Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 11, 1880, Page 2

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Pubk DAILY BEe EDITOR _ THANKSGIVING A PROCLAMATIO! history since th a nstion has of our population berty and justice ¥ e thavks of & happy, e with ur:e\o'\::'lxl‘«ld‘g.\ de- to the rerof wll 0 e ehond dntia, T f Novemb %to- | enforcing laws above every other duty Pre dden Vi, B. Evags, Secretary of State — d Forney are now ., entitled Bex BrrLer g that pathetic so “Ogt in the cold world, out in the Herald says Morey has gone to n Collins. The election of T Ad hus cnumed @ change in the + political conscience. ano ces andther crisis ¢ French government and the © u of the cabinet. Like the lust trouble which ended in the sizuation of the Waddington minis try, the. present_difficulty seems to save arisen feom the enforcement of the decrees againet the unsulborized sious crders, - - The ch of the chamber of deputics voicing the protest of the church, pre- cipitated the, present trouble. A —— ieN, SuERIDAN has published his anausl veport-of the-conditicn of the army from whichat appears that the deporiment pEDakots contains 4550 men and offivers, &He ‘devartment of the Platte 2840, the departmeat of Missouri 4720, andl that,of Texas 3640, "This force is distributed on the basis 1+ oae soldier to evergninty-five miles orritory exeept in Texss Whero there is only one soldier Lo every 125 miles. Iffndo'be hoped that one of the first acts of congress will be raise he army to a basigomwhich it af- d adequate protection to the lives property of ‘the settlers on the ntier. ! "N % Taose “‘gtalwarts” whose stalwart- ism consiste in wh/Overpowering desira for office me the weward. for. their y4oGeneral Grant and who ure building grest'expectations on the in- coming administration ace likely to find thomselves werionsly mistaken A personal friendof General Garfield ares tht -the president 18 not u to -any -entangiing alliances, has made'no barg will take his seat wnpledged and un- teammalled, . Decrying Proeident Hayes afid culogizing ‘General Grant ufter the manner of some of tho talwart” organs- whose sclo cry is for spofls will not preposess General Garfield in favor ‘of such government vulturen, pa political 18 and Tur bourbon press fn gatherivg e vresident of the Ulifted States of | 7 legitimist | STION. rd Mayor's banquet 2t Guild- custom, pouding to the took occas- try,” ing topica cf Dritish political interest. Mr. Glad- « remarks on the Irish question of serious consideration, rom a liberal minded and srloss statesman, who throughout cntire parhamentory course bas greatest sympathy with worih and oppression, sod an desie to do strict eriial jastice to all the the British government. at that the Eoglish ministry e determined to preserve the peace + Ircland at all hazards end st cxponse. fom the premier's remark that s the duty of This is plainly mauifest “the government recoga! and will not hesitate to ask for in- created powers should their present powers prove insufficient.” The mos! dent lover of Ireland cannot deny that tho Gladstone ministry wilfully closed their cyes to the beginning of the land league agitation, and even 3 to intorfere when agitation n to inflimmatory appesls and governmental dcfisnce. It is only mow whem tle whole country seems rips for revolt, when landlordsagainst whom no tenant is uttering complsint sre prohibited from reaping thefr harvest under threats of assasmation and when law and order are opealy eet at defiance | by en orgenization whos> heads sre constituent members of the imperial parliamont, thit the liberal govera- { ment finds it itsswornduty to interfere | and protect the lives and property of ite citizens. | Mr. Gladstone’s mpecch voices the disappointment not only of the minis- try, but sleo of thoussnds of the | warmost triends of the Irish Universal eympathy had beea aroused by ,their famine suffer ings, and 1snd reform was ripe for execution through the lawful chan- nels of parliamentary enactment. A ministry backed by strong major- ity in the house of commons had shown its active desire to aid in the pacification of the country and the Dermanent relief of her wrongs, and the saber secse of the English people would have supported the government in the measures looking to the reform of Jand tenures and the elevation of the peasantry. The present violeut sgitation and lawleseness has worked great in- jury to the cause of Treland. In Mr. Gladstone's words it has been ‘en- tirely iilegitimats totally in- compatible with the concerns of « well constituted society.” The