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THE DAILY BEE. i S 5. ROSEW ATER: EDITOR Hamxoxy in the republican party means discord among the democracy. —e Tae Boston Transcrip! rises to re- mark that “All is not Gowd that ‘blisters. — Tar rapid inorease of the specula- tive eplrit among our people gives well grounded caase for alarm. —_— Tz Slocumb bill may heve been slow in coming, but the general im- prossion is that it will be rapid in de- parting. WaEx the anti-treat bill becomes a Jaw the cld and westher-besten song of “Pall down the blinds” will recelve 1t final death blow. —_—— Tae attacks of the Omaha Herald on Messrs. Doane and Broatch will stona commualty where they are known and respected. iy Taz university of Pennsylvants has conferred the honorary degree of LL. D. upon Garfield. The general can stand it if the university can. g, will not attend Wy, H the &m«n ‘ton off account of the expense. He has been economizing ever since the lste lsmented election. Cotoxes Cas who murdered Col. Shannon in a ducl, has been indicted by a South Carolina grand jary. This is undoubtedly & case of very bard Oush. —_— Taar political mountebauk, Church Howe, receives a half columa pufl from the Union Pacific monopaly or- gan, which denles that he is & railroad capper. That sattles the matter. Tuedemocraticrallroad organ howls loudly over the capital appropriation, ‘but has nothing to say concerning the maliroad tax exemption by which Omsha and the whole state is annual- 1y robbed of thousands of dollars. Tax advent of Lent so soon after the close of the legislature 1s partieu- larly appropriste. Leat is a season for repentanco and the stteution of those members of the legislatare who sold out thelr constitaents is cxlled to this fact. Tax Missouri house of representa- tives, by & vote of 95 to 3, has passed » bill making the keeping of & gamb- bling house s felony, punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary for » term varying from two to five years. Tax Herald s endeavorlng to make political capital out of the unfortu- nate posesge of the Slocumb *high license” bill. The Herald knows very woll that that measure was strlotly un- partissn, and 1t will be repoajed two yoars honoe by an equslly unpar:lssn ‘majorit — ‘Waex Charch Howe was approach- od s fow days since by an indignant upholder of the Union Pacific monop- oly, and asked to explain his vote in favor of Dosne's rallroad law, ho ex- e —————————————————————————— the railroad mianagers than any other state in the Unlon, California alone excepted. They bave waited long enoogh for the promised reforms in the raflroad headquarters and they have walted in valn. They have dis- covered that the lsw of ‘‘self-inter- est,” which the railroad organs have 20 persistently howled In their ears, is altogether one sided. Mr. Deane's law is the entering wedgo of a comiog railroad legislation which will compel corporations to keep within the limits marked out for them by the laws and will force them to acknowledge and obey the will of the people which called them into cxistence. — Ix 1840 the entire white population of the reglon now included n the states of Minnesota, Towa, Kansss, Nebrasks, Colorado, Texas, Oali- fornia, Oregon and Nevads, and the territories of Dakota, Mcntana, New Mexico, Wyoming, Utsh, Idaho, Washington and Arizona, was not equal to that of Utah in1880. Itis now mnearly 7,000,000, and contains three times ¢s many miles of railway a8 wers in operation in sll the states thirty years ago, with postoffices and mail service in proportion. Waatevee M. Stanley Matthews may think of the delsy of the senste in acting upon th® matter of the confifmation of his appolntment s an associste justice of the supreme court, he caunot complain of the delsy of the general public. Thero has boen astorm of protest seldom equslled. The busivess of packing the supreme court with corporstion lawyers has gone far enongh. Tae prosperity of our country dar- ing the past year is shown very con- olusively by the corrected report of the chief of the burean of statistics at Washington. During December, 1880, the value of our ex- ports of merchandise amount- ed to the sum of §98,856,632 being larger than during sny previous month in the history of the country. —_— TaE editor of our Faraham street contemporary has discovered that mo- nopolies are uniting to hinder the ad- vancement of the northwestern por- tlons of our state. Why don’t the Herald turn its attention to the mo- nopelies which are injurlng its readers mear at homo, Now that Omahs has a charter competent to supply her needs asa growing metropolis, the greatest care should be taken by our citizens and electors that none but able and honest public officers and council shail be elected to carry its provisions into