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THE DATLY BEE B. ROSEW ATER: EDITOR - Arres Japuscy 1st Brother Brooks will have more leisure to devote to Wman's Gessip About Woman. APBEY L o ~.wdcann ihe Pasior 4 Jum O'Neil, who has bee: the princips P bracing up o pers pow dev character will is cld role of the Pirate Ki Tar Republicon seks, “What w. Ao with our ex-vice precidents] hem alore, sonny, let ther e, and devote your evergies t question, What shail we do wit} ¢ x editors? Mapade MoxTIFOIND, 8 well-know: Perisien writer, hes been sentences t0 six monthe’ imprisonment for of fenees against public morals. This i {he firs! instance on record where pub morals in France have been of And Zola still writes. fonded. Nepraska has more statesmen t re mile of area ready for sen s+orial sacrifice than any otherstate i viom. The prospect for a fr + all scrob racethere is promiein NEBRASKA FOR SHEEP. To the Elitor f the Boe. I would like to eay through your widely circulated papér, which repre- sents the west, but more cspecially raska, that thers is no country in 113, north, south, east or'west, ture to sheep raising, as this Valley of the Republican. Every ‘eature of the eouniry favorsit. The nd is sufficiently rolling with open winters and a clear, dry atmos- phere, while upon nearly every ction of lsnd there gushes forth the ground clear beautifal ate Is it not strange ald every year import wool eign countries with such a country as this is, which invites east- ra capital to invest in a0 havdsomely aying a department of agriculture. [ would add slso that here we have hie clearest streams, making the best seible water power for milis to man- cture the wool which will soon be he leading product of this valley, as « eotton of some of the southern from ton, December 1 JM.S Our correspondent touches on a sabject of great importance to the mers of this state. No one of the tern states possesses such admir- oneer Press. And Pcd. still thinks he has “hi and clection sure” on the fir —_— cvand democracy go hanc gures from the postcfi st show that the states whic rficld in November retort zy dollar expended fc the Haneoch five centa. T 8 for e e, all et while stes return but six it in the first class is S‘Z,('Kl(l."[l last yesr; the deficit in the otha 500,000. sl=o calls for the vigorous hu 2 of the rascal. Hewitt is like th ! who joine in the ery of “'st in order to cover up his owi ro in the transaction. —_— Tae failure of 1he Georgia electors lege to meet on Wednesday is like dste the clectorsl vote The law requires that shall bo prescnt at the o the very day and hour epec ied On cne occasion the votes of whose cloctors, detai storm, ed t in time, were ted by congress. No formal de on was rendered, but the rofusal t mt is generally r £ arded as tan'a wount to a ruling an «"in Well sirset may soem : ittle importance to weste: The faot of the matter i *hat the manipulations of the Wal strect jobbers affects the whoie moi- system of the country. Jus ent tho *bull” manipulator od stocks up to the P heiropponeute,the “‘bears, are o dlinting bylocking up milli ¥ iu orderto produceastring ) the “bulis” to sl The whole monetery o f he country fecls the pres w from this stock gamt 1 i wewntime the gam € at T mod because this paper has premsturcly made public the fact thut his editoris] flsoon becutoff. He calls ater a liar, and Tux Bre atother for stating that Mr. Hitch- <ock is s0on to supplant Mr. Brcoke as editor in chief. If anybody hes ed about this trivial matter it is Mr. Hitcheook himself. Our inform had it from Mr. Hitcheock himn. ot more than one week ago, that this change i the editorial managemert of the Republican was contemplat and would go into eflect with the ing year. If Mr. Brooks haa u kept in the dark aa to hus sum- ytaking of, neither Tie Bex cr R sewater are to blame. We wre sory to part with Mr. Brooks. He has made the ~Republican such spleudid paper to ouflank in tle journalistic race. ©ief of tho Republican, goes b Tux electoral colleges of the wtates wth the single exception of Geurg'a, met Wodneaday and cast their votes forfpresident and yice-president. T vote #0 cast wos eigned in triplicste, one copy being deposited in the of the state, another for. warded by mail to the president of the | and the third will be delivercd nds of a special messenger to | the secretary of state. Onefuriber | step remaine before the final declaring | of the result. On the second Wednes- | day of Februsry, 1881, boih houses of | to amsemble i