Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
IHE DAILY BE! E. RUSEW A THANKSGIVING DAY. A PROCLAMATION. T the vresident of the United States of eriod u their history since the fed States became a natiom has thi sons for joj made our greatness as a matios ie institutions government v v erpetusie I these let. the thavks of & hay ted wit!: ope voice ascend in ¢ hamage to the giyer of all good « %5th of N-vember next, the pec ot at thie Fespective places of worss " make the sckuowledgment of His hour ies and His an nd _caused the seal of the U ixed. Done at the city o n. this thirty first d [Seal. | By the President : Wa K. E Jax Govp is having new survey: made for a road from Ogden to Port- and, Oregon. Gould Is monarch of 1 his surveys. Tz union of the two territorics Jak sta and Bontapa by the iron tic tbe Northera Pacific has te place, and the rond is now compl for a distance of 145 miles west of Bismarck, on the Missouri, and by the firstof Januaryit will be finished to (1 Yellowstone. By the spring of 1852 the road will be in running order frow ““Wuat Judge Briggs contends for —[Herald, Nov. 8-11. 1 “‘compend” thet the editor of the Herald was ““born in tae mighty brain of Jay Gould,” or in the brain cf some othermighty fellow, that eald editor’s miwion on earth is to dance around *‘mighty” fellows and obsequiously do elicir bidding; and that the Herald's assertion that I ever said a state had the right to secede, is & “‘mighty” big f Jsehood. Crixron Brices. Tae desth of Mr. John Duff, which to0k place & few days ago in Bostc ia annotnoed by the castern pap A STANDING MENACE, Special dispatches to Tre BEE an- nousce preliminaries looking to the eolidation of the Union end Cen- Pacific railrosds. A few weeks s sec the ratification of ered into by the acir conference in New Yerk, and the result will bs an amal- gamation of the great trans-conti- aental rcads, with sl their beanches, ato the most powerful and erushing wozopoly on the globe. e inception of thess Pacific h Credit Mobilier to e into voting rouls w national congress princely subsidies of lands and bonds, to tiie duy, when this Coloatus be- e whole contiaent #nd levies extortionste tithings upon American commeree, the country hss been men- ased with the creation of a power geester than the American governme: where is the policy of antic monopcly felt moro than in ies between Francisco. What makes the hard times in California to- Who hes absorbad the profits her rich min fertile arain, vineyards and orchards? Why is it that thousands of crants who have goue to the Pacific coast in quest of homes and employ- ning every day! The anawer lies in the racent exbibit made day? from s, emi- ment are retw Ac BLACK HILLS NUGGETS Rapid witl organize a bass band. R:pid averages a wedding a week. - Lead’s new hose house iscompleted. Rapid City cast 331 votes during the late clection. The second dividend of the Golden Terra agzregated £25,000. The physicians cf the Hills have or- gan'zed a medical society. The Washington mine at Galena has been stocked for §600,000. South Deadwood’s hosaball was a great social and financial success. The recoipts of the Deadwood telegraph office are over §30,000 s year. Hsy tn Deadwood is'selling at $18 per ton the lowest price in the history of the Hille. Lancaster's will at Central, which has beeu idle for two years, will scon start up again. The clean up at the Old Bill mine in Custer county last week, averaged ovor $26 per to, A firm of placer minera in Blacktail suich have obiained a patent on 6000 fect of placer claims. Sinale banking houses in the me- tropolis of the Hills often send remit- tances of £100,000 & day. Thenew hallfor the lodge of Knights of Pythias, soon to be established at Lead, is nearly completed. Rockerville is looking up. The new flume is neaily completed and the prospects are very good. Deadwood's judges of elections eat thirty-six hours in receiving and count- by the assessors of California cording to that showing Leland Stan , who was a poor man compara tively before the Pacific railroad was built, is rated at £19,000,000, Chacles Crocker, whose carcer as capitalizc began with tho building of the Central Pacific, is rated over $19,+ 000,000. The ostate of Mark Hop- kins, who was onc of the syndicates in the the Central Paciific, is ra‘ed at over $15,000,000. What of Jay Gould, Dillon and other spe whose immenss wealth has all been wrang out of the eacings of the people? sams extorted from the people have all been abeorbed under dishonest in- terpretatton of charters, while the govervment has mortgages upon there