operation. —_— Oy two more days of wind and buncombe and the country will be re lieved of the first democratic congress under which it has suffered since the days of James Bucheoan, The coun- try is not likely to repaxt the experi- ment. ] Mixxesora is unfortunate in the 1oss of her public buildings by fire, A fow months ago the insane asylum at St. Peter was destroyed -and now the capitol has shared the samo fate. Both were uninsured. Flatned that he saw the bill was bound to pase anyhow and he proposed to be on the winning side. When Oburch Howe wina the people generally lose. —_— Tue recent order of the French government forbldding the importa- tlon of American pork will not be an. unmixed evil 1f it calls the sttention of American shippers of meats to the necomity of greater care In pork packing and closor inspection of meats intended for foreign export. Our foreign consuls have already callea the attention of the govern- ment to the injurious effects which the sale of this class of produce has had upon the general trade in Amer- ©can meats sbroad. The dishonesty of English muslin manufacturers s driving thelr goods from the East Indian trade. In like manner, Amerios cannot afford to offer for wale in foreign markets snything but the best of her products. Gax. G. M. Dobar writes to » friend in this eity of the panic in New York. He saye: *It looked like 73 yesterday, but the big men, the us men, the ‘monopo- lists,’ came fn and did what the gov- ernmsnt ssemed utterly unadle to sc compll The purchase of stocks * % by Gould, Vanderbilt sod Drexel saved many a poor lamb's bide to-day. To-morrow they will hold an anti-monopoly moeting."—[Herald. What outragsous nonsense! Does the edlitor of the Herald or Gen. G. M. Dodge think that the people of Oumaha sro fools! Who have presip- Itated apd malnteined nearly every panlc which has shaken our fioanclal oontres since 18571 Who was it ln 1869 that entered into & conspir- acy to bull the price of gold, and in the ocollapse which followed paralyzed the business of the country and rained thoussads of our business men? Ths people of thls country are too familier with the causea of the financial panle of 1873 and subsequent squeezes of the money market not to lay the blame st the proper door. And whea the Herald approvingly quotes Gen. Dodge as sayicg that the purchase of stocks by Gould, Vanderbilt snd Drexel did what the government was powerless to ‘sccomplish, it endorses misstatement which it knove better than to belleve. — Tux cordial eympathy expressed by the corporation managers for the peo- pleon sccouat of the passage of the Dosse law, is very edlfying. If one were to bolieve the statementa of Managors Touzalin and Kimball the operation of the Doane law will seriously injure the stock, agricaltaral and commerclal Interests of our state and rea:t heavily upon the producers who have urged it's passage. This I a very late day tor the managers of the railroads to commiserate with the ~ people uf Nebraska. For twelve yoars they have wuffered groater ex- tortion and oppression at the hands of Tae last coats of varnish sre being applied to that cabinet, and three mora days will witness its exhibition. Hitcheoek won't be found stowed awsy in one of the drawers. — ‘Tiz Black Venus,” by Adolphe Belot, ® one of tho most rematkable works of the prosent day. It is alt ogether unlike any other ever published, and occupies place in literature peculiar to itsell. In M. Bolot takes his readers to equatorial Africa, and introduces them to strange people and still stranzer customs. Start- ling soenes and incidents follow each other in rapid succession, and the wonderful ook may be sppropriately described as a series of exosptionally attractive and novel surprises. * A new world is exposed to the eye in its pages, with rauk tropieal vegeta- tion and innumerable hosts of wild and ter- rible animals, The Nile s described in a notably vivid and interesting fashion, with its colossal hippopotami and armies of crocodiles, and a glimpse is given of the horrors of the slave trade. “The Black Venus” is, in fact, & happy combination of travel and fiction, and through it runs » vein of most felicitous and pleasing hu- mor. Tt is, to a great extent, a love story, but & love stary utterly oat of the com- ‘mon track, aud therefore all the more in- feresting, Swhile that portion of the tale relating to the Black Veous and ths Amazons is fall of weird besuty. Itis excassively romantic from beginning to end, and contains an im- mense amount of valuable and entertai ing information concerning the *‘Dark Continent” and its numerous tribes, which has been worked into the story in & mas- terly way. “THEEBLACK VENUS” has been translated and adapted by George D. Cox, in the moét faithful and effective manner, and has been dramatised and brought out in spectacular form, and will be given in all the principal theatres in the United States. It is published by T. B. Peterson & Brothers, Philadelphia, in a large square duodecimo volume, paper cover, price eents, in uniform edition of ““Dosis,” *Nanma,” *! 