Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 3, 1880, Page 2

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THk DAILY BEE B. ROSEW ATER: EDITOR Saman BERNHAKDT is eaidto liveon French roles. _— Tmx ceosus shown that §8,000,000 are invested iu- this ccuatry in eilk ‘mapufacture. — Bex Burion tas gove back to Quincy, Mars. He in eaid to be suf- ferirg from Quincy sorgdirost. —_— Axzriosx spples are~now- going +bread in grest quantitiog, They sre & ples of peace, not of Tue old motto, “Th earth will rise changed to “Truth ennhed to earth will lie again. Tuzovors Trurox is sbout tode liver a locture on ‘Y with, Authors.” “Yesterdsy Preach- ers” would bo more sppropriate. —— Owmana, with the rest of the west, is already ready to hold out & welcom- ing hand to capital, but while willing to welcome and proteot the right of capital she insists on having labor pro- tected against the wrongs of capital. —_— Josqrox Miuuen saystbat JayGould hee a colomssl intellect. Joaquin w skinned in Wall atreet out of all bis pre prl") gambling in Gotld’s *water That's where the *‘eclostal comes in. ede .\,(ehz — Dexocranic rule snd _flourishing public schoole don’t alweys go havd in d. The echool board of New Or- 1e.m recently deducted A5 per cent. from the pay of tae teachers and paid the balsnce in city cates worth twenty two cents on ollar. Tae ind:p-ndonum pluck of the farmers of the Republican valley un— der the depressing effects of heir ud harvest speaks volumes for their swordiness of character. With few cxoeptions they have refused all offers of outside aid, and indiguantly refuse (o be misrepresented hy the shiftluss sozgars who are parading and magui- fying their misfortune to the peoplé of other states, Nebirdska can well | aff rd to be proud of Ybr stardy pic- necrs. 3 w Tas stics of milway earnings for the first ten months of the pres- ent yeor have deen poblished, and show o very eatigfdstory balance shot to mansgers snd direciors. O myaring 1he figures-with those of the heaviest traffic years in the history the roads, the increase in, met ruings sverages from tweaty %o +hirty per cent, while the gross earn- ings are io many cases nearly double. When 1t is considered that the past year has been onejof remarkable wc sty in raiiroad extension and that the expenses of the rosds have cor- respondingly increased, it will readily be seen what enormous imposts have becn laid alike on producer avd eon- sumer in order towwell the money Tags of the grest corporations and raise the market value of over stocked roals. — As & corn raising state Nebraska has no cquil. Her soil snd climate seem peculiarly fitted for corn culture, aud 1o state in the Union can boast of & b tter aversge of busaels to the scre, of better crops in season and out of wesson, than our own, It sometimes seoms as if corn was & drug on the murket. The oribs at railroad sta- tions and the bins on the farms groan with their yellow riches. The price falls almost to & point where profit ceases. The raflroads eat up all mar- g'ns, the distilleries are supplied and the farmer seriously considers the question, ““What shall I do with my corn in order to pay me for my toil snd leave me a fair profit?” The answer is not difficult, Ne Vraska by her geographical pasition Tiss & vantageground as a stock feed- t5g state. On her borders are the srestest stock Tanges in the world. Mundreds of thousands of cattle pass yewly msross Wer— -boundaries v their way to the markets of the world. Thero is asconstant demand 4or corn-fed cattle which cannot be tupplied. Feed your corn to #tock, 1 rmers of Nebrasks, and you will 1ap a profit whiy ¢ iminish and whi you for your labor. Sivoe the Geneva arbitration and +ho fishery questiog the United States Jios been free from -diplomatic dis )ues. Special dispatches from Ea- p» indicate that & Sbrions complios- toonia likely to agiae between Ger- voars beld the doghiip 1ubjest of the King always s subject, + . foreizn born fwtaralized citizens «"America were cotefantly subject io (s to military gaty from their 1 cmer governmentio Eoghland gave 1o this doctrive #911812 when the United States decli#ed war partly on 13¢ issue that hor jilors though Ea- 4 ish born could ndtoe impressed in- 1 the Eclish servioe: 101868, & treaiy,was made with G +many guaratesing the sxemprion ¢ mturdized Gertakn citigons of thie | Py Vinited States in Germany, 1 @ military dmy.".nmm {1t the Germao government has de- cided that the 768 shall not 1 recogaized as appising fo Alsmoce #2d Lorraine and that nacurdizsd United States residing i tho new Germa$ provinces shall be # bjost not ouly 4 military duty, bat & all bs imprisonsd,,for non service. 