roads amounting to over §100, 000,000. By the criginal charter to the Pacific rairoads, the'government was the first mortgage holder, but the axoundrels who msnipulated the Oredit Mobilier sccured tho passige of & law making the goverament the California ors, These vast Mr. Duff will bs remembered in Omaha as une of the earliest presi- dents of the Union Pacific railroad, in which capacity our citizens bad © mo dealings with him in connecticn with the issues of certain bonds for railcoad purposes. Mr. Duff was » man of fine pereonal presence, avd since his retirement from official life has had mo ambition beyond the enjoyment of his pri Tue debt of Illincis will be exiin- waisned by January lst, if the out- ding 181,000 in bonds be pre- or payment. At the com- ncement of 1867 the state debt wrs. over §14,000,000. A wiee provition in the counstitution devoted the reve- nues from railroad taxation and svr- plus earnings to the extinguishment of the state debt. The result has proved the wisdom of the law-makers of Illi- nois. Wirn Ed. Carns presiding over tho dvlibarations of the state senate, and Church Howe in contrel of tae lower the grief of the lower Farnham ‘ concgrn may be better imagined han described. —[Herald. Tue Bek hasno personal grief in this matter. Tt considers it shameless impudencein an editor who pretends » publish a_paper representing the interests of the people, to gloat over the possible misfortuve to the state of bhaving such a pair of railroad monopoly -tools and political huck- sters presiding over it legislatiy liberations. Tuk break In the solid south seems likely to como not from any new po- litical party affiliations, but rather from a disinclination of the buciness interests of the south to place them- #clves under the control of the bour- ben leaders. Edward Atkineon, the d'stinguished Massachusetts statistic- ian, who bas been down south looking t2 the interests of the New England manufacturers, in view of theprogress which the eouth is mnow ing manufactaring industey, writes to his section that there is wrowingup in the south a middle claes, composed of small farmers, both white wad b'ack, laborers, tradesmen aud others; these, with the leaders in man- ufaciures, business and ratlway enter- isee, are becoming diesatiefied with he taxes imposed upon them by the bourbon politioal managers. It is this class, he says, which wi break up the solia sout mak- fn eventually T rosult in New Jersey did not rouch the anticipations of the repub- lican managers, and the potent causo for the loss of the state ts found in a corrapt bargain between the present democratic state house ring and the Pevnsylvavia railroad company. A Tenton correspondent of the New York Times tells tae story as follows: ““A fow days ago & prominent ofii cerof the Pennsylvania company was runaing along the main line and all 1ts numerous branches on A special locomotive, stopping at all the shopa, coal yards and docke, and other vings where the road has many cm- iloyes, and immediately afterwarcs telograms were received by mem- bars of the repablican state committee a an ererywheie i 1 s siznificantly at the intocests of the Fenusylvania voad required the election of Mr. Ludlow.” Ta t+'s wag probably 1,000 = perhaps 2,000 men, either demo- crals or without positive predilec tious, who would have praferred to voto for Mr. Potts, were persaaded to cast their ballots for his opponent, and doubtless encugh of them woted the straight democratic ticket, in pureusnce of this hint, to have changad the re- saliin the stato on premdent. Porth Amboy, East Awmbay, Elizabeth, Feechold, Monmouth Junction, in this and along the Belvidere aud Delaware railroad, avd other places tis single locomotive was cbeerved * opping here, there and everywhero I'ne resalt was to be ssen in the re turas from Union, Middlesex, Mon- scond mortgage holder, and giving the firet lien on the roada to the faside ring that owns the constraction bonds. With the millions amassed by these Pacific railroad highwaymen, leviclatures are bought up, conpress” men fed asattorneys, judges and juries suborned and all the branches of our government are made subservient to the interests and greed of railway kinds, who rule the land with as mnch imporions sway as if they were mon- arshs of all they survey. The U aad Central Pacific roads made their jonction on the tenth of May, 1369, To the short space of eloven years revolution boen wronght in this country in our whole railway system. Consolida. tims and poolings have taken place everywhere. Short and competitg lines have been ‘mbsarbed, the