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2 THE DAILY BEE: DECEMBER 11 1880, THE ANNUAL INVOICE An Inventory of Past Products, Presen: Stock and r upure e Prospects. Electric Lights and Railroads, Water Works and Telephones. The Harvest of Grain and Polygamy—A Review of Ogden'’s Progress. Correspondence of The Bee. Ocpex, Utah, December 8.—This being 80 near the close of the year 1880, all newspaper men are busily engaged in making footings of the year's progress for the purpose of pub- lishing to the world, m a concise form, what has been done, what fmportant business transacted, the extent of mining developments and the yalue of new improvements made in the lead— iz 5 T Ygu might start in with a butter-tryer, and if that don't work send to Det- roit fora submarine diver. If youreally want your heart fathomed it can be done, but more likely 1tis your iiver that meeds repairs. YANKEEs IN RUSSIA. WHY THEY ARE LIKE["AND WHAT THEY ARE DOING THERE. St. Petersburg cor. N. Y. Sun. The Russisns are particularly charmed with the democratic mauners of Americans. These appeal to a characteristic national trait of the Russiavs themselves. They despise from the bottom of their hearts all pretension, arrogance and walking on stilts. That is why the Russians stretch friendly hands to the people across the ocean, in spite of the abyss that lies between their governmeut and that of the union. My personal experience is thab American citizens in general, and American business men in particular, are warmly welcomed in Russia. On the part of the Czar’s government there is not the least fear that hey will inoculate the Raussians with re- publicanism. Oncel asked 2 calonel of gendarmes whether he had eoy ap- prehensicn of dangerous results trom the close relatibns of the Russinus und i “Not the least,” he abroad. I nsed not tell you that the Yankees are especial'y welcome here.” Uncle Sam’s boys lending their shouldersito push Ivan Ivauovitoh’s wazon along—what a funny and un ique sceme it would be. But, if it comes to that, I have a shrewd sus- picion that the autocrat of all the Russias will not stay long on top of the wagon. That is a piint on which I disagree with my friend, the colonel of gendarmes — The Season. The lover of the maiden fair Now hides himself away To seek the pure, fresh country air, ’And there he's bonnd tostay Until old Christmas disappears, ‘When ne'll return again, And with his eyes engulped in tears Will ask her—what she would like for a birthday present. New York Dispatch. PEPERMINT DROPS. Wood is 8o expensive nowadays in Conneticat that real nutmegs are cheaper than the Connecticut article. —[Boston Post. “If Jones undertakes to pull my ears,” said a loud mouthed fellow on a street corner, ‘‘he’ll just have his vands foll.” The crowd looked at the man’s ears and smiled. RELIGIOUS. Professor Swing’s salary has beon raised by the trustces of his church from £7,000 to $10,000. In the African Miethodist church of North Carolina there are one hun- dred Jocal preachers and ninety-twe exhorters. Rt. Rev. Dr. Harris, formerly of Chicago, now bishop of Michigan, has resigned the rectorship of Christ chareh, Detroit. Dr. Talmige’s tabernacle is report- ed in desperate financial straits Four months’ arrears ofsalary are due him, $9000 notes are falling due, and there is but 350 in the treasury. A Baptist minister in La Crosse, Wis., recently, left a_Christian pulpit because a Universahst pastor was seated there. His defence was: “I don’t consider a Universalist a Chris- tian.” church at Washington. It is proposed to lay the corner stone on the bth of March, the day after the inauguratior of President Garfield. 