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THE DAILY BEE E. ROUSEW ATER: EDITOR HATIGNAL REPUBLICAN TICKET. FOB PRESIT TAMES A. GARFIELD, of Ohio, POR VICE-PRESIDENT, CHESTER A. ARTHUR, of New York. g e PatSILERTIAL ELECTORS. GEORGE W. COLL! of Pawnee County. JAMES LAIBD, of AAI-HM ¢ THURSTON, /s Covmty. JOH; .,n BLV: K STATE TICKET. For Merl, erof Congress, EOWARD k. VALENTI For member of Usngress (Contingent), THOMAS J. MAJORS. ¥ Governor, ALBINUS NANCE. ¥or Vieutenant-Governor, E .C. CARNS. For Secretary of State, 8. J. ALESANDER, For Aufttor, JOHN WALLICHS. Fer Treasurer, BARTLETT. Attorney-General, . DILLWORTH. For Commiwsioner of Pubilic Lands and ‘Bufldings, A. G. KENDALL. For Superintendent of Public Instruct on, DISTRICT TICKET. ¥or Attorney—Third Judicisl District. N. J. BURNHAM. ——— THE RAILROAD 'nc&h»- The railroad convention Witha re ¢l has done its work, put- ting a legislative licket inthe field which republicans of Douglah county are expected to support and elect on the second of November. The ticket from bead to tail with perbaps & eolitary exception is made up of men who are sbsalately unde 4o control of the Union Pacific mon- 050y, either as employes or depend ants. Mr. 0. K. Coutaat, who heads the ticket, was a member of the last een- ate, and in that body he voted for every corrupt jcband every sppropri- ation to fleece and rob the taxpayers, and against every measure limiting cr curtailing the power of corporate mo- nopolies. That & wan with such a record should be presented for re-cleccion is simply an insolt to the intelligence of this community and an impeachrent cf the honesty of the republican party in its pledge to redress abuses and stop extortion of monopolies in the coming iure. Mr. S. R. Locke, the second nominee for the senate is o gentloman socislly and s staunch re- publican politically. If Mr. Locke was not & tenant of the Union Pacific and was not the head of the Omaha Water Works compa terest hie desires to legislate, he might have made an able and ueefol leg tor. pabiican 1s legis , in whose in- is L As it is, he conld only go to n as a5 atteche of the U. P. and ent of the Water Works company. the lower houte the railroad 1 paid the highest honor to x and Gates Barber, who each received 57 out of the 76 votes. Mr. Fe conver Over ten thousand democratic workmen il New York city have an- nounced gheir intention to vote the republioan ticket. They are workirg on full time and fair wages, snd don’t want a change. Tux sanctimonious Libagh didn’t dare to venture on the troubled politi caleea, €0 ho b hinman friday, Pat Mullen, put on Thurston’s U. P. ticket. Patwould cuta magnifcent figare in the legislature, wouldn’t hel Wira U. P. capper Coutsntat the hoead, U. P. Boes Jac! ut the ufl’ aad Pat Mullen, U. P. store-kee; ers clerk, sandwiched in- the middle, the is a nies morsel for republicensto swallos: Tae Superb's latest lettor on the tariff, in which ho deciares himself for protection, after having previously endorsed the democratic platform, is characterized by the New York Post as weak aud imbecile. Hancock must have loft his coraet ff when he wrote it Tt ehows a dsck of backbone. GExenar Garrisup seruck tho key- note of the colored question when he told the Cleveland colored men that ali that liberty and do for them is to give them a_fair and equal chance within the limits of the constitution, and that they must et it be under- #lood that they sre willirg and renay to work ‘out their own muterial sa tion by P worth and Iabor. Tue (.Amu\nu Pacific syndicate promise that work on the e-tension of the road will be immcdiately bogun, aud trains over 700 miles of the road will bo running by the end of the year. The mumagement claim that the rcad will be less blocked by enow than cither the Northern Pacific or Union Paclfic, owing to the low alti- tule st which it crosses the moun- tains, and that their expectations of gunihgthe bulk of the western car- rying trade are based on the fact that their western terminus will be 1,000 milesfaether west (han_San Fran- cleco. Tus oubrageous andimpudent swin. dle pragticed upon ‘eur people by the Union Pacific Toad in pablishing & schedule-of so-called