pooling system has destroyed competition and all the avanues of trade and commerce have been monopolized by a few men. Oaly a few months sgo the Union Pa- ctfic and Kansas Pac:fic wcre consoli- dated, and by thisatrokemillions were put jinto the pockets of Jay Gould, while other millizns were taken out of 10 pockets of the fpeople of Kansas, Cblorado and Wyoming. And now the consolidation of the entire system of Jay Gould with the gigan icsystem of the Cental Pacific, which monopolizes the entire carrying trade of the Pacific slope, caps the climax of consolidstions, and cannot fail to arouse the whole country toits danger from monopoly domination. The cor- raption funds of the two roade, acd all their means for enrithing them- selves at the expense of the people, will now be united. The absolate power of the Pacific corporation kings will be exercised with more tyranny and recklees disregard of the rights of the people. The American republic wiil soon come face to face with the momentous istue, whether this country is to be raled by the peo- ple, the p:ople, or whether its vitality to be sapped and its resourcés absorbed by a set of vampires who have no con- ecience and shrink from no measure, however corrupt and opprestive, to perpetuate and increase their power. When the railroad kings pool and con- solidate, the people will have to pool all minor differences, disregard all po- litical antagonisms and unite upon one platform that will put a limit to the power of corporate monopolies aad place them under subjection as pablic servants rather than as imperial masters, a has ol i for ‘What Mrs. Hancock Says. New York Telegram, eth. A lady who csmo over to the city in the boat from Governor's Island re marked that she had just visited Mra. Hancock, and she “never saw a happier woman in her life.” T hope yon will pardon me for asking the question, madame,” ssid_the re- porter. *“Why should she feel happy when her husband has been defeat=d in a conteat for tha highest office in the United States!” “She thinks he has escaped vast amount of trouble and responsibility,” was the reply. “‘She y who loves a quict, ethauthe distinetion sie woald have as the mistress of the White House. She knows that as long a8 the country is st peace her husband’s position s general in the army is much moro plessant than that of president. She prefers her tran quil home on Governor's Island to the turmoil of Washington life. In th matter the s seusitle woman, and T know that Tam repeating her eenti- monts, for1had 2 loog talk with her this morning.” Justice Olifford, it is stated, will never again take up_his public dutics. He is ablo to ride, but {akes compar atively littlo interost in what goes on aboat him, and shows little mental activity. His family wished to take him to his Portland home for the win ter, but he emphatically ret loave Washington Asitis tho ks Fnnsardnn and Warran couy- ing the vote at the late election. Ranching is on the incseass in the hills, and is esid to be about the most profitable businces in tho Gountry. A number of farmers will winter in Spearfish in order to take advantage a bridle made of hair bya man in the Utah penitestiary. It wassentto a friend in that city to be raffled cff, the proceeds togo to the manufac- turer to purchass luxuries that the territory does not furnish. About one hundred men will remain in Bear Gulch daring the winter, and & number will mark in quartz. Ex- tensive prospecting will be done this winter for quariz leads, and as the placers haye turned out more coarse gold than any in the Hills, it is ar- gued that a mouster ledge will yet be found. The Bleck Hills Times says that there has never been a brighter pros- pect for mining than there is at pres- eut in the Hilis. The evils of capital- izing gopher holes have been met and will bo avoided to a great cxtent in the future. Out of scores of compa- nies thus far organized a mojority ace ina healthy condition, and the fow shaky cnes that exist are working by & wise economy to secure solidity and safety. The Northwestern telegraph com- pany which owns the lines from Mis- souri Valley Junction, Sioux City and Yankton co Fort Pierreare negotiaticg with the goveroment for the use of the milit'ary line which runs from Deaiwood aud Rapid City to Dack croek, thirty miles from Pictre. If negotistions resalt successfully the Nortawestern propose to build over the gap and operate tho line from Sious City to the Hills, furnishing full press and stock reports to the Deadwood papers. The total output of the Homestake campany from May, 1878, to Septem- ber, 1880, was 