701 pastors ard 869,303 souls. The Slavonic langusge is used in 234 con- gregations, German in 128, Hungar- A movement hasbeen started among the Disciples of Christ to build & The Hungarian Lutherans number | Massach usetts learn how to cook well, and they can come West with profit to themselves and pleasure to our young men. By the way, why cannot some good woman be induced to put on her apron and come to Chicago to teach our girls to cook ? Is there any other city in the world where she is more sadly needed? And ‘‘our girls” are so anxious to take hold of this business! Com. West, Miss Parloa ! A great many young men in these days excuse themselves from attempt- ing to get a finished education on the ground that they are not rich and have no influential and rich relations to aid them. Dr. Prince gives tosuch | some good advice. He says: ‘The { way of the world now is to look about and see who will help you to get it. That is not the right way. Look about and see what you can do to help yourself. Grind your own ax. Support yourself by your own indus- try, and earn your bread while you fmprove the odds and ends of time in hard study. When you get something ahead, useit to support yourself while you learn. Ten thon- sand men are now serving their gen- ax for them.” eration with ucefulness and honor who pever asked anybody to grind an No yourg man with good health and strong arms should 1LEBSG. Basased. We call the attention of Buyers to Our Extensive Stock of GLOTHING, AND CENTS’ FURNISHING GODDS. WHOLESALLZ AND RETAIL. We carry the Largest and BEST STLECTED STOCK OF GOODS Which We are Selling at IN OM/HA ing towns and cities. No placeis this h{‘,‘w*“,’c,,‘ ':,f‘mp,h‘ “Yout citizens | The Boston Journsl of Commerce | itn in 122, Swedish in 2, sad 125 con- ::‘if(i.lxzur):nl‘::l:nzfsnfi;e ge:;brl‘;j-:‘fi DINT ' Eosturpofuswapepsr SOUHESS 7 A #rs too scnsibleand practioal o be E TR D O SRS Ui Cor A e beheard. It is ot the sons of rich L i‘ b LE a octed with the churches are 1543 parochial schocls. A Presbyterian church of 93 mem- toue of them beat the old way of fooling with an empty shotgun. —Syracuse Sunday Times. throughout the | dangerous to our government. To imagin a practical Yankee indulcine iu theorizing with the Russians would ter obscrved than west, and I presume this year’s show- mey who to-day fill the largest places and are laying the world under the greatest dcbt of gratitude, but sons of ing will be as fully sati:factory as an 5 S 5 A EABISIE % AL s bocs ba e me the b pocse the most improbable o Boy (to a lady visitor Teacher, | beis have been org: 4 the poor, who have carved their own » if not betier than former yesrs. That | ov imorobable things.” here's a ga here i Nez Perces Tudisns \KlkodiIns | 219 POOEy (W10 22 ~, probable things. there’s a gal overthere w v Tees e Al coaaue Cr o | = 8 ok e oy, B il G o | S P e e | O sy oo et it 8ol OUR - MERCHANT TAILORING ) 3 per yes he co ness men in general are apparently her. B “Bus if I don't look y nd Red Wolf have been el t 1es an o . excel any former year. ) S 2 ! e Y ected elders. More than two-thirds ments number and style of new buildi exhibit a healthy state of impro ments, woile business interests w. never 60 extensive. Since the census enumeration last June, fully 500 pe:- sons have increased our then popu- Iation of six thoussnd, aud this is being augumented by daily arrivals. The demand for houses is far in ex- cess of the supply, while our hotels cannot accommodate all who apply At this time, one of our most pressiug needs is that of a large first class hotel, and this need is 8o well under- stood that we are confident thatan other season will see the erce such au institution. Our city offic have aw:keoed to the wants of our city and have been ctive in improv ing our streets, building necded brid- ges and taking the initiatory steps for a complete system of water works, How soon we will be supplied with such works depends much n cer- tain legal questions invclving titie to water rites. Ifthese legal poinis are settled in favor of th w company,the supply of pr 1 water will b abundant, ad the fall or pres sure can be at almost any degree re quired, as the sireams are loc:ted hundreds of feet above th Tie city council have lat tracted with the Brush Electric Lignht company, and it is proposed to have the city lizhted by the 1st of January. . The plan contemplates «n iron tower 4 160 feet high, placed at a central oin of the city and on an eicvation torty feet abova the business portion. The light at the top of this tower is to be ample for illuminating a space one mile in diameter, and 1s 10 coet $4 000 per annum, Six days’ time is allowed for testing the light, and the econt is for five yeara. Stores will be lizht- edat an exeuse bf about $130 per an- mum, which is cheaper ard far safer than by the present pian of using cosl oil. £ The