reduced bridge rates becomes every day more sppar- ent. Lending merchants of our city, some of whom are the heavieet ehip- pots froris the east, declare that under the Tigw schedule their freight bills for the Zatne smount of goods are heavier and more exorbitant than ever. The change from $10 a car load to five conts '8 hundred woight is absolutely nothing,’an1 it is s impudent and backficed pwindle an the part of the Union Pacific manager 44 protend that sny reduction has beet “made which affests the mass of merchants or pur- chasors in our city. —_— WaiaT do the col red republicans of Oamha think of Thurston, Yost and compeny now! Thess arrant bypo- crites have all along professed “extra orditary friendship for the colored man. They eheonrsged republicits i1 the effort to secure representation in the next legislature, and were pro- fu e with their promises to nominate Mr. ‘Orerall. When the conventign mot they let Mr. Ovarall down with - & complimentary. vote of ci¥enteen out of the aevepty-five votes in the convemlion, Thurs on and- the Baion Pacific ring sccured combral ‘of . thy mackinery of the re- p blidan pitty, in Dov_;t- county by tha id oF colored men, and after thiy pull the Union Pacific chestout out of the fire they-are. iosulied with a be.- gwly complimenit 0f seventeen vote-, Comrast that course with the candid oY “menly. - ‘oonduct. of Tur Mew, . This " paper © fravkly tild the ocolorpd people that ther peremplory demand for representation in the legislature wa: prem tare, We warned the colored mer - -ainst the false friendd WHS we==o1i- - ‘ng them for their own | nde. Now, that thowe Bypogri( 4d knaves 5% un- masked, we i . ihe colored voters Oamabawil: Bave self-reapockengugh > resent the insult and refuse to b led By the wose like cattle. |. At tuem- vote the isan na- ~al ticket, butlet them assert their 1athoad by voting down every U. P. 1 they do not they may forever here- after hold their peace and continue to b the slaves of & coriupt ring and a #-uless monopoly. Fox is prelty generslly known in this county, and we pass over his chrenic sin charitable silence. Gates rwould make a good deal better horse jockey then a logialator. His recent performances as member of the ropublican county committoe show Wim to be utterly uoreli- able snd beyond any reasonable doubt an ally of the Uuion Pacific strikors, Next in honcrable promifi- encyis J. H. Kyner, who, we are cor- rectly informed bas never as much as paid « pell taxin this county. Mr. Kyuer is one of Paul Vandervoort’s the army. His training with the u. P. gang, snd his endorsemont by them is proof of 1he hold they haveon him. Mr. Kyner is life insurance egant,bst le was fisted ou the Hok«t a8 & repre- sentativo of the horvey fisted former, Nesxt ia order comes Henry Bclla, a geocer, who depends U. P pa‘ronsga for a livelyhood. Mr Belln is put on a8 a representative German. Heisaman of fuic repate, but will harily drsw the German support, in- avmuch as the Germansare decide: Iy opposed to men who teke John M. Thurston as their po iticsl goide. Patrick Mul'en was placed on the ticket as & representative Irish repub- lican. Pat is clerk in the U. P. storehouse, and is about as fit tomake laws as o hog is to dance ou s tight- —r E. M. Bartlett is a young attorney of the firm of Bartlett & O'Brien. Ho it a young man of fair promice, and if he kept out of bad company, end did not train with the log-rollers and cappers ot the U. P., might make a good legislator. Haying packed the ticket with tools, tenauts, dependants and straw men, Thurston, Kimball & Co. threw a sop to the mercantile element by nomioa- ting Mr. W. J. Broatch. Mc. Broatch is absent from the city, and we doubt whether he will accept the nomin:- tion. If he decli at the eleventh hour on the day before the election, find room for some states- man like Frank Hanlon or Frank Walters. That will season the dish for respectable republicanf and make the crow more palatable —_— on Hexny Sxvoek has been nominat- ed for the legislatare in Cheyenne county by the republicans. No re- publican in_that_county could poll more votes than Heury Suyder will— and no man_ would ~betier deserve them.