5 ‘molr,” eto., and will be found for sale by all Booksellers and News Agents, and on all Rallroad Trains, or copies of it will be Sent to any one, to auy jlace, at once, on remitting the price in a letter to the Pub- lishers, T. B. Peterson & Brothers, Phila- Qelphis, Pa. Marriage by Telegraph K. Y. Hemld. A marriage by telegraph has been announced that, had the vacies to tho sacred contract been at the itwo ends of the wire instead ct two ardent uls st one end and a clergvman at the other, theinnovatien might have been hsiled s an improvement on existing methods. Ordinarily s ma riage is a contract between two pecple who, thanks to personal and mutual friends, have temporarily taken leave of their senscs. They promise many thiugs which, if they were to see their vowsin writing, would never be but which, standing up in a ba ly frightened condition priest in a cbascel of a church, are eaid without the slightest hesitation and lamented. | for msny years after, This would perhaps beof special advantage to the contracting parties, but as marriage almoet always bas consequences which expect to reach three score years and ten the feeliugs of the’ contracting partios are of secondary consideration. before ' lines to his colossal comblu: also ocontrols the telegraphic system | Tosuch complications of conssogulnity as are created by marrisge s ceremony by telegraph is of Inestimnblo service. As everything ssid by bride, groom or minlster is recorded in black and white the heirs of the contracting partios are reasonably certaln of sup- port during their minorlty, which is more than they can depend upon un- less their parents are bouad by some- thing strongér than the ordinary vows of sentimental lovera. STATE NOTES. David City wants a flouriog mill. A new depot is belog built at Shel- ton. Alma s to havea large geain ele- vator. Oitizens of Norfolk are preparing for a flood. Several breaks in the mill dam have occurred lately. Farmers are predicting heavy crops the coming season. A large part of the Clay county corn crop s ungathered. e Otoo county wheat crop is as- sured beyond all danger. Twelve sacks of mail were recelved in O'Neill City on Monday: A new postoffice building will be erected in North Platte. Red Willow county is taking steps to organiza an agriculiural society. The estimated expensea for Dixon county for the current year is §12,200. Jadge Gaslin has recently engaged in the eheep business in Harlan coun- ty. Syracuse received o mall from the west for eleven days, until last Wed- needsy. The Central Nebraska Hortlcultural ociety met at Hastings Tuesdsy of this yeek. There wiil bs a great deal of trans- ferring of real estate in Holt county the coming seazon. The man who buras the first hun- dred thousand brick near Alma will find a ready sale for them. The Oakdale mill is now running night and day, and every pound of flour always ordered ahead. Last week the body of an noknown man who had perished in the late storms was brought into Loup City. The Farmers’ Alliance of Boone county has publicly expelled Geo. W. Brown, who represented them In the legislature. The village treasarer of Indisncla gots a salary of $5 per year and is re- Qulred to give s bond “in the sum of Pool chips are s logal tender in the town of Fallerton, Nance county. They are taken in the stores at 50 per cont face value. Several business houses in Bloom- ington closod one day last week on ac- count of the scarclty of fuel in that place. North Platte has a scandal. A young giel loft her home there last Week to enter a house of ill-fame, notwithstanding the entreaties of her parents. In November, 1880, the clty of North Platte received over the Union Pacific railroad, 1,253,611 pounds of freight, coal not incladed. The Ancient Order of Hibernlans of Columbus are msking arrangements for a grand celebration oa St. Patrick's Day, March 17th, There will doubtless be a great de- mand for farm hands this spring, ss corn husking and spring work will come all together. Mr. Joseph Retonmyer, of Sher- man county, wae frozen to desth last week, while oa his way home from a neighbor's. Joho White, husked day after day last fall for Francis Dively, liying a fow miles southwest of Syracuse, 75 bushels of corn per day, working nine hours daily. Ono W. W. Hoye is notifylng par- ties in the eastera pact of the state who have bored walls to walk up snd pay him £ for the privilege of using them. Serlous fears are entertalned that when the ice in both the Platte and ins to move, many of the ing