introduction of the telaphone exchenge has become &0 popular with two menth’s use that new instruments are being put in almost daily, and the pumber in use has reached over 80,;5ud the lincs are beirg extsnded to North Ogden, seven miles, and at an eurly cate will be extended thirty miles, to Salt Leke City, to connect with an exchange which is to be c-n- structed thore. It isa cource of much pride to cur - izeus tha o ing all other ia point of i provewents and public enterpriss | The railway connections north bave this year been extended by the con- | struction of one hundred wiles of road by the Utah & Northern, takmg the northern terminus to tve town of D 1. len, Montana, ee hundred a: forty-eight mil rom thi Col onel Wolcott, of the Union™ Pacitie engineering corps, has just returned from Lis lsbors 1n “setting the prade stakes for the Ogien & Portland r city. way, which is to be built from this city, by the ad{ition of » third rail to the Uiah & Northern to Bingham City,twenty-five miles, andturnoff ina northwesterndirection. This road is to a standard or wide guage, and cou- struction is to begiu_in early spring. Nearly two hundred miles of the route is s:aked, reaching to a poiut beyond Snuke river. This entiro ter- ritory has seen s prosperous year. Crops were never better, while the oute!de demand brought unusually good prices, and shippers and farmers have reaped a rich harvest. The President’s message causes some sbuse towards the chief cxecative, because of his plain talk on the sub- jectof polygamy. It isa fact well known to all close observers here that the Saints are going into polygamy as rapidly, if not “more so, than at any other period of its accursed exis- tence here. At least thirty sach . marriagss have been made by citizans of Ogden and vicivity duriog the past six mooths, that we have proof of, yet “ecause wo cannot prove actual marriageand date, becauseof the sacre- ey of the endowment house, there is no way uvder the present laws by which punishment can be meted out to the olandarg of decency and good morals. The anti-polygamy soclety, through their meetings and the publication of their paper, The Anti-Polygamy Btandsrd, are doing a good work, and we hope will aid much towards blot- ting out the “‘twin relic” that is now such & stain on the fair name and hon- or of our nation. Delays of trains lately have been #0 common that we have about learned tc expect them to arrive behind time, The Central Pacific and the Utah and Nortbera are both troubled badly with deep snow and heavy drifts. J. “Who can fathom x;e human | Thi glad to have Americans come oere, rve their ways of do- ing business. They preter to inv American engine:rs to Russia ins of scnding their engincers to study in Awerics. It appears that the work done here by Yankes engineers has contirmed tbe high opiniou which t! Russians had formed of theo: before- hand. The grain elevators built b them in some Russian ports, the bor- ing for petroleum in the Caucassus, d some of their miningexperiments and closely ob: Russiane. Americsn agricultural ma- chines and implements, sewing ma chines, iron stoves, rubber goods, cauned fruits and many other art here.the question, cens comos here to make all gs for us? They would save the expenre of transportation, and would be sure to sell their goods.” In proof of this last assertion Russians point to the great and prosperous factory of St. Petersburg operated by the Russiuu-American rubber com- Thia Amer: ture and trade seemed to mea very interesting one, and I wanted to get pinicns about it. A Russian friend introdoced me to the director of the department of manufacture and trade. | I asked his ncy whether he would a¢ 1 manufacturars to come to Russia and engage i busi- . “Moet heartily,” he auswered, “tchough T don’t beheve that at pre- sent your manufacturers can be in- sgestion of an iuvestm o mense field for Yankee enterprise, okill and capital, and they cannot be bearen here by any foreign competi- tors, for these rea-ons: They are our friends, and that no other nation | can boast of. The general characrer of America is very anal- owous to that of our country. Oar Caucarus yields us petroleum, and the Don vailey gives us coal and anthra- cite like Pennsylvania; our middie provinces yield