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liE DAILY BEE 1. ROSEW ATZR: EDITOR Tee turkeys sre now comiog dovn $rom their high roosts snd breathing & sish of relief over the depsrture of Tasukegiving. GrEXCE is shuut 10 T a cobi : .. - abie is fully sbrees cighbors. Bxxaron G v, of Oregon, will probably bs unatle tosttend the next £ oare, owing to the decl of s besith. Ifhe remains away r March 4tn, andif Bahone acts {he republicans, the republicans 11 bave » majority in the sevate. — Srxazon Dawes e Likely to be re- elccted from Maseachuzetts without orposition. Ben. Harrison is shead ans, snd the contest over the seat left vacant by Gen.ral Ger- field's election is likely to prove es- e selly livel, Towa racks this yesr socond In the Tie: of whest atates, having r-ised 45, 600 000 bushels. Nebraska is credited Witk 9 130,000, while the whole west OMAHA IN THE LB JISLATURR Thers aro some vital intarests for Omahs and D.uglus county in the coming legisiature apart from any gen eral legislation that the peopls of the whole etate demand. Our city charter le'e..ve in mauy pait culsrs. The he- outgrown the limsits which the present charter, framed ten years ogo, was designed to cover. The construct- ion of water works, which are beund to be completed within the next six » oaths, will necessitate the constructs §0 1 0f asysten of sexers that may i vo've sn ouilay of from £200,000 to $400,000. The taxes to meet the cur- rint expentes and interast on oor dsbt are slready high enough, and any sttempt 4o ccmstruct @ system of sewers by a dired 1sy of epecial texes, would b:iuinous, We must leave the nest gsueration to pay for these public fice p-ovements, of which they will resp #: much benefit as we do. Twen! five years bence Omaha will contain a population of one huadred thousand {inabitants, and by that time the property valuation in thie city will probably exceed fifty millions. A levy to pay for the sowers will be a mere Dagatelle by that time, while at pree- ot n asseasment of six millions it u‘es 324 675,000 busbels to the ‘.cat erop of the world. T= Locze, we understend, has ex- .d himse'f s8 decidedly opposed the contest for the seat in the sen- ate to which he was not elected. Now, the hest way for Mr. Locke to show that be doesn’t want that seat, ard frow: s down thisscheme todeprive this evnnly of its rightfal reprosentation Tows L. Davexrorr and Marshal Jowllealled vpon General Garf the other day and Dz, Miller sneering arks that people are known by jmpauy they keep. This beivg cue Dr. Miller mey draw what ea irfaction he can from his intimacy ith Bill Carpum, Abe Hewitt and Cronio. It is a poor rale doctor, that dow’t work both ways. —_— CONEPIRING AGAINST TEE PEO- PLE. *Whom the gods with to dcstroy thoy fret make mad” When the wonepolies of Ncbraska packed ¢ ate convention with their cap- e, and forced upon the leand party of this stats repre- government who were notoriously in 3eszue with them to rob the tax pap {his state, and thus prevent an aesorsment of corporstion snd Jegislation to protect the ts cgaiust abuses by transpor- companies, they strack a blow + the Jiborties of our people that roact and which is sure ere long %o srray the pecple against them. Nut eontent with perpstrating thie outrage upon the pecple of Nebraska, the wenagers of thess monop olics now comspiving to « b them of rightfal represcutation in the legulaturs, The wixth plank of the republien plat- fora, h pledges our perty to re drese the grievances of the people from excossive tolls and olher abuses, is to be wmedes dead letter by the lawless counting out of members elsot- i by the people, whom the monopo not control. The most highe s conspiracy that has ever dirgraced Nebraska pol is the at'empt of the Union Pacific monpoly to disfranchise Douglas connty in the mext leglslature, by forcing & “ogos delegation under the ooyt Himay pretext into the state sen- %tz and Jower house. The entire on machineryin this ccunty wes y uoder the control h> Union Pasifle. Governor Nanoe hal packed the registry board wi'h Union Pacific eappers and noto. riooe politicsl tricketers of whom Has- @]l was a fair sample. More than two thirde of the judgesand elerks of elesiion appointed by the connty com- misioners were directly or indirectly nts of the U. P. The county lork, who appolnts the board of ©canvassers, is in