thoss streams will move with it. The Sioux City & Pacific company will, this year, build 110 miles of road from O'Noill City, where the grsde now rests, to the vicinity of Fe, Niobrara, a little north of west of O'Neill City. Senator Windom on Monopolies. ““Corporate power has_done much to develop our ccuntry. For its good deeds I freely accord 1t full credit. As an iastrament to execate the will and serve the interests of the public, it is of incalculable value; but as the im- perious ruler of the people it isa most cruel and relentless tyrant. Kept within the limits of proper restraint, it is an invaluable servant of the pub- lic. Unrostralned by the forces of Iaw and public opinion, it will prove most dangerous master. The indi- vidaal feitizen Is impotent to contend with this gigantic and rapidly growing ower. Gouernmental suthority, state and national, alone Is competent restrain its aggressions and correct its abuses. I have long foreseen that the time would come when the people would bs compelled to Invoke the exercise of that authority for other protection. I repeat to-day, in substance, words uttered seven yearsago, that “‘there aroin this coun- iry four men who in the matter of taxation"possess and frequently exer- cise powers which neither congress nor any of our state legislatures would dare to exert—powers which 1f exercised In Great Britain would shake the throne to its very founda. tion. Thes men may at any time, and for any resson satisfactory to themselves, by & stroke of the pen re- duce the value of property in the United States by hundreds of mil- lions, They may at their own will and pleasure disarrange and emba: rass business, depress one city or lo- cality and build up another, enrich oae individual and ruln his compet tors, and, when complaint is made, coolly reply, *‘What are you going to do about " The men who wield this stupendous corporate power have grown wiser with the passage of ovents. Hitherto they have been content to absorb and contral thegreat T country. He may at any time securo the foorth paper, T ehich will give him sbsolute control over_ the news which the people shall receive. When that takes place what will be our condi- tion] What chance will the people then have to resist the epcroschments, of corporate power? How shall they even communicate with each otheron the subject! What opportunity will there be for a fair discussion of these through the agency of which the news Is distribated over the entire questions! The daily news supplied to the myrisd of newspapers must pass under the supervision of cne or two men, who represent the Arsoclated Press, and who_are appointed by its owner. They will have full suthority aud doubtless will be required to sup- press, add to, or color the information thus sent out as_may best serve the Interest, the ambition,'or the malice of theman to whom they owe thelr places. Hence, the twenty milllcns of people who read the moralng papers at their breakfast tables bill daily receive just such impressions as this one man shall choose to give them. Pablic menand affairs, and business interests and movements, will beseen in the color- ing which shall best serve his interesie, The legislator who shall then be bold enough to raise his voice in behalf of the people, or to strike a blow In their dofense, will bo misrepresented, or denied a hearing before his own con- stituents, Tho business man who shall venture to_quescion the divine right of corporato ralo will be crushed. and no telegraphic wie or Associated Press will voice his woe or demand re- dress from his prsecutors. The poople wiil find themselves unable to com- municate with each other except by tho gracious will and plessare of the autocrat of the wires. Should special correspondents undertake to supply information not deemed expedient to be sent by the Associated Press, they will find that the owner of the wires can supply a ready remedy for such prasumption. The channels cf thought and the channels of commerce thus owned and controlled by ono man, or by fow men, what is to restrain corporate power, or to fix a limit to its exactions apon the peoplel What s tnen to hinder these mon_from depressing or inflating the value of all kinds of preperty tosait the' ice, and thereby gat] own coffers the wealth of the nation? ‘Where is the limit to such & power as this? What shall be eaid of the spirit of a free people who will submit with- out a profest to be bound thus hand and foot? Ihavehinted at some of the dangers which menace our future, If It be to correct these evilsand avert these dangers your league has been or- ganized, it will receive tho benedi tions of the people. The practical questlon s, ‘What are you going to do about it” To my mind the answer ls easy. This organized gigantio corpo- rate power can