'ae paturalized Américan citizen, & Gorman, has beelt dready arrested +d isnow in prison and the govern- n.mnd--m.mh--p Thia is art's "sbilities and onedwith which + 4 ikely o deal with that keanness i1 voted. ott will pro FIOTITIOUS CAFITAL. A recent suthority in politiosl economy has given it as his opinion that one of the greatest causes of finsncial distrust end commercial dis- aster haa its origtn in the vast smounts of fictitious capital crested by cor- porationsand foisted on the public as means of investment. The evil is not peculiar to America, but has at- tai: ed ils greatest growth on our cil The United States is as yet lurgely uodeveloped. Eaormous tractsof terri- tory lie idle booause they require riches fodraw out their wealth. On the other hand centres of populstion and trado require new outlels or unite in demanding the home production of articles of duily use. Tbere is thus a ind throughout our coun- eonstant e try for capitsl, in the logitimate use of which large profits are assured. But while cepital is demanded there is st the same time s necessity for Jatge sums, in most ceses of sums be- yond the control of a single individual ‘and corporations resultin conscquence, formed from aggregated capital, Who plics @ fictitious value on the enterprise by the issusmce of immense quantities of stock on which future dividends are promised and must be made, Itis statedass | fact that netrly 70 per cent of all the corporations in this country, be they rilroad, mining or industrial in char- acter, are stocked far above their real value. In order to pay dividends to their stookholders the earniogs of these enterprises must be enormous, and therates o fariffs must be placed ata Sgure eufficient to pay interest on an amount of stock often twice or thrice the value of the p-operty. Now, all this comes out of those who either &s producers or consumers, Every doliar esrned on watered stock most first be drawn from the pockets of the pe ple. Every dividen? of ten per_ount declared on overcapitaliz-d right to demand for th-ir owa iover i stockholcers can be protected agsinst the inevitable orash which finally sends such enterprises into bank raptey or the hands of & receiver. Eight out of every ten railroads in tae Uniccd § ates, nice out of every ten wining compenies are over-capital- ized. The popl the first to su- fer. Evorg pound of freight and e-ery Ppassenger is rated at an excess above legitimate tariff re flicient to eat- isfy the dividend obligations of the road. Every pocl and combination made agaiust tho interosts of produc- ers is ratified to incresss earnings on watered stock. Over-capital zation of raitroads is responsible fur more than baif the sins of railroad managers and for all” the sufferings of railroad pat rone. It is the root of an evil for which the remedy can alone be found in officis] exsmination and legiglative restriction. — SPEKKING of the hedthy fnancisl eondition of the country, the Giobe- Democrat remsrks: Thepublic deb: is stesdily dwindjing uader the application of our surplus rovenues, ond these_reventes sre growing in smount without pressing P m the industries of resources of the country. Thero is nat another nation in the civilizedwrorld which has ever been able to do what_we are doing now, which has reduced its im- ports and at the same time re- duced its debt with equal step In- he history of nationsl there is nothing to compare with the spactacle presented by the steady rec ord of this pation. From time to time, by great effort an rough many sac- e, tookicme Tt eive il e have succeeded in reducing _the amiount, butno nation has ever beeo able to carry out the process of reduc- on on such a scala aud with such re- sults. —_— Tax estimation in which American railroad difectors are held