active sympathy with that monopoly. With all this ma- chinery in'their cwn hande and after sing hundrads of voters various wards who were crowded the bulldosers, after recounting votes in scveral wards and scraping us all the odds avd ends overy- whore, the canvass of the official re- '8 g ve majolies ranzing from -five to one hundred for srs. Dosne, Howe, Paxton end over Coutant, Locke, and Barber. After waiting © weoks without saying one word ugh their organs as to the validity he election of the two senators and » mombers just named, these iufs- 1:08 conspirators tramp up & contest dsot up their claim for seats in the lezislatare. Lol them goon with theirsudacious robbery. The last straw broke the 's back. These high-handed at- odisfranchize communities and ios are rure to arouse the state to daugar. {And when the farm. wrs of Nebrasks, who form niue-tenths o our popalation rise in revolt against railroad, woe be to the monopo- )is and their tools. A day of retri b :tion will come and the people will f their rights in legislatie vand astitutional prohibitions which will #srever koep the the monopalies with- thoir legitimate ephere as public carriers. Tast day ianot very d'stant, either, ia Nebrasks. Teo yea:sh.ace, when «waelect & U States senater and eutirely vaw et of stato cfficers, sre will be no mational campaign, there will b no party in Nevracka « xcent the people oa one side and the corporate monopolies and their tools «n the other, The gentlemen who 1snage the politics of these corpora- ©19ms aro treading on avoleano. They defy the elements, rido rough- #od over an outraged peopls, bat when the next battls is over they will » found baried under the debrie. *Whom the gods wish to destroy they {icir make mad.” their danen icShane Fox would bankrupt nearly every property owoer of the cit; perience has demonstrated that on of at least one-half of our ouncil by the city at largo would ;ivo us a beiter grade of meu to man- o our city aflairs, Our merchants and manufactarers, w21 nine-tentha of all the other peo- ple, are heartily tired of the awarm of jasiices of the peace with which we aro afflicted. One justioe for each ward* would be ample, and, in fect, theee for the whole city would be still batter. The present system of levying ape- cial taxes for paving, guttering and carbing needs thorough overhauling, s the Omaba street rail- jarisliction of the city council, just 8 mach as railroads chartered by our s aro under the jurisdiction of slatures. No corporation ac ng our public thoroughfares it to be tolerated within this cor poration more powertul thsn the mu- ity itself, which can defy all y authorities and compel people for paving their own roadway The law governing our public necds amending also in sever. ol important particulars, which wr will not now diseuss, bt abount which the delegotion of Douglas county onght to be thoroaghly informed Now it strikesus that no better moth od of instracting oor members asto the requiremants of this city and county bs devisad than that prsued twe yesrsago. We ought to hold public moetings, at which every vitsl issoe from Donglss couaty, sud by lo0't mean the fonr bogus who hava't baen elected, ought tob present to hear what their con eats desire, s0 that they may carrs 0 active duty jn the lagislature. The sooner theee public meetsngs are held tie better, becanso much useful in formation will b obtained and a com- parinon views will draw out the most fensitle suzgsstons for leg- islative cur munictpal fairs. reform in —_— Tre speculstions indulged ia by politiciaus concerning the cabinet of General Garfield and whother he will retain Mr. Sherman or any other of President Hayes' advisers, hava re- called the fact that up tc 1841 cording to the Chicago Times, with tho single cxception of General Jack- son, all cur presidents have chosen some, but not all, of their cabinet ac from smong those who held like the preceding ad- ministration; but that since 1841 allof these procedentshave beenabandoned, Mr. Jobnson, indeed, retained Presi- dent Lincola's cabinet entire, but the circumstances that seemned to require this wera wholly exceptional. Taz National Grange is bolding s session in Washington, and on its ning day passed resclutions asking congr.ss to pass a bill making the commissioner of culture a csbinet icer; recommending congress to past what fs