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THE DAILY BEE. E. ROSEW ATER: EDITOR PRESIDENT GARFIELD. Davip Davis 18 n: relation to Chief Justice ““Welght.” —_— Sexaror Oonuse's top knot 1s twisted tighter than ever. —_— Tar dissppolnted cabinet makers can now devote their energles to news tinkerings. —_— Grxzral GanrmEnv's sdminlstra: tlon began in storm and will end in sunshine. - —_— Havixo finished up the storm busi- ness, Vennor is now giving Hazen a qalet pointer on gales. We miss the unsual democratic re- marks that the new president isn't & man of strong convictions. _— Tue veto of President Hayes on the fanding bill was short and to the point. At least the*bankers think so. Tux inhabitants of the Transvasl are expert marksmen. The English now sppreciate the efficacy of small bores. AxD now the rural exchanges have ceased to copy the stereotyped remark about the new administration march- ing in and the old March-ing 4th. A pEMocratic lcbbyist tn Tllinois 1s named Buzzard. He frequents the legislature about appeopristion time, because “where the carcass ls, there the buzzards do most congregate.” — AxL the prestige won by Hitcheock and through his literary buresu, couldn't diepel the odor which hung about his record. Hence the failure of that cabinet appointment scheme. —_— PRESIDENT GARFTRLD enters into of- fice a« the chief executive of & nation of 51,000,000 inhabitants. He will retire, eight years hence from & gov- ernment ruling over 65,000,000 of peo- ple. Tae state board of discrimination will bo watched with close attention at their coming sossion snd the plans!- ble argaments of railroad managers will not be sccepted by the people as an excase for another steal from the tax-payers of this state. Omaruzs A. Daxa, of the New York Sun, has lost his oocupation, and the stereotyped “His fraudul- will be melted up and cast into type more befitting the presi- dency of the United States. —_— Tux farmers in and sbout Middle- town, New York, have organized a company for the purpose of selllng milk. Tts oapttal stock is $10,000, in shares of §1 each. In the interests of consumers, it is to be hoped that they will refrain from watering thele stock. Tue Milwaukee Republican thinks that the orthography of Joo Medill, of the Chicago Tribune, would be a fatal objection to his appointment a® Todisn commissioner. It wouldn’t do to introduce the Medillisn system of spelling among the Indians. ———— Tar monopolies are chuckling over the fact that freight rates will in wome instances be advanced under the new railroad law. The people will havean opportunity to lesrn before two years are over, what frelght rates wre just and equitable and having provided that they shall be uniform, they will next make them reasonsble. —_—— T rallroad managers are likely to fall {2 the conspiracy which they are now organizing to make the operation of the Doane’rallroad law ax distaste- ful as possible to the shippers of this stato. Two years' trial may serve to ehow ite defects, but the corporations may be certain that those defects will finally be remedied in the interest of the producers of!this state and not for the benefit of the monopolies. —_— No greater evidence of the growing strength of the anti-monopoly move- ‘ment throughout the country is need- ed then the petitions which have poured into Washington protesting sgainst the confirmation of Stanley Matthews sud Eliot F. Shepard. Shepard is a son-in-law of Vanderbilt and ss district attorney would have the supervision of cases mow pending against the Central raflrosd company for shirking taxes to the amoant of $187,000. ENGLAND 13 becoming alarmed over the increased emigration to Americs, The London Standard atter estim- ating that during the past year Great Britain has presented this country with nearly $300,000,000, lsments bitterly that the vast stream of eml- gration cannot be diverted to the colonios. ““We may need our bone and sinew yet, but the bold peassntry once destroyed caunot be supplied again," says the Standard in conclud- ing its article ou the subjoct. When Great Britsin cesscs making her country impomible for a bold and liberty peassutry to reside in, it will be time ensugh for her jouroals to lement their departure. Mz. Fisx, the commissioner of the Eastern fool, is making the vain at- tempt to prove that the railroads of the United States are paying less than four per cent. on the capital invested. Mr. Fink