abroad may boscen from an articie in the London Tyuth, which ssys, speaking gene- rally, all American railroad directors are knaves. It might have added “‘and most stockho'ders dupes.” —_— WasuINGTON is making preparations for the coming session of congress and thie bar-rooms are laying in a fresl stock of liquore. . —_— RAILROAD NOTES. The Alsbama Great Southern road is building a fine iron bridgo over the Tombigbee. The Texas and Pacific railroad ir being extended westward st the rat. of a mile and s balf & day. It ia estimated that railroads center ing in Chicago will spend this year $6,000,000 in improvements. Tae Hurrishurg car works, Harris- barg, have lately closed a single con cract f.r one thousand cars. The Fitchburg steam engine"com- nang is full of work with more tha: twenty engines now ord:red ahead. The Miami valley narrow gauge rail- rosd s to be built at once under the name of the Cincinnati Nortners rail rad, The Santa Ferailroad's corps of sur- ve.ors has been ordered to For: Worth and work on the road will b. commenced at once. The Minois Central railrosd com- has ordered the immediste con ctruction cf 100 freight cars of 20 tons canacity, at its Weldon shopa. At the Tepsit shops of the N York, New Haven and Hartford ra in , wo less than 600 box cars aro in provess of completion. B e T e R T o o iy e an ot o 4 Mexico from Sosorro to San Marcial, and_espscts &0 bave emourh mare track completed by January 1 o mak connection with the Southern Pacific railrosd. are dependent upon the corporations roads represents an excess which ie siicer rabbery. The pecple have & teres's as well as for the industrial terests of the eountry, that corpora- e shall be placed on & footing | where the publis can upderstand jast what their_profits are, and where Another branch of the Sont be.run from Flat shrough the rich l-cnlnnd)mbel’ Ngn: bordering the road at that point The Chicago,-Milwaukeo and St Paul road is now graded forty-threo miles west of Mitchell, Dakots, and the track laid for eight miles. The track- claying ls being pushed at the Tateof a milea day. The geadiog, it i expeoted, will Do completed o the Missouri river, opposite the lower Brule sgency, at the mouth of the Ameriosn creek, sixty-seven miles from Mitchell, in abot two months. The linea of railways in the five di visions of the earth cost, in round numbers, $16,000,000,000,and would, acoording to Baron Kolb, reach eight times around the globe, although it is bat little over halt a century since the first railway worked by steam was opened between Dalington snd Stockton, September 27, 1825, and between Manchester and Livarpsol September 15, 1830. It inshown that in France, previous to the existence of railways, there was obe passenger in every 335,000 killed and one out of every 30.000 wounded, whercas be- tween 1835 and 1875 there was but one in 5,178,890 killed, and one in 580,150 wounced, 8o that we may in- fer that the tendency to accideats is yearly diminished — A New System of Apprenticeship. Western Manutecturer. A system of aporenticeship, in some respects new, says The Ircn Age, has been adopted by Mersra. Richards & Dole, machinists, of Springtield, Mass It is intended to combine.the thor- oughly practical education of the shop with the theoretical education of the school; or, in other words, it is an in- dustrial school In which the most time will be given to practice instead of to theory. They propose to require of the ap rentice fifty-sight hours a wesk of work in the shop and nine hours a week of study. The term of appren- ticeship for those b-ginning to learn a trade who are under twenty years of age 13 to be six years, in_whioh tume, under this system, it is believed that an apprentice will be qualified to rank with he best journeyman and to earn the same wages. Those who are over twenty years of age are allowed to finish their appren ip in five years, and those who have worked in & shop sre sdvanced according to proficiency. The be- sinver is first put to drawing from sketches, then ‘akes up projection and and diagram, and_advances regularl iry. - It i belie way “one year fy bim sz well to work from g as four or fve years ordi varily. . All applicwnts four to twelve weckson