jolnt con- According to the constitu- tin,““the prosident of the senate ehall, f presenca of “the senate and of ropresentatives, open sll the cates, and the votes -shall then vention. Tue contest over the seats of Mesers. Dosne and Howe was the last desperate ort of desperate men, 1t is preity generally understood tha of Soyder in the Cheyenne districthrd beeu assured o nocon- vt would have been made over the | | Louis. anle resources for wool growing as Nebraska, Other wostern states have ensive ranges, and as dry au ere, but none have cultivated 5d available sheep ranges in sach close proximity as our own. This isan importent element ag, because sheep for mutton aud heep for wool must be taken into ac The valleys of the Elkhorn, Loup and Republican rivers are un- sirpussed a8 ranges for sheep. All posaces & climste in which the variove discases o common to sheep in the Admirable gra: ing, open wintersand smplowater sup- ply ffer a constant prewiam for the favestment of capltal in this branch of agricul Why, 2s our correrpon- dent asks, shou'd we import our sup- oly of wool from abroad, when such magificent opportunities for home geowth and manufastare lie near at hand! If Nebraskans would only awaken to the rich bonaiiza which our walo cffers to sheep raisers, a few years would placo this state at the heud of weol growers in the union. plentiful supply of wool would the and mainten ance of woolen tactcries on our streams a1d rivers, and a good home market more e; ehecp rais- count. est are unknown. tion BLACK HILLS NUGGETS. ‘Wood at Deadwood is §4.50 a cord. Lawrence county bonds are in de- mand at 1.033. Sturgis City rchool is in a most flourishing condition. Wild ducks are very plentiful on Bear Butte creek. There will be a scarcity of hay in the Hills-thie winter, The library association of Rapid is frying 10 secure a charter. Lesd City has two well equipped hack lines and three express. The thermometer lart Suudsy in Pennington was 24° below zaro. A besr weighivg 345 pounds wos brought into Dead wood last week. A Hill's bunter trapped 120 beavers on alate excursion on the Bismarck road. A miner was killed Isst week in the Homestake by elipping down an in- cline. Tatensely cold weather is prevailing thronghout the valleys of the foot hills Tae Homestake company employs forty teaws hauling wood from Pen- nington. The suit of the King Solomon gold mine has been decided in faver of the defendants. The Montana minir.g company, at Rockford, has been offered 835,000 for the Montana mine, Ranchers on the Bigbottom have completed their 21l plowing and report cattle as Jookin; splendidly. Caledonia mine at Central is ouly rumning twenty stamps on scoount of the scarcity of water. The goveroment telegraph line was down last week, seriously iaterrupting communication with the north. A larg force of men are engaged in erecting poles for the telephore ex- with the neglect of technical educa vion in this country—ia probably s sufficient explanation of the active of- forts now made to secure the services of pattern makers, designers and artis- tio workmen from the cities of Ger- doubtful if anything like the ashioned system of aoprentice- ship can ever be revived. Time was when, for the most part, the skilled artisan who was master of his trade, worked at home or in a shop connec- ted with his own house, assisted by a few younger workmen as journeymen. In his house and family he would re- ceive ons or two lads to learn, during a four years' engagement, the art and mysteries of his craft; master himself tsaching them work, feeding and cloching them, ani looking carefully after their moral and personal habits. But the extension of trades and the the use of machinery hss destroyed the best and most important fea- tures of apprenticeship. The master is no longer a_craftsman, but an em- ployer. Complicatedmachinerycrowds out the boy learner, and requires the skilled workman, whose eyes and fin- gers have already been trained in some similar occupation; the master no lon- ger works at the trade, but dirccts and finds the capital. The apprentice has become merely the boy worker, at ra- Quced rates and picking up the trade asbesthe can. Heis pitchforked into the business; no one is responsible for his training, and if he doesn’t like job, he leaves In search of a_better one and his place is srpplied by another boy from the street. But, while in many occupations ap- prenticeship can never be restored to its former value as a guarantee of good end cficient