ingeniously brings In the thirty or forty roads partly bailt or abandoned which are paying no inter- est on thelr oapital, and thus reduces | v, the sverage on roads like the Union Pacific which is paying nearly forty por cent. on the sctusl money iovested. A glance at the stock list * given the lie direct to Mr. Fink's im plied assertions that the majority of American railrosds are aot paying heavy dividends on stocks watered to twice and three times their actual value. THE LATE ADMINISTRATION. The four years administration of Ex-president Hayes will ever be clased as ove of the purest and best in the political history of the United EStatee. Entering the White House amid the trying circumstances of a d puted electorsl vote, enduring throughout his term of office the con- stant snd unwearying hostility of an opposition who held control of the legislative branch of the government, and hampered in the execation of his policy by a factious antagonism In the ranks of hisown pacty, the ex-presi- dent bas neverthelees loft his impress for good upon our mational pol and retires with a record of which no American need be ashamed. Four years ago, when the reins of government were given into the hands of Presiden Hayes, the ceuntry was staggering under the effects of financtal, commercial and in- dustrisl depression. A depreciated currency wasstill in circalation,eleven years after the clcse of the ciml strife which called it iato existenca. Amer- ican industry was producing but helf its capacity, our mills and furnaces, forges and looms wera workingon re- duced time. Our laborers snd me- chanics were earning reduced wages and our merchants receiving reduced interest on their business investment. The late administration found the republican party disorganized and In shopeless msjority in the national con- gress. The reckloss extravagance of the preceding administration, corruption in public ofice and coantless scandals among office holders some of which had stained the ekirts of the ontgoing members of the cabicet, the dishonest distribution of federsl patronsge the reward of personal service to con- gressmen and senators had created within the ranks ot the party a op- posing element. Tt converted a three- fourths republican majority in con- gress to a helpless minority and allenated from the party thousands of its former supporters and a number of ite founders. President Hayes enter- od upon the discharge of his duties by calling around him a bady of advisors of high reputation, acknowledged sbility and unquestioned _integrity. Every branch of the public service has felt their influence for good. The nation at large owes a greater debt of gratitude to the late secretary of the trassury than it can ever repay. Re- | sumption of specie payments and financial, commercisl and industrial stability have taken placo since the dark days when the administration of President Hayes first came in power. The clvil service has never preseuted » purer and cleaner record than dur- ing the past four yearsand carplog foreign criticlsm has been forced in- tos tone of outspoken praise when the subject of the govenment, the financial or industrisl condition of the United States has been under ite discussion, To his own party the late sdmiaistration has beeu of equal ser- vice, It found ths republican party disorganized and woak from a drawn battle in which congrees had been lost aud the presidoncy hardly won. It lesves it once more in control of the legislative branch of the national government, strong in the confidence of the people of the union and with a chief execative whose tenure of of- fice cannot be questioned. It leaves it with a party from which the most corrupt of its leaders aud henchmen have beea dethroned, with factional estrangement almost eradicated and with su_executive fully in harmony with the best elements of republican- ism. To the record made by the ad- ‘ministration of President Hayes more than to any one other cause was due the triumphant election of General Garfield, and the republican party will ba indeed “ungrateful if they fail 5 recognize his great services in their behalf. That the late administration made serions mistakes cannot detract from the praise which is justly due it. Had President Hayes and his cabi- net accomplished nvothing more than resumption and the revival of business which followed its aperation, history would not have neglected the