trial, and if not entisfactory are then dismissed. For the first year's Iabor 5 cen's per hour is prid to those under 18,6 cents to those who. are:18, and 7 cents to hose who are 20 and upwards; for the next years the rate is advanced 1o 8 e firm pay 2 ceuts « er hour additional into veserye fnd, which"is pai aoprentices who finish their full term frervies; for the six, years this amounts to $400. The schemo in this shop grew out of the difficolty cxperienced 1n gesting thorbughly qualifi-d machinists, snd s ansttemp: to:«lve sgun the old problem of how to_eontinue the sys tem of sppre.iic:skip, mow largely fallen Into Cisuse. It i atated that s firm already have mure applicants than they can accept. The scheme inly seems worihy of a trial. We have but Lule sympathy n many cases with the lament over the decrease of the apprentic sys- The oduetion of machioery aud the cons-quent eubdi vision of labor have 1:ade it unneoe ary in miny trades. Insome trades, however, there cann<' b euch a sub division, nor such mschinery as will ty for a llrga trade is one of these. The acheme wo have described above cortainly seems well calculuted to produce workmen aot only competent for the ordinary routine of shop work, but competent t~ design and oversee ’the execation of ‘work. “Lhere are other considerations which commend_this scheme to manufac torers. It would educate a class of «fficient workmen whose sympithies and interests would be thoroughly American, and strongly eolisted in the eucoess and progress of the industries with which they will have been o long conueste: fraterni: come to this_country prejudiced and oredisposed to hold all employers as capital which they have been teught w0 consider as the irreconcilable foe of labor. 8o long as the great bulk of the sechanical labor of the coun- ‘ry is in the hands of and controlled by this foreign element, o long will tiis unmstural enmity between, labor and oaita , a8 taught by foreign com munism, be cultivaed and cherished. e mowa LOILED DOWN. The elevators - Corning bave a capacity of 75,000 bushels. A shirt and overall factory has been startedin Grundy Center. The new mill at Alden has a storage capacity of 8000 bushels of wheat. The Ma shalltown glucose works when running at their full capacity will use 3000 bushela of corn daily. Work on the Towa ity glucose ~orks has_begun and is progressing «ith an encouraging rush; An ege plant over two feet in cir- ;umcrence comes frotu the garden of the Baptist min‘ster at Clinton. C. A. Myers, of Jessup, has made 2,000 gallons of sorghum syrup this seas0a, and disposed of it at 50 ceuts a gallon. The Dubuque. linseed oil company Gled articles of incorporation with t @ secretary of state in Des Moines @ the 24th. The ewpital stock is $50,000 in shares of $100 esch. ‘Dauring the Tast three. months more 1and has been sold_n Oalhcun county then in five petrs befure. The sales have been made toactual eettlers. on the 28th with the secreary of state in Des Momes by the Dako'a land company, of Hampton, Fravklin somaty. - The cwital stock is $25,000 inshares of $100 epot Wallucnjnds Ros of the Jeresy’ Creamery, Adair county, are’ making xperimeutal shipments of butter, o3 Denver with the hope of establishing ‘s permanent -trade with that market, Partied insinking a well at Carlon recently, came upon an underground forest, as it ‘were, at the depth of sxty feet. The timber was found in + well-preserved stite, and resembles of the fnjury done to the particalarly Reports "for | Botato crop of this state, 3 s che righte of ityitizans sbeosd as | w_the north: There oflgmm,u( i catatta of the G:.y, in the Mn‘ sold at tax sale ¢ u year against iwo years Tho el bas ot been 20 -u‘;::‘n'?