workmanship, some ap- prosch toward supplying its place might be m: f those rudiments of industrial trainiog common to all tho skilled avoeations were taught in our publicschools. he change ccmpany of Deadwood. Developments in the King Solomon mine st Rochford will bo pushed at once. A fino body of oro has been struck. The Homestake company has de- clared an extra dividend of thirty cents cn the share, aggregating £60,000. The Homestake mining company at Lead City uses ofl taken from the sprindz near Jenny's stockade; in the lower Hils. Articles of incorporation for the Spearfish College have been drawn up and forwarded to the secretary of the territory. The tliistian people of Deadwood are united in their efforts to close up #:loons and places of business on the Sabbath. The Black Hills canal end water works are supplying Lead with all that for our farmers. One thing is certaio, it our own peopledo not take up thie asbject others will renp the profit of isight. Already large droves of sheep are coming intc the valleys of the North Platte coun try and another will doubileze witnessa still further increase of sheep on the fertile and weli-watered ranges of Nebraska. superior business THE RIVER OUTLET. t) water transportation and the fuw- ment of the water courses of > ooe but & westorn or shipper csn fally spprociste the immense import ance of an early opening of the great water ways of the continent to trade and commerco. A sucoessful navign tion of the Missistippi and Missouri lions a year i ho country in the sav s snatched from the hands of rut loss movepolies. Every year makes importance of river fumer, mercha rivers would add the we:lth of i the surpas improvement more spperent. Gigan- tic coneclidations are, hydra- like, wrapping their ircn grasp around the producers of the great west. Immense sums of money are being used to irflaence legislation and prevent the people from employing the remedy of t Rater are advanced until the earniogn of the people are swept Info the railroad coffere, and trade and_ agriculture lose their greatest stimulus, a fair end sure profit on the investment. In the mean Lw agaiust theit oppressors. time, at our very doors, lies an agent ready to offer its services 1o relieving the people from their thrall- dom, adequate to open up new regions %o agriculture and industry and cap- able of farnishing a permanent check to corperate greed and monopoly ex- tortion. Cheap transportation is the ove crying need of the Great West. The river at our feet only needs a litle encouragement to give the people of Nebraska perm- anent eolution of this great problom. Ocher states are tuking up the ques- tion with an earnest determinstion w.ich avgurs wall for their success. Kansas City is organizing a live f barges between that city and St. Louis. St. Lovis ‘merchants have taken the ample transportation facilities between that port aud New Ocleans. Now let Nebraska take her part in this great movement. The general governm alone can make adequate improve- ments on our great water ways, but we caunot expect congress to act until we have shown some disposition of our own to desl with this greatand im- portant subject. A fow years will donbtless witness the arrival of occan stesmers on the Missiesippi es high up, perhaps, as St. All the developments of naval architecture are now in the line of light draught vessels, aod & steamer drawing ouly six feet of water, built las county delegation. The | on the model of the Lividis, is a pos ncpoly munagere without Sayder |sibility of the fature. Shoul aud Wells féil of a majority. {such prove the case, our in- Fiodiog that t {land cities will become ports £or the shipment of western produce to Europe entirely by water. Barge lines will become the most profitable presented itself. Tois explains why nothing was sxid | ®bout & contest in Omaha urtil solate | #day. OaFiday preceding the Sat- | o3 which notice of contest ws terved on the Douglay “county seoa- tore, Diley and Ballentine were in Norih Pistie and Sidney sersiog the uotices of the westorn conteste, while | the T. P. cppers in Omaba held | thewsclves ia readiness to the signal of declared they should Bot occapy. and effective means of bringing our grain down the river to the ports of lading. Raiiroad monopolies will lower their rates ani colors, and be compelied to compete for traflic. Such & future can and will be hstened if our people will take the matter in their own hands, end, by energetic work, draw the attention of the country at large