recitel of the event us onc of the great eras In our nationsl aupals. But to this must be added the remarkable tunding operations of Secretary Sher. man, the maintenance of peace st home and abroad, the elevation and purifica. tion of the civil service in all its branches. When these sre taken into consideration, no fair and unbiassed cltizen of the country will deny that the late administration gave up the government, leaving behind them a ra- cord no less creditable to themselyes ihan honorable to the whole nation whose ntercsts for four years they watched and adm!nistered with abi- lity, fidelity and spotless integrity. Ausgnt Fisk fesrs the “dangerous temper” of the producing classes to- wards the corporato enterprises of the country. Mr. Fick ought to know whereof he speaks. As commissioner ot the eastern pool which has raited and lowered the rates on produce with a reckless disrogard of everything but the corporation coffers, Mr. Fink has had as much to do with exciting a just feeling of autagonism towsrds the railroads as any one other railway subordinate in $he country. Goversor Naxce has vetoed Re- presentative Schick’s bill which im. powered counties, precincts, villages, school distriots, towns and clties to campromise their indebtedness. Gov- ernor Nance deserves commendation for this action. Honest debts should be paid In fall with honest menoy. —_— Withina radius of sixty miles Las poseessec iron, conl, fire-clay, , suriferous silver, copper, srzen. us galena, miscaceous clay, pot. | ter's clay of superior quality, mics and silicato of magnesia. 1 strikes us that this is a feir showing of undeveloped resources. —— An importact discovery has bes mado on Taylor Hill, nesy Lendvate. | QOOCIDENTAL JOTTINGS Californa. Small pox hss dissppeared from Onkhmi.Po s San Benito counyy experlenced a lively shock of an earthquake Iast week. A section of a mastodon’s jaw issaid tohave been found at Danvills,Contra Costa county, The megnificent Masonicf,'emple at Oskland, was dedicated last week. Its cost was $70,000. ‘Wheeler, who strangled his sister- in law, Miss Tillson, in Francisco, has boen sentenced to be hanged on April 19th. The fruit canneries of California are turning a stock outyworth §2,000,000 a year, and the ;businees is largely in- creasing. Granite Basin minirg district s ex periencing a heavy boom. Over §06,- 000 1n gold has been extracted during tho last year from the quartz ledgee. E‘ght hundred thousand toos, or nearly twenty-seven million bushels of wheat, are on storage in the grain centres of Califoraia, left over from the season of 1880. Since the erection of wharves at Port Costa, cn the Straits of Carqui- sz, over two-thirds of the wheat for- merly shipped from Long wharf, at Oakland, has been loaded there. At Santa Aana, a party of engineers are reported to bs making surves at the coal fields recently purchated by the Southern Pacific railrosd compa- ny, preparatory to sinking shafts, The recent flood inthe Trackee river proved a godsend to the lumberman, for 1t brought down to their dams all the'logs | which had been caughtfin the stream for a long time past, and which would not have been moved by ordinary high water. Nevada. The Insane Asylum has been located at Reno. The Nevads legislature adjourned on the 2nd inst. forty-five murderers in state prison, Over £19,000 of bullion was shipped from Tuscarora last week. The Buster is the name of a mining location st Cherry Creek. A number of the mines of Tintfc ars produciag well and making ship- ment, Tho; Virglnia Chronicle ssys the Sutro tunnel is in a deplorable condi- tion. Toe Nevada legislature at their late session passed a bill forbidding opium smoking, Good laborers can be had for one dollar a day. The best carpenters get £3, 84 to $4 50. At Carson, Brown's aloon and bowl- ing alley and two Chinese laundries were destroyed by fire on the 25th alt. In the legislature, Smith’s bill to regulate and reduce charges on the inter-state railroads passed with only two negative votes. The age of the oldest convict in the Nevada state prison Is fifty-three years and the youngest fifteen. Among the 151 prisoners confined thereln are 45 marderers. The money erder department of the Tusearora postoffice issned orders- to the smount of $2,393.95 last week. The year ending Decsmber 31, 1880, it totaled up $69,713.77. The great Sutro tunnel, cut tore- lieve the celebrated Comstock mines of the