‘k | years, The Masoatine “Tower Chimes and Clock Fair” was s the receipts being §1700. The piwking house at which #ill bo i fall runniog order this week, will slsughter 1200 hesd per day and give steady employment %0125 or 160 hands. At the usual computations of five fo s family this meaos support for 750 citizens’ for Keokuk. g John N. Dixon, the great apple King of Mahaska county, has gathered 35,000 bushels of apples from his orchard this season, besides making 500 barrels of cider. Ho has sold 4600 barrels of apples, 1100 of which were shipped to Eoglond. He has in reserye 21,000 bushels and has oon- tracted for 12,000 baerels fn which to store and ship his supply of fruit. —_— Thrifty Oregon. S Francisce Chronic.e. Not many statesare making as good gress on a solid and endurirg basis Toward the lines of sgricultural esmmercial achievements as our th re taken Fom neighbor Oregon. Her population— 175,635 —is compsratively emall, but itis like @ thoroughbred horto in training for long heats, all bone,muscle nd action. In 1850 it numbered just about as many as San Francitco— 15000. In 1860 the figures were 52,465. In 1870 they were 90 928; and by the census this year 175,53. This shows & very fair rate of increase for & new stste s0 isolted: as-Oregn was_from 1850 to 1870.) In 1870 Portland, the chief town, contained but 6717 inbabitants. It mow has over 20,000, and for a place of that number ' exhibits more commercial vitality than any city in the Union. A fow comparative figures of export will explam the rapid growth beth of Portland and the state in production and commeroa. In 1867 Uregon exported but 120,- 980 barrels of flour and 76,350 bush- els of wheat. Nome of it went to foreign countries. In 1870 the ex- ports of wheat and flour amounted to $1,050,500. Of thia amout 316,480 bushels, valued at §379,818, wen: di- rect from Portiand to Europs. It was the inauguration of Oregon's foreign trade; and it gave a great stimulus to her producti¥e industry. 1In the next year the foreign wheat trade agure- ga'ed'8531,089. In 1874 the foreign ehipments «f Wheat and flour emplov: od fifty-two large vessels and were val- usdar 82 435,704, The total roceipts from wheat and flout exports thaty-ac 0 foreign and domestic corts were 84,- 037,000, 1n 1875 there were seveuty throe vessels cmpliyed in the direct trade from Portlaud to ports in Eu- rope, Ohina and Australis, and ther catward cargoes embraced 1,300,000 centa 8 of whest and 116,000 hurrala otflour. Tn the same year 825,000 centals of wheat cawe from Portlind to San Francisco, Reducing flour to wheat, the total shipments in 1876 amount'd to 4,272,398 bushels. In theharvest year ending August 1,1878, the total “exports to foreien aud domestis poris aggregated 5,900,000 bushels of wheat,valued at 85,635,166 Amd now comes tn us the snnul re- port of the Portland Board of Trade with the astonishing figures of exports for the yeat endinz August 1, 1880: Salmon exports in cases to San Feanci co. 1,570,610 Wheat, floar, oae, hop, e jumber and pickle Do to o ramcoen . 2,002,473 Lumber wool. ete., from Coos yu‘r to Sml{)z::‘x;:o[ s 2,155,147 orelin ex of wheat d Bose.. 4,786,677 1,199,205 413,375 900,000 The totaljsxports of wheat, and floor reduced to wheat, during the year just ended aggregate 4,470,170 bush- “le, against but 316,486 bushels in 1870; 404,690 in 1872, and 3,133,333 in 1875. This aggrega‘e of $13,957,~ 488 by no means covers all the ex ports of thestate for the year. There were lumber exports from Astoria,and coal exports from other ports not taken ino account by the Portland board of trads. In 1875 the gross ex- ports from all ports were barely £10,- 174,000, including $,279,160 1n treas- ure; leaving for merchandise exports but $7,896,750. From 1875 to 1380 the merchandise exports have in- creased about 86 per-cant. In proportion to her population Oregon is now producing more wheat than_any other_state, hardly excep ing California. Ta 1877 her orop was Susbat st 7,896,000 buthels and her population at_about 130,000. gl bushels per head. average per head in the United Stat Iast year, when we produced the heaviest crop ever known, was but 48.3 bushels, In no other country In the world is_the average above 25 bushels per head. The average in Oregou this yesr is hardly less than 58 bushels. Hor recent progress in railway con- structicn and the tapping of new and vast agricultural regions has been quite up to that of any other state; and the result of it is an unprece- dented immigration, which given the prospect that in fiye Tears more Oregon may rank smong the four o fiva great wheat-produning # the Union. A Curious Hybrid. From the 8t Louis Chronicle. , Some time ago thers was a large monkey in_this city of the.dog facs