—[Republican. Henry Snyddr is the agent of the U. P. at Sidney, who bas prostituted himself to the bascst uses as a politi- el tool to the ecrporation controlied by Jay Gould. He packs republican primar.es with U. P. employes, ! nipulates county conventions and miis- represents the republicans of Chey- enne county in the state convention by acting as the most abject eapper and slou)-pizeon of the U. P. bosses. Tals is just the kind of cattle the Omaha Republican recommends to the people as fit men to make laws for this sute. GaMBETTA scems to hol i the destiny of France in his bands, and his con- trolis heartily sustaincd by the French people. It is anmounceo that in any fu wre complications caused by the Eastern question, France will fnsist on taking & hand and waking berself felt. TaE troubles in Ircland continue, and new agratian disorders are re- ported. The government,- it is re- ported, will immedictely take meas: ures to prosecute disturbers of the peace. They ehould commence on a few landlords of the Mountmorres type. Buicur Evss, the Indian protege of that eninest philanthropist, Rev. T. H. Tibbles, has written some recol- lections of her childbood for an east- ern magasive, It's fitlo is said to be, ““What I Kuow of Dog Soup. —_— ST. JUleN has retired ffom the race track for tHe season. St. Julien is just two weeke- ahesd of General Haacodd Tae baloou failure yesternay- in Eagland was csused by too mich gas. This was the reason of the democratic taiTare in Obio and Tadiana last week. The Michigan car works at Detroit Juaction turn cut about five hundred cars a month, snd the business for the | s, the ring will, | TEH._IAH.,KOAD VAMPIRE. " The olfrsgeous. exiortions of the Union Pacific are not confived to Omsha or Nebraska. The game of bighway robbery which it is the pol- icy of this gisnt monopoly to play. whenever opportunity 1s sfforded, has now begun furcher west and Salt Lake City isthis time the victim. The Usion Pacific company hasa virtual monopoly of the coal trade in Salt Lake, its only competitor being the mines of Pleasant Valley, which have mo means of eutrance to Salt Leke except by way of the Usion Pa- cificrod. Last week the Union Pa- cific company left the wholo city shivering in the 'midst of a severe snow storm with- out cosl, which it could met or would not sopply and which it refused to permit others to furnish. The enormous tariff placed on the tracs- portation of Pleasant valley coal ef- fectually shuts it off from the Salt Lake market, while by the rame pro- cess of freight discrimination it keeps coal from the Weber veins from com- ing into the city. This cutrageous discrimination has aroused a storm of indignation throughout the territory. The Salt Like Eerald says that “in consequence of the policy of the giant monopcly Salt Lakers must regulato | the temperature of their homes to the likirg of the U. P. and go without tires until the U, P, is in a mood to Jet them strike & match. It is truly s #ad condition of affairs, and one mot conducive to kindly feelings for the grest corporation which every day fur- and cruel.” Not confehted with monopclizing the cos] trade of Utah the latest move of the Union Pacific has been an un- wucoessinl attempt to crowd out all railrond competition and hold the re- rources of the territury in its pitiless havd. During the course of tha sum- mer the Utah Esstern, a liitle com- pany, has been struggling to construct & narrow gauge railway from Coalville to Park City, a distance of twenty- three miles, and having completed its grade purchased rails in San Francisco and had them transported to Ogden. The Union Pacific had promised a rate of §35 per car from O.den to Conlville which, as the distance is only forly miles, was an out- rageous mts Tmagine the surpriss of tte new road when on receipt of its rails at Ogden i= received a notice that the great mo- nopoly had decided to raise its rates to $85 per car. The whole territory, Mormon and Gentile, is aroused over this outragecus attempt at highway robbery. The Salt Lake Herald, in a vigorous editorial, say: The Union Pacific is ranning a epur to Park City, and is doing what it can tion that the lit- Tt for of the ics of the ed in the o wilt be