278,282 tons of ore at total direct cost per ton of §3 44-91, distribated as follows: Mining $1.31- 60 per ton; dead work, izcluding shaft- .mfi and tramway, $0 36 5; miningin the 80-stamp mill, 153,372 fons, aver- age cost, $130-18 per ton, of which 27-88 cents was for water for the hat | | of its superior edusationsl facilities. One thousand .heus were driven last week through Rapid City for tho upper camps, where they will winter, Desdwood's new water pipes are beiog rapidly laid and the work will be cempleted by the end of the month; Work on the grading for the sixty- tamp mill at Biacktail galoh, Central, is being pushed by a large body of men, Rapid is without pastor, and The Journal says a good competent minie- ter would be well supported by the community. A mine owner in Deadwood staked his interest, worth §1,500, agaiuat his partner's on the election of Haacock s from the Southern Hills indicate that work is very generally being resamed with the best prospects of rich results. Lawrence county bonds are worth one hundred cents on the dollar, and have been sold for une hundred and two and a half. The Fort Meade tunnel company has put in sluice boxes and expects soon to be taking out the yellow in paying quantities. The new stage line between Pierro and Deadwood is opened. At Pierre itconuects with the Chicago & North- western railroad. A moustsis cheep was brought into Deadw od lust weck. whose ho:us mcasured niveteen iuches in circum- ference at their base. A preliminsry organization of the Blask Hills stock association, was ef- focted by a moeting of the stockmen it Rapid City last week. Juaction City, the yvungest we- tropolis of the soathern Hills, now contains over one aundred inhabitants and houaes going up every day. A plan is on fu. ¢ among the Catholic churches of the Hills to start an academy, using <.+ building now cc: cupied as & hos; t Cleveland. St. John's Episcopal charch at Deadwood is Do 1 course of erec tion. Tt will be buiit of brick and of an i aposing siyle of srchitecture, The Flora Bslle mine in Hidden Treasure gulch showing up some handsome developments, and a ledge of good paying ore has been struck. The Bald Mountain district «is r p- idly improving. A number of mines have been bonded, the principal of which is the California, for $15,000 A train of half a dozen wagons were londed at Galens, October 27th, with ore from the Sitting Bull mine, to be transported to the smelting works at Omaha. Oats in the different valleys in the Hulls sell at from two dotlars and a quarter to two dollars and forty cents per handred weight, and the crop is very large. New aud reliable discoveries have cen made all about Custer City, snd several ten and twenty stamp mills have been moved and put to werk in that section. Rochford Miner: For four consecu- tive years, or since the settlement of the Black Hulls, the first storm pre- ceding winter occurred on the 15th of October. Forty tons of ore from the Atlantic mine in Custer county have been crushed and show an averago of $11.50 a ton. This disposes of tho report that the mine was salted. The Clermont mine at Galena has a body of ore which seems to be inex- haustible, and is o soft that it readi- ly diszolves in water. The value is considered of the highest, The Portland silver mine hss shut down to put in roasters and dry crashers, as it was found that much of the metal was lost by the present system of wet crushing. The Cross 40-stamp mill will be ready to drop stamps in about fifteen days at the furtherest. The Cross mine is regarded as ono of the beat l- cations in the southern Hills. On election day in Deadwood more freight was delivered than on any one previous day, over 1,000,000 pounds being handed over to merchants and miners. The streots were blockaded for hours. A ramor prevails in Deadwood that the Sidney stege_company will trans- fer a portion of its stock to the Pierre route, and compete with the Northwestern company for part of the travel. The Bismarck stage company will run only tri-weekly stages from Derd- wood to Bismarck in the future. The extra stock, made so by this change, has been withdrawn ard transferred to the Pierro route, The Sitting Sull, Merrit, Mam- woth Buckeye, El Refugio, and Flor- ence mines in'Galena have been re- cently developed with promising re- sults. These are all silver bearing lodes. ® The Whitewood sud Ceatennial toll road was opened last week. By this improvement the distance to Centen- nial is only four mles from lower Deadwood, ae the distance to Crook City is shortened three miles. During a political excitement at