which exhibited singolarly Jwith others of his kind ke invariably ‘evidenced a farious _antagonism ral smaller monkeys iy handled by the spe when they c-m in contact with him. He was more amisble with mambers of the dog famil, idea was conceived of putiing a Mex- foan ha £ black and tan terrier in th cage with In time a_ourious litter of hybrids, several of which are still alive, was produced. Mr. Archer, of Scott & Lynch's lifery stab one of the creatures for some fime, ‘but fiually exchanged it for a dog of lees curious type. Several of the thers hken“h e cro they have apparentls prepeced sud hava boen eamined v many of thosa dis to take an i S b o These hybrids are excesdingly cu- rious in appear-nce, haviog some of the heavy rolling action of the bear, being. with short hair of a | shagey nature, peculiarly marked and blotched. Theyare quite intelligent, ‘seeming to understand all that is ssid 1o them, and have a singularly haman expreesion when spoken so. They are quiet, without that nervous, restlecs movement of the dog, and get in out- of-the-way places. It jsa very curious phate of deme mature's productions, and has caused no little' comment. Hybrida sre not musual iu the catand dog kind. Batty, the tamous Egg- lish showman, ubed to miake a special ty of mixing the blood: of panthers, tigers, - lions, etc., or jackals, hyenas, foxes aud wolves; tioned is & remarkable instance, andis vouched for by several gentlemen. L — Quriosities of Human Hair. Th-‘i-lnn on record in which a man's hir changed three times. One lady, the age of 70, has a suit of hair without gray strand io it. = Agentle- men, aged 114, had the color of his hair: naturally restored a short time before his death. Another, at bis 110th year, had a full sait of hair re- turn to his head. Another named Nazarelio, of Vienns, in1774 hada full suit of hair aud a complete second set of matural teeth. Workers in 0obalt mines have blue, sud workers in ter in charge are to be ougmnlM, | eopper mines, green hair. In some countries, parents paint the childrens Keokuk | bairvermillion. Albinos_have hair nearly white and almost like threads ofspan g New Frocess of Embalming. Oneof the most simple and effec- tive processes, it would sppear, for proserving the dead, has recently been brought forward in Germany. B this mothod, it i stated the dead i tally retain their formj color biliy continuously, aud many be di sected, while decay and offensive smell are m»mplelely prevented—the musou- lar flesh upon fucision, presenting the same appearance as_in the case Of & fresh dead body. The liquid used for this purpose is prepared as follows: Three quarts boiling water, three snd one half ounces alum, six drams com- mon salt, three drams saltpeter, two ounces otash, and two one-| d::‘ are in the water, and then theie saturatiug and impreguating bodies with this composition, from one and 8 half to five quarts being used for s.single bod7. An Arizona Copper Mine. One of the curiosities of Arizon: an ancient copper mine, on the esst side of the Verde. By whom it was worked it would be hard to deter- mine. Possibly by the Aztecs; more likely by the Avaches. The mine has not been worked for the metal in the ore, but for the paint. There are now. on the dump rich and easily worked carb nates, while with battered edgu and staive of ore on'them, prove that implements of stone were used. ‘They ran a_tunnel into the ledge nine feet high and from six to eight fect wide. In places there are walls_buil: and the waste metter thrown bebind them., e————— Mr. O A. Beckford, Gen £t Gafl, Fleischmana & O pressed Yeast, warm indorser remedy for ho giiC Agent Com- Troy, N. Y., is s of St. Jacobs Ol a8 & B3 RADR RHEUMATISH, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumba, 0'1. Backache, Soreness of ‘the Chest; Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swall- ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, Ganaral Bedily Pains, Taatlr Ear and Headache, Frosted Foeet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. Mo Preparation on earth equale Sr. Jacons O o3 7 ure, chple 154 chep External I i gty Hiing sutay of 50 Cente, s ehery dme auiof, T e can v chsp and s oot o Dicuctions in Floven Languagss. BOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS ANDDEALERS IN MEDIOINE. A.VOGELER & CO., Baltimore. Md.. U. 8. 