vast quantitles of het water which are encountered in them, af- fords an outlet to 12,000 tons or about 3,000,000 gallons. The ruins of Franktown present a melancholy picture. In the wide- waste left by the torrent's track there is nothing left but desolation, except one white cottage, which, though it stood directly in the path of the flood, was unaccountably preserved unin: jured. Oregon. There were 2,078 arrests in Port- Iand last year. Over 822,000 were paid on govern- me=t account duricg 1860, in this state, for beer stamps, The Oregon Improvement company has contracted with tie Central Pa- cific railroad to supply all its coal for one year. The Oregon Railway and Navigation company has awarded the contract for grading 6fty miles of road bed be- tween Texas Ferry and Colfax. Railroad loggers near Olympia late- Iy cut a tree which was 112 feet high, without limbs, straight as an arrow, and without knots or flaws. It was sawed into four monster logs. Property is ssld to be greatly depre- ciating at New Tacoms since news was received of the Oregon Railrosd and Navigation company’s controlling the Northern Pacific. Fears are enter- tained that it will not be the terminus, Washington. Coal at Walla Walla retails at $60 per ton. Property valuation of Wasco county is $4,000,000. Olymia Is out of debt for the first time in many years. . The depot building at Seattle will be 100x40 feet, two stories high. The Port Discovery mill makes & cat of 75,000 feet of lamber ln twelve hours. A band of 700 sheep were sold near Pataha City recently for $L.50 per head. Preparations are made for an exten- sive sealing businss oft Cape Flattery, W. T., this yesr. Stockmen in Yakima, W. T., report that the cattle aro in a deplorable con- dition from lack of foed, and that hundreds of them could be purchased at §1 a head. Large bands of wolves, probably driven from the hills by enow, have lately been roaming in the vicinity of the Neah Bsy agency, Washington Territory. Idaho Snow has nearly all dfssppeared in Lower Pagetto valley. Coal mines In Beaver Head county are developing finely. The bridge over the Snake at Black- foot is completed. It cost £17,500 The opium law will knock a big hole in the sale of that opiate in Idaho City. The snow was five feet deop at Picrce City snd still falling at latest advices. Fifty men are at work in the Custer a0d Unknown mines, in the Yankee Fork dietrict. There are 200 houses in Ballovue, and many new ones going up. Orer- coats were laid aside there s month ago. The water in the Yankee Fork is of | a deep red since the starting ap of the Custer mill. No more salmon need be looked for in the stres: Many cattle wintering o the canyons of Snake and Salmon rivers have slipped and rolled from the stzep declivities and been killed. The Wood River extitement con- - hc:: h;been !truci which is said e hematite, making the finest | steel fn theworld. ~ et tinaes sll over Nevads, Utah, Mon- tana, and throughout the cast. It is thought that at least ten thousand peo- ple will go-there s soon as spring open Boise river has been booming, and it was for a time feared that the bridge would be carried awsy. So nuch damage has never before been done by high water in Southern Idaho. Prospecting the foothills at Wood River is quite extensively carried on; many are getting out timbers for building purposes, and several large contracts have recently been let to erect business houses and residences in the new town Marshal. Snow -slides aro numerous from Bellevue to Ssw.Tooth City on Salmon river. Themountainsaround Ketchum are dotted with sltdes. About fifteen miles below town, on what is known as Deer creek, four miners were hurled into eternity as they weze in the act of asting. The Paradise is improving con- stantly, The tunnel is now 200 feet on the ledge. A depth of 150 feet or more has been cbtained, and the mine widens with depth, The ledge is all good ore, gald-bearing, and the Par dise is now considered one of the best mines in the Salmon river country. [ Last week a party of 12 or 15 whites and several Indians started ona big hunt up the north fork of the Clea water, where they were joined by another large party of Indians. The snow being four feet deep, all hunting bad to be done on now-shoes, but the party killed about sixty deer, and caught any amount of trout through the ice. Montana, The twelfth legislative assembly ad- journed the 23rd ults : All