ser- timent of obedience to law is firm ot in the Anglo-Saxon mind, and it is manifest that the Eaglish govern- ment will never submit to ba coercid into land reform uuder threats of ae- der and rapine, backed of lifa and prop- had a and sassination, mut by the destruction erty. - Mr. Gladstone no doubt spoke by the card when be declared that the maintensuce of the existing laws, which the government hid eworn to enforce, must precede reforms, and in bis declaration he will be backed by an united Eoglich sentiment. It'is very unfortunate that at s time when there really seemed to be a good pros pect of peace and prosperity in Ireland, when her wrongs and injuries were brovght into what consolation it can from the fact, that Havcosk got a popular majority in the United States of 20,000. This “popular majorit, ception of about 1800 obtsined in Ne Jersey, Oslifornia aud Nevads, com cntirely from “the silid south, and there s mo resson why the south couldn’t have given 500,000 just as wasily as it id 20,000, The Leaven- worth Times very properly remacks that ““‘General Garfield received the majority of the votes cast in the north, where men cast their ballots s thoy please, and Have them counted General Hanecek's “popular majority” comes from the south, where men, if allowed to vote at lave theirvotes counted es the de moeracy pleases. Bo kind enongh to uste the difference. s cast, — Tae true explanation of The Republi- i lity to Mossr.. Doave aud Howe is the f1ct that it was largely due to i effurt that the Holly job, in w 1¢ Republiean had a 1irge fingsr w.x wted " The Jow of a prospective £5000 am, ebe —[BEE. "Pbe Ropublican is quite content 4 the outcome of the waterworks test. Neither The Ropublican nor iy one connected with Tne Republi- n-everneoeived, ever was promised, - ever expacted to zeceive 85000, one laz, or any other sum of money or ser consideration for its advocacy of © Holly plan.” Wesimply advo as againet the Wiley fraud and steal | Rapublicsn. Daring the campaign of the Helly hieves sgainst the tressury of the ity of Omabathe Repullican was the warmest-advocste of every corrupt move made in the interest of the *ushingerowd, and their good man h ted ¥rigay, Haecall, . Every citizen of |* © aha who knows the past course of %o Omaba Republiean snd the public « ~ser of the managersof that corrupt sot, kubw, perfectly well thut gentle voice wasn't raiced in Hol- favor for nothing. Every resident ¢ our eity who saw the whole force the Repullican efiice working ut : polls far a Helly city o uveil saw sri:at wepdtho compouicion of the wat. Phi- hoork was sne of tho in- poratort of theHolly company and { course one of the hardest workers | 1ibby through the job. Every 3 cember Of the Bepubli can’s force was résted §o fuisting the shameful dle o the Gity of Omaba and the | waount of, the dollars and cents | wonsi is now mn| opan di will do ™ no good to deny its « molici'y with the Holly jobbers. | strong relief by the horrors of a year of panic, andj when the sympathies of thejwhole world wero demanding a per- manent relief in her system of gov- erament, that hot hoaded leaders should deliberately set to work to deetroy what had slready been gainod and raite the people in fruitless insur- rection against the first government which for years had shown an earnest intention o yield to tho demands of the people If the slightest chance of succass by revolution presented itself, the cse would be difforent. But when the odds are eo frightfally dis- proportionate, as they are in the pres- euat case, armed resistance ceases to be defensible, and becomes the sheer- est The only hope of the wronged and oppressed people of Tre land 1y in the carnest yet peaceful presentation of their case to the ns- tion who a faw months ago were thor- oughly in sympathy with thoir misfor- tunes. To-day the Irich leaders scom to be dolng all in their power to wipe out every vestige of that sympathy, and to antagonize cvery law-abid; citizon against the meaace, intimi tion and crime which now hold carni- val in Ireland. Every oncs and swhile the peo who protest agaiost the outrageous swindles of railread corporations are iuformed by the mavagors that as logitimate busivess investments, the profits of the railroads are groatly overestimated. How little they are overestimated may bo seen from the ics of the Pennsylvania road, which sinco its first dividend in May, 1856, has paid dividends, cash and ccrip at par, torether amounting %0226 per cent. The company hrs never parsed a dividend except in No vember, 1857, and sgain in August, 1877, when dividends