known as the Regan bill, regulsting tho transportation of cattle; favoring a graduated income tax; recommending a revieion of the patent laws, g0 that farmers who boy machines shall not be liable to pat- eatoes for penalties, but that the lisbilities should rest upon the per- sons from whom the machines are purchased. — Gex. Garrewp will probably have the appointment of a majority of the justices of the supreme court of the United States. Justices Clifford and Hant are both old men, and are euf- fecing from parslytio strokes. If they do not resign their coffices, it is not likely they will live long to enjoy thom. It is said that Justices Swayne and Strong, who are respectivaly sev- euty-five and seveaty-two years old, contemplste resigning. Justice Mil ler is now sixty-five years old, a2d Justice Bradly sixty-seven, and they are likely to have good work in them for ten years to come. TaERs arc many ‘ndications that the railroad kings will make a hrrd fight to eecure control of the United States senate. Vanderbilt is already laying hie plaos in New York to se- cure the election of Chauncey M. Deperw es the successor of Senator Kernan. Depew is the able attornsy of the New York Central road and corporation, whosa ioflaence in the legislature is very powerful. _— Ir Hitchoock has been giving thanks in advance for that cabinet sppoint- ment, he is Yikely to find it a case of misplaced confidence. TeE following civil sersice coun- drum is seriourly prcpounded by an exchenge: ““If a president deserves a peosion-of §12,000 & yesr for having served ths countey four years at $60,- 080 a year, how muoh should a gov- srnment olark get who has served six- teen years at$1200 a year? = ——— OCCIDENTAL JOTTINGS. Colorado. Amethyet is found in the Lake Ware mine at Sherman. There is not an emoty businees huse in Idsho Springs. Ouray’s nomerous heirs will contest the will lef: by bis ehiefahip. roof is being put on the new opera house st Coloradc-Springs. A fre in Denver's now hotel, the Windeor, last week, ocoasioned a loss of 210,000. Daily discoveries of new mines are reported from the telluriom belt, B.ulder county. Gothio City, in the Gunnison, is now connected wich the outside world by telegraph Quantities of Mormons sre being employed on the extension of the Denver & Rio Gran e railroad. Lieutepant Governor-elect Robinson has given $500 towards erecting & Ustholio church in Kokomo. The Williams mine in Lake district has a moothiy output of over 500 tons ner month, milling and smelting material. Tae Del Norte and Sammit Tele- phone company has its poles set to Del Norts. acd now awaits the arrival f the wire. A “circle railroad” ia soon to sur- round Denver. A company with 81, 100,600 capital bas been organized for its comstruction. A metailurgical and mining depsrt- ment is to be added to Colorado_col- , at Colorado Springs, with Prof. Willism Strieby in oherge, Over 800 cars of freight are now ly- ing along the main hne of the Santa Feroad west of Darned, wailing ship- ment over the mountain Castom end Tetens are the euphon- ious names of two new rival towns down in the northern end of Saguacho county. They ars both prospering. An important atrike of rich ore hi been made on Fletcher mountain, the ore running ninety cunces in ailv two in gold and seventy per eent in lead. An unusual emount of work is be- ing done on Sheep mountain, and ¢ mines, without an exception, a showing large smounts of mineral where sufficient depth- has been roached. Some three hundred men were prospecting and mining in North Park, Colorado, last summer, and half that number will romain- in the locality all winter, The new scheol of mines bollding st Golden is copleted, aud is certain- Iy very econwe tly constructed throughout. The location is excellent; <an be seen from all points of the city, and presents a fine appearanse, The Fort Collins Bxpress saya: “A auntel named Rowell came down from North park, last Monday, bringing hree wag m loads of game, consisting of deer, elk and four bears. The largest bear weighed eight hundred sounds. The hunters killed several Tka which they -z fn the woods over ight, On retu ning in the morning hey foond the beers prowling ubout d were_ fortunate enough hem all. Ono of the bears were beught in Colline and te balance shipped to Deaver.” voxing. Sovoral stamp mil's will be running ny epring in