its patrons, what 2 I fre gats the way and the generally are so0 indi.nant Leartless conduct of tho Union Pacific thas they srsert that whera it is pos sible, thie Utah Eactern will receive their patronage. There was no occa. eion for more than « 1 Park Ciiy, but it is apy there must and will 1d there have leeu occasion for two lines between S It Lake and the coal bede; but evi-y day furnishes convincing proof th ¢ two are neces. ssry. Tho socmer tho m.ma is in operation the ber 5 600 people in Salt Lake, D.vis ‘ooels countics, who are at t'o mercy of a corporation that hs does not know the word. Tae Deseret Evening News remarks it was_expected no doubr that the Utah Eastern people would kick at his outrageons extortion and thus pletion of their road woald be But they have concluded to pay the exorbitant price under pro- testand go ahead. Good. Rush on the road and lot_eve public spirit and a jittlo spure cash take some stock inthe new road, and help the men who are endeavoring to save Salt Lake from \he grasp of a soulless monopoly. Will the peeple of Nebraska wait until their indusiries are prostrated, their trade driven from thestate, their farmers impoverithed by the railroad Vampire, before they rise in thelr might and insist upon regulations and restrictions which other states have long ago found necessary? Wil they not ineist upon the passage of such laws as will prevent the discrimination and | extrtion which are now practiced uy- on the producers of the west by the greatest monopoly of the sgel BEGGARS MOVING BAST. Broomierox, Neb., October 19. To the Editor of Tur Pre: T have just been reading an article In your excellent prper headed “Beggars Moving Bas.” I thirk the writer is a little harsh in his judg- ment avd language in regard to the poor but honest farmer that find it a necessity to go east, where they can find work for themselves and families during the winter, and as & result plenty of bread and butter, to stay their stomachs while performing their labor, which we must all ackaowlodge is very essential and very hard to ob- tain, especially so. with those who failed in raising crops of sll kinds as many have done. They have nothing tosell or by with after working so hard all the past year. T will let the readers of this decide from their own experiences, in whatever business they may be, whether such things are discouraging or not, and all that have gone east, under my personal observa- tion, expect to return in the spring or a yeor from next apring, and bring friends slong to help reitle up and miake homes in our beautifal vallcy. And I trast that a large numter of the five thoussnd tourists that are expect- «d through the month of November will find their way to Franklin county and Bloomington. While it is true crope have not been s success this RAILROAD NOTES. The Indiana ~arworks at Cambridde | Gty are building 100 coal cars, 50,000 prunds capacity, for the Hocking Val- oy road. The minagement of the Toladn, Delphos and Burlington have deter- wiged not to run trains over their nove-laid ron uatl thoroughiy ballest ed. The Utsh and Northern Eranch of the Union Pacific railroad is now com pleted to Dillon, Mortana, 350 miles north of Ogden. Regular frs eleeping cars atta tween the two points. Ta order to prevent the disagreesbl noise of steam whistles, whick deafons trasellers in the Paris railway st tioos on the arrival and depariure cf trains, @ new system of elcctric sig- nals is now under trial at the North- ern railway terminus. It consiets of a large board, erected in the hall, indi- 2 the situstion of trains on each line. A special meeting of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas railway company bas beea called for Wednesday, No- vember 17, at Parsons, Kausas, to take action in regard to a proposed in- crease of the capitel stock of the com- pany to the extent of $25,000,000 in additiox to its prosent capital, for ¢ purpose of securing an extension ot the rbad to the Rio Grande river and the City of Mexico, and to Fort Smith, Ark. A new railroad o the heart of the Catskills is under survey. The ron is from Pheenicia, Ulster county, to Hunter, Gresne county, with a brar.ch to Tannersville, Haines' Fails, tho