gram as abuudantly as the western states of the union, aud the treasuves of the Ural moun- tains can be falrly compared with those of Califormia and Colorado. is a very important points for the ¢xprrience of Americans, acquired at grest expense, can be fully and cofitably employed here in Russia. Wae Lave great natural wealth, with no capital aud no skill; them the Americans have in superabundance. There csn be no political trouble be- tween the two countries to interrupt our business relations. The Yankees are very skilful teachers, as is shown { by their perfect absorption and assimi- | 1ation of an immense and heterogene- ous immigration: our history shows | that we are diligent and docile pu- pils. Brirg the Yankee teacher and t-e Ruscian pupils together, and you will eee ~urprising results.” Prince O. is one of the largest land- owners in Russia. He employs a number of German agriculturists to look after his property—over sixty thounsand acres on the Volga. I called on him and asked whether he wonld like to raplace ht Germans with Am- ericans. ‘‘Only let me have some practical American firmers,” said the prince, ‘‘and { will not employ any- body else. Bat the trouble is. that your farmers seem to be perfectly satis- fied at home, and do not care to make roubl_s and imparials so long as they are pcketing dollars. I think it would pay American manufacturers of agricultaral machines and implements to send over here, say one hundred skilled farmers. They would readily find employment with our large land- owners, and would be able to demon- strate the fall value of American farm machines. Undoubtedly this would increase the demand for the machines more rapidly than advertisements, ex- hibitions or agents. Russia is pre- eminently a farming country, and her prosperity depends wholly on her crops. Yet we do our farming on a prehistoric plan. Now the crisis has come, and it puts a grave question be fore us. Either we must apply all the modern improvements in agricul- tare to our land, or we must be pre- parad to be cut off from the civilized world. What s chance there is for the enterprising Yankee to come to us, to stir us up, to show us how to handle these machines, and to create an immense market for their ewn wares. Our misfortune is that our edocated men become functionaries, parts and parcels of the complicated heart!” excitedly inguires a young ! lady of Sangamon county in the coursa of a charmingiy short acticleon e Realtics.” We do not iy exactly know, | scrasy mies, an left witn nt intelligent business men; hence wo have to borrow them from lse become its bitter ene- fied the highest expectationsof the ato 1a full demand everywhoro in this country, and I have frequently heard “Why don’t the f au capital in Russian manufac- | duced to leave their conntry of plenty | for one that 1s afflicted with grave troubles By and by, when the security of business here is insured beyond any doubt, there will be cpened an im- at her she'll wink at sombody else.” The czar’s yacht makes fifteen kuots an hour, but The Puiladelphis Chronicle thinks this isu't a circum- stance to a needleful of rhread thut a man is trying to fasten a button with. An agricultural paper says: ““Sour milk will bring betler returns in o than in any other way.” It may be but the people must be educated to it before they will relish sour milk io eges—New Orlesns Picayune. A poet asks, in thirty-two lines, “What ao the treessay?” If he were to recite his pootry under several irees we don’t believe they would s:y auything. The would leave.—[Nur- ristown Herald. “QOld woman, how do you sell beats?” asked a New Orleans loafer of an old woman in the French warket. him from head to foot, she rep Ven L haf some like you vas I sell them t o fora cent abiece.” The lightning used on theatrical | stages costs $20 an ounce; but ther so tele is required that you can kil & sixty dollar brigand and ten twelve- dollar brigends so tifully jor about two cents. A little lightai is a dangerous thing. I hate to be bald-headed,” said he. “When a burlesque troupe comes to town my wife watches me as a cat would a mouse, and every man I mee asks me how 1liked the performance. It dido’t use to be so0.” The Locomotive publishes engrav- ings in each issue showing how boilers look jus: after they nhave exploded. This doesn’t seem to hit the case at all. What isneeded is a picture show- ing how a boiler looks before it is go- ing to explode. We could then learn when to get out of the way.