Stargis, October 25th, s young man by tbe name of Merrit, a clerk of Major Harmon, shot and killed George Hebber. It is claimed it was done in self defense. A mesting of the Congregationsl association was held at Ceatral, Octo. ber 25th, and the churches of Dead wood, Lead, Central, Rapid, Custer Spearfish and Galena were made & will not resicn. his eeat on the bench part of the asociation. teryand boilers; in the 120-stamp mill, average of 121,810, $177-70 per ton, of which 2427 cents was for water; oro crushing, £0.03-72 per ton; sund- ries, blacksmith, foundry, saw mill, roads, etc., $0.6729 pe- ton; total, §3 4401 per ton. Plaot, mill con- straction, ttamway, property bur- chase, holsting works, ctc., $1.63 58 per ton. Dividends, $600,000, or $215-61 per ton. Average net yield of ore, $6 78 91 per ton —_— Breaking the Sectional Line. Gulveston (Tex.) Nows, No. 6, The decisivencss of the victory gained by the republicin party on Tuesday lnst is seen in the ready ac- quiescence of the party .sufferiog de- feat. Had the result been close or doubtful, the country would havecon- tinued in a feverish state of excite- ment for soms time to come. It is pretty evident that the country at large had no desite to again wituess such a crisis as attended the decision of the contest between Hayes and Til- den. Itwas better that the case, ono way or the other, should be decided by an unmistakable verdict. In the conclusion that has been reached both parties apparently feel relief. The contest is over: the vic- tors have gained even more than they calculated upon; the vanquished are disposed to forget that there has been a contest atall. The republican vic- tory was overwhelming, and, instead of chagrin and sullennoss, has awakened in the defoated a epirit of loyal acquiescence in the inevitable. It will be well for the years to come if the epirit now evinced be permitted to continue. There is danger to the future of the Republic in allowing -y by cither irxitation or negloct, to become cbronic- and infecticus. The growth of a eecret sore is surs and certain. Wrath nursed in silenca soorer or later will como to the surface, the lesson of the presidentis] contest just brought to & close teaches anything, it teaches tha: that the south, as a section, and with all possible exterior reinforcements, is in a hopeless minority. It teaches that _sectionsl alignment tn national politics is vicious in principle and wischievous in practice. If by this standard the south is hereafter to be gauged, then the south and the norch are really and truly mutual en emies for all time to come. There c3n be no frateruity where the stamp of subjection is placed upon the weaker party. Under this treatment the theory of government is changed f-om what i» meant by the conceded right of & majority of all to rule. Sectional domination is not ma- jorisy rule. Tt is a rule defined by a terr torial line. It means for thuse living on one side of the line to goy- ern, and for those on the other side the necessity of obeying. Represent- ation in one case means representation to control; representation 1n the other means only the voico of a powerless minority to protest against severity and beg foreasy terms. A comtinua- tion of sectional dictation and section- al oppression must sooner or later end insirife. The caunot reasonably cx- pect to overcome the odds against her by auy ordfvary increase of populs- tion. Un'ess the statesmen and lea ers of all porties. therefore, 50 proper to A d lsies grow iog ouc of . tue. auministration of publicaffairs, away from and be- yond the dangerous subject of sec- tional solidarity, future contests for ascendancy in the national government must be fraught with the gravest peril to the poace of the country. If the present period is deemed by the north a period of probation for the peogleof the south; it may come to be inquired siter a while Loy long the period is tolast. A generation js now. entering public life, both north and south, other than that which was en- gaged upon the battlefield. To this new generation the past, with its troutles and mislakes, is a matter of history and tradition. The American people have reason_to believe in their com- mon equality, common nationality and common destiny. The generation coming to the front may mot inquire 80 closely into accomplished results as the generation which is passing to the rear. Those tofollow may not exact- ly undetstand that the mistakes of their predecessors entailed an inherit- ance of distrust. The part of wisdom plainly peints to bresking the section- alline. The hope of the American