Laurel House, the Supset Ro: nishes atronger proof that it is soullcss’] sear it was no fault of the soil, as it could not yield fruits without rain in due eeason. We have no right to question the Higher Power, buttrust in vie willinguess £ give usa beautiful harvest, “‘enough and to epare,” another year. Business is very dull hore, just now, and our citizens are feeling blue over the withdrawal of passenger trains from ihis end of the d. Bot we expect the Central branch throagh to this poit before year will, it is believed, aggregate epring. Mo House, 8 large hotel now build and to a powt about ono mile from the Catskill Mountain House. The road is to be in operation by June 1, 1881, and will be urder the mavage- ment of the Ulster and Delaware road company. Tho car recently sent east by the Northern Pecific Railroad company, freghted with the products cf tho country tributary to the road, is now on exhibition at Ck people at tho Dominion fair at } ireal, by 75,000 at 1o New Eugland fair at Worcester, Mass., by 40,000 at the Vermont state fair at Montpelicr, and by 65,000 st the Western Now York fairat Rochester. The cost of a double track rai as laid by the. North Chic railway is given by Mr. A. W C. E.. at $18,694 90 per mil s for Jabor, tes, stringers, etcel rails —451bs. per yard, atS67 per ton— T chair joints, spikes, etc. In add to this the cost of paving harse 7 s $9,005 76, snd ¢ g with cedar blocks of six feot is S387" cost per milo This more expensive thau ie generaily sup- posed, seeing that there is no grading or bridging to be done. g the tc Cold Comort from a Democratic Or- gan. New York Sun. The democrats havo sustained ca unexpected and mortityi f Indiana and Ohio. It snd may prove fatal. o ight of it, and idl whittle it away by cuuning calcu'a- tions aud adroit figuring. The crats are beaten, badly beaten—s er beaten to death or mot is the or question. s seemed to us that tho w blundera. The party 1 only one, whoseimme: been demonstrated cratic pa deed, as hu record in the o Ihca rf g0 emor had proved. He was o state nan, ss all his public papere, espec wlly’ b lottor declining to compete for the nomination, had emphatically shown. Childless, like Washia toa, ho had only his country to love; n the ties of kindred were rut! cly sundered by Lis storn and wi- | with bauner: THE VESERABLE DEMOCRAT . BOW THE FIBNDS BROKE UP A DEMO* CRATIC PROCES I Toco “CoxFEDRITX Roaps (wich is in fhe m\m of Kentucky), October 1, 1880, | —It was determiiied for effect>upon the Injeal $0 hev a parade uv the Hanc rcesim the Corners, d tory We liad 1 gorgeo: ranged. wuz heal containin ez many wez states that seceded, with the cou- fedrit flasa wavin over.em. Melindy Pogram wuz holdin the confedrit flag, dressed in mournin’, tipifyin’ the pres- ent condishn uy {he south, while Hautier M'Pulter was dressed in white of lickin’ a nigger, showin wehopo will Lappen when Han- cock is mml; el and we get com- plete coatrol uy the government. Follerin’ tLis allegorical representa- shun come the citizens uv the Cor- ners, two by two, headid by me, barin’ torches, with the confedrit, flag & wavin’ over us in triumph. The perceshun formed in front uy Bascom’s, and it wuz 8 perty sits to see, Capt. M'Pelter wuz on Biscom's mule actin’ as marghal, the wagen with the wimmen wuz in lme and ev. thing wuz reddy for a start. Tz it teok two hours to get the per- ceakun organiz:d, the dimocrisy wuz d_ permichun_wuz_ssked to nks a8d go in end get one fore it moved. I refoozed , for of ghe perceshun had ever gob into Bescom's it wood hey took an- Gther hour to git ’em_into line agin, and Buscom eeitled it by remarkin’ thist no oue need go in onless ho cood show the money for his drink jist e got hold uv the bottle. ho wordand eadly the per- hn moved up the street to the in- sp notes ““Dixie™ the “Bonuie Bloo Flag,” played by o fife and(wo drums. cered Po Ilu:k s store, and wuz pint of givin him threo & a th l' store on ! wocd give the o¢ Jikker for jist 30 kle. Issaker SHEELY BROS. PORK AND BEEF PACKERS Wholesale and Retail in FRESI MEATS& PROVISIONS, GAME, POULTRY, FI! COUNTY ORDERS SOLIGITED. OF'FICE CITY MARKET—1415 Douglas St. Packing House, Opposite