were suspended till November, 1878. An investment in the stock at par in 1856 would have paid an average of 11 per cent since then for twenty-fonr yexrs, adding to the dividends the premium on the stock dividends made at par. “Tuey could not stoal California,” remarks’ Dr. Miller. They did, alt the same, Doctor. They stole it by forgers. Thres huudred democratic majority. The friendships of politios are not permanent. Ex-Goveraor Dennison, who weat to Chicago as the special champion of John Sherman for pecsi- dent, is now the liveliest and bltierest silic sentimeut 1ong ago has fixe i the 1 siiom of that concern, and its advo- « oy of avy swindle, fraud or eteal, 3 U suither sl o ot The | 22 candidate, and eo i Staniey Mat - o rival of John Shsrman for seuator, and the battle between the two prom: isea to be quite cxciting. Gev. Foster Sherman is unaoubtedly the October. position of the gov- | make i ran Orles: pany 12 now operating 517 miles moro road than at this time Iast year. RAILWAY NOTES. Never in the histery of the New Central road were the earnings cssinz finely, and the directors 12 announcement that they will ns from El Peso to New within one year. This com- The Pullman Palace Car company has declared its fifty-third usual quai- terly dividend of 2 per cent. on thelr capital stock, payable Nov, 15 at the teliow.ng oftices: Farmers’ Loan and Trast Co., New York; New England Bostov; Pullman Palace Car Co., Chicago. The statement of the Atchison, To- peka and Santa Fo railrosd company, New York Stock ex- exhibit of 835.14 miles k in Kansas, exclusive of side ; 285 09 miles in Colorado, and 4 miles in New Mexico, reaching to n Marcial; a total mileage of 544.23, . Mr. Vanderbilt has given orders to have built and put on the Lake Shore road 3000 additional fesight cars, and the Central road 5000. He has also given orders for the building of new passonger cars, to be the most commodious, comfortable , in short, the best that can be constracted. The Railroad Gazstte reports the construction of 113 miles of new railroad, making 4,388 miles thus far this year, agaiost 2,739 miles reported at the same time In 1879, 1,635 miles i , 1,668 miles in 1877, 1.875 s in 1876, 686 miles in 1875, 3 miles in 1874, 3,075 miles in 1873 and 5,709 miles in 1872. The work of laying steel rails along the Albany and Susqushanna di of the Deleware and Hudson C. wi deal more d ““Jim” since their ‘‘pa” was momi- nated for president. ) thought this a littlo snobby, and said he didn’t consider they wero a bit big ger o better thaa_they were_befor: and that ho would reepect his father jnst 2 much “even if he were noth- 41, He evidently ing but a congressman all his life.” He didn’t scom.to thick it a very big thing to b congressman. Jim is what is called a rollicking boy. He is never known to be still | anless asleep. Both physically and | intellectually he is very strong and very quick. He mssters his studies almost without effort and inincredibly short time. At school he likes the gymnasium; ho excels on the trapcza and the springboard. At home he stands on his head, walks on his hands with his heels up, turns hand-springs and someraaults, and jumps the fence in preference to opening tho gate. Ho i good-natured, kind-hearted and ac- commodating, and famous for boyish devilment. Molly ia ratherquict girl, with remarkable good sense for her years; sho keeps to her lessons protty close, and plays the piaro very well. Trvin is the queerest genius of tho family, thongh I don’t know how to describo him. ‘‘Abe” is an artist. Ho is slways making pictures, and scoms to profer drawings of machive- ry. A train of ears is one of his favor- ito drawings, and he will have tho ne, and mail cars, the coazhers and sleepers, all so porfect that it would take an expert to find & part left out. SHAMELESS SHAMS. SHAM GENERALS, SHAM COLONELS, SHAM CAPTAINS, SHAM JUDGES, SHAX EVERYTHING. ew York Spilt of the Times. Thirty years sgo_the sharp pen of Charles Dickens pricked the bubblo of Amorican titles, and made our militia company's road will be completed in rtaight and ata cost of about $900,- 0! Fifteen uew locomotives have been ordered, as every ono now an the line is frequently in use at ono time, principsily in handling freight. The earnings of the St. Louis ard San Feancisco railroad company for the month of October show an enor- mous increase over the same month Inst year. yThe egrnings for October, 1880, wera $310,581.50, against $214,- 711 97 for Qotober, 1879, an increase «of £96,860,63. Tha incresse for the first ten months of 1880 over the same period in 