Jump at | to the possibilities of river improve- | the telegraph for the | ment seizare of the scats the people had ' the all-i and the eonsequent solution of | mportant question of cheap trausportation. beverage required, and of an excel- lent quality. The Homestake company fs build- ing a two-story brick ret of ofices, and hes a two hundred stamp mill ia prospect. Mr. Halley, teller of the First National Bank of Deadwood, will ilar institution in Rapid pitel of §50,000. The Alta Lodi mining company has let tho contract for the delivery of 600 corde of w +d at its mill to be de- corporated into the common schoo course, it would greatly tend to cor- root the sickly and pernicious senti- mont which now infests the youth of our public echools touching the digui y of manual labor occapations. Youth- fal hoodlumiem, which has become the standing reproach of Americen cities, is largely made up of unplaced, idle and incapable young fel who were full of good inte when they left the public schools, but who bad imbibed o dread of hard work. They wero resolved to trust toluck and tako their chances ont- side the swarming dinner-pail brizade, Among the incidental | beneits of society, tpringing from a | wholesome provision of this kind in- | ant food staple. The bran, shorts, etc., utilized for the dairy, is son- verted into still mors valuable pro- ducts—milk, butter and cheese. And thus, whether we consider the wheat crop of Towa in its relations to the state export trade, or its home econo- mies, we find it to be a source of im- mense_wealth to our people. For a stato that isalready in the front rank in the production of ‘corn aud Eogs, this showing of wheat production is certainly remarkable and full of en: couragement for the future of the state, Towa lies in the great trans-conti- nental pathway. The two greatest rivers of the continent, and of the world, wash its east and weet bound- aries. It has less waste land than any other stats in the union. Itis far encugh south to raise good corn and far enough north to raise good wheat and is located just right to reach all the great markets by the cheapest lines of transportaticn, both by rail and wat and amid the strong-— est competition for freights. Under these circumstances a study of the wheat crop of Iowa, in connection with all the great and varied crops yielded from the prolific soil is » mat- ter of prideand thanksgiving. Iowsns have much to bs_thankful for, and, in the language of Governor Gear, in his Thanksgiving proclamation, *‘Let all join in giving hearty thanks for our abundant harvests' and for en- hanced prosperity in both nation and state.” A Kansas Men's Satisfaction. J. H. Keuffmann, Esq, of Hatton, Rush Co., Kane., sometime ago wrote: 1 am eura everyone who ever tried the Hamburg Drops will be satisfied with the result and use them again. The romedy has been in use by our family and has rendered excellent service. | | but finding no soft place ready o fall into, they quickly soursd and dezen- viclous vagabondage to get this non- sense out of their heads, and dispcso them to buckle into the serious wi of earning a living. It appears that niety-two per cent. of our criminals ate directly traceabls to the unskilled and half-educated laboring classes; and this fact goes far to prove that it is cheaper to toach the child the ele- metits of some honest calling in an industrial school than itis to teach aman a trade in the penitentiary. The better educa ed our ariisans are the better workmen thoy will make—if the education is of the right sort; is in the line of their fa- tare career, not away from it. Tho Natural Science Monthly iosists that livered at the 1ate of 100 cords per mop:+ The Sitting Bull mine at Galena is puting ou a fall forcy of laborers, d there is » romor thst the Flor- e mill will ba leazed for the bene. it of that property. Central City barely escaped burning t nd time he night of Nov. 20:h. baild ngs were destroyed at a Ioss of 86000, supposed to bo the work of anincenci ry v firemen has passed a resolution to st 7 -1l work and hang any person cay calmg any goods atany fire which 1sy occur in that town in the fut Tarough trave! s begian vor the Pierro line The cquipment of the route and ita stativus are said to bo sery fine. Itis threo days and a half {rom Chicago to Deadwood by this ine. The Homestske company have been sinkiug athaft on the Golden Star No. 2 location cast of Lead City for some monfha past, bat have gone down to such a depth that the engine was insufficient