for expenses of ofice, weading-room, cleaning; and taxes and ‘water reats, 5,166, with a consider- sblo sum, $4,340, set aside for im. provements, leaving a net income of 815,518, or more than G per cent. on the capital stock of $250,000. This is certainly thorough success, The dwellings bave not only given pless- ant and heaithful homes to a thousand people, but they have proved an ex- cellent business investment, and have ‘demonstrated to landlords and build- ers that improved and wholesome tenements, without ovezcrowding avd uuder moral conditions, can be made to pay. Governor Gear has designsted as i to represent theatate at York, in 1883, the Hon. A. G. Adams, of Barli and Mayor Racine D, Kellogg, of Garden Grove, with B. Bowen, of Keokuk, and Negon B. Collins, as alternates, QUACKS AND THEIR UIPLOMAS. The more audacious the quack the more ponderovs his diplomas. Mar- vin, the woman butcher, who was pardoned out of the Nebraska peni- tentisry by James I for & purse, always poiuted fo his diploma as an evidence of surg the horse jockey, who was sively advertised eminent surgeon, one of them signed and sealed by the faculty of ing’s College, Dublin. bigemist masher, had several diplo {mas from Philadelphia eclectric and 0 called medical colleses. shecgskirs were the product of bogus The charlatans this country but all over Europe. Their headquarters have been Cincin- nati and Philadelphia. bogus American diplomas has become such a scandal of late that Minister White at Berlin deemed it Lis duty to cill the attention of the government The name of an American diplowa became synonymous with for- gery and fraud, and the well-carned reputation of our physicians and sur- geons was tarnished by the venal ef- forts of the bogas diploma dealers, Philadelphia, which is the seat of two of the foremost medical colleges of the American continent, was made the headquarters of the quacks who dealt in bogus diplomss, and although the condition of things was no secret, and the attention of the authorities was repestedly called to the evil, noth- ing was done to check it. Some time since tbe Philadelphia Record determined to investigate the matter to its bottom. its staff was employed to ferrct out the institutions where diplomas were s0ld, to examine the chartera on which they grounded their claim, to obiain full details of the manner in whichthe bogus sheepskins were purchased, and to report fully all facts ascertained. The sity editor of the Record paid $130, attended seven lectures, suo- mitted to electrical treatment, so that as the professors aid ““he might know how the patients felt,” then wrote an elaborate thesis, passed an examina- tion, and reccived adiploma authcriz- ing him to treat and cure disease—al] done in twenty-fivehours’ time actuslly spent in reading and attendance at Having gone through the diploma mill the Record man madea thorough investigation of the whole bogus dip- loma business and finally in conjanc- tion with the caused the arrest of the chief of tho gang of scoundrels Dr. John Buchanan who is now in prison awaiting the ac- tion of ihe grand jury. The wholesale diploma manufac- turer had his sgents in the principal cities of Eorope, and among the s who purchased diplo- mas from him wera parties resid- Berlin, Vienna, Baden, Prague, Edinburg, Malags, Hamburg and other Europear cities, These mames are published to the world and the quacks will doubtless find their various localities too hot for It was shown that five quack facto- ries have been in operation in Phila- Philadelphia Eclectic Medical College. 2. American Univer- sity of Philadelphia. University of Medicine and Surgery. 4 Quaker City Business College. 5. Philadelphia Elec i itu- rably conducted snd peculiarly suc. ‘h‘ adlphia Electropathio Iustitu 3. Philadelphia Onx of the most interesting ques- tions which will be settled by the cen- sus now under way, will be the rela- tion between population and produc- Certain theorists who maintain 1t is an enormous against 86,900 in 1880—an incrense of 40 per cent Our exports in 1870 amounted to 520,000,000, against $730,000,000in 1879—au increase of 38 per cent. The increase in coal production from 1869 t0 1878 was over 60 per cont. Our agricultural exports in 1868 amounted to $320,000,000; in 1878 to $592,. 