the wines about Jelm mountain. Cueyenne capits!'sts have organ- z2d & company to d:velop mines near Caammins City. A stexm eaw in'll has been pur- ‘hased andis mow an routa to the Cammine City eari The r twenty five miles, and ia to be further shortened. Over 700,000 pounds of govern- uent froight was hauled from Che; noe to Fort Laramie during the past all. The building sssociation of Lara- nio hes paid 2 profit of 50 per cent. apon two years' investment. On Wednesday of last week the sercury at Carbon and Fort Steele anced from 40 to 46 degrees below [ 2N A herd of 400 elk are ranging on the upper Platte, baing forced by the «evero weather from the mountains to the river valley. Mr. B. F. Everhart, a stock deteo- va on the Fort Oasper and_Sherley Basin trails says that 164,965 head of sattle have prased over thewm thi <0n going eatt. The boiler of the Bridger water ‘ank exploded laet Tuesday with ter- iic roo, blowing out one end and «ide of the engine house, and caasing ‘he death of Mr. James Liddls, the englnear. An overland passenger named Jas, of Vermont, shot himself ation last week and died at Obeyenne » d Ho had $650 0 his poss Pierce, the murderer of Joseph Hornbeck, the freighter, was conviot- -d lsst weak, at Laramie, of marder i the second degree, and sentenced to imprisonment for life. Fully two feet of snow ia blocking up the mountain roads between Rawlins and the Whits river canton- menis and nearly 800,000 pounds of overnment freight are in the depot warehouses awaiting shipment. - Daxota. Grand Forks has twenty-sevea ss- loons. The hotels at Montxose are erowded all the time. The track layers are at work forty miles west of Diitohell. McCook county has sixtegn organ- #2d echool districts. The new charch at Wittenburg was Jdedicated last Sunday. Parker has doubled her proparty valustion during the past six months. Five thousand bushels of wheat per day are received at Casselton. Cars to ship it away are next to impousible to get. The population of Stutsman connty bas more than doubled during the past year. The railroad well at Plaokiogton is oue hundred and fifty feet deep and atains seventy feet of water. Track will ba laid on the Sonthern Minuesota as far as the Vermillion river falls. The receipts of wheat at Flandreau avarage about 2000 bushels per da Eighty-eight miles of railroad have been graded up the Jim river, north of Huron, An extra large crop of flax was ratsed in Hutchinson county this sea- son. A quantity of wheat near Water- town averaged thirty-five bushels to the acre. From fifteen hundred to_two thou- sand bushels of wheat per day are ta- kea into the Volga elevatore, A number of buildinge, depot, ho- tels, stores, section houses, ware houses, ete., are_being built at Bux- ] 4.0, a now town in Thraill eounty. Oregon and Washington: Grdln shipments continue to be made from Portland. “About thirty men will winter in the & caglt mines, o There are indications that the Ool- umbia river will soon be closed to cavigation by ice. The survey of Yaquma bay m:de by ihe government shows a safe channcl through the reef outside the bar. A men pamed Haugh of Beaver Loke (Or.) killed four panthers with foar successive shots in the ccuree of two hours. A whale reoently found stranded on the beach near the mouth of the Ump- qua riv-r, Or., wassold by its finders #1800, Atadepth of 600 feet the Van- couver ceal Lompany have reached an 11-foot zeam of excellent ocoal neir the old workings. An organizalion of a branch of the Irish National and Industrial League has been effected at Portland. Officers were eiected, and 81 members sigaed the roll, ihere is considerable complaint among farmers throughout the state owing to the absence of rain this fall. In many sections the grourd is so dry that the farmers have not boen able to put in the fall érops: ‘The Northern Pacific has recently sold ten townships to a German col- ony on the Pen d'Oriells end of their line, cons sting of 20,740 acres, and nettiog the company over half % mil- Mon of dollare. Ten sticks of timber have recently been gotten out at the east side camp for the Port Blakely (W.T.) mills, the longest being 162 feet in length snd 24 inches at the emallest end. There waa very little difference in any of them, and allof the finest fire timber. At the Cascades lahding, George Weilder is building two large flat- boats for