Omaha Stock Yards, U. P, R. R. TBLEPBONE CONNEBOTIONS. ISH & NcMAHON, Successors to Jas. K. Ish, DRUGGISTS AND PERFUMERS. Dealers.in Fine Imported Extracts TmI-t Wmters, Culog‘nes, Soaps, Toilet Powders, &o. P CITY AND A full lino Drugsand C Jas, K. Ish, M 1S FARNEAM STREST . ORE POPULAR THAN EVER. Ths Genuine SINGER NEW FAMILY SEWING MAGHINE. REMEMBERS, That Every REAL Singer Sewing Ma- chine his this Trade Mark cast into the Iron Stand and em- bedded in the Arm of the Machine. he stood and © hod whispered it or three heerd an the line like aseend ther rehesn bt wo teood X el loud enuff s it, aud it Z0't a soul the wag re,and Bascom a drowin out the 1 dippers, aud dis- \yhat that perczsh- in. Towas busted. it the men into dd to the fiendishnis uy Joo Bigler a mulatogo in frone oses wich vz a drawin cho rner sudden, the load they tnrred the corner sud- went the wagon, aud perceehn wuz dumped likker and the peck zoin to send to Injen dent b llo in ume tako the ,ard thero is jist numbr iy voteslozt to th dimo- cer, and to carry celentis g havd, if the fui. test vlush of an imprp-r practice rested upon tiem. So patri tic, so lofty, so con vincing, was his great lettir to the convention which made the nomina- tion, that the most adroit and the aslest of all his ¢n-mies, after reading avowed his disposition to aupport him. Thi ustrious man the democratic pirty thought it could afferd to dis- pens: with us a candidate. There is & word of one syllable with two o's in it whish dmight not inappropriately be ted. Tao party nominated Hancock—a 200d man, weighing 250 pounds. But Hancock is not Tilden. Then, us acrowning act of folly, the party wentinto the state of Thomas A. Hendricks, and took another man for vice-president. Any name other than that of Herricks would have been fully enough; but to go one stap further, they bad to take a man with the most odious reputation as a skin- flint to overcome. Thers us:d to bea fellow who made an occupstion ¢f butting his head agaiott a rough stone New England wall for twenty-five cents, The demo- cratic party, in making th's nomina- tion, resembled bim, only, if report be truo, they did not get tne twenty- five cents, Now, we are for looking the actual facts squarely in tae face. Who can not do that without blashirg, in de- feat and diswster, a8 we lasin viotory, has no mankood in his make. Wo aro heateu, we are overthrown, but we are not nlenmyed The dis- aster wo have_experienced may yet ba retrieved. Hancock is not aTil- den in ability, but he 1s a good, true, pm‘iotu man, of strong common 820 He has sigaed and writ'cu in the form of orders, as is believed, some of the finest essays on civil and military authority ever issued or com- posed by mortal man. He nevertack a bribe. Pure, patriotic aud good, he is a fit man forypresident. As for Eaglish, though ho may be stiogy, he is a firm Dbeliever in the rights of man and in the equal rights of all. If he has not given much money - to the canvass, which isthe chief charge against him, has he not erously given his mame to the vicket! Besides, whatdo democrats and patriots want of money! For ourselves, we ara utterly opposed- o the unnecessary use of money. We would rather lose the election than catry it by ono bribed vote. 1If that vote givlig us a majority could be bought for §320, we shold be op- posed to the payment of that pesy sum. We sail in with flying colors, or not at all. No backstairs entrance to the whi*e house for our candidates. As to Mr. Eaglish’s pecuniary prac- tices, one of the brightest, wiscet, purest, beat of all our presidents, John Quincy Adame, used to shave notes in the White House. Our candidates, then will anawer. Now; rally, boss, and elect them! Youcan dolt ! Wil you? It is smd the demosats were beaten in Indiana by the importation into that state of southeru negroes to vote the republican tickes. . Tis is a pua. rile baby plea: -Are Dot the Iadiana democrats men capable of lawfully maintaining cheir rights Beaten' by negroes! It is the last thing they ought to own_ and they should be ashamed to concede it. Now, men, Democrats! rally and conguer ! "t te d any money om is goin to start some pint in South- ullaf-er Ho is anont