—]New Haven Register. Young women, cultivate your voice. A man who has been organisi in a Woodbridge choir for fourtcen years reports that in that tlme thirty three members of the choir have been mur- ried. This is on the authority of the New Haven Palladium which never lies, whatever other deviltry it may be up to—Danbary News. “I've had my eye on dat chap fur some little time,” said President Gsrduer, of the Lime-Kilu club, “‘an’ I kuew from the way he sot his feet down that we shouln’t carry him wid us werry long. A man who would rayther drag his hoofs thron-h the mud dan go to de trouble ob bendin’ his knecs, doan’ 1as’ long arter ye be- gin to watch him.” When the cook placed the turkey on the table, upside down on the dish —that is, with its back vp—the head of the house got his back up, too, gave her a withering look and almost pro- fanely asked if she “‘’posed he was going to crawl under the table and cut a hole up through the plate. to get at the breast of the fowl?”—[Nor. ristown Herald. The other evening a Galveston young man observed his economical landlady bottering a slice of bread. Finally he said, “I wish, Mrs. Bom- bazine, that you had raised me when 1 was a wayward boy.” “Why so?” she asked, as she spread a very small lump of butter over a vast ares of bread. ‘“Because you would have Iaid it on 80 very light.—[Galveston News. A well known German supporter of Her Majesty's theatre volunteered to go on the stage on the first night of the season to apologize for the mnon- appearance of Mlle. Elisa Widmar. Mr. Armit, like a prudent manager, preferred a rohearsal, and this s somewhat how the thing came out: 30 the country at large is | “Laties and chentlemen: Mees Vit- mar oan not seeng to-night. She have a leetle horse—I mean, she have a small colt.” Mr. Armit preferred print. A Galveston man went to a doctor and told him, “‘doctor, there is some- thing the mstter with my brain, After sny ssvere mental exertion I have headache. What is the remedy forit?” ‘“The best remedy is to get yourself elected tothe legislatare, where you will haveno occasion to think.” The patient replied If it wasn't for the sake of his children he would make the experiment. He didn’t want themto go through life with = stizma attached to their names. “‘Herbert Spencer says,” remarked a Boston girl to her Chicago admirer the other evening, as they were hold- ing down one end of the sofs, “‘that life is the definite combination of heteroc renous changes, both zimulta- neous and successive, in correspon- D : s | dence with external coexistence and ckaty machinery called bureau- | sequences.” He said that it was prob- ably so, but hastily changed the sub ject, and afterwards told his mother thst thosa Boston girls could send out words a little too quick for him. e tribe were present at the ad- ation of the Lord’s Supper, 1gton with about for whires in Washng and 33 2,000 mem ers, bera. Women in the churches. Lincoln University, of the liberal education of colored youth has given from ite collegiate department. the southern states, and 656 have beer ordained ministers. The school now 113 stu EDUCATIONAL. There is at Union eollegs this y an increase in the number of stud of frem 20 to year. The public ¢ making good progress, crensed during the pest having latsly and with ren Many of the pupils were and portios English. The new oxder of eollege govern- were Germans e: take examiuations, reviews, which will place of the usual term. Some of the school officials of St. Louis are endeavoring to make the study of penmanship more thoroush in their schools. They propose to make the pupils write cut their read- ing lessone after reading them, the teacher to supervise as closely the writiug as the reading. The Baptist: have seven churches colored churches with more than 4,000 mem- The women have esiablished a Women's Baptist Home for Needy Oxford, Psun , a Presbyterian institution for ruction to 400 hundred young men, and has graduated 133 Most of them are teachers or ministers in has 5 per cent over last ols of Muryland are narried women; and a large pro- to learn ment at Amherst provides for regular the each student being ranked according to his standing in these, ratherihan an/ examination at the end of the IMPILTIES. schoola, have presched power on “The A in the Flesh.” Itis not determined where rection of aiecarded husbands.