4. always Cures and never disap= points. The world's great Pain= Reliover for Man and Beast. Cheap, quick and reliable. PITCHER’S CASTORIA is not Narcotic. Children grow fat upon, Mothers like, ard Physicians recommend CASTORIA. It regulatesthe Bowels, cures Wind Colic, allays Feverishness, and de- stroys Worms. WEI DE MEYER’S CA~ TARRH Cure. a Constitutional velievo Catarrh, this cures at x ;-\;-n ‘before Comsumption T —_— M. B, RISDON, General lnsur.mee Agent, REPRESENTS. PHGENIX ASSTRANCE Co., of Lon- Ty siomLer EAINSR AMRRICk RS0 R ANGEGs Lm.m NEWA (K FIRE INS. CO., Amots. RICAF CENTRAL, Awets. .2 8 Cor; ot Piliosath & Dong Bt KENNBOY'S EAST INDIA 3 AND 3 BV E XA G-E. ‘NOILINASNOD ‘wyuemeSueie(y SO WINUWMOUY ‘viecedusq oy A FAMILY TONIC na BITTERS! ILER & G0, SOLE MANUFACTURERS OMAHA, Neb, SHEELY BROS. PORK AND BEEF PACKERS Wholesale and Retail in F“S. H MEATS & PROVISIONS, GAME, POULTRY, FISH, ETC. _CITY AND COUNTY ORDERS SOLICITED. FICE CITY MARKET—1415 Douglas St. Packing House, PACKING CO., | 1B56. 1880. We call the attention of Buyers to Our Extensive Stack of ~ CLOTHING Oppombe Omaha Stock Yards, U. P. R. R. TEHLEPHONE CONNECOTIONS. ISH & McMAHON, Successors to DRUGCISTS AND PERFUMERS. Dealers in Fine Imported Extracts. Toilet Waters, Colognes, Soaps, Toilet Powders, &o. A tull lipe of Surcical Ttruments, Pockst Cases, Trussss and Supoor Prugaand Chemicals usd in Dlspensing. - Preserpiions illed at any houe of the might. Jus, M. Ish. 1SAFARNE AM STREET. MORE POPULAR THAN EVER. SINGER NEW FAMILY SEWING MACHINE. Tl polse demend for b GENUINESTNGER 1570 o cude kot arter of a Cen ury in which this “Old Heliatle” Machind haa roen betors the publie 2 0 101878 we sold 356,422 Machines. In 1879 we sold 431167 Machinee. Excess over any previous year 74,735 Machines. Our sales last year were at the rate of over 1400 Sewing Machines a Day | For (yery business day in 1he year, auy previous year during the REMEMEBER. That Every REAL Singer Sewiog Ma- f chine has this Tradc Mark cast into the Iron Stand and em- bedded in the Arm of the Machine. THE SINGER MAN»FAGTURING CO. Principal Office: 34 Union Square, New York. United States and Canads, and 3,000 Offices in theOld rid and South America. 1,600 Sutordiants Offces, in th AND CENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS. K. Ish, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. We carry the Largest and BEST SELECTED STOCK OF COODS IN CMAH Which We are Selling at GUARANTEED PRIGES !] OUR MERCHANT TAILORING DEPARTMENT rters. Absolutely Purs Lawrence McMahon. Genuine The “0ld Reliab'e” Singer is the Strongest, the Simplest, the Most Durable Sewing Ma- Is in charge of Mr. THOMAS TALLON, whosa well-establishe reputation has been fairly earned. ‘We also Keep an Immense Stock of HATS, CAPS, TRUNKS AND VALISES' chine ever yet Con- stracted. REMEMBER WE ARE THE ONE PRICE STORE “sepl6-dawtf HOTELS. THE ORIGINAL. BRIGGS HOUSE ! Cor. Rendolph St. & bth Ave., GHIOAGO ILL. $2.00 AND $2.50 PER | DAY Located, fn_the b , o s of amusement. Elucanty tarmia Sonfaiming o fmpre dertor & CuMM "OGDEN HUUSE Cor. MARKET 8T. & RFOADWAY Council Bluffs, Yowas Onlinoo Strest Haliw.y, Omnibus 0 +nd from alana, TATES Park o, 35,00 por days second fonr. $250 per day ; thi Th bestfurnished aad mo-tco METROPOLITAN Omuana, Nsz. IRA WILSON - PROPRIETOR. The Metropolitan is centrally located, sud et claes in every rec haviog recently boen entirely renovals Fubl wil nd it s comfortable and tot “UPTON HOUSE, Schuyler, Neb. Fhust.class House, Good Meals, G3od Beds Ly Boma,ind Kiod o cmmodstng treatmeont, ‘sample rooms. Sieation s to commorcal ravelon: §, MILLER, Prop., Schuyler, b, FRONTIER HOTEL, Laramie, Wyoming, The miner's resort, good sccommodations, arge sum ple room, charges: r.onlhlo. Bpecial sisction ivon to traving H.C HlLLMRD Proprietor. lN’l ER - OCEAN HOTEL, Cheyenne, Wyoming. Fiesiciom, Fino argo Sumplo Roome bogk from dopot. Trains stcp from S0 miatos e AT 4 acco 40 Toom; ¥ ngle meal 76 centa. . BALCOM, ANDREW BORDEN. Culef Clerk. st 77t w413 02y 2t cmo anly NN P ot vt J. C. VAPOR, MERGHANT TAILOR Capitol Ave,, Opp. Masonic