to do the work. A miner near Custer placed a stock of Hercules powder under_his csbin store, whero his wife and children were. Itexploded, tearing the build- ing to pieces, but, strange to ray, in- juring none of the occupants. Tho new water sapply forDeadwood will come from Lead City. The ditch is now being made, snd when comple- ted, will connect with the Lead City tanks, and will be supplied f.om the \\'llutewuod, Nevada gulch aud Wkite- tail. 4 large number of sheep have by brought into the Hills within the pas twomonths. Sevoral parties bave lo- cated winter ranges in the vicinity of the Sandance mountaics, and in sn- other year that country will pasture large herds. The Galens mines are clamoring for emelter. There is an abundance of high grade ore, but there being no fa- cilities for smelting, not much is be- ing done -in the way of reduction. They could afford to pay fifty dollars a ton. A shaft on the mive, st Lead City, has recched a depth of 870 feet. The shaft is all the way in ore, and the new hoisting works when completed, will be the best in the Hills, and of a capacity to godown 2000 feet. & The Father De Smet mining com- pany is advertising for contractors to supply their mill with ore from their mine. The Do Smet having got rich enough mining in its own ore, is will- iog to give another man a chance, All tools will be farnished by the compa- ny, as well as all timbering. There is & movement on foot among some of the Scandinavisn men at Lead to organizs & company for the purpose of putting a man out in the valleys somewhere to raise cattle, and pool their earniogs and enable him to buy cattle to increate h's stock and furnish him means to live on. The object is to let fhe stock increase un til there is enough to divide and make a living for all the stockholders.— [Black Hills Times. t & Old Abe Apprenticeship—Or a Substitute. St._Pani Pioneer Press. Under the pressure of a constantly increasing demand for skilled and in- talligent labor, the Ames manufactur. ing company, at Chicopee,. Mass., is teying to bring about s return to the old apprenticeship system. Several of the leading edge tool companies of the east also contemplate adopting a milar course, on account of the dif- ficulty of obtaining thoroughly com- petent mechanica. In other vocations, also, there is a demand for that skill | which in the iron-worker's art transforms five dollars’ worth of raw iron into pen-kni blades worth $3,000, into shirt bat- tons worth $29.000, or into watch #priags worth §200,000. In Germany, outside of the free education furnished by the state, there are some 250 scien- tific and professional schools, which af- ford %0 every pupil the opportcnity of obtaining techuical lnstruction and scquiring practical skill in some branch of useful industry. And this fact—while it is in striking contrast the education which we offer to the children of our artisaus, who will form the artisans of the next genera- tion, is of a character purely literary; in no sense technical, or even acion- tific. Itisan education which, so far as it goes beyond the three clements of reading, writing and arithmetic, is formed in all its eesential featares up- on an exclusively coltegiate type of atudies; erammar, history, gecgraphy, foreign languages and the like b wtroduced to the exclusion of dr ing, practical mechauics, the kn: edge of woods, metals and textile fab- rics, manual dexterity in the use of tools—of all, in fact, that most nearly ros the workman throughont his ontire career. 1f we kesp our future arlisans till they arrive at the ege of fifteen or sixteen’ employed sitting at erated in theatmosphers of tha strast. ; Tt generally takes a year or two of | S :.z"_j . =1 RHEUMATISM, Heuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Sareness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Soro Throat, Swell- ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, Gensral Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. o Preparation on earth equals §. Jacons O, 0 with Tain can have cheap aad of its claims. Directions in Fleven Languages, SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS ANDDEALERS 1% MEDIOINE. A.VOGELER & CO. Zaltimore, Md., .. a desk, pen in baud, to follow the lit- erary couree of studics of our educa- tional code, we need not be surprised that they have lost the taste for man- ual work Tor f ) starve on a threadburo : L a o iorks or book- keepers reiher tian scek more re- munerative labor. ¥or many trades the training