the purpose of shipping ties and cardwood to the Dalias for the Oregon railwsy & Navigation com- peny. He has a contract for 100,000 corde, and the company is to furnish the towing frem Little White Salmon to the Dallas. These scows will be of oqual eapacity, two hundred cords ata load, Agrand Indisn potlach s been in progress un Squaxon island, few A young man of Provo killed one grizaly and two brown bears in Provo eanyon last week, The owners of mmes in the Frisco dietrict sre making preparations for a ‘vigorous winter campsign. ‘Ihe Utsh Eastern is only eight miles from Coalville, and is beiog rap 11ly rushed forward to completion. The drift : ¢ the 70 footlevel of the Ouatario mine at Park Oity has tapped the vein, shoring a fine body of ores Work on the temple at Logan is be- fog pushed with grest vigor, end sirenuous cfforts are being made to get it under cover befcre December Tas Friseo Times complains thst Beaver valley is infested with oattle thioves, who find a ready market at Milford for the atolen beef. The bullion shipments from Silver Reef, through Wells, Fargo & Co., from the 84 of November to the 10:b, inclusive, aggregated the sum of §13,- 917.03 Idaho. The ice bridge st Blackfoot over the Snake riveris completed and teams are crossing. Tae Panamint mine st Idaho Oly i being thoroughly eyplored by its owners with good prospects of a Tich ntrike, A smelter will ba erected &t some point In the Wood river country this winter, and a daily paper is also 0 be started soon. The population of Alturas county will be considerably increased nexi year. The estimate ia placed from 15,000 to 40,000. From three to six inches of snow lies on the Saw Tooth mountains, but the Salmon volley and adjacent foot- hills are clear and grass still green. Nineteen hundred locations have ‘been reeorded in the Wood river coun. try this season. The number will pip s il GHEE] Y BROS, PACKING CO.,, PORK AND BEEF PACKERS Wholesale and Retail in FRESH MEATS& PROVISIONS, GAME, POULTRY, FISH, ETC. CITY AND COUNTY ORDERS SOLICITED. OFFICE CITY MARKET—1415 Douglas St. Packing House, Opposite Omaha Stock Yards, U. P. R. R. TEHLEFPSONE CONNEOTIONS. Successors to Jas, K, Ish, DRUGGISTS AND PERFUMERS. Dealers in Fine Imported Extracts. Toilet Waters, Colognes, Soaps, Toilet Powders. &o. A full line of Surzical Instrumonts, Pocket Cescs, Trusses aud Suprorters. Absolutely Purs Drugsand Chemicals used in Dispensing. - Proscrl; tions fled a any hour of he night. JFas. B. Tsh. Lawrence McMahon. 1Z2AFTARNEH AN STRERT. MORE POPULAR THAN EVER. The Genuins SINGER NEW FAMILY SEWING MAGHINE. The popular demand for the GENUINE SINGER in 1879 exceeded thatof #n¥ previous year during th Tieliable” fl Quarter of & Cen'ury in which this “Old chine has een before the public. In 1878 we sold 366,422 Machines. In 1879 we sold 431,167 Machines. Excess over any previous year 74,735 Machines. Our sales last year were at the rate of over 1400 Sewing Machines a Day| REMEBMEIEIR, That Every REAL Singer Sewing Ma- § ehine his this Trade most likely rezch 2000 before Christ- mas should the weather continue favor- able. In Smiley’s Canyon Yankee Fork, two eompznies, the Emma and Vienns, are at work. A 73-foot ehaft on the Emma showa a three-foot vein of ors, most of it sassaying from $300 to $1200 per ton. The company have a foree of men running a tuons) to reach the vein at a depth of over 250 feet. The miles below Olympis, W. T. Last week about 1000 Indians assembled there, making indis:riminato presonta of blanke:s, flour, clothing, etc., to ech other. A number of Olympians, inoluding Gov. Newell and Jy, weni_down to witnes cires. The unearthly yolls of the cavages during a war dance could heard for miles, The Viotoria Colonit det, who spent the Skagit mines, pronouncesthe diggings & palpable failure. He says $10,00 is in excess of the vall taken out there. Th fifty men there when be left. Fully thtee hundred men had left the mines dirgusted _within the last month. Miesof mill dams, scores of water wheels, pumps, machinery, too! esbins, sluices and lomber are sbundand. Thousands of feet of of the creek at frechet to earry aw Ererybody has become demoralias correspon- mmer in the Cailtforma. Forest fires are raging neer Santa Barbara. W. rk has begun on the new insane asylum at Stookton. Road agents continue to b trouble- some in Neveda county. Ban