tohimiheimiliey He isbound 0 to Exglisi’s money hev his divry, soms way. Perrousvy V. Naspr, (P. M. that wuzand is to be.) ot cure the head- :w he, nor a gulden siipper the gout.” Very tiue; but a crowned head when it uches doeen’t have to keep right on devising ways and meaus to procure bread and buster, nor does a g 1d-shod foot when it twinges have to_ support the weight of a toiling body. A1 dyet boththecrowned heads aad steady workers: tho goli-shod feet and tho weary toilers evjoy the same inestimable bl ssing of curing b dily pains and wnches, be oming v 1 h rheumatism, by usiug St. Jazcbs Oil which costs but but fifty cents a bottle. Ex Gov. Salomon now of San Francisco, was cured of severs rheumatic paios by the uve of St. bs Ol ol A3k youn gt A i poton JAansnlL THE GREAT CERMARREMEDY RHEUMATISM, HKeuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbaga, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell- ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, Bsnsrnl Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. Preparation on earth equals St. Jacons Ort. D pl heap Extersal sox.»x!mnnuwm ANDDEALERS A, VOGELER & CO., Baltimore, 2., U. 5. 4. THE SINGER MANZFACTURING GO. Principal Office: 34 Union Square, New York. 1,500 Su! ordinate Offices, in the United States and Canada, and 3,000 Offices inthe Old Wor'd and South America. HOTELS. Tieliable” Machice has becn before the public. In 1878 we sold 356,422 Machines. Mechines. Excess over any previous year 74,735 Machines. Our salea last year were at the rate of over 1400 Sewing Machines a Day | For evory business day in the year, PACKING CO.,, ETC. rs. Absolutely Pure he night. ich this “Old In 1879 we sold 431,167 The “0ld Reliab'e” Singer is the Strongest, the Simplest, the Most Durable Sewing Ma- chine ever yet Con- stracted. 1856. 1880. Wo call the attention'of Buyers to Our Extensive Stack of CLOTHING, 2 AND CENTS’ FURNISHING COODS. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. We carry the Largest and SELECTED STOCK OF COODS IN OMAH Which We are Selling at GUARANTEED PRICES !! OUR MERCHANT TAILORING ‘ DEPARTMENT BEST Isin charge of Mr. THOMAS TALLON, whose well-establishe reputation has been fairly earned. ‘We alzo Keep an Immense Stock of HATS, GAPS, TRUNKS AND VALISES sepl6-déwtf | BAYKIG NOUSES. . THE ORIGINAL. BRIGGS HOUSE Cor. Randolph 8t, & bth Ave., CHICAGO ILL. PRICES REDUCED TO $2 00 AND $2 50 PER DAV "3 COMMINGS, Eroprietor. flGDEN | HOUSE, Cor. MARKET ST. & BROADWAY Council Bluffs, Iowa;: Online o Street Rallway, Omnibus ‘o snd from Al traing —Pariy hrfl)\w 33,00 per dev; o Sho o METRUPOLIIAN Oxans, Nes. - I’I\OPRII"T(JP IRA WILSON marstf, “UPTON | HOUSE, Schuyler, Neb. House, Good Meals, Good Beds ns, and’ kind and acoommodating Tw good sample roome. Specia Paid to commorcial travelors. 8. MILLER, Prop., Schuyler, Neb. FRUNTIEH HOTEL, Laramie, Wyoming, ort, good accommodations, charges reasonable. - Bpecial Fiven %o travling men: H.C HILLIARD Propristor. I\T[le OCEAN HOTEL, Cheyenne, Wyoming. Firstcioss, Fino arse Sxmplo Raoms, one block from depot. Trains stop from 20 minutes t 2 hourn for dinner. Free Dus toand from Dopot. Kates 8200, 82560 and $8.00, according 0 rooi; e ngle aeal 75 cente ANDREW BORDEY: Gt KAITLISEY, THE MERCHANT TAILOE, Isprepared to make Pants, Suit 10 orier. Prices, it and workman 1 st One Door West, of Cralokshank’s. oy C. VAPOR, nd overcoats ranteed J- MERGHANT TAILOR Capitol Ave,, Opp. Masonic Hall, NFB. OMAHA. e HARTIGAN & DODGE, Sheet Iron Workers BOILER MAKERS' Cor. 12th and Cass strets. Please e Us a Cal THE ONLY PLACE WRERE YOU @n find a good sesortment of BOOTS AND SHOES Ata wvn PIGURE than st any other shioe house in the city, P. LANG’S, 236 FARNHAM 8T. LADIES' & GENTS, SHOES MADE TO ORDER 4 & portect 81 cusesnteed. Piices vryreasan Anet1ty PASSENGER ACCOMMODATION LINE OMAHA AND FORT OMAHA Connects With Strect € Corper of SAUNDERS "an liitros STRE 2a fallows: VE OMAH. 620,48 uum e FORT OMAH 45 . m., and 12 :15'and 815 p. m 75,10 run, leavin: omahs, snd the 4200 p. m 1, Teaving Fort Ouba; ofe emaly. 10g ded to fall ‘capacity with 72 . 12 wil be made fromm the post- office, corner of Dodze and 16th snrehts. 