000,000—increase 85 jper cent. The coreal products of the country in 1868 aggregated 1,450,789,000 bush- inclading Indian corn. In 000,000 bushels—an increase of aboat Tn 1865 we produced but 148,500,000 bushels of wheat. 1879 the production of this cereal was 440,000,000 bushels. The incresss in 14 years was nearly 200 per cent, or 16} per cent per year. From 1870 to 1878 the cotton yield rose from 3, 000,000 to 5,216,000 bales—an in- crease of 70 per cent in eight years, or at the rate of nearly 9 per cent a year. The expansion of American manufac- ture has kept pace with the increase in agricultaral production, Philadel- phia, Pittsburg, Lowell now rank i among the greatest man: the world's fair to be held in New | cities in the world.” :{on Franklin R.R., hasbeen STATE JOTTINGS. —Albion talks of a rope factory. —Diphtheria ravages Colfax coun- ty. —Twmigeation is flocking into Holt county. —St. Paul's now public hall is com- pleted. —Knox county is moving for a new cou:t house. —Fremont will havo a new direc- tory ina week. ~ West Point creamery has more orders than it can fill. —Work hss been begun on the new B. & M. depot in Lincolo. —On the 16th railway mail service will be extended to St. Paul. —The first trains were run into Al- bion and St. Edward cn the 6th. —St Paul hassuch a rush that more hotel room is an absoluto nccessity. —Fromont has organiz:d her board " | of trade aad elected a board of officers. —Niobrara has pentilentis] slonghs that the peopie demand shall be dram- ed. ] —A colony from Elgin county, On- tario, intends settling in Dawson county. —Gage county has thirty-eight miles i railroad, divided between three lives. —Some of the leading men of Heb- rontemplate moving south to the new B. & M. —Tekamah hopes to celebrate the completion of her new bridge on the 4th of July. —Four hundred head of cattle from Fairibault, Minn., sre cn the way to Nance county. —The 8. C. & P. railroad people have bought eight blocks in Norfolk for depot grourds. —PFullerton, is moving for village organization. It has 264 population, and is but one year old. —For the present mail matter from the east is 48 hours in reaching Cul- bertson after leaving Orleans. —The old Ponca Irdian agency,con- sisting of 50,000 acres of first-class land, is without an occupant. —A B. & M. surveying parly has been camped just north of Falls City for several days awaiting orders. —A number of Fremont men left on the 8th by team for the Black Hills, by way of Yankton and Fort Pierre. —The medical fraternity of Harlim, Graoklin, Webster and Nuckolls coun- ties will orgenizs a medical associa- tion. —Daniel_Skoopman, residing near Utics, was instantly killed by the ac- cidental disch: of hus shotgua last = —The railroad grade between Pierse and Plainview is nearly completed, aud track laying will soon be com. menced. —Afarmerin thesoutheasterncorner of Batler county, who has & herd of near'y 300 cattle, has lcst ten of them from ‘black leg. —Thestorm of the 5th caused ¢on- siderable destruction generally, but the va'ue of the riinfull more than counteracted this. —The new Iron bridgo across the Elkhorn, opposite Pilger, is completed and accepted by the commissioners of Staaton county. —The first tree planted in Fremont, a cottonwood which had reached a Inrge growth, was uprooted by last Saturday’s storm. —In the Cedar river at Fullerton is found a white chalk stone which can be sawed into suy shape, and wher dry is hard and durable, —The only thing which prevents Dakota City from betog happy is the stench which ariees from the different cattlo and fced yards in the city. —Excellent peat has been dis- covered in Wheeler county. It lays in a bed about two feet thick along the beaver under four feet of dirt. —A Stanton Iawyer threw a book at the head of a witness who displeased him, in the court at that ylace, and was committcd to jall ten days by the judge. —West Point’s new round houss is nearly comploted. It was atruck by lightening during the recent storm, but the damage was slight and scon re-" paired. —A child of Louis Auftengarten was bitien by a rattlesaake, near