of the hand to work may begin, and _in some ought to be- gin, at an earlier ago than that at which childron lesve the primary achool. The taste for marual labor, for mechanical construction and deco- ration, at an early age is almost uni- versal. It reqaires years of misdirec- ted education to uproot it entirely. And there is not wanting evidenco to provemost distinctly that even a very small amount of manual labor train- ing—thtrty or forty minutes each day —interjected into the elemantary school, serves to keep alive the capac- ity for active employment, and the manipulstive skill of the fingers. The problem of mesting the demand for skillful and accomplished workmen 18 thus beset with a doublo difficulty: That while the old system of appren- ticeship has well nigh crombled, and is less and less able to afford a train- ing worthy of the name to the child of the artisan, the character of the education now given himin the public schools not only does not make up for that which apprenticeship ceunot now give him, but positively predisposes him sgaiost the career of manual toil to which either apprenticeship or in- dustrial training is the recessary and only adequate introduction, Iowa Gereal Wealth, Bradstreet's revised returns of the wheat crop of 1880 show the follow- ing figures: Total in the western states 75,000 Towa ks second in the list of Forty-five million bush- It is, we think, a low estimate, to say that the crop will ay- erage, at home, 75 cents & bushel at present market prices. Barlington prices range from 80 to 85 cents for spring and 90 to 95 cents for wirter. The Chicago price for No. 2 is 81 11. The freight rate from Burlington to Chicago is 7 25 cents per bushel; from_Council Bluffs to Chicago, 18 cents per bushel. From these figares our readers can make their own esti- mates, and we think they will concar with us that ap average of seventy- five cents in the crit before shipment s a fair estimate of the present value of the wheat crop of Iowa at tnis time. The yield this year, 45,600,000 bushels ‘at seventy-five cents net to the farmers £34,200,000. But these figures do not cover all the value to our state of the wheat crop. That portion of the crop that 18 manufac- tured into flour and_other products is greatly increased in value, and so much of the manufactured products as shipped out of the state brings a richer return than the cereal itself, but that portion which is retained for | Dome cobsumption has a still greater value. The floor of Towa man. always Cures and never disap~ points, Thowarld's great Pain= Reliever for Man and Beast. Chenp, guick and reliable, PITCHER'* CASTORIA is not Nare¢:'c. Children grow fat upon, Mothers like, ard Physiciass recommend TORIA. It regulates the Bowels, cures Wind Colic, allays Feverishness, and de- stroys Worms. WEI DE MEYER’S CA- TARRH Cure, a Constitutionai Antidote for this verrible mala= dy, by Absorpticn. The most Important Discovery since Vac= cination, Other romedies may rolieve Catarrh, . this cures at any stago before Comsumption sets i b J. C. VAPOR, MERGHART TAILOR «Capitol Ave,, Opp. Masonic Hall, OMAHA. NEB. @O Q0 5oy 2y bome. Samples wor troe. Address Stiason & Co Portiand, READ,TEINK AND BELIEVE! THE LITTLE GIANT STILL AHEAD. Read What Nod Tuntline fays About A% STAMFORD, N. Y. ‘ehruary 101 Mr C.B. Thompeon, ridgewater, My DEan Sin—The Pocket >ciles 1 ordered 1 have tested them and find them he full it: ctive and tseful article, doing away th the need of cumbersome “OL Foat” aril- Yours Truly, E.Z C. JODSON, vo lstter speaks for itsolt, me of the best eportamen s % wri s Nm In this © 1 known thaoughout theworld T of meat ablits, and the d cont ince any one’as to the TTLE Guaxt Pocker Sciues, they are the neatest invention of the age, weigh froin cunce Lo cicht peunds, snd warrsnted ac- curate; cach ceale silver and will las EVERY G Just the thing for S portamen, Hunters, Fisher- men, and alo for family use, as they are caslly carriedin the vest pocket. Every fumily shoold surely have one, a8 they are very handy sbout the house. In weighing Preserves, ctc, tbey are indisoersable. - Any child can wei: b with these Scales, and they can Dot zet out of or.er, 8 they are inade co & new principie. The price ‘s cnly Fifty Cents each, and is witbhin the rexch of a1, AoENTS AXD THE TravE Strrup v REDUCED Ras rEs. C. B. THOMP:ON, Izventor and fole Manu facturer, Bridgewater, Conn. sepzowt. TWO DOLLARS WILL SECURE ufacture saves the Importation of s like smount of that impor. THE WEEKLY BEE one For Yeer, SHEELY BROS. PACKING CO., |1856. 