1879 amounts to $95,550 65, Tae railway exhibition which is to be held two years hence at Berlin, oughtto bring together an interesti and instractive collection of the arti cles used in building and working iron roads in all countries. Should our railroad eystem, and the industries connected with it, be properly repre- sented, we may safely challenge cors- parison with those of Europe, al- though they have had greater oppor- tunities for development, The general annual inspection of the Pennsylvania railroad has just been published. The inspectors are composed of the general manager, general and division superiutendents, civil engineers, bridge builders, su- ervicors, road forcmen, ete., who ride in open cars with raised seats, each car beinz riven shead of tho engine. It 1 uires feur to six loso moti s to Lrauspo: . 1k trains are rum fiye winutes apert. Tais inspection is one of the features which contribute to make the Penn- sylvania road the maguificent piece of organizati Our Next President and His Family. #£rom Mr. T, L. Nicho's Sketch, Gen. Garfield likes books and mu- slo and pictures He is withal very versatile. He sir : songs and reads poetry, studies cmntics, prob- lems, and transiatc: *“knotty” paseages of the G t with equal in- torest and ralis i remember once seeing & gentleman is called & “trick with trying it a few tiues, Mr. said: “Thatis no trick—it is the re- sult of soms law of numbers; it's a wmathemstical problem, depending on the number of cards, spots, ete.” That night he determined to solve the problem. I went to bed at midnight and left him working atit. In the moruing he azid he had eet up till af- ter three, but, like Archimedes, he had “found it,” and he had covered ozen sheets of paper with algsbraic formulas in the operation. I think Garfield would like to be rich —at least better off than he is; but he could never endure the kind of life that makes men rich—the con- tinued and monotonious routine and attention that is_required in mere money-getting. That kind of mental food wouldn’t nourish his intellectual nature, He s ambitious and, in a and laudable sense proud. He likes to excel. He told me the evening the nominations were made iu Chicago that he would rather have the oredit of making the best speech before such an audience than to get the nomination. People may not readily believo it, but Garfield’s speech nominating Sherman was very nearly an imprompiu speech. Garfield is a temperance man, though not a *‘total abstinence man.” I have seen wine on his table twice in Washington, once at a breakfast and once at a din- ner 1 know that liquor is not habitually used about his house, and that he very rarely touches it himself. He is not at all sensitive on the snb- joct of temperance, mor desirous of concealing his views and practice. Gen. Garfield is fond of his home and his farm. He walks his visitors around and shows them el the im- provements he has made and explains those he coutemplates. He shows his stock, machinery and crops with as much enthusiasm ss Horace Greeley used to display on the same subjects. Hofinds the fam a souroe of perpat- ual pleasure and interest. Oue cannot be about Mentor long, without findicg out that Garfield likes his neighbors ana that they like him. Mee. Garfield is a very plessant but not & demonstative woman. She is well educated and appreciates the good things in literatare and art. She reads ““aolid” books, and the megazines; looks well after the house, and teaches her own children; she is a “‘help-meet” and an entertaining com- panion for her husband, and abund- antlyable to_entertain his most intel- lectual friends and visitors. I should “igonerals,” corner-grocery “judees,” and town-council “houorables” as ridiculous as our spittoons and our dollar aristocracy, But before the title nuisance could bo quite laughed out of existence the war transformed all our people into soldiars. Wo kuow from the official records that a million of high privates enlisted on both sides during_the war; but the slaushter was. terrible, and nOt a sin- oldier escaped alive. All the vors _are cfficers, ond al- though perhaps few of them could show their commissions, they take every possible opportunity of air- i r raok. In avistocratic coun- titles are hereditary; but country they are infectious. Abroad, the son of a lord becomes a lordship when his father dies; but in this fres republic ono iitle generates another as fast as fles in the sun. ‘When the head of afamily becom:sa judge or a general, all the bogs aro dubbed colonels or majors or commo- dores, 50 as to keep up with tho