Hall, OMAHA. - - - HARTIGAN & DODGE, Sheet Iron Workers —AND— BOILER MAKERS Cor. 12:1 and Cass streets. Please Give Us a Call: N naaAsKA VINEGAR WURI(S ! VINEGAR. Je.cs St Bet. th and 100k, OMAR 4, NEB. o A N.ASEL THE MERCHANT TAILOR, I ok B, sute and overrte 'm:" Frics, B 12d work Al pom e on- Door West of Cruickshank’s. oty ‘M. HELLMAN & CO, 1301 & 1303 Farnham Stre PIANOS = ORGANS. J. S. WRIGHT, Gt e | MENT AUIGKERING PlANO, i cheok wibous woh FOR And Sole Agent for Jfi}fi}u‘?fi“ it et Hallet Davis & Co., James & Holmstrom, and J. & C- Fischer's Pianos, also Sole Agent for the Estey, Burdett, and the Fort Wayne Organ Co’s. Organs, I deal in Pianos and Organs exclusively. Have had years’ experience in the Business, and handle ouly the Best. J. 8. WRIGHT, 218 16th Street, City Hall Building, 0m.|hm, Neb. HALSEY V. FITCH. Tuuer BANKING NUUSES. THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED. BANKING HOUSE IN NEBRASKA. CALDWELL, HAMILTONZCO BANKERS. Advatioes made o customers on approved se- curities at market rate of interest Buy andsell ¢old. bilisof exchange Gevern- e, Btate, County and City Bonds. Drsw lght Drafs on Enciaad, Ireand, Seot Iand, snd all parts of Sl ropesn Pusnco Ticket. GOLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. sugldtt U. 8 DEPOSITORY. “ | Fist Namionar Bank OF CMAHA, Cor. 13th and Farnham Streets, OLDEST !AHKIHI} ESTABUSHMEIIT DOUBLE AND SINGLE ACTING ..POWER AND HAND PUMPS Steam Pumps, Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, Capital and Profits Over300,000 BELTINE HOSE, & luas Efl IRON rmums. PPE, § smn PAGHIN, ety e i ey o= e HOLESALE AN === | “HENRY HORNBERGER, STATEH AGENT EFOXR V. BLATZ'S MILWAUKEE BEER! In Kegs and Bottles. | Bpecial Figures to the Trade. Families Supplied st Reasonable Pricea. Office, 239 Donglas Straat Omaha GARPETINGS. Carpetings| (BUCOESSORS T0 KOUNTZE BROS., ‘ESTABLISTND I 1856, Onpxaiend o Kitions Buck,. st , Koowran, Presldent, Avagerrs Kovermy, Vies Prestdent. E. W, Yarss. Gubior ioun G o, ¥ H. Davis, Ase's Cashiler. This bank receivesdoposit without regard t0 T ——— oa Draws drafi o San Francisco snd prinel i ofthe Unirad Sate, Ediabursh and the prinelpal o i of the oatl [ p—g‘lkkl\llnlfifl(nn.h tae, To- \TE BROKER Geo. P. Bemis’ Rea EsTaTe Acexcy. llfiéflomghlflk ON‘I.N“. does srmIOTY ‘gatns on fta booksate insred o ita p.nu..h stead of being gobbl-d p by the agent BOGGS & HILL. REAL ESTATE BROKERS No 1408 Farnham Street OMAHA - NEBRASKA. Offce —North Bide opp. Grand Central Hotal. Nebraska Land Agency. DAVIS & SNYDER, 1506 Farnham St. Omaha, Nebr. 400,000 AORES carefally selected 1and fn Eastern Nebraska for sale.. ‘Great Birgaing In fmproved farms, and Omahs. YT WEBSTER SNYDER, Laiotand Comr U PR B apteomit - Carpetings! . B. DETWILER, Oid Rehable Carpet House, 1405 DOUGLAS STREET, BET. 14TH AND 15TH ‘ShoN nam. aws axm, Byron Reed & Co., (ESTABLISHED IN 1868.) REALESTATE AgENcy | Carpets, Oil-Cloths, . < IN NEBRASEA, Matting, Window-Shades, Meep » complete abstract of title to all Real e Lace Curtains, Etc. MY STOCK IS THE LARGEST IN THE WEST. I Make a Specialty of WINDOW-SHADES AND LACE CURTAINS o e HAMBURC AMERICAN PACKET C0.S Weekly Line of Steamships Leaving New York Every Thursday aé 2p. m. For ‘England, France and Germany. For r—c- apply to C. B. RICHARD & €O., General Passenger Agents, Juetlly 61 Brosdway, New York CHARLES RIEWE, UNDERTAKER! Metallo Cases, Coffns, Caskets, Shrouds, ete. Faruham Street, . 10th and 11th, Omaha, Neb. Tolegraphic Orders Promptly Attended To. A. W. NASON. CDENTIST, Ormce: Jacob's Block corner. Caoitol Ave. snd And havs & Full Line of Mats, Rugs, Stair Rods, Carpet- Lining Stair Pads, Crumb Clothes, Cornices, Cornicé -Poles, Lambrequins, Cords and Tassels In fact Everything kept in a First-Ulass Carpet House. -man’:‘: m]: S, and the .r.:fl‘I from abroad ullclte‘. Satistaction Guaranteed ookt ran John B. Detwiler, 01d Reliable Carnet. Honse, QMAHA, SHOW CASES MAMOTACTURED BY O. J. WILDH, 317 0438 ST, GMARA, NEB. A gond amotment siwaye i bani w8 PASSENCER ACCOMMODATION LINE OMAHA AND FORT OMAHA CQllecLl ‘"l.h Street Cars DEES md HAMILTON e s . e il e ot S Doge s !l mfl.w’flmflml CAR w|

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