Feancitco cofuiplal price of con), which is$3 a ton. The frost has put an end to grape picking and crushing at the viverics. Moody end Sankey are drewing crowded houses in Sau Francisco. The wine produced this year in 8 mowa ‘county will amount to over 850,000 gallons, A Innd elide occurred last week on the San Liia Obixpo railroad, stopping travel for two daya. Stockton Is shipping over 500 tons of grain a day, but the warohous continue filled tn their atmost ca) ity The vorable weather h3s enabled the farme:s on the coat :n nearly clean up their graini thresh- og. Oakland’s new railroad bridge for the narrow gusge railroad will be near- Iy 700 feet in lengtk. A gharp shock of esrthquake was felt at_Santa Barbara on tho 14th inst. Tt lasted weveral seconds but did no damage. The Oentral Pacifie railroad com- have presented their aunual r showing that they operate 2575 miles of rallroad. Forest fires in the region of Laguna aud Green Valley, Santa Crus county, have done greas damage to tmber, funces, bridges, etc. The first fifteen miles of the Oali- fornia Sruthern railroad from San Diego will be put under contract with- ina few days, all preliminary work haviog been completed. of the The whalers in Monterey Bay are having lively times. A echool of whales came in near the town the other day and a company took after them. They killed one and hooked ou to another, which took them out to the heads and sunk, compelling the whalera to cut loot Nevada. Travel on the Central Pacific is in- creasing. The aggregate losses from the fire ot Mammoth City were $45,000. The works of the Goodshaw com- pany at Bodie are being rebutlt. The varlous towns in the state sre contesting for the location of the in- saneasylum. The treasurer of Storey county has defaulted in the sum of $21,940.91. Ruby Lake, formerly the sports- man's paradise, is drying up. Over $25,340.44 of bullion were shipped by the Standard company, of Bodie, during the week ending No- vember 13. Virginia City 1s said to be having a mora) boom, aad policemen have tle to do. A partition in_the Sierra Nevada mine, at Virginia City, gave way last weck, fatally crushing the foreman, A fire broke out on Monday In the 2050-foot level of the Consolidated Tmperial mine at Virginia City, which was extinguishrd with extreme diffi- calty. In the next sssembly out of fifty members there will be but seven 1e- publicans—three from Eareka, three from Ormeby and one from Lander., The Nevada Southern road will be oven for travel on the first of June, 1881 The building of this road is only a starter of which will be a continuous line of rails from Batile Mountain to the Colerado ri and will be the means of opening an im- mense field of good mineral country, Ttah. The weather at Salt Lake has been intensely cold. Salt Lake has established a city es- tray pound. The prospects In the Marysvale Vieona, from which ore has been shipp-d o Salt Lke the past season, s tho best developed mine in the oan- son. At a depth of 250 feot from the discovery the vein is four fost in width, the best ore sampling over 8000 por cm, and. the average $800. a Montana, ame is sald to be plenty and Hunt- er2 are few in Meagher county. Copper mining is rapidly assuming great importance in Butte. The ssscssment of Deer Lodge eoun- ty this year will be over $4,000,000. Threo hundred new bui been erected in Buite ville, has been patented in Missoula county. The 80-stamp mill at the Alice mine at Butte is the largest dry erushing millin the world. Taere have been one hundred new sheep sheds constructed in Meaghr county this fall. The Presbyto.ian chureh edifice at Butte, a handsome brick structure, will be finished before midwincer. Tho Beel mine, which was pur- chased last spring for $100,000, is now held at a cool million, Itsquartz averages 40, per cent. copper and 260 ounces of silver tn the ton. The balk of the Piegans and Bloc# Indians will winter in Meagher county because thero are euch vaat herds of buffilo in ha region of the Big Bend of the Musselshell, The plscar mining operations in Alder gulch doring the season just closed have been very eatisfactory to the cliim owners. The yield of gold duat has been somewhat in excess of that of last year. At tbo present prices of farm pro- duce the farmere of Montana should be in the best financial condition of any class in the territory, except