—El mira Advertiser. ! | Jess.—New Haven Rezister. following: Here lies the body of M Kicked up her beels anc Bent ; was sncked under a coal barge, up in time to catch his bresth before finally scrambl town, abou the remark: drown a deep water Baptis'!” ven miles below, I Leit Behind Me”—it cannot be. gladness, pot of sorrow. our suthor mistuken his locality? a power in the pulpit. talk with him yesterday, and we cussed most of the disputed qu of our churck, and we a every point. He is a thororghly sepsible man.” ‘-Your premises may be all right,” returned his lisiener, “buc I don't agree with your conclu- sion.” A Many-tone(e)ous Percentor— Young deacon: Now, eldsr, as our percentor is getting so frail, I think wo had better have a choir. You can not imegine the grand and eolemn Now says the Boston Commercial Bulletin, is the time to join Sunday A Boston minister is reported to uily andlogically bstlo Paul and his Thorn Mra. Oates will be on the day of the reaur- “Missicnary teas” are very popular. The gossip is confined exclusively to pecple in foreign pirts and is harm- On an old English tombstone is the way she went. A Vicksburg negro feil from the deck of a steamboat the other day, and came he elid ueder a raft a mile long, and ashore at Warren- with “No use fryin’; ye can’t | *‘Grandfather’s Clock” or “The Girl We are led to believe that heaven will be a place of perpetual juy and Hasn’t (T tell you, our new pastor, will be T hed along The trustees of the proposed Cass | effict of nearing the four parts sung School of Applied Science have deter- | together.” Auld elder: “Deacon, mined to begin almost immediately | ye'll never profane the kirk wi' a and in the medest form of a prepara- | band! An’ gin we go to the tune o’ tory echool, the work of the institu- | £40 a year, surely wé can hae a man tion. The surplus income will be|thee Sooth wha’ can sing ‘a’ four saved and invested from year to year | pal-ts himsel!”. until with a real demand for an ad- What an invaluable gift it is to be vanced scientific school there will be | able to say the right thing in theright fands to establish it. way at the right time. A railroad man who had been instructed to in e Hebrew union college is to be | oy (™ qy that her husband had established permanently in Circinnati, where & house has been purchased for its accommodation. The institation is maintained by voluntary subscrip tions. There are ouly three Hebrew colleges in this country—one in New York, onein Philadelphia, and the third is ths: in Cincinnati. Harvard has now 1364 students—8 Thers are 158 The more than last year. been killed by a railroad uccident, and was cau‘ioned to break the news gently, is credited with writing the following letter: ‘“Dear Madam® I write to say that your husband is un- avoidably detained. An uncertaker will call on yow to-morrow with full pacticulars. The funeral sermon has beer arranged for.” A priestin Irelaud, having preached instructors in_all departments. most noticeable gain is in thescientinc | ® sermon cn miracles, was asked by department. Last year it had only 16 | one of his congregation, walking students—this year it has 37, The | homeward, to explan a little more post-graduate depactment is in s high- | clearly what a miracle meant. ‘‘Is it ly floarishing condition. The number | & miracle you want to understand now studying for the higher degrees is | 83id_the priest. ‘‘Walk on there 36. The evening readings from the | forninstme, aud I'll think how I can ancient and modern clasics are open | eXplain it to you." The man walked not only to the members of the uni- | %, and the priest came after him and veraity, but also to the public. gave him a tremendous kick. “Ow!” A larger number of Indian youth | roared the man, ‘‘why did you do are now in schools aud learning trades | that?” ‘‘Did you feelit!” asked the than ever before. The futare of the | priest. *‘To be sure I did,” said the red man is more hopefal. The