only be kept under proper restraint by the orgabized power of the peopls, expressed through their state and national governments. That such governmental power exista and may properly be cxercised I have not a particle of doubt. It is plainly written in our constitutions, and has been unequivocally declared by the supreme court of the United States.” INDUSTRIAL NOTES. The Norton iron works, Ashland Ky., durlng 1880 manufsctared 223, 000 kegs of nails, and 10,840 tons of The People and the Corporations. Gazs Go. (Neb,) Democrat. There s no question but that the combination of capltal und concentr tlon of effort effected throash corpor- ate organizations has dome mora than anything else to develop the resourcos and advance the materisl prosperity of the country; and yet it 18 not to be de- nled that the greatest dangor threat- ening the futare well-being of the ople, is that which arises from the increasing powsr of the great corpor- stions, and the inclination to the self- ish abuse of that power upon the part of corpsration mansgers. Indeed, if these great_corporations contiaue in the same line of effort for the next ton years that they have pursued for ten years past, crushing out competi- tion and building up monopoly, and vuying up leglslatures, and even con- gress itself, and packing courts in order to sustain themselves in the course which they ara taking, tho peo- ple will inevitably come to tne conclu- sion that the early position of tho democratic party, in opposition to the grauting of charters to corporations of all kinds, was just and safe and thould have been generally endorsed and adhered to; that national great- ness and wealth is by no means a blessing to the peogle, when the Do eras well as the property is concen- trated in the hands of the few, and poverty and oppression is the ot of the many. A contemporary suggests that,*“The pecple against the corporations would e an 1ssue that would go through th country like fire before a March wind.” Such Is the fact. Such anissue would go like fire and would bo ecarcely loss destructive when once under way. It is sincerely to bo hopod that no such sue will be ralsed—and that the ne- cessity therefor will mot a The danger, howover, is immfnent. Un- lees theso glant combinations of cor- porato power and capital, or the Vanderbilts, Goulds, Hunt- ingtons, and others who direct and control them, ceaze their efforts to grasp supreme power and abso- lutely govern. the people through whose past concessions they obtained the right to engage, in corporats capacity, in the business in which they have attained such weslth, and confine themeelves to the fair and legitimate parsuit of such business, the fssue will be raised and in the contest which ensues the people will surely triumph, Lst tho corpora- tions attend to the businees for which they are chartered and lot the psople take care of the government, if thls is really a government of the people by the peoplo, and if net let us know why not. In thi does a worthy Tllinois contemporary bemoan: “‘This is {o certify that we bavo nover frled St. Jacobs Oil, and haven’c the least idea whether it would do us good or not.” Even s, ye Ledger people; but we know lots of people who have been cured by it, and such s glad thanks. giving a3 is dally rendered by tho army of martyrs recoverod from rheumatism and other painful dis- eases, would be a revelation of pleas- ure to the favored ones of health. TE® Great German pig iron. NEURALGIA, Ths rolling mills at Bay View, near Milwaukee, Wis., conyerted 131,000 tons of ore last-year, and will require 140,000 tous this year. Daring the past year the produc- tion of siik fabrics in the -United States exceedod $30,000,000 in value, d 1t is steadily increasing all the timo. The New York Contral & Hudson ver raflroad company has ordersd 30 and the Lake Shore 40 new loco- motlyes from the Schnectady (N. Y.) locomotive works. Eloven furnaces were erected in Ohio in 1854, and eloven in 1870. During the forty-eight years interven- ing between 1829 and 1877, tho aver- age was about one furnace per num. At Des Moines, Towa, a starch f; tory I8 in course of erection, which to cost §300,000, and have a capacity SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, BACKACHE, GOUuT, ‘SORENESS GENERAL for consuming 3,500 bushels of corn per day. The manufaciaring Indusiries of Codar Rapids, Towa, are reported as having been more prosperous darlng :h: lyelrl lSSl; th.u:iever before. The otal valu of products is stated at $7,500,000. 