Ogallala, the fore part of this week, and died in a fow hours from the effects of the venomus bite. —One thousand dollars and the best mill site in southwestern Nebrasks, will begiven by the citizens of Alma to the party who will built a first-class mill’there at once. _ —The valuation of Beatrice precinct is §50,000 more this year than last, exclusive of the 0. & R. V. R. R, assessment, which will increase those figures §15,000. —Horse thioves have been raiding Syracute aad neighborhood, aud so indignant ate the people that if the thieves are oaught summary Jjustice might be meted out to them, —From different parts of the state come reports of two crops growing in the same field, the result of two plant- ings, one of wheat and one of barley, Doth coming up. —North Bend is o vote on a propo- sition to_issue $4000 in bonds to be placed with £10,000 already voted to build a bridgs across the Platte. It was found that the latter amount would not do it. —A. P. Day, of Lebanon, Fraoklin county, bas 170 bead of fine Merino sheep. ' From the first sixty ewes he sheared six hundred and twenty-two and one-half pounds of wool. = One hundred lambs constitute this yoar's increass in the flock. —A farmer by the name of McBin- ney, living near Pilger station, Stan- ton county, was the unfortunate loser of 200 head of sheep out of 750 in the storm of last Saturday by being chilled and drowned in a ravine, —On an elevated piece of land near Steel Creek, Knox county, can be found traces of what evidently was once a fortification. A circular em- bankment embracing an area of two acres can bo plainly traced. It may have been put there by General Fro. mont, who wintered there in his ex- | hq plorations forty yesrs ago. —A suspicious looking fellow was arrested recently in Plum Creek who turned out to ba a downright walking arsenal. The following is a articles found in his possession: —2 British Bulldogs, self- , cal. 41; 1 nickel-plated Hood, cal. 38; 1 Remington, cal. 38; 1 Val- can, cal. 38; 1 nickel-plated Haod, cal. 32; 2 Smith & Wesson, cals. 32 and 38. Pocketknives—1 large dirk, with spring catch in back of handle; 1 pearl handle, three blades, and one black handle, two blades. The value ;{&lo eight pistols cannot be less than Chester A. Arthur. New York Times. Gen. Arthur was s delcgato g9 e convention at Saratoga that the republican party. Previous ts the outbreak of the war he was judge ad- vocate of the second brigade of the state militia, and Goyernor Elwin D. Morgan, soon after his inaugnration, selected him to fill the position of engineer-in-chief of his staff. In '61 whether tempor manently is not known, he held the post ot inspector- 1, and 800n afterward way mi'::é"w that of quartermaster-general, bo held until the expiration of n Morgan’s term of office. No bigher | was tacked on in spite of him, he encomium can be pased upon® him than the meation of the fact tht although the war account of the stats oF New York was atlrast ten times | spéoch in the house December 9, 1873, larger than that of any other state, | Mr. Wilson, of Todians, said on this i he first audited and al- bject: 3 S — Toved Ta’ Waahinglon, and without | Ja mattors not how many yearsof | WiTHOUT mmE USE oF DS AR 2 | GAY DWELL HAMILTONBGO, butter during tte month of May. cleared $2t9.56 by a steamboat excur- sion the other day. was killed by lightning at Floyd on are in the Burlington market at 25 balance of the distance. The well is legislative, executive and judicial ap. | propriation bill providing for increaseq the deduction of a dollar, while the | faithful servico had been devoted to ] RESCEES quartermaster’s accounts from other | the country, nor how exalted a char- [ REVIEW, AN ILLUSTRATED JOUE states wero reduced from $1,000,000 | acter for integrity had been builded to $10,000,000. Duriug his term of | up, this ono act has been deemed an office every present sent to him was | uapardonable crime. My distinggish- ed friend from Ohio (Mr. Garfield), Among others, a prominent cloth- [ who struggled against 1t until in & ing house offered him & magoificent | conference report which he had resi :d to the lzst it was brought before | ofa cure; are asyers a costly