union lies in the most perfect frater- nization. There cwn be no safety within the union for the ruled and the ralers in a condition of sectional an- tipathy and sectional domiuation. —_— Russia’s Future Kuler. London Telcgraph. What may be ia store for Turkey, Germany or Austria—indeed, for Great Britain itself—from the moment, the belm of the Russian state ship shall be confided to the vigorous grasp of Alexander Alexandrovich, no map | ! canssy. The Crarowits is s prioce cast in 8 very different mold from that which shaped his weak, amiable, easi- ly-influenced sire. Heis known to en- tertain fixed opinions, resolves and projects, and to adhere to them with all the tenacity of a singularly determ- ined and seif-relving natare. Of his fervent faith in Pan- slavistic dogma, no doubt has been entertained, since he came to manhood, by those who know him best; and his antipatby to all German d things is no less notorious than his sympathy with the attractive qualities of the French nation. He is believed by his countrymen to be, before all else, a tiue and uncompro. mising Russian patriot; to hold in horror the system of pecalation, has honeycombed the empire during the last two reigns, and bronght it to the brink of ruin; to have set his face, in_particular, agsinst abuses of their high sta ticed hereto- fore with impunity by certsin of his own near rclutives, aud to have vowed himself to the mission, 88 far as the internal affairs of his concerned, of extirpating, root and branch, the countless abominations that have been tclera‘ed by his father, with what results the nihilistic move- ment has ouly too {erribly demon- strated. The Russian crown prince, nader whatever title he mey acsume the active governmert of his imperial beritage, corcgant or other, is gener— ally expected to come forward as a radical reformer at home, and asa vig- orous promoter of the Panslavistic programme abroad. Should he realize the anticipations at present enter- tained on his account, it is more than probsble that Russin's neighbors in Europs and in Asia will, in the course ars to come, find ample to regret the romantic union about to lead to Alexander ch's renunciation of imperi<l favor of Alexander Alexan- PERSONAL ITEM. Among the many who have expe- i the remarkable benefits of the Great Germen Blocd Purifier, Hamburg Drops,Mr. Mathias Bausch, Cold Water, biich., refers to the case of an acquatutance who, after suffer- iug for a year with Indigestion wkich bya cians and remedies failed to re- iove, was made woll and hearty iy tho uso of the Hamburg Dropd. JACOBS ] SHEELY BROS. PACKING CO., PORK AND BEEF PACKERS Wholesale and Retail in FRESH MEATS& PEOVISIONS, GAME, POULTRY, FISH, ETC. CITY AND GOUNTY ORDERS SOLICITED. OFFICE CITY MARKET—1415 Douglas St. Packing House, Opposiie Omahe Stock Yards, U. P, R. R. TELEPEOND COONNEAECTIONS. ISH & McMAHON Successors to Jas, K. Ish, , DRUGGISTS AND PERFUMERS. Dealers in Fine Imported Extracts. Toilet Waters, Colognes, Soaps, Toilet Powders, &o. A tull line of Surgical Instrumonts, Pocket Cases, Trussss and Suprorters. Absolutely Pure Drugs and Chemicals use iptions lled at any hour of the night. Lawrence McHahon. 1866. 1880. We call the attention of Fuyers to Our Extensive Stock of GLOTHING, AND CENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. We carry the Largest and ISZ2AFARNEAMN STREET. MORE POPULAR THAN EVER. SINCER NEW FAMILY SEWING MAGHINE. and for the GENUTNE SINGER in 1879 exceeded tht of any previous vear during the Quarter of a Century in which this “0ld Reliablo” Machize has been before the public, 1n 1878 we sold 356,422 Machines. In 1879 we sold 431,167 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 cyery business day in the year, REMEMBER, The “0ld Reliab'e” That Every REAL Singer is the Strongest, Singer Sewing Me chine has this Trad: Mark cast into th the Simplest, the Most Durable Sewing Ma- Iron Stand and em bedded in the Arm of chine ever yet Con- FOoR RHEUMATISH, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell- ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Bl Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. / No Proparation cn earth equals Sr. JAcons Oit B "X"t'r'x'a'n'c‘.fl"',’ffl'{-z"n";fiffigfipfy’;fi;fy' utlay of 50 Cents, and every one sufler- Diroctions n Eleven Langrsges. S0LD BY ALL DRUGGISTS ANDDEALERS IN MEDIOINE. A.VOGELER & CO., Baltimore, Md.. U. 5. A. always Cures and never disap= points. Thoworld's groat Pain= Reliover for Man and Beast. Cheap, qaick and reliable, PITCHER'S CASTORIA is not Narcotic. Children fat upon, Mothers like, WEI DE MEYER’S CA- TARRH Cure, a Constitutional Antidote for this terrible mala= dy, by Absorption. Tho most Important Discovery since Vac= cination. Other remedies may veliove Catarrh, this cures at any stage before Consumption- sets in. . S TEECTE——— the Machine, == stracted. THE SINGER MANUFACTURING CO. Principal Office: 34 Union Square, Newfl {Eork.