goy- |man. “Well then, it wculd have ernment can well afford togive special | been a miracle if you had not. care of the handful of Indians yet| Ap inquisitive boy who had been 'g'“‘l‘:';“p‘mr::; ;’]"‘"" that they | {aught to believe in the resurrrotiou : of fl“z'" ¢ "l;m the corrupt- | of the identical atoms which cunsti- ng iofluences of that civilization | tyted each individual during life, said: which takes ldvennge of their press- | M, will all the heathen come up ingneeds. Whisky and the traders | when it comes resurrection?” ‘Yes at outposts have been the fraitful | mogon, ¢cAndthed those T causes of troublo in the past. The | srjes—will they tarn up, too?” ¢Cer- whole nation will approve #nd second the efforts to give the Indian fair treatment. The school sup rintendent of Co- lumbus, Ohio, does welli in arging that less money be spent in brick and mortar and in the basiness depart- ments of public education, and more upon the department of instruction, He holds, and wisely, that the num- ber of teachers in all the cities and large towns should be increased one- third. When the people, he adds, are willing to bear the expense of em- ploying the best teachers, the number of whose pupils shall be limited to twenty or atleast thirty, there will he an immeasurable gain in davelop- tainly, my son.” “Well, when them cannibal heathens what’s been fredin’ on missionaries get resurrected, an’ when them missionaries what's been eat comes around sn’ wants to get resurrected, things is going to be worse mixed than the preeideatial elec- tion; hey, mal” “It is time you went to bed, my = The city auctioneer of Toledo, O., Mr. Fred. G Ferguson, was terribly sfflicted with rheamatism, and, after seeking dvice from six different phy- sicians, and finding no rellef, was in- duced to try St. Jacobs'Oil. He says: 1 used less than two bottles acd am e i 0 o ! now s well man—Which I oweto the ment, learning and efficiency over | Great German Remedy. what is now obtained in the present | e e B. F. COOK, crowded cond’tion of the senoals. UNDERTAKER, Miss M. Parloa, of Boston, ia doing a good work in teaching the young Fellows’ Block. civen 4 oricre by telagrapi. women of the Ezat how to make pud- | dings and patties. Sbe has juet| opened a class at LaSslle seminary, | Auburndale, Mass. Let the “girls of Frompt attent 02 |ITHE SINCER fa DEPARTMENT Isin charge of Mr. THOMAS TALLON, whose well-establishe reputation has beeu fairly earned. We also Keep an Immense Stock of HATS, CAPS, TRUNKS AND VALISES® REMEMBER WE ARE THE ONE PRICE STORE M. HELLMAN & CO, 121 & 1303 #F'arnham Streeq, m3Leodaw PIANOS 2 ORCANS. number of buildings, teac and pu- % piis, aud in the z tendance. That is a good sayivg, that the song e surely do not mean to hint that 3 o AG E}1 FOR § & g3 CKERING PIAND, 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 Pisnos and Orgacs exclusively. Have had years experience in the Busiuess, and handle ouly the Best. 5. WRI“HT, treet, City Hall Building, Omaha, Neb. ¥ %Y V. FITCH. Tuner. Succes to Jas. K Dealers in Extracts. Toilst Waters, Colo A full line of Surgical Instrumenta, “ocke Drugsand Chemicals used in Dispensiog. Jas, 4. Ish. 121 F L FLINELS SHEELY BROS. PACKING CO., PORK AND BEEF PAGKERS Wholesale and Retaii in FRESH MEATS&E PROVISIONS, CANE, POULTRY, FISH, ETC. CITY AND COUNTY GRDERS SCLICITED. OFFICE CITY MARKET—1415 Douglas St. Packing House, Opposiis Om:ha Stock Yards, U. P. R. R. 2 TIX. PHMONDE CONNEBOTIONS. MORE FOPULAR THAN EVER. The« Genuine SINGER NE'/ FAMILY SEWING MACHINE. The popular demand for the GENUTNE SINGER in 1579 exc any previous year during the Quarter of a Cencury in which ok Reliable” Machine h.s reen before the public. In 1878 we sold 356,422 Machines. In 1879 Machines. Excess over any previous year 74,';73853‘?1;3111;67 Our sales last year were at the rate of over 1400 Sewing Machines a Day | For every business day in the year, J 218 16th § ish, DRUGGI: PERFUMERS. Fine Impo! n-na;lm:::;:. Tbe “0ld Reliable” That ery g Singer is t R T T ger i the Strongest, the Simplest. the Most Durable Sewing Ma- Con- chine hse this Tradef Mark cast into thel Iron Stand and bedded in the Arm of the Machine. m- ever yet sractad. NFCTUR 4 Union Sque e, Nev | Principal Office: |00 Sutordinata Offices, in .