saddle and trappings. Both | the house attached one of the most vis. Tho snbjectof Elsciic Helta ree e ifts “wers indignantly rejected. | important appropristion, and then as | Lics to wisring humaoily, are duly «ousidered When Mr. Arthur became quarter |all of us who are familar with the master general he was poor. When | facts mostconfidently believe (and it is his term expired be was pocrer still. | but justics to him to ey 8o here) vo- He had opportanities tomake millions | ted for it in the consciontious dis- | i s 1hd"waay SioomySiaweiiences «7 37 || Draw Stent Drafia on England. Ire- immediately returned. uniform, and a printing house senthim | ¢ unquestioned. Contracts larger than | charge of his duty to his country, has | [Wlieeiiot ey, & the world had ever before seen were | fared no better than any one else. The at his disposal. He had to provide for the cluthing, arming and travsporta- [ members of congress to return the igor, and Bodily Energy. tion of hundreds of thousands of | back pay, and the most earnest advo- | Seudl your address on postal eard for Hd avd men. Speaking of him at this | cate of the bill repealing the increase. | “gmation orth thouas period, a friend eays: “So jealous| Speaking in reply to Alexander -PULVERMACHER GALVANIC CO., was he of his integrity that I have | Stephens, who advocated still high.r €OR. EIGHTH and VINE STS.. CINCINNATI, G Fms]- NAT'UHAL BA"K known instances where he could have | salaries, Mr. Garfield said: made thousands of dollars legitimate- Iy, and yet refused to do it on the|men I know in this nation, sman who, ground that he was a public officer | perhaps, has done as much for its in- and meant to be like Cavsar's wife, | tellactual Jife as any other, told me not ‘above suspicion.’ His own words to | many months ago that he had made it me in regard to this matter amply | the rule of hi o illustrate to his character. ‘If I had | tellectual pursuit the moment it be- misappropriated 5 cents, and on walk- | came commercially valuable; that ing down town eaw two men talking | others would utilize what he had dia- on the corner together, I would imagire they were talking of my dis- | above the line of commercial values, honesty, and the very thought would | and when he brought down the great truths of ecience from the upper hights to the level of commledlcill values, & thousand havds would be ready to it bbbl et St valuabie in the markets of the werld. drive me mad. Ottumwa expects to show up 12,000 population. . The question of a system of sewers | o tered upon his great career, not for is beiog agitated in Cedar Rapids. | he salury it gave him, for that was | always Cures and mover disap= Hampton shipped 68,230 ds of | meagre compared with tha pay of thoss | points. Theworld's great Pain= or during tbe month of May. . |in the lower walks of life; but he fol- | Bictioner for Man Sod Beart lowed tke promptings of his great na- | Cheap, quick and reliable, tare and worked for the loveof truth instructi kind, The Presbyteri:n ladies of Clinton g{';’,‘;,;i,::i £ this apirit hes ";:;‘"’:{:d tho lies of grest men who did % | PITCHER’S CASTORIA |mats much to build up and msiatsin our = J. P. Leonard, a man 23 years old, | republican institutions. Aud this | 18 1ot Narcotic, Children |mmi spirit i, in my judgment, higher and 1 worthier thao. that ghich the gonde. | and Physicians recommend Early potatoes of home production | man from Georgia (Mr, Stephens) bas | CASTORIA. It regulates tho deecribed. To come immediately to | Bowels, cures Wind Colic, the question befcra us, I join mn no allays Feverishness, and de- orimmations sgainst thess who used | grove Worms, the right to vote and act differently from g muself on this subject. But when the P}’;";;‘:‘:‘-‘w company | PUDIE #a7s to me, and to thoso asscic T — Rl el s oot e - ( <) at Keokak, after an ex- | constifutions] ' law, given ourselyes | WEI DE MEYER'S CA- | i, D% boitreculse, sud tharstorssoy bar 2 1stence of six years, collapsed. more pay than that publig is willing| TARRH Care, a Constitutional | stead of being gobbled up by the agent § The crop of the state has been pret- | to graut us, it would be indelicateand | Antidote for