the horse, esttle, and wocl growers, who are always in the lead. A handsome gold bar, of the value of §2,000, was turned out by the asay offico at Helena for the Boston & Montana Go'd Mining company— the product of 116 tons of ore from the Gloster mine. Very rich bodles of ore and of an- usually large dimensions are being uncovered at the Mant ine near Tons of frea gold bearing ying 18 high s $400a ton, are being ex‘racted. The eight foot veia promises to yield a fabulous amount of bullion. Upwards of 100 quariz stamps are in constant operation within a circuit of 25 miles of Helena. Upwards of 100 additional stamps will be put in operation within the same limits between now and next autumn. Forty of thess will b added to the present twenty on the Bonanza Chief; twenty will be put up on the Gloster mine; twenty on the Bsld Buite; ten on the Drum Lomond; five on the Star of the West, and probably twenty on the Mantle.—[Helena Herald. e ———— 15 Should your food not properly di- gest, then it is time to take Hamburg Drops. Mark cast into the Iron Btand and em- bedded in the Arm of the Machine. For every business day in {he year, ISH & McMAHON, The “0ld Reliable” 2) Singer is the Strongest, .Oz the Simplest, the Most Durable Sewing Ma- chine ever yet Oon- stracted. THE SINGER MANUFACTURING CO. Priucipal Office: 34 Union Square, New York. 1,500 Subcrdinate Offices, in the United States and Canada, and 8,000 Offices inthe Old ‘World and South America. ‘sepl6-d&wif HOTELS. THE ORIGINAL, BRIGGS HOUSE ! Cor. Randolph §t. & 5th Ave,, OBIOAGO ILL, $2.00 AND $2.50 PER DAY in the business centrs, convenient e Eloganily furnished, et pass 68, Froprietor. OGDEN HOUSE, Cor. MARKET ST. & BROADWAY Council Bluffs, Towa: Online o Btrost. Rallwey, Omaibus ‘o and from all trams. RATES—Parior floor, $3.00 per day; second floor, 82.60 per day ; thifd foor, 82.00. The best furnished and moat comnodious house 1n the city. GEO.T. PHELTS Prop FRONTIER HOTEL, Laramie, Wyoming. ‘The miners resort, good accommodations, sigvmpl room, chaegesressonatie. Specia on %o traveling men. l“l‘l?:lhu G5 l? C HILLIARD Proprietor. INTER - 0CEAN HOTEL, Gheyetifie, Wyoming. Fine arge Sample Kooid, one pot. Trains step from 20 minute to2hours for dinner. Free Bus toand from Depot, Rat 75 cants, A. . BALCOM, Propristor. DE! mio-t "UPTON HOUSE, Schuyler, Neb, Fhst-class Houso, Good deals, Grod Beds Airy Rooms, and kind and sccommodating treatment, 2 good sample rooms. Specia attention paid to commercial travelers. S.-MILLER, Prop., Schuyler, NEERASE A VINEGAR WORKS ! ERNST KREBS, Manager. Manufasturer of all kinds of VINEG AR Je e St Bot. 9th and 100h. OWARA, NEB EKAITLISET, THE MERCHANT TAILOR, Iprepared to make Pants, Suita and oy cremts o ndar. Prioe, Bt a0d workmamsiup gosrenteed 0 sult ©One Door West of (irniskshank's. 8101y alst —————— s DEmMAiENEDY RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swel/- ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Toqth, Ear and Headache, Frosted ‘oot and Ears, and all other Pains Aches. Ben sy, nd evey gow suter, g STk paih e pare cheep a5 posirs proct ey Directions tn Fleven Language. 80LD BY ALL, DEUGGISTS AND DEALERS N MEDIOINE. A.VOGELER & CO., Baltimore, &, V. 5.4 EKENNEDY'S EAST INDIA ‘NOTLIWASNOD uemegmeieqy suoNg WENBWNOUH ‘eWCededq J0q BITTERS ¥ I ILER & CO, SOLH MANUFACTURHERS OMAHA. Neb. PROPOSALS FOR BONDS. A FAMILY TONIC AND Ssaled proposals will be ‘recsived by the undersigned st bis office until 3 c'elock . m. Eatardsy, the 4th day of December, 1839, for the purchase of one huadred snd twent v cent. per annnm, payablo semi-aaru Uy inthe by of New Said bonds shall be redeemable at the option of the board ol county commicsioners of said county, at the expiration of ten years from the date of same, but no levy shall bs mde to pay apypack of e principal of mia bonds watl atier the expiration of sald ten years. Interest shall be paid on eaid bonds only from and after the date f the sals cf rt thereo, 420 be dwivered as follor BARKING HOUSES. | THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED. BANKING HOUSE IN NEBRASKA. | CALDWELL, HAMILTONCO BAN'_KERS. Business trazsacted rame a8 that o an Incor- porated Baak. Accounts kept in Curreney 9F §0Id subject to #ight oheak without notice. ct{ifioaten of deposit lasued pavahio fn thre: atx and twelve Forthe, hearing. Intes demand without Intefods. eurities at market ratea of futarest Buy and sell goid, bills et exchange Gevern- ‘meut, Btate, County and Clty Bonds. Draw Sight Drafts on Fnzland, Ireland, Scot- Iand, and all parts of Europe. Soll Earopean Passage Tickebs. GOLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. sugldtt 0. 