1280.. Po R K AN D BEEF PAGKERS & We qall the attention of Buyars to Our Extensive Stock of _ Wholesale and Retail in FRESH MEATS& PROVISIONS, GAXE, POULTRY, FISH, ETC. CITY AND COUNTY ORDERS SOLICITED. OFFICE CITY MARKET—1415 Douglas St. Packing House, Opposite Omaha Stock Yards, U. P. R. R. THLEPHONE CONNECTIONS. ISH & M:MAHON 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 Instruments, Drugsand Chemicals used in ispens| Jas, B, Ish, P cket “Cases, Trussss sud Suprorters. Absalutely Pure Proscriptions flled at any hour of the night. Lawrence McMahon. ISZAFARNNEAM STRERT. MORE POPULAR THAN EVER. The Genuine SINGER NEW FAMILY SEWING MAGHINE. demand for the GE: INESINGE! during the Quarter of a Century in Relible” Machine has been before the pu In 1878 we sold 356,422 Machines. In 1879 we so0ld 431,167 exceeded that of h this “Old Machines. Excess over any previous year 74,735 Machines. Our sales last year were at the rate of over 1400 Sewing Machines a Day | For every business day in the soar, REMEMERR, That Every REAL Singer Sewing Ma- chine has this Tradc Mark éast into th Iron Stand and em- bedded in the Arm of the Machine. THE SINGER Wi Principal Office: 1,500 Subcrdinate Offices, in t \hn rld and So nited States and C. Singer is the Strongest, struoted. th Amer; ‘sepl6-dsowti BENKING HOUSES. THE ORIGINAL, BRIGGS HOUSE ! Cor. Randolph St. & bth Ave., CHICAGO ILL, $2.00 AND $2.50 PER DAY mprotements, passenger CUMMINUS, Froprictor, containing all modern elevator, & J. 1L oct6tt OGDEN HOUSE, Cor. MARKET ST. & BROADWAY Council Biuffs, Iowas onlive o St Omnibus ‘o and from ol trains. AT |3t FRONTIER HOTEL, Laramie, Wyoming, The miner's resort, good accommodatlous, ~ reasonablo. - Bpecial TARD Prprietor. HOTEL, Cheyenne, Wyoming. First-claas, Fine arze Sample Rooms, ono block from depot. Trainsstcp from 20 minutes o2 hours for dinner. Free Bus toand from Depot. Rates $2.00, §2.50 and §8.00, according to room; single meal 75 cents. . . BALCOM, Proprietor. Cufef Clerk, __mio-t Schuyler, Neb. Fhist-class House, Good Meals, Good Beds Aty “Rooms, and’ ind and”acommodating troatment. Tw» good eumple rooms. Specia atteation pat to commercial tracelers. 8. MILLER, Prop,, Schugyler, Neb. NEERASIEA VINEGAR WORKS ! ERNST KREBS, Manager. Manutacturer of all kinds of R INEG.A - Jeves St Bet. 9tk ani 100h. OMAHA, NEB EATLISEL THE MERCHANT TAILOR, Isprepared to make Pants, Suits snd overcoats to order. Prices, fit and workmanship guarant 10 ruit One Door West. of Gruickehank’s. 101y albtt KENNEDY'S EAST INDIA = ) Sws z géc 5 &5 g [ g8 % = YE = -lér . = s Sw § 7 2% 3 £ 4 B [ BEE < ¥ B BITTERS! ILER & (0., SOLE MANUFACTURER3 OMAHA, Neb. | THE 0LDEST €STABLISHED. [BANKING HOUSE IN NEBRASKA. BANEKERS. ‘Business transacted same ag that 0 an Incor- porated Bank. Accounts kept. tn Currency oF gold subjoct to sight chook without notiee. Certiilcates of depostt lawuod payable fn three, six and twelve months, besring intarest, or 03 | demand without interest. Advauces m2de o customers on approved se. curitles at market rataa of taterest Buy and sell gold, billa of exchian, ment, State, County and City Bonds. Draw Sight Drafts on Encland, Ireland, Soot- 1and, and il parts of Earope. Scll Earopean Passage Ticketa. COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. angldt TU. 8. DEPOSITORY. First Namionar Bank OF CMAHA. Cor. 13th ana Farnbam Streets, OLDEST BANKIKC ESTABLISHMENT 1N OMAHA. Govern- (SUCCESSORS TO KOUNTZE BROS.,) INTARLISTRD 1 1856, Organzed a8 a National Bauk, Atgust 20, 1863, Capital and Profits Over$300,G00 Spectally authorized by the Secrotary or Treasury to receive Subscription to the U.S.4 PER CENT. FUNDED LOAN. OFFICERS AND DIKECTORS Hxmyax Kooxrzy, President, Avaustus Kovras, Vice President. H.W. Yarus, = 4. J. Popruxtox, Attorney. JomX A. CRriauoN. B H. Davis, Ass't Cashlor, This bank recetves deposit. without regard to amounts. Tsrues time certificatos bearing Interest, Draws drafts on San Francisco and principsl clties of the United States, aisy London, Dublin, Edinburgh and the principal cities of the conti: nent of Euro Solls pasesgo ickets for Emigrants fn_the In. man_ue. maylatt REALESTATE BROKE Geo. P. Bemis’ ReaL Estate Acency. 16ih & Douglas Sts., Omaha, Neb, Thta sgency doss sTaicTiT 8 brokerage buse nees. Does notspeculate, and therefore any bas- aie on fm books e Insarod 10 i petrors tn Foad of balne gobbied G by the scont REAL ESTATE BROKERS No 1408 Farnkam Street OMAHA NEBRASKA. om th opp. Grand Central Hotel. Nebraska Land Agency. DAVIS & SNYDER, 1606 Farnham St. Omaha, Nebr. 400,000 ACRES carefully selected land {n Exstern Nebraska for sale. r Great. BargainaIn improved farms, and Omaha. clty property. 