this terrible mala- L] ty much_ruined by the recent heavy |indecent in us on such a question to | 9¥» by Absorption. The most i resist the public opinion. Last week the Cedur Falls creamery made 1,000 pounds of butter a day. Wedneeday afternoon. cents for three quarts. Engineers are locating sites for piers for the proposed railway bridge across the Missi The Io (co-oper: storms of wiad, hailand rain. The normal schocl at Cedar Falls clcses the term on the 25th. About | whether Mr. Garfield in this speech tage befo: thirty students expect to graduste. | exhibited the spirit of a ealaty grab- | Sags o vo Commmption | OMAHA, - NHBRASKA. Coal has been found at Luke City, | beF or & sordid politician. He sp)k S Nec K lds, ooy GOk Fiotas simply a1 ho has acted il i life | through. Ho has not been a movey- miker. Ho has not made money. Spite of his great abilities as a law- | ATTENTION, BUILDERS AND GCON TRACTORS. Calhoun county, at a depth of forty- five feet, but probably not in paying quentities. Over 1,000 visiting firemen were present on the first day of the Mar- shalltown tournament. Cedar Rapids sent the largeet delegation, 200. The Albia and Moulton branch of stage, covered; that his field of work was yer and a literary man, he is ono of the poorest public men in the pation, and at the same timo one of the most | Tne owner of the solebrated Kaclin fragul, industrious aod temperate. 18656. 1880. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. A COMPLETE STOCK FOR SPRING=SUMMER STYLISH AND 600D, NOBBY AND CHEAP. ‘We have all the Latest ‘Sty.lss of Spring Suitings, an Elegpnfi . Stock of Ready-Made ClotLing in Latest Styles. Gent's Furnigh- Accor icy or wold | 7 sublect o sight check without notice. | jng Goods Stock Complete. ficates of depoeit lssued pay- tion an u iR SEURSITUERAE HATS, CAPS, TRUNKS AND VALISES, In fact the Stock 1s complete in all Departmeuts. Advances mads 1o (-u!’oluxtzl'! &:ggn:( Socuririos At AKet T A xplained. Prtereet. Don’t Fail to sec our Castom Department in charge of YOUNC MEN Buy and se _gold, bills of exchange Mr. Thomas Tallon. an Acd others who suffer from Norvous and Physical ggxnmsm, State, Coun M_ H ELLMAN & CO" h e e o Eromaturs Eyhaca: e 1301 & 1303 Farnham Street. laries %‘n:,“:r'h 'f:fl:h :“f_::d;::;{ I NYALI DS AND OTHERS SEEKIKG THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED voted for the whole bill, as chairman T i s e LT H. [BARKING HOUSE ing in charge of it himsell. In s , IN NRBRASEA. STRENGTH and ENERGY, QUESTED TO SEND FOK THE ELECTRIC BANKERS. * NAL, WHICH IS PUBLISHED FOR FREE DISTRIBUTI x Business transacted same as that of ank. indisczetion, LSl " | 1ana, Scotland, and all parts of Europe Lmnchx'xfllkwu&mndh- pemigated | Sell Buropenn Pasesge Tickots. Mr. Garfiold was one of the first | who peiics to' pachen et wi COLLECTION? PROMPTLY MADE the only safe, simple, and efectivs road i aagldtt U. 8. DEPOSITORY. JOBBERS OF HARDWARE, CUTLERY, NAILS, STAMPED AND JAPANNED WARE, O A ASUSYMENT | TINNERS STOCK, SHEET IRON, TIN STOCK, ETC. ors 10 souses 1817°% 1319 DOUGLAS STREET, Organisod aa » Natiousl Bank Acgust 30, 1868 OMAHA, NEB. Oapital and Profits Over $300,000 | **“ __ Positively no Goods Sold at Retail. e rmasy |l L SLEDZIANOSKI<= GO., MANUFACTURERS OF MOULDINGS!I! AND DEALERS IN PICTURE FRAMES, CHROMOS AND ENGRAVINGS 922 Douglas St., Near 10th, Omaha, Neb. HENRY HORNBERGER, STATH AGENT FOR V. BLATZ'S MILWAUKEE BEER ! In Kegs and Bottles. Bpecial Figures to the Trade. Families Supplied at Reasonable Prices. Office, 339 Douglas Street, Omaha. information worth thousands will Le sent you. OF OMAHA, Cor. Farnham and Thirteenth Sta. Onc cf the brightest and greatest 1fe to abandon any in- (SUCCKSSORS TO SOUNTZX BROS., OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS A voice—Who was hel Mr. Garfild—Tt was Agasslz. He This bank recelves depasite without regard to amounza. oo o cerficnto baaring mtarest Draws drafis ou Ssu snd principa cltles of the United Btates, Dublia Kdinburgh and the principa citiee of the sont pasmade. tickets for emigran in the - grow fat upon, Mothers like, ool REAL ESTATE BROKER Geo. P. Bemis’ ReaL Estate Acency. 