bridges between Shaw and He- lena are reported gone. S Counsiderable stock is reported dead on the hills of Missoula county. Graders are at work on the North- ern Pacific road at Powder river. The_citizens of Diilon have sub- scribed §1,650 for a Methodist church. The Alice mine at Butte shipped bullion valued at $24,000 last week. Indians are reported to be killing cattle on Arrow creek, «in northern Montana. Next summer the finest hotel building in the territory will be er- ected at Butte. The end of the Northern Pacific road is less than forty miles from the Yellowstone river. The Northern Pacific proposes to put in a bid for the Yellowstone gov- ernment freight this season. Two of the thres meat markets of Benton have been obliged to close, be- ing unable to prooure beof. One of the Benton boats will make one or more trips up the Yellowstone as faras Huntley the coming season. The Butte bullion shipment for the week ending Saturday, February19th, far:)ke;l up 2,643 pounds, valued at Many sheep men on the north fork of Sun river lost their herds by drowning during the recent rising of the waters there, It is now believed that the loss of sheep in Meagher county will reach 20,000, 15,000 of which may be set down to Smith river. The Northern Pacific rallroad sur« veying party are expected Missonla on the 11th. From there a line will be run down the Missoula river. The willows bordering the river and various creeks near Benton have been almost entirely cat away for fuel dur- ing the scarcity of cord wood. Out of a flock of 6,000 of Burt & Kleln's sheep which they started to winter on Beaver Flats, they oply ‘broaght down 1,300 last week. T. C. Power has mado a proposi- tion to the legislature by which he agrees to build and oparato a steamer on the Upper Missouri for a subsidy of $20,000. No_ stock sf any consequence has boen lost up the Missoula valley yet on account of the winter. Cattle are looking well, but stock-growers are becoming alarmed, as the supply of feed is growing short Advices from Argenta, Madison county, say that Con. Bray is_taking out 1,000 ~r 1,200 pounds of $300 rock from the Lagal Tender every day, and will have quite a pile ready for ment when the transportation season opens. The entire herds on the Musselshell range last year wera estimated to be worth §100,000. This summer, it is estimated, this valley will cash its beet for §75,000; next season it will cash it at no less than $100,000, and the third year $150,000. The Missouri has overflowed its banks at the mouth of the Powder, drowning Indians and_ ponies in large numbers, From Major Ingles camp the bodles of five red men are visible, lodged In the trees into which the) had drifted when the flood was at it height. Utah. Park Clty now has a bank, Lead is worth $45 at ton at Salt Lake. The Great Busin is agaln shipping bullion. The Salt Lake telephone exchange will be opened the 6th inst. The Salt Lake hotels are crowded with miners bound for Wood river. The Utah & Pleasant Valley rail- road has changed hands. A New York company now owns it The ore body in the Kanarrah mine, South Camp, of Star district, has now widened to five feet and looks permanent. 2 Down in the Sanpete district of Utah there is of vast deposit of coal which is unequaled in the west for making coke. Silver Reef Miner: Chloriding is likely to again become a prominent faature of the mining industry in this camp, and work has already commenc~ ed on eeveral claims on the east reef. ‘Wyoming. _Cattle in the vicinity of Fort Me- Kinney have not cuffered greatly this winter. The terrltorial fish commissioner has arrived from Wisconsin with millions «f trout for Wyoming streams. Tha petroleum deposits in northern ‘Wyoming are still attracting attention. Saveral now locations of 40 acres each have been made recently. Coal of excellent qt y for black- emithing purposes has already been discovered to exist in great abundance on_the famous Goose creek, about 50 miles from Fort McKinney. Colorado. Colorado Springs will hava a free li- rars. Tha oil well at Canon fs turning out magnificently. Work has been commenced on the Trividad gas works. The California mine on Quartz hill | bas attained a depth of 1270 feet. A new strike of carbonates s re- ported at Willard, near Gunnison. It 1s eatimated that the bullion pro- duct of Colorado in 1881 will resch $26,000,000. Lsst weck Hall Brothers, of Trini- dad, eold their entire herd