7a0d 729 p. p-m. Tickets cau-te procured from street cardris- ers, or trom drivers of ba FARE, 25 CENTS, INOLUDING STRE _CAR " | THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED, ! BANKING HOUSE IN NEBRASKA. | CALDWELL, HAMILTONSCO BANKERS. Buslness *ransacted mme 23 that o an Inear ‘porated Bank. Accounts kept. n Currency or goid subject to sight check without notice. Certificates of depostt lssued paratle fn threo, six and twolve months, bearing interest, oF on demand without interest. Advances made to customers on_approved se. curities at market rates of Interes: Buy and sell z0ld. bills of exchange Geverm- ‘ment, State, County and City Bonds. Draw Sight Dratts on Fnaland, Ircland, Beot- Iand, and il parts of Europe. Sell Eropean Passaze Ticketa. COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. augldit U. S. DEPOSITORY. First Nationar Bank OF OMAHA. Cor. 18th and Farnnam Streets, OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHMENT Nourns (SUCCESSORS TO KOUNTZE BROS.,) ‘ESTABLISHND 1N 1556, Oryanized as a National Bank, August 20, 1865, Capital aud Profits Over$300,000 Specaily suthorlzed by the Secretary or Treasury to receive Subscription to the U.S.4 PER CENT. FUNDED LOAN. ovncm A CIECIORS ashler 4. J. Porpruton, Attorncy. Joux A. Cr-igutox. F_H. Davis, Ass't Cashler. This bank recetved doposlt withont regard uz ‘smounta. Tssucs time certificates bearing Interost, Drams drafta on San Francisco and princlpal * liies of the Usited states, alss London, Dudiin, Edinburgh and tho principal cities of the contl. nent of Europe, Seis paemse lcketsfor Emigrasts & i the In- Iw.unr!mm Geo. P. Bemis’ ReaL EsTaTE Acency. 15th & Donglas Sts., Omaha, N Ths agency does sTaicrLr 8 brokerage noms. " Doen ot tpectite, and therators say v gaing on its books aro instired to lta patrons, tn stead of belox gobbled up by the seent BOGGS & HILL. REAL ESTATE BROKERS No 1408 Farnham Street OMAHA NEBRASKA. Office —North Sido opp. Grand Central Hotel. Nebraska Land Agency. DAVIS & SNYDER, 1605 Farnham St. Omaha, Nebr. 00 ACRES caetoll slected and in Eastern ebraaka for sl G reat Bargaion o impreved farms, and Omaha digprrert” WEBSTER SNTDEK, dComrU. PR R dptornts BYRON RRZD. Luwis RExD. Byron Reed & Co., oLDRST ESTABLISED REAL ESTATE AGENCY IN NEBRASKA. Kmn a complete abstract of title Eetho n Omasa and Dosgias Comy HAMBURG AMERICAN PACKET C0.3 Weekly Line of Steamships Leaving New York Every Thursday at 2p. m. For Ergland, Frauce and Germany. For Passago appiy to C. B. RICHARD & CO., General Passenger Agents, 61 Bronaway. New York | ~ SHOW CASES MANTZACTURED 2T O. J. WILDE, 1317 CASS £T., OMAHA, Laty Al Resl maslit Sane2t-1y THE DAILY BEE Centaias the Latest Home and Tele- REMEMBER WE ARE THE ONE PRICE STORE: M. HELLMAN & CO.,, 1301 & 1 PIANOS = ORGANS. J. 8. WRIGHT, AGENT FOR CHICKERING PIANO, And Sole Agent for Hallet Davis & Co., James & Holmstrom, and J. & C. Fischer's Pla,“OS also Sole Agent for the Estey, Burdett, and the Fort V%nyne Organ Co’s. Organs, 1 dosal in Pianos and Organs exclusively. experience in the Bu Have had years” siness, and handle only the Best. J. S. WRIGHT, 218 16th Street, City Hall Building, lbm.llu, Neb. HAL\PY V. FITCH. Tuner. GARPETINGS. Carpetings 3 Carpetings! J. B. DETWILER, Old Reliable Carpet House, 1405 DOUGLAS STREET, BET. 14TH AND 15TH (ESTABLISHED IN 1868) Carpets, Oii-Cloths, Matting. Window-Shades, Lace Curtains, Etc. MY STOCK IS THE LARCEST IN THE WEST. 1 #take a Specialty of WINDOW-SHADES AND LACE GURTAINS And bavs a Fuil 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-Olass Carpet Housa. Orders from abroad solicited. Satistaction Guaranteed Call, or Address John B. Detwiler, 0ld Reliable Garpet House, OMAHA. DOUBLE AND & 'POWER AND HAND PUMPS Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, IElTllG HOSE, lp:us m mn:znnfllt?flm.ngnm m:mc, SA Al HALLADAY 'llllll) Mlil.s GHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS A. L. STRANG, 205 Farnbam Strast. Omahs, Neb HENRY HORNBERGER, STATEH AGENT FOR V. BLATZ'S MILWAUKEE BEER | In Kegs and Bottles, graphic News of the Day. i Bpecial Figures to the Trade. Families Supplied at Reasonable Prices, Office, 239 Douglas Street. Omaba