15th & Douglas Sts., Omaha, Neb. This_agency does sTRICTLY & brokerage busl- & B;ggs and Hill, REAL ESTATE BROKERS No. 250 Farnham Strest We Manufacture to Order OFFIGE_RAILINGS AND FINE GOUNTERS OF PINE AND WALNUT. Iron and Wood Fences, Brackets and Mouldings, Improved Ice Boxes furnished on short notice. @UST, FRIES & CO., Prop’s., 1231 Harney St., Omaha, Neb. LANGE & FOITICK, Important Disoovery sinoe Vas- lotclligent readers may judge| D GiCUlRe (ISr Thnedos mey Nebraska Land Agency DAVIS & SNYDER, 1505 Farnham St. Omaha, Nebr. Banks, near LOUISVILLE, NEB., has | - Groat Bow ready at the depot. at Louisvills, on | gty bro railroad, o.F.D. the Chiceo, Burlington & Quincy GUILTY OF WRONG. the B.& - ohvis, e Dealers in railrond i completed to Moravia, and | some people have » fablon of contalog ex- I . OK T v ] :S will bo running to that place by June | cellent re; alics s o Taass of [TWeDt | 4 61l any order at reasomable prices. Par. | wruox xao. v . xE U 10. Weone. Thero aro somy adverticel remedios | £i63 desiring a white front or ornamental Byron Reed & Co,, A five per cent tax has been voted | fully worth ail that s asked for them, and one of a railrcad from Tama City to Mal- com and thence sonth to the coal fields. Mr. Beatty, professor of science in the Mt. Pleasant university, is or- ganizing an excursion party to spend sigweeks or two months of the summer in’the resorts of Colorado. The telephone line between Ma- quoketa and Andrew will be completed the latter part of this or the first of next month. Bellevue and Preston tions with the firat named place. There is on exhibition in Muscatine a Poland-Chiva pig which weighs | Price 25 cent per box. For sale by Plansfor new Machinery, Meachanical Draught. Owmaha. 1532 pounds. _The demensions of the mouster are: Length, 7} feet, girt of neck, 63 feet; girt of chest, 71 feet; 80 inches. ¢ Thursday afterncon Abe Greenwood, recently diecharged from the employ of the Keckuk & Hamilton Bridge company walked into the engineers office on the bridge, at Keokuk, and in the presence of Superintendent rirt of Ky ips, | sure and permanent cu-e Melton, deliberately shot and almost | i ts between iles, constipation, kidney | a1s.t¢ Seh i i : | discases it lives tromblen: To R us# Schuyler, Neb. instautly lilled Mr. Lefller, tho engi- | diearcs sad lver troubles. In Kids T, Neb. Thofearful cyclone which devasta- | freriey womane neatiby s | MMEAT MA’RKET, neer. ted Pottawattamie county on the night of the 10th, did its terrible work in a strip about_eleven miles long and eight rods wide. Some of the killed were carried half a mile before; they were whirled to the ground dead. A discrepancy in the accounts of ex- Treasurer Walker, of Des Moines, amounting to nearly §18,000, has just been brought to light in that city. | greatest caro. Walker was formerly chairman of the greenback siate commiitee, and is now a candidate for state auditor on Cuts, Braises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt | " Gaatigs of sver desmad, 2 o siute. o OHICAGO, ILL. Rhetm, Fover Soros, Tetter, Ohapp- | _ Eotn, Fumes sus svry chao. machers | 5 A Positive and Permanent Cure ed Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all 2 = : tro aliotalking of talephone conneo- |iiydy"of Biin Eraptions. . Thia Saive | Well Anpare: eys, Hangers, it 4150 to French Pad Co, Toledo, 0., and’they | Alry Rooms, and kind and accommodating same. over. Jail and Jailors, u the city. ok will do well to give us a call or send \ e e— o Tave mos ot theyaris sy | 9 To A HOOVER, Prop., | REAT, ESTATE AGENOY Uil it s chtsad i o | —————___ Lociavilla. Neb IN NEBRASKA. BXOELSIOR '.::p s complete abstract of title to all Reallk Machine Works, =" wux suasac——~|T0 THE LADIES AND GENTLEMEN: Bucklen's Arnica Salve J. F. Hammond, Prop.