of cattle for '$410,000fcash. Tanzlel:g Contre is s town on tha N P. road. It has 51 houses—39 of whioh are saloons. An abortive attempt was made last weck to wreck a passenger train on the Colorado Central near Golden. Ore that assays 195 ounces has been struck in the bottom level of Capitol mine, Montana district, Clear Creek county, The Denver and Rio Grande rail road has sent an order Lo the Baldwin TLiocomotive Works, for 144 lccomo- tives. A rich vein of ore has been dis- covered east of the Franklin lode, in Tdaho mining district. Some of the ore is bespangled with free gold. Roports from the mountalns be- speak a bright fature for Boulder county. Good judges estimate the output for the coming year at about one million dollars. Bonanza City, In the Kerber oreek district, is all ablaze with excitement over the discovery there, on Friday last, of ruby silver that assays in the thousands. ~ The strike was made in the Empress Josephine lode. City lets are held at $2,000 each ln conse- quence, Last week the richest vein of min- eral ever struck In the Rosita camp was discovered by Judge Adsma and Edward Enderlee, It is In the In vincible mine, contignous to the Leavenworth and Yankee Boy lodes, and is more than two feet in width, wolid minera), composed of geay cop- per, brittle silver and raby silver. Streaks of rudy silver, half an inch thick, run through the body of the mineral, and it asssys about 65 per cent. silver, equal to 15,000 per ton, Jack Haverly, the celebrated minstrel man, is the owner of thismine, . New Mexico. = The Silver Mountain mhiag com puny and the Magdalena camps are doveloplng in the most encouraging manner, The new coal fields three miles west of Las Vegas are in a prosperous con- dition. The main shaft is down sixty feet. The Cscura chloride district and Hansonburg_still continue to claim much attention, ond the excitement is unabated. Reports from those points continue favorable. Socorro_1is the centre of eighteen mining districts; thirty-one mining firms and mining companies are re- prosented by _superintendents or agent Reflections on the Man In the Moon. Ohlcago Times. “Are you the agent of this road.’ ‘The inquirer was a young man who scomed terribly in earnest. His hair was long, his clothes shabby gen- toel, and his remarks were addressed to the manager of one of our leading trank lines. “Yes sir. What can I do for you?” “I would like a pass to Baltimore by the way of Cleveland.” “On what account?” general passenger «t8; Edison Hershel, cf Osbkosh.” ‘What have you The young man looked around un- easily, and sai “‘Are we alone?” “Wo are, proceed.” Lowering his volce to the key of a stage whisper, he said: “I am the inventor of the ‘Luna- scope. “Luny what?” “The ‘Lunascope;’ the most won- derful invention of the nineteenth century.” “What is it for?” “Why, it is an Optical Reflectome- ter, whereby I can throw the term St. Jacobs Oil ia sciatilating letters across the face of the moon," A peculiar scintilation was observ- able around the cornets of the official’s es, bat otherwise his countenance was pecfogtly mobile. 1 have just come,” continaed the inventor, *from a confidential inter- view with Mr. Peter Van Schaack, of the ‘Oid Salamander Drug House.’ I entrasted my secret to him. He commends me to you most warm- ly. And ho seoma &8 confident ss I am that the invention will save over three hundred thousand dollars a year in newspaper advertising to the pro- prietors of St. Jacobs Oil—the Great German Remedy. Please write out the pass at once. I may be able to overtake Messre, A, Vogeler & Co.’s advertising manager at Cleveland on his way east. I will let them have the invention for $200,000, which is very low.” “Young man,” said tho official, ris- ing and slowing stroking his beard, “this corporation cannot, become & party to casting reflections upon any- one—not even 8o luny an individual the Man in the Moon. Yeur ‘scope’ does not come within our scope and all T can do is to pass you to the outer atmospher » TEwE Great German REMEDY FoR [R nmmmuansy, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, BACKACHE, GOUT, SORENESS o CHEST, NSORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS r BOOILY PG TOOTH, EAR HEADACHE, BT g g T v DiicioRs 1 isras Lisaricrs. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDICINE, A. VOGELER & CO. btmsore 2 55 4. "~ PROPOSALS FOR FLOUR. Office of the Purchasing and Depot Com. of Subsistenca, OxaHA, Neb., February 14, 1881. Sealed proposals, in _duplicate, subject £0 the nsual conditions, will be received at this office, until 12 o'elock noon, on March 2lst, 181, at which time and place they will be opened in the presence of bidders, for furnishing and delivery at the Subsi:t- ence Storehouse in this city, of twenty thousand (20,000) pounds FLOUR, in Dew, strong, siagle cotton sacks. T be made from No. 1 Spring Wheat, half hard, half soft, or Odessa, to be sweated befors sriading, and mixed in milling; to be high gronnd.” Sample of Flour o be sent n ‘with proposals, and all to be celivered on or before April 15,1881, The government reserves the right to reject any_or all pro- posals. Blaok proposais can be obtained at hisoffice, Proposals must be enclosed in sealed envelopes marked ‘Proposals for Flour,” and ad to_the under- signed. THOMAS WILSON, C.8,U.8.4. MORE POPULAR THAN EVER. The Genuine * SINGER NEW FAMILY SEWING MACHINE. The popular demand for the GENUINE SINGER in 1879 exceeded that of fous year during the Quarter of a Century in which thi Ttk hine has been before the public. Reliable” 1d In 1878 we sold 356,422 Machines. In 1879 we sold 431,167 Machines. Excess oyer any pre ‘evious 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 year, REMEBMBER That. Every REAL Singer Sewing Ma- chine has this Trade Mark cast into the Iron Stand and em- bedded in the Arm of the Machine, = The “Old Reliab's” Singer is the Strongest, the Simplest, the Most Ma- Con- Durable Sewing chine ever yet stracted, THE SINGER MANUFAGTURING GO. Principal Office: 4 Union Square, New York. 1,500 Subordinate Offices, in the U nited Stat World and Sou Geo. P. Bemis ReaL EsTATE Ackncy. 164h & Douglas Sis., Omaha, Neb. This sgoncy doos sTRiOTLY brokerage bust- nés. Doca notapeonlate, and heretore any ar- gatas on Its books tolta pstrons, In Stead ot being gobbled up by the agcat BOGGS & HILL. REAL" ESTATE BROKERS HNo 1408 Farnham Street OMAHA - NEBRASEKA. o forth Blde opp. Grand Contral H Nebracka Land Agency. DAVIS & SNYDER, 1606 Farnham St. Omaha, Nebr. 400,000 AGRES carefully selected 1and In Exstern braska for salo, Grest Bargains In fmprovod farms, and Omaha ity propertr O.'F. DAVIS, WEBSTER SNYDER, Lato Land Com'r U. P. R.R. dp-toblit 9 hn;";on Reed & L:;:, i ouDmsT sTABLIID REAL ESTATE AGENCY IN NEBRASEA. Heep a complete abstract of title to all Real Estate in Omaka and Douglas County. _may1tt CHARLES RIEWE, UNDERTAKER! Metallc Csses, Cofing, Caskets, Shrouds, etc. Fam mStree . Othand1lth, Omaha, Nob. cgraphis order oro notly sttendad to. BN OBLSIOR Machine Works, oMAXAa, WEIS. J. Hammond, Prop. & Manager. The most tuorough appolnted and_complete Machino Shops and Foundry In tho state, Castings of every description manufacted. Englnos, Pumps and evry clasm of machinery ‘made to order. ‘pactal attentlon given to Well Augurs, Pulleys, Hangers, Shafting,Bridge Irons,Geer Tatting, ete. Planstor new Machls eu::]mlal Draught g tod. ng, Models, etc., neatly o 56 Harnev St., Bet. 14th and 15th. D. T. MOUNT, Manufacturer and Dealer in SADDLES aud HARNESS, Agents for JAMES R. BILL & 00., Celebrated CONCORD HARNESS, #27 The Best in The World G 1412 Farnham $t., Omaha, Neb. JNO. G. JAGCBS, (Formerly of Gish & Jacobe) UNDERTAKER No. 1417 Farnham 8t., O1d Stand of Jacob Gls ORDKRS BY TKLEGRAPH SULICITE NEERASE.A VIREGAR WORKS ! ERNST KREBS, Manager Manutactarer of al kinds of VINEGAR nesiStt Bet. Sth and 10 OMAHA A. W. NASON. DENTIST, Orrice: Jacob'a B ck, corner Capltol Ave, sud 6th Street. Omaha Ne EKAILISET, THE MERCHANT TAILOR, Isprepared to make Pants, Suits and overcoats toorder. Prices, it and workmausbip guaranteed to sul OneIDoor West: of Orujckehank’s. woty. J. C. VAPOR, MERGHANT TAILOR Oapltol Ave,, Opp. Masonic Hall, OMAHA, - - NEB AGENTS WANTED EOR {he Fastest elling Book of the Age! Foundations of Success. 