old gentleman, whoee brothers and brothers-in-law straight-way confer on themselves titles of honor or distinc. tion, in order that the original judge or general may not, oclipse them by the brllliancy of his prefix. i happened that this democratic repub- licis inhabited almest exclusively by men of title—“geaerals,” “colonels” and “majors” are as plentiful as crauberries, anl eversbody. out of jail—and a mnjority inside—is con- siderzd an “‘Hon.” Four ““generals,” o.ly one of which has a genuino claim to the title, are raumng for president, and the of campaign speakers show so many “honorables” supporting thete candidates that, if thero be anything'in 4 name, the per- foot intearity of all the political par. ties ought te be thoroughly insured, The proposition that only thoso who have earned their titles should wear them is self-avident; but whilo we may discover real soldiers coutented to be plein “Mr.” now that they are mus— tered out of service, wa see thousanda -£ men, who e citizna in war and soldiers in peace, strutting abont with military haudles to their names heso soda-water *colonels,” all fizz and cork, manage our theaters, direct our operas and run our circuses. land sends us a militia “colonel” to giveus Italizn opera, and wa recipro- cate with an American *‘colonel” of negro minstrels. Miitary officers are ths landlords of our hotels, a “‘msjor” mixes drinks and a “‘squire” attends to the boot-blacking departmont. All the editors who are not ““Colonels”are “Hons.” To some Americans you may be boid enoagh to deny a prelim- isary title, but to address anybodys letter without the affix ot “Esq.” would be rezarded as a rerzonal in- sult—the smaller the social position of the person addressed the greater tho insult, of course. Thus titles which, honestly won and honestly worn, would do_equal honor to thoss who bear and those who respect them aro cheapened by bogus imitations and be- come ludicrous instead of distinguish- ed As regular officers are most anxious to get out of uniform and into maufti as soon as they are on duty, 50 those who have a right to titles are beginning to discard them, while the bogus bearers flourish more and more obstrusively, like the raw militia_captain on his first training day. Wo observe, also, an organized system of self-promotion among these sham aristocrats. One personage, whose card bore the proud but modest title of major five years ago, has just roturned from Eatope a full colonel, tough he hes mever seen service since Bull Run. With steady devo- tionto duty and 8 new card stamp, this type of his class will become a general by the time the next Newport sesson opens. Thereare no *‘corpor- als,” and outside of the police, no “Yergeants” among our civil mili- tary heroes, all the non-commis:ioned officers having ehared the sad fate of the privates during the war; and. although we can count our “‘generals,” “colonels” and “majors” by the hun- dred, weodo not remember a single ““lieutenant” ameng our acquaintance outside of the regular army and navy. Why do theze mioor titles remain un- tached ] ‘We cannot all be tatlors,” the English nobleman remarked to Mr. Poole, who complsined of “mixed company,” and Americans onght to havo sense enough to know that we cannot all be superior offi- cers. The visit of Gen. Grant to New York affords esch reader a capital oc- casion to reflect upon this bogus title nuisance, and to resolve that, hence forward, In his owa case, and among his acquaintances, he will steadfastly think her most marked characteristic is that of perfectattanticn t ) her owa business, and 0o meddling with other | people’s. She is unostentations. She | refused to allow her photograph o bo sold or her pictara to bs engraved, | though earnestly pressed to do 80 by photographers, engravers and by mavy | friends. T suspect she don't care to | be written about much, either, and I | don't wish o do violence 10 her desire in this respect by extended comments. The children are two boys, one girl and two more boys. Their first ohild was a girl, which died when a few montha old. The last one was a boy | that died when about 2 years old, | Harry, the oldest living is 15; Abram, the youngest, is8; “Jim" is 4; Molly 12,a0d Irvin 10 years old. Harry is a quiet, steady boy, very obedient and duiifal, particalarly respectful to- discourage it. It is unrepublican, ua- Americav, and unmsaly; it renders us absucd at home and a laughing-stock abroad; it encourages petty vanity and obbish affactation, and 1t should be 80 severely punished by society, it not by law, as any other form of ob- taining