‘h . Sutordinate Offices, in |‘h\e ‘l(l ne(‘il b'..nul: ;x:i!l‘g&z:dn, and 3‘:73‘116.(‘;::&!1 e BANKING NOUSES- — THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED. BANKING HOUSE IN NEBRASKA. CGALDWELL, HAMILTON2CO BANKERS. BRICCS HOUSE ! Cor. Randolph 8t. & Gth Ave., CHICAGO ILL. nsacted same s that o an’” Incor. Accounts kept In Currency or gold subject to sght chieck without notice. Certificates of depoit tzsaed pavable n three, six and twelve months, bearirig Intarest, or on Gemand without intereet. Advauces made to customers on approved se- curities at market rates of Interest ‘Buy and scll gold, bills of exchange Govern- ment, State, County and City Bonds. Draw Sight Drafts on Encland, Ireland, Scot- Iand, sod all parts of Europe. Sell Earopean Passage Tickets. GOLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. augldtt U. 8 DEPQSITORY. PRICES REDUCED 70 $2.00 AND $2.50 PER Located in tho business to places of amuscment. El containing all modem impro elevaior, & J. H. CUMMIN nelhtt First Nariona Bank OF CMAHA. Cor. 13th and Farnbam Streets, Cor. MARKET ST. & PROADWAY OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHMENT Council Bluffs, Towa: IN OMAHA. Online o Streut Ratlway, Omnibus ‘o +nd from all teaina.RATES—Parlor fonr, $3.00 por day; second floor. $2 60 per day ; thifd floor, $2.00 The best furnished and most com nodious_house » the dty. GEO.T. Prop METROPOLITA IRA WILSON - PROPRIETOR. The Metropolitan I centrally located, and Grst c'ass in cveiy respect, haviog recently bee: entiroly ronova‘ed. The public d it comfortablo and homelike h FRONTIER HOTEL, Laramie, Wyoming, Tho miners resort, good accommodations, argasaimplo rootn, charges reasonble. - Special teution given 20 traveling men: 5 A . H. ¢ HILLIARD Proprietor, INTER - OCEAN HOTEL, Cheyenne, Wyoming. First-clags, Fine arge Sample Room: block from depot. Trainsstop from 20 minutes to 2 hours for dinner. (SUCOESSORS TO KOUNTZE BROS.,) EsTARLISHED 1 1856, Organtzed &8 & Nations! Bank, August 20, Capital and Profits Over$300,000 Specially authorized by the Secretary or Treasury 10 oceive Sbrcripion o ho U.S.4 PER CENT. FUNDED LOAN. OFFICERS AND DIKECTORS ‘Hanuax Kcoxrzs, President, ‘AvousTus Kourzs, Vice President. H. W, Yarzs, Cashie 1868, i PozruTo: ‘Jom A. Cr>iauros. FH. Davis, Ass't Cashler. This bank recefves dopostt without ragard to amounts. Tssucs time certificates bearing Interest. Drawe drafts on San Fiancisco snd principal cities of the United Statcs, alss London, Dublln, Ediuburgh and tho principal cities of the contl- nent of Rurope. Sells passage tickota for Emigranta fn_the In. man_to, ‘mayldte REAL ESTATE BROKER Geo. P. Bemis’ ReaL EsTaTe AceNcy. 16th & Douglas Sts., Omaha, Neb. class Houss, Cood Meals, Good Beds | This sgency does staorir & brokerage bash- Atry e, and’ i ani accommedaiing | nate. " Daes 1o spaseiate,sud thoralore sny par- treatment, Twagood sample rooms. Specia | galua on its books aro {nstired to Ita patrons, in attention pald to commercial travelers. stead of bolng gobbled p by the agent § MILLER Prop, |~ BOGGS & HILL. T > |REAL ESTATE BROKERS Free Bas toand from 50 and §8.00, according 5 centa. D. BALCOM, Proprietor. Cnlef Clork, + mio-t ngle mes * W BORD "UPTON HOUSE, Schuyler, Neb. L5t SIOUX CITY & PACIFIC AND St. Panl & Sioux City RAILROADS. The Old Reliable Siowx City Route ! 100 MILES SHORTEST ROUTE! From COUNCIL BLUFFS to ST. PAUL, MINNEAPOLIS DULUTH, or BISMAROK, And all polntatn Northern Yowa, Minncsota and Dakota. This lino ia with the Im- proved Westinghouse Automatle Alr Brakes and iller Platform Coupler aud Buffer. And for SPEED, SAFETY AND COMFORT is uneurpassed. Elogant Drawing Boom and Sleeping Cars,cwned and controlled by tho com- 5, run_ Through Without Chango between mion Pacifc Traustor Depot, Councll Biafls, and St. Paul. Trains leave tho Union Pacific Transfer Depotat Council Blufts, at 6:15 p m. reaching Sioux City at 10:20 p. ., and 8¢, Pau] 2111053, m, making #=-TEN HOURS 1x Avvaxce or axy Ornzs Rovzs. Rnnmmf. leave St. at 8:30 p.m., ar- siviag at Slonx City 3¢ 445 3 m., and Uion Pacific Trancter Depot, Council Blufls, at 9:50 a.m. re that your tickets read via “8. C, &P.R.R.” F. C. Superintendent, Missouri Vailey, lowa. P. E. KOLINSON, At G