& Manager BRIGGS HOUSE PROF. GUILMETTE'S Thé Best SALVE in the world for [ yiemigs shorosgh sspolated and compiste | Cor. Randalph St. & Gth Ave, FRENCH KIDNEY PAD| House Furnishing Goods, Shelf Hardware, Nails and Ete. 1221 Farnham Street, 1st Door East First National Bank. m8-tt Special attention given to Guaranteed, ses of Grave’, Diabeles, Dropay. Bright's Discase of th Incontinenle and Retention of Uriue, Inflamation o s, Catarrh of the Fladder, Hixh Colored Urine, Prin the Back, s de or Liocs, Nervous Weakness, and in fact all disorders of the Bladder and Urinary Organs, whether contrac'- d by private discases or otheawise. This great remedy has | con used with success for nearly ten yeam in France, with the most wondeMul curative effects. J¢ cures by absorption: no naseous internal medicines being required. ~ We have hundsods of testl- ‘monlals of cures by this Fad when al 2 , DIB, if you are suflering frem aborption, Ask your druggis Schuyler, Neb. +heco, ot disecaes pecullar o females, o in fact any diceses, sak cure, and take 10 other, and I ] £ your drusicst for Prof. Guilmetie's Frouch Kidney Pad, and be Las not got it or will not get 1t for yon, send | Flistclass House, Good Meals, Good Beds ge : * take no other. 1f he has not xot it. send $2.00 aud you w.ll s ~ recvive tte Pad by return mail. - Address U, 5. Bianch, Pall guaranteed to give perfect satiafac- | Shafting, Bridge Irons, Geer od in every case or money re unded. Cutting, etc. Ing, Models, etc., neatly executed. 150 266 Harnev St.. Ret. 14% _ and 15th dumb ague, jaundice, dyspepais, ivo~ Pads, Guilmetic's French L ) this' nol iry [P 0ne PR Yot Mol S setamttic pa e sy e g FRENCH PAD CO. It is well known that a relationship ex- 8., MILLER, Prop., % Toledo, Ol;lo y . PRICES REDUCED TO $2.00 AND $2.50 PER DAY | PRO F;““-M ETTES FRENCH LIVER PAD Located In the business centre,conventent 4 2 A iious Pever, Jaaodice, piaces of amusemmont. Elogantly furnisbed, oon | 1\ a0 0, O the Liver, Miomach and Biosd " Tho yad cares by sboorption. sed 1y porereren el v'A E‘T":L :“6:"‘ “St. e 5k S our Sraggs for this jad s0d akoino scher. 1 e esonor Kesp e ormd O30 B ek PRERON an eata o all Kinds constant X t . . B, Br h) ledo, Ohio.fand receive it by return mail.. UHN on band, prices reasonabl. " Vgeiabiee in scas | _ 0cI RAD00. O P Tomch R Toio8a 2 Agents, Omaha, Neb. HALTLS on. delivered toa ny part of the elty. e d B ~iw5h. | OCDEN HOUSE, |PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY HAIR m:xmszs OF | Cor. MARKET 3T. & BROADWAY = S RENEWER. | L0UCLAS C0-,FOR THE YEAR 1g50- Council Bluffs, Towa The Only Lithographing Establishment in Nebraska JEROME RACHEK. = > Online of Stree: Railway, This standard article is compounded with the = I l H Proprietor. penses ... s from all tra Poor and Poor House and fuel for 73 second fl Its effects. o as wondsaful and ratistactory as 1t restores gray or faded hair to ita youthtul METROPOLITAN By H. T. Leavir, Deputy. the greenback ticket. He will proba- | 1t fymoresalleruptions, liching and dandrutt i Hly not proceod with his candidature, | Heat'® <P 7 4 W ppiedsad e o Sk .~ el ol s Tho recent storms and floods have | s . thels wormat vior proveniar b, | County Offce, Ofics Tient, Kice. i, TROTRIBIOR. E;.h:d ulny‘ every rcad bndg‘c in :Ll:;lw.ml making the hair grow thick and | tions and Assessors. m’,n"’.l’,';",_;_m et beo e o Hosdedanl s il du |k g oo e s o ot | e g were washed out. The wind blow | Dr. A“;yu;c,GhmA-{:ruwu, * By Order of County Commissioners, down and unroofed various houses | 715 oL gonsder it tho best proparation Jonx R. MaxcaEstEn, and barns, and did other damage near County Clerk. NEW GRQGER owon o low ooty Tas st s | BUCKINGHAM'S DYE, in the county will foot up $100,000. Anamosa has a sensational elope- :;nt case. A young lady was to have ch:nge m: orlo{lu the mb mbf:x any n married on & certain day, and | Ui undesirable ade, to brown or black, ¢ everything was in_proparation for the | pacie and e eyl bong in ne frs- event. The night before the twain permanent color which will nelther Rub er waeh : were to be united another fellow, a former lover, made his appoarance, with whom she e'oped, and they were [ 3R 2. EX.A XX & i ., | ——————— = * "=—"" |duce. Goods delivered free to any married the next day at Anamoss. The farmers in Union township, Harrison county, are what may be | Sold by all Druggists and Dealers in Medicine. termed on the war-path in rd to herds mow. looated -in the m-hip. Several men claim that there is nearly 1000 head of cattle now being herded there, greatly to the detriment of om hatchets and driven through wire