undeserved credit under false pretenses — An Barly Start. Lincola Globe. The Omaha Republican opens the campaiqn for Hircheock in 1883 by firing a whole column of charges at Senator Saunders—charging him with the defest of a portion of the republi- can legislative ticket of Douglas coun- ty. That Senators Saunders will be fully_able to bear all the dirt which The Republican shall be able to throw at him during the next two years we wards his patents and grandmother, | The writer had an_opportunity cf seeing a characteristic letter which he wrote to his mother shorily | after the Chicago conventi he and “Jim” boing in school at Concord, N. H., at the time. Ho spoke of the fact that somo of by have no doubt. The Hitchcock cam- paign draweth on apace. The Carolinas, twin perpstrators of , voted the old reliable tiseus ballots again. That's the way Old Solidity sticks together, disciplining the opposition with & shot-gun as a POLITICAL POINTS. Shades of soushern chivalry: There will bo four nea in the newly lected Georgia legizlature. Samuel Woclner, the distillery man, is the first republican elocted alderman of the Fourth ward of Peoria. General Harrison, of Indiana, will cither be eent to the senate or have a seat in the cabinet close to the president. Frye, of Maine, isa candidate for speaker of the house, and ex-Senator Dorsey would like the secretaryship of the senate. Jefferson Davis received one vote for president in Baltimore on Tues- day, but that dcesn’s count. He is not eligible. The democratio candidate for mayor of New York, W. R. Grace, John Kelly's candidate, ran_ 38,472 votes behind General Hancock. Gen. Butler intimates his intantion to enter the lists for governor of Massachusetts, by eaying in a recent speech at Springfield that he expects to “come out aguin next year.” And the saddest word of tongue or pen is it may be Ben. Justice Clifford, it is stated, will never again take up_his public duties. He iz ablo to ride, but {akes compar- atively little interest in what goes on about him, and shows little mental activity. His family: wished to take him to his Portland home for the win- tor, but he emphatically retused to leave Washington Asitis thoughi he will not resign, bis seat on the bench may remain vacant as long as he lives. Colonel James G. Fair, who is con- testing tho United States Senatorship of Nevada with Ssnator Sharon, is of Trish birth, and is 49 years old. While aboy he lived in Ilinois, and at 18 went to California, aud in time be- camo superintendent of mines. In additicn to his fortune made from the Biz Bonanza mines he owns nearly 100 acres in vsrious parts of San Francisco. He suffers with rheuma- tism. He is of medium height and | heavy, with a large beard streaked with gray. Here are some of the veteran voters: John Bailey, of Lynn, Mass , cast his eightecnth vote for president. He is years old,and voted for Garfield and. Arthur, Lowis Allen, of Peatody, | Mass , cast bis seventeenth vote for prasident. The Hon. Artemus Ward, of Bridzswater, Mass, 97 years old, and the oldest living ex-congressman, voted for Garlield and Arthor. The Hon. Levi Robbins, of Copenhagen, Lewis county, New Yerk, who reached o last May, voted the re- can ticket, Marcus Richardson, angor, Me., who completed his 100th year last Saturday, voted for Garficld avd Arthur. Mr. Anthony B. Arnold, of Providencs, R. L, who Drugsand 0 yearsold, and has voted but three imes for president—for J. Q. Adams in 1824, aud A. Lincoln in 1860 and 1864—walked to the pol's on Tuesday and voted for Jas. A~ Garfield. I have used St. Jac'bs Oil in my family with-perfect success for every- thiing which nceded a liniment—writes Me. J. B. Potter, Amessille, 0. My daughter, baving been thrown from a horss, sprained her ankle 8o badly that she could not walk o sleep; a few SHEELY BROS. A tull lige of Surzical Instrum emical Jas. K, Ish. ISZIFARNEHAM STRERT . MORE POPULAR THAN EVER. The Genuine SINGER NEW FAMILY SEWING MACHINE. The popular demand for the GENUINE SINGER in 1870 exceeded thatof arter of a Cen'ury in which this “0ld a8 been before the public. 