pass: Acken: T oBRTAN, % 1 Passenger Agen Gonnar Biotte GREAT UNION SALE SHORTHORN CATTLE. Conasting of toe entira herds of McPride & Druse, and Vanderpool Bros., aud drafis from he T C. Dawson and T. P Quick, will et = Lincoln,Neb. Nov. 11 and 12, ’80. Sale will commence at 2 o'clock p. m., of the 11th, and close on the 12th, at which time there will be sold at public suction 47 HEAD OF SHORTHORNS, of which number 30 hezd are breeding cows and helfers: 17 2re bule, moatly ye rings and in Trime conditin for service. - All sre thor ugh- bred and in_z00d condition, and will be sold to the hizhest bidders, on easy lerms, Re-ncrd rat-s bave been obtain”d on all rafl. Toads in Nebraska leading to the city, and at the leading hote's There wili also be #old fow thoroughbred Jerseys, both males and females, and & fize Jot of grades of Loth Shorthorn and Jersey varie. ties. _Aleoa Lirge lot of Berkshire & Poland-China Pigs, of the right 3g and size for Immediste rersice. Catalogaes will be mailed frec on_appli-ation to the Nebraska Farmer, Lin:oin Terms of eale will be auuounced at opening of the sale, NcBRIDE & DRUSE. VANDERPOOL BROS. H.C, DAWSON & 80N, . P, QUICK. | Paratiam Stree NEERASE.A VIENEGAR WORKS ! BNST KREBS, Manager. Manufacturer of all kinds of VINEGAR. Bet. 9th and 10k, OMAN A, NEB EKEKAILISEL THE MERCHANT TAILOR, Isprepared to make Pants, Suts and overcoats to order. Prices, it and workmanship guaraateed o sutt. One Door West. of Crnickshank’s. No 1408 Farnham Street OMAHA NEBRASKA, Office —North Bide opp. Grand Central Hotal. Nebraska Land Agency. DAVIS & SNYDER, 1605 Farnham St. Omaha, Nebr. 10000 ACRES caetllyselced s o Pstern et for e gains in imprived farms, and Omaha WEBSTER SNYDER, | Late Land Com'r U P. B. B 4p-tobiet BYRON REED. s AED, Byron Reed & Co., otomsT RATATLISED REAL ESTATE AGENCY IN NEBRASKA. a complete abstract of title to all Real in Omaha and Douglas County. mayltt & Estate Q17w 15 gay st eme gagh BT aian irtn A raet e & 07 PASSENCER ACCOMMODATION LINE —BETWEEN— OMAHA AND FORT OMAHA Connects With Street Cars Corner _of SAUNDERS and HAMILTON STREETS. (End of Red Line as follows: LEAVE OMAHA: 630, *§:17and 11:19a m , 3:03, 52 LEAVE ‘NOILIWASNOD ‘syuemoSunie( snoIIg wWANYmMevY ‘wNCedsAq o A nF *4:00, 6: 15 p. m. “The §:17 3. m run, leavin: omahs, and the 4:00 p. m. run, leaving Fort Omahs, are usnally oa ded to full ‘capacity with reular passengers, a. m. rua will be mads from the post- BITTERS! ILER & (0, SOLE MANUFACOTURERS OWAHA. Neh. e, or from drivers of hacks. FARE. 25 CENT. INCLUDING STRE _OAR o HARTIGAN & DODGE, Sheet Iron Workers BOILER MAKERS Cor, 121h and Cass streots. Please Give Us a Cal. JNO. G. JACOBS, (Formarly of Giah & Jacobs) UNDERTAKE No. 1417 Parnbam 5t., 0ld Stand of Jacob Gls ORDERS BY TBLSGRAPH SULIOITE | CHARLES RIEWE, UNDERTAKER! Metalic Cases, Coffius, Caskets, Shrouds, etc. - 10th sd 11¢k, Omsba, Neb, BEST SELECTED STOCK OF GOODS IN OMAH Which We are Selling at GUARANTEED PRIGES !'! OUR MERCHANT TAILORING DEPARTMENT Is in charge of Mr. THOMAS TALLON, whose well-establishe reputation has been fairly earned. We also Keep an Immense Stock of HATS, GAPS, TRUNKS AND VALISES! REMEMBER WE ARE THE ONE PRICE STORE: M. HELLMAN & CO., 1301 & 1303 Farnham Street PIANOS = ORCANS. J. S. WRIGHT, "% GHICKERING PIANO, FOR 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 Orgaas exclusively. Have had years' experience in the Business, and handls only the Bost. J. S. WRIGHT, 218 16th Street, City Hall Building, Omah HALSEY V. FITCH. Tune: m3teodaw Neb. DOUBLE AND SINGLE ACTING POWER AND HAND PUMPS Steam Pumps, Engine Trimmmgs, Mining Machinery, BELTING HOSE, BRASS AND IRON FITTiNCS, PIPE, STEAM PACKING, AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS A. L. STRANG, 205 Farnham Streat Omaha, Neb HENRY HORNBERGER, BSTATE AGRENT FOXR V. BLATZ'S MILWAUKEE BEER! In Kegs and Bottles. Special Figures to the Trads. Families Supplied at Reasonabls Prices. Office, 239 Douglaa Streat. Omaha GARPETINGS. Carpetings| J. B. BETWILER, Old Reliable Carpet House, 1405 DOUGLAS STREET, BET. 14TH AND 15TH (ESTABLISHED IN 1868.) Carpets, Qil-Cloths, Matting, Window-Shades, Lace Curtains, Carpetings| Etc. MY STOCK IS.THE LARCEST IN THE WEST. I Make a Specialty of WINDOW-SHADES AND LACE GURTAINS And have a Fall Line of Mats, Rugs, Stair Rods, Carpet- Lining Stair Pads, Crumb Clothes, Cornices, Cornice Poles, Lambrequins, Cords and Tassels In fact Everything kept in a First-Class Carpet House. Orders from abroad solicited. Satisfaction Guaranteed Call, or Address John B. Detwiler, 01d Reliablg (lamnet Hanga QAT *