fences. A meeting has been held and the entire township is solid for ousting the intruders, clatming that it is an outrage and imposition they cannot and will not submit to longer. A Monticello man makes a proposi- tion to Boone to construct a well that | 11ogk (o depot. Triins s from 3 miaise ; " 5.5 o e will supply 200 gallons per minute, to | Depar. " Raich ts (L o Fooin; 8 e st T4 o be curbed with seven and five inch gas pipe—the seven inch gas pipe to be sunk to a depth of 300 feet from the surface, and the five inch pipe the to be put down to a depth cf 500 feet for 81200, the city to furnish all the Monday, July 5th, 1880, by a pic-nic, to be heid material used in the construction of the well. In case the well is to be sunk over 500 feet the charges are to be not to exceed $3 50 per foot, de- pending on the kind of material through which it is necessary to go. ey aleo claim that | SUITS fi - . it . thare stoott s {I:in’g‘:ulfl:ud e PANTS l!:)l].: Gin e FH“"TIE HnTEI., Mb‘:_m;y; L by S o ok Lowest Possible Prices. INTER - OCEAN HOTEL, | o niniie oome et rsasommin 3umss; | g 28 round, ANDREW EORDEN, Cuiet miot at Sailing’s Grove, ia Sarpy County, under the RS by S : (6% vk ' | Sl e e tisdamszen | GHOES MADE TO ORDER one ki ince bato the Grove. Seventy-five cents will be ebarced for the r.und trip: children half fas, | FBFE = = - - « - 25 Cents, o ook s m.. and return at s.ven p. m., and Papiltion at ten a. m, returning at six p. mi2iw | ]6th and Cuming Sts. ‘We propose supplying the people of North Omaha with OHGICE CROCHRIES at mod- erate prices. Give us a call. I. H. BERGEHN. 3 72Cash paid_for Country Pro- For the Whiskers. ‘This elogant prepsration be relled on te OMAHA BEE A LITHOGRAPHINS PH| N G MANUFACTURED BY part of the city. apl7-Im GOMPANY. Drafts, Checks, Letter Bill and Nute Headings, Cards, Bonds, Certificates of Stock, Diplomas, Tabels, etc., done in ths best manner, and at Nashua, N. H SANTA CLAUS FOUND. Greatest Discovery of the Age. BUSINESSl "'T '3:1""“!1:?»& You | It really he li "";:?{":mnrfirm‘ Py " on in b 3 ™ 20dgok rlcs, whih he | Laat you an cxearmion saled e o 4o Pole ‘o all ‘uaranteos the lowest in the cit ‘And suddenly droppedinto what seemedikexhole 00 1220 PARNHAM STREET. | Where wonder of wonders they found a now laad, JITBROME RAOEBIK, b PRACTICAL LITHOG! Suams THE ONLY PLAGE You NEBRASK.A. iatiled Cider Vinogar At s LOWER PIGURE than st | First quality distilied Wine and Cider Vinogme any other 1 v And far brighver akics Wyommg. Birds with the hues of a rainbow were found, While flowers of exquisite Iragrance wer grow atiantion piven o Cheyenns, Wyoming. nu "mz:fl;fl (ARD, Proprietor. First-close, Fine large Swumple Rooms, one NEW TIME TABLE E below €200, #250 and $3.00, according or castern shoe house in the city, | of sny sreogth holessle #ad _retail. el s e ot 2 Wl "Twas a team of grasshoppers He rode ina shell Instead of & s But be took them on bowrd ‘airay Ho showed them all over his wonderful realm, . b, ..'tcg:.:,m OMAHA AND FORT OMAHA d factories making goods for women and men, N, Furrlers were working on hats greut and 236 FARNHAM ST. M. R. RISDON, GRAND CELEBRATION. UM "I B U s I. Koa e s the Olove Haker R . & gENTs, | General Insurance Agent, Our Noiool Hottoy w1l o coimtod on | sasem oxens. S tiome e ppea s o tings T ; pr—— PHGENIX ASSURANCE CO., of Lou- don, Cash Assets. . WESICHESTER, N. Y., IKARD FIRE, iphia, Capit SORTHWESTEN - NATION neats | ave been made with the U, P. K. UNDA Frtees ¥ ompany to run an excursion tram from Oma SUNDAYS EVERY TWO HOURS. pertect 8t guamnteed. Tiices TIRT ble i will leave Omaha at.nine o' Jaums K. Scorr. DR. A. S. PENDERY, A B cong’ | B.A. Powums. . SCOTT, o |mieines fesees | CONSULTING PHYSICIAN, e Ul s R : ITECT ks T . D t Pa E, g i B. BEEMER, A Rc H E 0 s- The back-pay “charge” is as base- | The rommitiens e ears o rsine Eapilion. a) T A F, RAFERT & CO. I hi . el pesmnt o thene iing rograme | Oflring ; COMMISSION 'MERCHAN o vldings o sey dsption o8 . - oted sesont the amendment sy e |55 o W B g e e =a. ol o g wiheiden.® | Gontractors and Buildors, e Ok v UXION BLOGK. * mm 1810 Dodge &,, Omahe, Bt ——

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