2 Five new glass factorles wero estab- lished in Ohio in 1880, and several more will bo added during the current yoar. Late ofiicial statistics give 19 firms engaged in the manufactura of glass, with 32 furoaces, having 202 pots and employing 2,032 hands. Columbus, Ohio, capitalists, it is sa’d, have decided to offer $20,000 in money and eeven acres of land as an inducement to » Hagorstown (Md.) firm of agricultural implement manu~ facturers to locate there, Ttis said that England has 2,930,- 000 cperatives whose average annual products are 81,120 oach; Germany, 2,781,000, who produce annually each 515 'in value; France, 1,936,000, whoss annual products average $1,100 each. The value of tho textile pro- ducts produced in_the United King- dom is 8775,000,000; United States, £120,000,000; France, $340,000,000% Germany, $240,000,000. The sixteen car works In this coun. try, it is estimated, are now turning out 128 new cars ds The Bothle- hem car works, Pa., lead off with six- toen cars per day; Barney, Smith & Co., next, building twelve a day; the others varsing from six to ten cars per day. Most of thess companios have as much work contracted for as they can tarn out in the mext six months. The Phoenix Iron company, of Phoen’zvilie, Pa, are nuwp.:.’aung their {arnaces with gas manufactured from anthracite This company o boen_experimonting for a long time, and have at last_discovered the secret which will add largely to the capacity of their works. The Siemens converters and furnaces are used in the process. Galvetton, Texas, has an extenalva cotton-seed oil factory, recently put in operation, which has a capacity to manufacturs 600,000 gallons of ril, BODILY PAIRS, TOOTH, EAR x> HEADACHE, e All otk Pains "No_Preparation on earth equals . Jac: 3 Siuriz and CHEAP Extoraal Remedy. i the compazativaly trifing outlay of £ 'Carrs, and every one sufleing with paia can Rave hesp and positive proof of ta claims. DIRECTIONS IN ELEVEN LANGUAGES. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDICIAE, A. VOGELER & CO. Baltimore, Md., U. 5. 4. aay previous yeard iable’ e R PR G O MORE POPULAR THAN EVER. ; The Gennine SINGER NEW FAMILY SEWING MACHINE. The popular demand for the GENUINE SINGER in 1879 exceeded that of juring the Quarter of a Century in which this “0ld Maohias s Deens betoes Bogattic. In 1878 we sold 356,422 Machines. In 1870 we sold 431,167 Mechines. 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 tbe year, RERMIEMBERR That Every REAL Singer Sewing Ma- chine hes this Trade Mark cast “into the Iron Stand and em- bedded in the Arm of the Machine, The “0ld Reliab'e" Singer is the Strongest, the Simplest, the Most Durable Sewing Ma- chine ever yet Con- stracted. THE SINGER MFAGTURlNG Co. Principal Office: 4 Union Square, New York. 1,500 Subordinate Offices, in the United States and Canada, sad 3,000 Officer intheOld p16-d ‘World and South America. Geo. P. Bemis ReaL Estare Acexcy. 1664 & Douglas Sis., Omaha, Neb. Tals sgency doos STRIONLY 3 brokerage bus's ness. Doca notapesulate, ud therefors any ar- guing oa lta books aro Insared o (ta_patrous, 1o Stoad of bolne gobbled up by tho eceat BOGGS & HILL, REAL ESTATE BROKERS No 1408 Farnham Street OMAHA - NEBRASKA, ©Offica—Nort Elde opp Crand Contral Hotel. Nebraska Land Agency. DAVIS & SHYDER, 1506 Farnham St. Omaka, Nebr. 400,000 ACRES carofully oclected land in Basteru Nebraska for salo, Great BargaingIn tmproved farins, and Omahs clty propert-. . F. i WEDSTER SNYDER, AVIS. Lategand Con'r U. P. R. B 4p-tabTtt Byron Reed & Co., oupmsTRSTASLIETD REAL ESTATE AGENCY IN NEBRASKA. Keep a completo abstract of title to all Real Estato in Omaha snd Dongias County. mayltt CHARLES RIEWE, UNDERTAKER! Metalle Casos, Coffins, Caskets, Shrouds, etc. Fara mBtres . Cthand1ith,Omaba, Neb. <graphic ordera oromotly atseaded to. IR OCHRELSIOR Machine Works, oMAIAa, WEAR. J. Hammond, Prop. & Manager, The most thorongh appolatel and complote Machine 8hops and Foundry In the state. Castings of very description manufacted. Fngincs, Pumpa aad every clase of machinery made to order. Pactal attention given to Well Angurs, Pulicys, Jlangers, Shafting,Bridge Irons,Geer te. Catting, Planstor now Mschinery, g, Models, etc., neatiy ex 56 Harney 8t., Bet. 14th and 15th. D. T. MOUNT, ‘Manufacturor and Dealer in SADDLES and HARNESS, Agents for JAMES R. BILL & CO., Celcbrated CONCORD HARNESS. #27The Best. in Tho Worldwa 1412 Farnham St., Omaha, Neb, 2iantos! Draught JNO. G. JACOBS, (ormerly of Gish & Jacobs) UNDERTAKER Ko. 1417 Parnham ., Old Stand of Jacob Gla ORDERS B TELEGRAPE SULICITS NEBRASE.A VIHEGAR WORKS) ERNST KREBS, Manager Manutacturer of all kinds of VINEGAR pes'Stl Dot 9th and 10 OMABA seq BANKING HOUSES. THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED. BANKING HOUSE IN NEBRASKA. CALDWELL, HAMILTONSCO BANKERS. ‘Business trensactod ssme 23 that 0 an lacor- poratec Bazk. Acsounts ke ¢ tn Carrency or goid subfect to sight check without uotive. Certicates of deposit fasued pavatle n t six and twolve months, bearing interest, ‘demand without luterest. “Advauices made