171878 we sold 356,422 Machines. Machines. Excess over eny previous year 74,735 Machines. Our sales last year were at the rate of over 1400 Sewing Machines a Day | For cvery businees day in the yesr, any previous y R r curing the Qs le” Macl REMENMEEXD, That Every REAL Singer chine hss this Tradc Mark cast into the Sewing Ma- the Machine. THE SINGER MANUFACTURING CO. Principal Office: 34 Union Square, New York. tes and C uth Ameri 1,500 Subordinate Offices, in the United § World and PACKING CO., (1B66. PORK AND BEEF PACKERS Wholesale and Retail in FRESH MEATS& PROVISIONS, GAME, POULTRY, FISH, ETC. CITY AND COUNTY ORDERS SOLIGITED. OFFICE CITY MARKET—1415 Douglas St. Packing House, Opposite Omaha Stock Yards, U. P, R. R, TELEFNONE CONNECTIONS. ISH & Mc:MAHON Successors to Jas. K, Ish, DRUGGISTS AND PERFUMERS. Dealegs in Fine Imported Extracts. Toilet Waters, Colognes, Soaps, Toilet Powders, &o. ts, Pocket Cases, Trusses and Supporters. s used in Dispensing. ~ Preecriptions filled at any hour of the ni Lawrence McMahon. 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. ada, and 8,000 Offices inths Old repl6-déwtf EANKIRG KOUS THE ORIGINAL. BRIGGS HOUSE! Cor. Randolph St. & Gth Ave., CHICAGO ILL. applications of St. Jucobs Oil relieved her enti A friend who tried it for theumatism was perfectly cured. res me, Tl uot Jive so GEACORS RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swll- ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily €9 Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feot and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. o Pragaraton on carth oqsals 6 Jacons 01 oy ety otammte o heda ey A s Dk 1o et riing outiayof 50 Cents, and every one il e v chp o s ot s it Difetions n Eleren Zen gusges. E0LD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS TN MEDIOINE. A.VOGELER & CO., Baltimore, Md.. U. 5. 4. dnfts from 1 C Dawson and T. P Quick, will Lincoln, Neb, Nov. 11 and 12, ’80. Sale will commence at 2 o'clock p. m., of he 11th, and close on tho 12th, at which time thers will be sold at AD OF SHORTHORNS, or: ugh. o sold to ai bred and a_good condition, and will the highest bidders, e o0 avis b i 4 1oain in Notraska leading to the ets, ezaing nore's Ther wil tao bo auid a few thoroughbred serseyt, Do mlen e ani s e ot of griite o both Thorthorn &nd Jersey varle: ties. Ale)a lurge lot of 4 Berkshire & Poland-China Pigs, of the right age and size for tmmediste service, Catalogaes wil be mailed frec on appiization to ebraska Farmor, Lincoln Neb. Terms of rale will be announced at opening of the sale. McBRIDE & DRUSE. VANDERPOOL BEOS DAWSUN & 30N, QUICK. 0229 nokws: on week 1 your ovn town. terms 200 owa: troe. Adiress . Hallett & O el T R e HAMBURC AMERICAN PACKET C0.'S Weekly Line of Steamships Leaving New York Every Tharsday at 2p. . For England, Frauce and Germany. For Passage apply to C. B. RICHARD & C0., Passenges Agents, PRICES REDUCED TO $2.00 AND'$2.50 PER DAY Located in tho business contre, convenient to pia contai clev 3 oc1gtf OGDEN HGUSE, Cor. MARKET ST. & EROADWAY Council Bluffs, Towa. n the city. IRA WILSON - PROPRIETOR. The Maotropolitan_is centrally located, snd first class in every respect, haviog recentiy beon entirely renovalcd. The public wil fad it & comfortable and homelike House. mariti. 'FRONTIER HOTEL, Laramie, Wyoming, The miner's resort, good accommodations, room, chirsen reasonible. - Specia) attention given % travoling men. . HILLIARD Proprt Cheyenne, Wyoming. First.cose, Fino nrgo Samplo Rooms, ons vlogk from e to hours for Depot. Lates $2.00, o Fooin; s agle meal Free Bus to and from 260 and §3. conta, . BALCOM, Propristor. Crief Clerk. 0-t HOUSE, Schuyler, Neb. Fhist-cluss Houss, Good Meals, Good Teds iry Roows, and kind and accommodating treatment. Two good eample rooms. . Spocta attention pafd 10 commercial travalers. 8. MILLER, Prop., Schuyler, Neb. KENNEDY’'S EAST INDIA , according L5t 0 n g 3! gE. g ¢ ged =0 E8 % o g SR 5z 58 £°R & ® Bk TEE q BE 2 < BB ILER & 60, SOLH MANUFACTURERS OWAHA. Neb. VINEGAR WORKS ERNST KREBS, Manager. Maoutactarer of all kinds of VINEGAR. Tees St Bet. 9th and 10rh, OMARA, NEB THE ONLY PLAGE WRERE YOO can find a Kood sasoriment of BOOTS AND SHOES At s LOWER PIGURE thsn at ‘aay otlier ehos houso Ia the city, P. LANGC'S, 238 FARNHAN 2T, LADIES' & GENTS, SHOES MADE TO ORDER Tantesd. Pricssvery soaan Traina stop from 20 minates | man . ness. gains on s booksare lnstired to Ita patrons, in stead of belng gobbled up by the aeent OMAEHA Nebraska Land Agency. PASSENCER ACCOMMODATION LINE OMAHA AND FORT OMAHA Comner 020, *8:17and 11 19, LEAVE 00 Toaded to full capacity with reguler passengers. office, corner of rocure em, or from drivers of hacks. FARE. 25 CENTS. INCLUDING STRE _CAR HARTI BOILER MAKERS UNDERTAKER | So. 1617 Parniam ., 1d Siand of Jaco 0D, HLBG, Liciea THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED. BANKING HOUSE IN NEBRASKA. CALDWELL, HAMILTONZCO BANKERS. Businees éransacted mme a8 that o an Incor- porated Bank. Accounta kept In Currency or gold subjectt0 | AOENT sight check without notice. Certificate