0.F. DAVIS. WEBSTER SNYDER, dp-tebTet Late Land Com'r U. P. B. B BTRON REED. Lawis REED, Byron Reed & Co., ouomsT EsTARLISRD REAL ESTATE AGENCY IN NEBRASKA. Keepn complets abstract, of title to all Real Estate in Omaha and Douglas County 1 JNO. G. JACOBS, (Formerly of Gish & Jacobs) UNBERTAKER No. 1417 Parntam ORDEES BF 7 PASSENCER ACCOMMODATICN LINE —BETW OMAHA AND FORT OMAHA Connects With Street Cars Comer of SAUNDERS “snd HAMILTON STREETS. (End of Red Line as follows: . 3:03, 537 and 7:29 p.m. FORT OMATA: and the usnally office, corner of Dodgo and 15th surchta. Tickets can te procured from etrect eardriv- ers, or from drivers of hacks. STRE _CAR et FARE. 5 CENTS. [NCLU! CHARLES RIEWE, UNDERTAKER! Metalic Cases, Coffins, Caskets, Shrouds, etc. E. F. COOK, UNDERTAKER, 02d Fellgms' Block. Prompt attentlon given 1 or fera by telegraph. ONLY o i v vou THE BOOTS AND SHOES At » LOWER PIGURE than at ‘any other shos house In the city, P. LANG'S, 238 FARNHAM 8T. Fam mstres . Othand1ith, Omabs, Neb. Telegraphiz orders promptly jattended to. 31 satiataction guarantesd., Prices very reason- able, The “Old Reliable” \\\the Simplest, the Most || Durable Sewing Ma- chine ever yet Con- UFACTURING CO. 34 Union Square, New York. iada, and 3,000 Offices inthe Old BOGGS & WILL, | CLOTHING, AND GENTS’ FURNISHIHG GOODS. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. We carry the Largest and BEST SELECTED STOCK OF GOODS Which We ars Selling at GUARANTEED PRIGES It OUR MERCHANT TAILORING DEPARTMENT IN CMA Is in charge of Mr. THOMAS TALLON, whose well-establishe en fairly e We aleo Keep an Immense Stock of HATS, CAPS, TRUNKS AND VALISES? REMEMBER WE ARE THE ONE PRICE STORE M. HELLMAN & CO,, 1301 & 1 m3leodsw CALDWELL, HAMILTONSCO i | SHOES MADE TO ORDER | rue: PIANOS = ORGANS. Jd. 'S W ERIGEERE we, 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 Orgacs exclusively. Have had years® experience in the Business, and handle oniy the Best. J. . WRIGHT, 218 16th Street, City Hall Building, Omaha, Neb. HALSEY V. FITCH. Tuner. DOUBLE AND SINGLE ACTING POWER AND HAND PUMPS Steam Pomps, Engine Trimmmgs, Mining Machinery, BELTING HOSE, BRASS ArD 1R0# FITT INCS, FIPE, STEAM PACKING AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. HALLADAY WIRD-MILLS, CHURCH AHD SCHOOL BELLS A, L. STRANG, 205 Farnham Stract_Omaha, Neb HENRY HORNBERGER, STATEH AGEANT FOXR V. BLATZS MILWAUKEE BEER! In Kegs and Bottles. Special Figures to tho Trade. Familiss Supplied st Reasonable Prices. Offlce, 939 Don Rtrast. Omaha TO THE LADiZS AND CENTLEMEN: PROF. GUILMETTES FRENCH KIDNEY PADI A Positive and Permanent Cure Guaranteed, e of rave), Dishatos, Incontinence and I all cas Rid: Dropay. Bright's Diseass mtic 4 of Urine, Inflamation hearly ten year in Prance, Y It curesy adeorpéic her. 1 ho hag not got . send $2.00 and 3o & Pad by retuen mail. Address U. 3. Branch, FRENCH PAD C0,, Toledo, Ohio. H LIVER PAD ‘Will positively eure Fever and Ago, ane all diseases of the Liver, Stomach ice , Dyspepsia s permanents PROF. GUILMETTE'S FRENG ood. The pad cus ' aborp sk your druggus for this pad and sako 70 other 11 ho docsnot keepit, send §1.50 s, tue FREN PADCG!, (57 Branch), Tolado, Ohio and recive 1t by revura mail L To Nervous Sufferers—-The Great | MAKE NO MISTAKE? European Remedy--Dr. J. B. Simpson's Specific Medicine, Teis positive caro for 31 Weaknets, Impotencs, and from Selt-Abuse, as Memoryy Pains i cing _use it wonder- Pamphicts seat free to all. Write for them ani get full 6T P Fiice. Spavic, #1.00 pr packags, o x pack- 5 Nos. = — iz = - XLE GREASE LR Al [ |MICA AXLE GREASE BNOBLESIOR e e Machine Works, [z orzATTa, WMEE. J. Hammond, Prop. & Manager. The most thorongh appointel and_completa Machive Shogs nd Founiy in thesate. your wagon twice as long. 28 well tor Mill Gearins Buggies, &c 38 for wage ‘dia of Things Worin Knowing. ‘any aiiress "MICA MANUFASTURING CO., E’:.T.‘::}S‘L’.’f;fif:fi;‘t{::".?{mim.,, 31 MICHIGAN AVENDE, mads to order. el sttsmiton gy i #-Ask Your Dealer For It Well Augars, Pulleys, Hangers, _ octoet Shafting,Bridge Irons,Geer 1. W. NASON. Catting, ete 5 = S DENTIST, Ormex: Jacob's B ek, corner Cagicol Ave, s 158, Omaba, Nob, new Machinery Meachanical Draaght. ote., neatly executed. 56 Harney St., Bet. 14th and 15th.