to customers on approved se- curtien at market rates of Interest Buy and sell gold, hills of exchanzs Gcvera ment, State, County and Gity Bonds. Draw Sight Dralts on England, Irclaod, Scot- tand, snd all parts of Earope Sell Earopean Passaze Tickete. GOLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. angldt U. § DEPCSITORY. First Namionar Bang OF CMAHA, Cor. 18tb and Farnham Streets, OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHMENT IN OMATIA. (SUCCESSORS TO KOUNTZE BROS.,) ‘neTABLIZIED £ 1666, Organtsed as National Baak. Auguat 20, 1562, Capital and Profi!n_Over$300,00£' Epocially sathortzed by the Secretazy or Tresgury %0 racelve Sabscription o tho U.8.4 PER CENT. FUNDED LOAN. OFFICERA AND DIRECTOR ‘Hxmzan Ecomaz, President. ‘Avsusus Kovmza, Vice Pre H. W, Yaras, Gash AL J, Porruzrow, Attoros. eridont. o A. G ¥ E, Davis, Aes't Oushler. socelce dopostt without razard ¥ am Tosuas time certificatos boadtn; latarest, Drawa drafts oo San Frauclecy snd pe citlen of the Unitod States, uls Lond. Edinb d tho principal cities nent of Barope. Bells passags Hckets for Emigrants in the Tn. msn_ne. o s1d4t HOTELS THH )JRIGINAL. BRIGGS HOUSE | oz, Randolph St. & 6th Ave., CHICAGO ILL. PRICES REDUCED 70 $2.00 AND $2.50 PER DAY Located in the business centre, convenlont to places of amusement, Elogantly furnished, taining all modern Jmprovements, passenger valor &e. 3. . CUMMINGS, Froprietar, OCDEN HOUSE, Cor. MARKET ST. & BROADWAY Council Bluffs, Iowa: Oultne o Street Fallway, Omnibus to snd from al tzaine, “RATESParior floor, $5.00 por day; socond floor, 32.60 per day ; thifd fioor, $2.00. Tho best faraished and most commodious hooss 1o the Gty ‘GEO. T. PHELPS Prop. 8. G. STEVENSON & CO. Carpenters and Builders, have removel to No. 1308 Dodgo Strect, whero they ato prepared to do allinds of work in theirline on short notice at reasonable rates. A. W. NASON. DENTIST, Orrcu: Jacob's B €, coruer Oapitol Ave, and 15¢h Street. Omaha Noh. NOTICE. Any one having dead anlaals I will remove them frec of charge. Leave orders southeast o ¥ of Harney and 14th St., second door. CHARLES SPLITT. CHATTEL MORTGAGE SALE Notice s hereby given that dofault has been ‘made in a certain chattel mortgage bearing date January Jst, 1881, executed by Joseph La Chapelic and’ Heory E. Forsdyke, mort:agors, and to John Edwards as mortgagee. Said morteage_was duly racorded in the county clerk's offico in and for Douglas County, Ne- braska. And in said mortgage sald La Chapelle and Forsdyke sold and morigaced to said John Edwards the following desibed goods and cha- tels, to-wit: 1 pearl power and model hand- press, 50 Iba brevisr type, 85 1bs nongareil iype, 1 cabinet with typs cancs, 8 new casts, 2 type racks, 1 nonpareil card border, 1stove and pipe, 2 planers, 12 coner pizces, 2 guoine, 1 wrench, 3 composingsticks, 2 “Boug® ofs,” 1 “‘Office Ot 1 30,1 %" 1 corner cut, 1 grape cut, 1 carriago ‘cut, § mall cuts. 11 flourisher, 15 168 leads, 15 fcod brass rule, 10C wood quois 6 #mall type cases, 1 hand ink roller, 8 emall i ing stones, 2 twezors, jooting stick, 1 industrial and material interests of the couatry by a monopoly of the ways and means cf transports‘ion, but recently new and alarming con- ditions are presented. They know full well that if the people can freely communicate with each othor will eeo the dangerous tendenci this power, and organize to restrain it. Hence, in order to lay doep and sure foundations for the maintenance of their power, and to defeat the efforts of tho people to curbit, they have now seized upon the- chaunels of thonght. Look at 1t moment. One man, who controls more miles of railroad than ang other in the world, and who is almost daily adding new ion, now of the United States and Canads, and is reaching under the sea to grasp that of Europe. Not content witu all this, and Getermined that no in- strument of commercisl add political | wer shall_elude his gessp, e is (as learn) aléo the owner of three out of the seven newspapers which constitate the Associated Press, and 10,000 tone of oil cske per annum, It has becn crected and put in oper- ation by a joint stock company with a capital of §300,000. The works oc- cupy. an entire block, the main building being of brick, two storles a half high. The machinery is driven by a 230-horss puwer engine, This new indusiry at present gives employmeut to fifty hands. The Philadelphia bridge works, at Pottetown, have received contracts for building an iron bridge of six spana, 100 feet in length, and a draw pan of 200 fest, for the New Orleans and Pacific railway company; also for # bridgo of three spans, of 100 feet in length cach, for the Teras Pacific railroad. Another contract has been reccived for making 350 tons of iron for the Pennsylvania railroad compa- ny's branch. The firm now employs 208 men and rans night and day. The first admonition you recelve, that havs caught oid 18 o commence. Snces ng. 1o 5 hlof wnder ch Greumiance 1t sen e persons do ta o get e parine et some. of Dr. Taomas ‘Omaha, Neb’,” 18, 19 A’Smal Gothic type, 14 A Cetlictype, vpe, 2 A J 104 i in the b story of building known as 1100 Farnbs Omaha, Nebraska on the 4th day cf March. 