of depostt lssuod pavable In three, six and twelve months, bearing fnterest, or on demand without intercst. Advances made to customers on approved se- curlties at market rates of Interest ‘Buy and sell gold. bills of exchange Gevern- ‘men, State, County aad City Bonds. Draw Sight Dratts on Encland, Ireland, Scot. 1and, and all parts of Eutope. Sell Earopean Passage Tickets. GOLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. augldtt U. S DEPOSITORY. Finst Nationar Banx OF CMAHA. Cor. 13th and Farnbam Streets, OLDEST BANKI;(—I:‘ESHBLISHMEHT IN OMAHA. (SUCCESSORS TO KOUNTZE BROS.)) RSTABLISTED Ix 1856, Organtzed a8 National Bank, August 20, 1865. Capital and Profits Over$300,000 Spacitly aathorized b the Secretary or Treasury 0 roceive Sberipion 10 (he U.S.4 PER CENT. FUNDED LOAN. OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS ‘Hxmuax Kovwmzs, President. Avaustus Kovr This, bank recetven deposit withont rogard 1o ‘amounts. Issuies time cartificates bearing Intorest, Dravs drstison an Franciso and priclpal cities of the United Blatcs, alsv London, Dublin, Edinburgh and the principal citics of the conti: nent of Europe, Bella passage {ickets for Emigranta fn_the In- e maylatt Geo. P. Bemis’ Rea Estate Acency. 15th & Douglas Sts., Omaha, Neb. This agency doce sTRIOTLY & brokerage bust- Does notspeculate, and therefore say bar- BOGGS & HILL. REAL ESTATE BROKERS | No 1448 Farnham Street | NEBRASKA. Offce —North e opp. Grand Contral Hote, DAVIS & SNYDER, 1605 Parnham St. Omaha, Nebr, 400,000 ACRES carefully selected Iand In Eastern Neri for e “Great Bargatia o impreved farme, and Omaba ity property. 5. DAvIE WEBSTER SNYDEE, Taie Land Comfe U P.R.R___dptevmit Twia nam. STRON RERD Byron Reed & Co., oLvmsT EsTARLISND REAL ESTATE AGENCY IN NEBRASKA. : Keep = complete ahstract of title to all Real Estate in Omaha and Douglas County. mayltt Snfl. wvel oot Are iy . g12 i fren Ada T Connects With Strect Cars of SAUNDERS and HAMILTON Red Lino as follows: OUALL :08, 5:37 snd 720 pom. OMAHA: SAUNDE STREETS. (End of LEAVE %0, 6:15 and 5:15 p. m. The 8:17a. ' run, leavine omaha, and the :00 p. m. run, leaving Fort. Omaha, are usnally The 6:17 &. m. rua will be made from the post. & DODGE, Sheet Iron Workers Cor. 12th and Cass streets. Please Give Us a Cal.. isso. We call the attention of Buyers to Our Extensive Stock of GLOTHING, AND CENTS’ FURNISHING WHOLESALE AND RETA! We carry the Largest and BEST SELEGTED STOCK OF GOODS Which We are Sel GUARANTEED OUR MERCHANT TAILORING DEPARTMENT ) Is in charge of Mr. THOMAS TALLON, wh e wall-e reputation has been fairl We aleo Keep an Immense St HATS, CAPS, TRUNKS AND VALISES REMEMBER WE ARE THE ONE PRICE STORE M. HELLMAN & CO, 1301 & 1303 Farnhs PIANOS = ORGANS. J. S. WRIGHT, CHICKERING PIANG, And Sole Agent for 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 Orgacs exclusively. experience in the Business, and handle only th S. WRIGHT, , Omaha, Neb. m Sireet, ’218 16th Stre ) HALSEY V. F POWER Al D HAND PUMPS Steam Pamps, Engine Trimmngs, Mining Machinery, BELTING HOSE, BRASS AND IRON FITTINGS, PIPE, STEAM PACKING, AT WHOLESALE AND RET HALLADAY WIHD-RILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS 5 Farnham Straat Oms A. L STRANG, HENRY HORNBERGER, BT AMS AGENT FOR V. BLATZ'S MILWAUKEE B! In Kegs and Bottles. Special Figures to the Tr Families Supplied at TO THE LADIES AND CENTLEMEN: PROF. GUILMETTE'S H KIDNEY PADI A Positive and Permanent Cure Guaranteed, FRENC p i caues of Gravel, Diahetes, Dropay, FRENCH PAD (0., Toledo, Ghio’ PROF. GUILMETTE'S FRENGH L itively cure Fever and Ague, Dumb Ao, Az iseases of the Liver, Stomach and Bi our draggust for this pad aid Bran he pad cures by absorption, 1 e doosnot keep i, send §1.50 f and recelve it by return mail SIOUX CITY & PACIFIC| axp 8t. Paul & Sioux Cif RAILROADS. The Old Relable Siouz City Route ] | 100 MILES SHORTEST ROUTE! From COUNCIL BLUFFS to ST.UPAUL MINNBE, or BISMARCK, Andal ofntatn Noritarn Lo, ed Weatinghonse Automatle Air Erak Pistlonm Coupler and Boffer. |MICA AXIE GR 3 st Coun reaching Sioux City at 10:20 p. ‘making 2&TEN HOURS 1x Aov. Ro lears 8t Pacl at 330 p m. . Goun ars that your tickets Bln = t, M H P. 2. ROLINSON, At 3.8 o Sad Pasenger Agens, W 1ree o any adt ress MICA MANUFACTURING C 31 MICHIGAN AV JUNO. G. JACOBS, (Formerly of Glat & Jacots) KRS BF THLEGRAPH SOLICITA . iy CHICACD. BarAsk Your Dealer For It! izt T A. W. NASON. CHARLES RIEWE, UNDERTAKER! Metalle Cages, Coffins, Casiets, Shrouds, eto. ¢ Parnham Street, . 10h and 11/h, Omaha, Nab,

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