8 DEPOSITORY. First Namionar Banx OF CMAHA. Cor. 13th and Farnham Streets, OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHMENT IX OMAHA. (BUCESSORS TO KOUNTZE BROS.,) BTABLISIED ¥ 1856, Organtzed as & National Bauk, August 30, 1863, Capital and Profits Over$300,000 Spectaily authorized by the or. 10 receivs Subscription to the U.S.4 PER CENT. FUNDED LOAN. OFFICERS ARD DIKECTORS @xmuan Kcowrzs, Preeident, Aveysru: ‘This bank receivesdeposit without regard so amounta. Igam=s timg certificates bearing Interest. Drawe drafts cn #an Francisco aad prinel citles of the United Etatos, siss London, Dubl Edinburgh and the priacipal cities of the eonti- nent of . Sell passag ticketa tor Emigracta fn_the Ta- man_ne. maylatt BEAL ESTATE BROKER Geo. P. Bemis’ ReaL Estate Acewcy. 164k & Douglas Sts., Omaha, Neb. This agency does sSTRIOTLY 8 brokersge bus- aom. Does notspectiate, and therafors sny bate ains on ita books are fnsured to lts patroua, in stead of being gobbled up by the agent BOGGS & HILL. REAL ESTATE BROKERS No 1408 Farnham Street OMAHA - NEBRASKA. Office —North Side opp. Grand Central Hotal. Nebraska Land Agency. DAVIS & SNYDER, 1605 Farnham St. Omaha, Nebr. 400,000 AGRES caretully selected land n Eastern ebraska for mle. Great Bargaing in improved farms, and Omaha O¥ v 'WEBSTER SNYDER, Late Land Com'r U. P. B. B 4p-tobTet Bl;;on Reed & Ec':.l,n oromsT RaTANLIED REAL ESTATE AGENCY IN NEBRASKA. Koep & complete abstract of title to all Real Estate in Omaha and Douglas Count 1t JNO. G. JACOBS, (Formerty of Glsh & Jacobs) UNDERTAKER No. 1417 Farnham 8., Old Stand of Jacob Gl ORDKRS BI' TELRGRAPH SGLICITH anry E. F. COOK, UNDERTAKER, 024 Fellows’ Bloek. Prompt attentlon given ¢ orders by telegraph. 1 e g oo BOOTS AND SHOES At s LOWER PIGURE than st any other ghos honss in the city, first dsy of Januar , 185 st day of July, 1857, fiest day of January, 1883, be recelved at the same’ time ‘purch: 125,0C3 of bonds, the entire amount to be delivered Janusry lst, 1581 The boa P. LANG'S, 236 FARNHAM §T. LADIE®’ & GENTS, SHOES MADE TO ORDER a4 satislaction guar ateed, Prios ry reason- | .. i FOR Advauces mads to cusiomers on spproved e 1856. 1880. W call the attention of Buyers to Our Extensive Stock of _ CLOTHING, AND GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. We carry the Largest and BEST SELECTED STOCK OF COODS IN OMA Which We are Selling at GUARANTEED PRICES 11 OUR MERCHANT TAILORING DEPARTMENT Isin eharge of Mr. THOMAS TALLON, whose well-establishe reputation has been fairly earned, ‘We also Keep an Immense Stock of HATS, CAPS, TRUNKS AND VALISES?! REMEMBER WE ARE THE ONS PRICE STORE M. HELLMAN & CQ, 1301 & 1303 Farnham Stres PIANOS = ORCANS. J. S. WRIGHT, “*t CHICKERING PIANO, And Sole Agent for Hallet Davis & Co., James & Holmstrom, and J. & C. ent for the Estey, ayne Organ Fischer's Pianos, also Sole Burdett, and the Fort Co’s, Organs, I deal in Pianos and Organs exclusively. Have had years’ experience in the Business, and handle only the Best. J.” 8. WRIGHT, 218 16th Street, City Hall Building Omaha, Neb. HALSEY V. FITCH. Tuner. DOUBLE AND SINGLE ACTING POWER AND HAND PUMPS Steam Pamps, Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, BELTING E, BRASS AND IROM FITTINGS, PIPE, STEAM PACKING, W’; ND RETAIL. HALLADAY mfi)' ILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS A. L. STRANG, 205 Farnham Straet Omaha. Neb HENRY HORNBERGER, STATH AGENT FOR V. BLATZ'S MILWAUKEE BEER! In Kegs and Bottles. Special Figures to the Trade. Families Supplied at Reasonable Prices. Office, 230 Douglas Rtraat. Omaha GARPETINGS. Carpetings!| Carpetings! J. B. D=TWILER, Old Reliak’: Carpet House, 1405 DOUGLAS STREET, BET. 14TH AND 15TH (ESTABLISHED IN 1868) Carpets, Oil-Cloths, Matting, Window-Shades, Lace Curtains, Etc. MY STOCK IS THE LARCEST IN THE WEST. I Make a Specialty of WINDOW-SHADES AND LACE GURTAINS And have a Full 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. Satistaction Guaranteed Call, or Address - John B. Detwiler, : 01d Reliable Carpet House, OMAHA, .