1881, at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon, all the above described goods and chattels to satisfy i JOHN EDWARDS, PROBATE NOTICE. In the matter of the estate of Julius . Talele, ‘decoased: g Notico s hereby wid ‘Cotnty,on to 20th day of February, the 20th diy ot Apeil, 1851, and_ou tho %0th day of June, 1881, 'at’ 10" Gclock, 2. m., cach day, for the purpogs of presenting their claims for examinati ce. ‘sdfustment._and al for_creditors to present ’m““'m‘&’..“'"w"'d%isw anlowat - O BTty dudge THE MERCHANT TAILOR, Isprepared to make Pants, Suits and overcoats o order. Prices, it and workmanship garaateed to suit. One!Door West of (frnickshank’s. moty, J. C. VAPOR, MERGHANT TAILOR Capltol Ave,, Opp. Masorlo Hall, OMAEA, - - - - NEB AGENTS WANTED EOR the Fastest Selling Book of the Age! Foundations of Success. BUSINESS AND SOUIAL FORYS. T laws of trads, egal forms, how to frans- act business, valaabie. tables, Bocal ctiquetie, Yekamentay T “eoniuct pabiss ity ocsatsy. Rdress for circolars and special terms, ANCHOR PUB- REED'S “ALLTIME,” By “Almont,” be by Alexander's “Abdalizh,” Sire of “Goldsmith Maid” First cam “On Time® by * War Dance,” son of the renowned “Lexinglon;” Second, “Eils Bro-kooridge” by “Coll son of iniported “Soverelzn.” ““Almonl's” frst “Maubeino Chiel” ‘This remarkable horse will be five yrars old in May, he will_serve only 35 mares (half of which number is now eagaged) at §2500 per mare, payable at time ofservice. ‘Sedson commences April 1st and will end Bept, Ist. _After that tme his service will be out at §35 00 Any mare that has trotted in 2:30 served yazn. ED. REED, Proprietor. Stable Corner 11th and Howard Btreets. ‘marlcodsm FRONTIER HOTEL, Laramie, Wyoming. Tho miners rosort, good accommodstions, args sseuplo room, chirges rosonable. Special aitintion givon 5o ravllng men. i i, HILLIARD Propeletor, INTER - OCEAN HOTEL, Cheyenne, Wyoming. Firstciass, Flao argo Sample Rooms, one bioek from depot. Triinastop from 30 mistes to hours for diner.. Pree Dus t0 and from pov. Eates $200,§2.60 sod $3.00, ccordiog oo e e T W BORDEN, Gulet lerk. " mid-t e PASSENCER ACCOMMODATION LINE OMAHA AND FORT OMAHA Connects With Street Cars Comor ot CSRUNDERS “and HAMILTON BRERTS. (Ead of Red Like a8 tllome: " KEATE OHAMA: 15 and leavine omahs, and the Fort Oomat, aio uenally ‘eapaci reqular passongors. The 6:17 a. m. run will be made from the post- office, corner of Dodgo and 15th enrehts. Ti ciiots can be procured from streot cardrir- car THE CREAT WESTERH: Geo. R, Kathban, Principal. Oreighton Block, - OMAHA Send for Circular, novad&wt AGENTS WANTED FOR OUR NEW BOOK, “py ) “‘Bible for the Young, Being the story of the Scriptares by Rer. Gto. lexander Crook, D. D., in simple and sttrac- i Tanguage.for ol ‘nd youg. " Profussly Hieatrated. Baking a most interesding and i Bressve i fsteactor. Secaro i work. . Pieachers, 500 abould dr- Guiaiel, wPrice 8300, Bend for circulars with extr terms. J. H. CHAMBERS & CO.,, Bt, Louls, Mo FIRIE FIRE FIRE The Popular Clothing House of M. HELLMAN & CO.. Find, on account of the Season so far advanced, and having a very large Stock of Suits, Overcoats and Gents’ Furnishing Goods left, = They Have REDUGED PRICES that cannotfailto please everybody REMEMBER THE ONE PRICE CLOTHING HOUSE, 1301 and 1303 Farnham St., Corner 13th. G00ODS MADE TO ORDER OK SHORT NOTICE. PIANOS = ORCANS. wer GHICKERING PIANG, 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, T deal in Pianos and Organs exclusively. Have had years experience in the Business, and handle ouly the Best. J. S. WRIGHT, 218 16th Street, City Hall Building, Omaha, Neb. ~+ #* HALSEY V. FITOE_Tung‘- SHEELY BROS. PACKING CO., Wholesale and Retail in FRESH MEATS& PROVISIONS, GAYE, POULTRY, FISH, ET¢. CITY AND COUNTY ORDERS SOLICITED. OFFICE CITY MARKET—1415 Douglas St. Packing House, Opposite Omaha Stock Yards, U. P. R. R. TEHLODPEONE OONNBOTIONS. DOUBLE AND SINGLE AOTING POWER AND HAND PUMPS Pumps, Engine Trimmings, Mining ) BELTING HOSE, fg”s AMD IRON FITTINCS, PIPE, STEAM PACKING WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. { HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS wrnham Street Omaha, Neb A. L. STRANG, 205 ¥ Remvmovz=ID. J. B. DETWILER, THE CARPET MAN, Has Removed From His Old Stand on Douglas St., to His NEW AND ELEGANT STORE, 1313 Farnham Street, Where He Will be Pleased to Meet all His ©d Patrons. ORK AND BEEF PACKERS ~