'BUSINESS AND SOUIAL FORMS. ‘The laws of trade, legal forms, how to frans- act business, valuable tables, social etiquette, parliamentary usage, how o conduct public inees; in fact it is's comolete Guide to_ Suc- COR |57 &D0UGLAS S5 Over CRUICKSHANK'S DRY.GOOOS STORE. Any one baving desd aniamals I will remove them free of charge. Leave orders southeast comn ¥ of Harney and 14th St., second door. CHARLES SPLITT. AGENTS WANTED FOR OUR NEW BOOE, “Bible for the Young,” Being the story of the Seriptares by Rav. Geo. et oter "Gk, DD 1y simple aad stira A neuage. for 14 and young, - Profusely illastrated, making s most interestiog and im- presstve youth's instructor. Every parent will securo this work. _Pieachers, jou should cir- . Price §3.00. [Sen for circulars with extr_terms. J. H, CHAMBERS & C0.,; 5t. Louis, Mo tes and Canada, and 8,000 Offices inthe 01d ath America. p16-dsewtf BANKING HOUSES. THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED. BANKING HOUSE IN NEBRASKA. CALDWELL, HAMILTONZCO BANKERS. Bustuoss transacted mme sa that o an Incor- poratec Bask. Accounts kept fn Carrency or gold subject #ight check without uotioe. Cortificates of depostt lssued payable fn thrs six snd twelve months, bearing luterest, or demand without Interdst. Advancos made to castomers on_sparoved so- curitics at market rates of {nterest. ‘Buy and sell gold, bills of exchange Govern- ment, Stats, County and n ‘Draw Sight Drafts on England, Irel tand, and all parts of Europe. Sell Earopean Passago Tickets. COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. angldt TU. 8. DEPOSITORY. P 4, Seot- First Nariona Bank OF OMAHA, Cor. 18th and Farnham Streeta, OLDEST BAMKING ESTABLISHMENT IN OMAHA. Organized a3 » Nations! Bank, August 20, 1648, | Capital and Profits Over$300,000 ‘Epectally sathorisod by the Secrotary or t0 rocelve Subseription 10 the U.8.4 PER CENT. FUMDED LOAN. OFFICERS AND DIRECIORS m, H. V. Yaras, Gashler, 4. J. PoveLstow, Attor: Jonx A. Caeomvox. . H. Dam», A: doposts withont rezard to totezeat, s E and principal clties of the United States, alsy Londoa, Dublin, h and tho principal cities of the contis rope. HOTELS. THE JRIGINAL. BRIGGS HOUSE I Oor. Randolph 8t. & 5th Ave., CHICAGO ILL, = - PRICES REDUCED T0 $2.00 AND $2.50 PER DAY Located In tho bus centre, convenlent to places of amuscment. Elsgantly farniahed, containing all modern | passenger elevator, &e. J. , Troprietor. oct6it OGDEN HGUSE, Cor. MARKET ST. ROADWAY Council Blufis, Towa: Online o Strest Rallway, Omnfbus to and from all tramns. RATES—Parlor floor, 83.00 per day; 8econd floor, $2.60 por day ; thifd fioor, $2.00. mos: The best furnished and most commodious honse In the city. PHELPS Prop. FRONTIER HOTEL, Laramie, Wyoming, Tho miners rosort, good ‘sccommodations, ‘arge s ple room, che reaconable. Bpecial siEaion piven o ravalng men. H. C HILLIARD Proprietor, INTER - OCEAN HOTEL, Cheyenne, Wyoming. First-class, Fino srgo Sample Rooms, one block from depot. Trainastop from 20 minates £ hours for dinner. Free Bus toand trom Depos. Rates §200, §2.60 and .00, according. to ro0m; single meal 76 centa. D."BALCOM, Propristar. mlo-t e PASSENCER ACCOMMODATION LINE OMAHA AND FORT OMAHA D ith Street Cars e s e autLTo 5 and 6:15 p. m. a.m’ run, leaving gmahs, and th 400 p. m. run, leaving Fort Omaba, are nenally loaded to tall ‘capacity with regular passengers, ‘The 6:17 a. m. rua will be made from the post: office, corner of Dodge and 15th enrehta. Tickots can be procured from street cardriv- ers, or from drivers of hacks. FARE. 3 CENTS. INOLUDING STRE _CAR EENNEDY’'S EAST INDIA A FAMILY TONIC AND WIRRENODY ‘SiscedsAa 04 s ‘guemeSusie(] snoNNg ILER & G0, SOLE MANUFACTURERS, OMAHA, Neb. FIRHIFFIRE 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 cannotfail toplease everybody REMEMBER THE ONE PRICE CLOTHING HOUSE, 1301 and 1303 Farnham St., Corner 13th. GOODS MADE TO ORDER OH SHORT NOTICE. PIANOS = ORGANS. "t CHICKERING 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 Qo’s. Organs. I'deal in Pianos and Organs exclusively. Have had years experience in the Business, and handle only the Best. J. 8. WRIGHT, 218 16th Street, City Hall Building, Omaha, Neb. HALSEY V. FITCH. Tuner. S SHEELY BROS. PACKING CO.,, PORK AND BEEF PAGKERS Wholesale and Retail in FRESH MEATS& PROVISIONS, GAME, POULTRY, FISH, ETC. CITY AND COUNTY ORDERS SOLICITED. OFFICE CITY MARKET—1415 Douglas St. Packing House, Opposite Omaha Stock Yards, U. P. R. R. TELEFPHONE OONNEHOTIONS. DOUBLE AND SINGLE ACTING POWER AND HAND PUMPS Steam Pumps, Engino Trimmings, Mining Machinery, BELTING HOSE, BRASS ANG IRDN FITTIHE8, PIPE, STEAM PACRING AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. | BALLADAY %iND-MILLS, CEURCH AKD SCHOOL BELL: T.. STRANG, 205 Farnbam Street Omaha, Neb ReaMmMoveDD J. B. DETWILER, THE CARPET MAN, Has Removed From His Old Stand on Douglas St., to His NEW AND ELEGANT STORE, 1813 Farnham Street, Where He Will be Pleased te Meet all Wis 0 d Patrons.