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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE FRIDAY MORNING MAY 13 1881: THE DAILY BEE £ ROSEWATER, EDITOR: Tom monate failed to dispose ot the Matthev’'s nomination at its last ses- sion, and Stanley isstill on the Tagged edge 17 is rumored that Carl Schurz is 1o, become the editor of the New York Brening Post. Tibbles has stopped Lis subscription. —_— Ouama believes that human life is move valusble than a few dollars in bonds Hence the sewer bonds will be carried by by a large majority. — Exicg 08 GIRAxwEN, the famous French journalist, left property val- uwod ut $2,000,000. American jour- ualists who leave enough property to pay their wash bills re few and far hetween. Ex-Coxoupssuax Joax H. Sramx has sold, his railroad transpor- tiam business to W, H. Vanderbilt for £1,000,000. That would seem to give shalio to_theatricsl managers who complain that *Starring” is not pros- perous. — D1 Beaconsfield die s Jew ? This is the question that is mow agitating Eugland. His executor, Sir Nathan Rothachild, declares that he did. Tt » significantt that he did mot avail himself of the services of the clergy during his last sickness. Ho was al- ways proud of his race and still more proud that the prime minister England was a Jew than that it was hinself. — & Massacartrserrs farmer with more comumon sense than politeness recently shouted out to 8 member of the state legislature who was about starting out for Boston: people Yingering at Boston for; don't you come home and stop fooling away the pedple’s money?” Several of the Massachusetts - journals make this foreible query the text for cdito yials on the legislature. Tur Council Blufls Nonpareil lins an attack on a former employe of THE Brs in which it charges him with uncifig Prof. () Paige as an im- Buough the columns of this yaper. The gentleman in question did ot write or see thenrticle referred 1 before its publication. It expressed the sentiments of Tur BEE upon one of the most unscientific paraders of ignorance and charlatanism we have ever read. 8o far from retracting anything stated in_ the editorial under discussion, the BEE repeats its remark that in_the lecture on the perihelion of the plinots Prof. Paige showed Limself to be either a credulous igno- ramus or an unprincipled impostor. Axp now Supervising Architect Hill s being raked over the coals, charged with drawing plans in his office for senators dnd others in official position. SR e work on the plans of & house for Bluing, and sofe time ago lie drew the plans of Sherman's house. The' work s dome out of office hours, but in a government office and by draughtsmen paid by the government. Mr. Hill Claims that he is at liberty to extend th wo smanll favors ¢o his official friends. e Sexaromial speculation in Wall street is on the rampage and rumor has it that Nebraska's senior senator has caughta favorable turn of the wheel of fortune. But the mania for speedy. returns on investments is by no means. cmfined to politicians. Massachusctts prvachers have caught the infection and soveral members of the Amherst college faculty have been inves- ing heavily in mining shares. The Springfield Republican states. that one reverend professor, who bought a number of shares at a fav- It is lieved: an) real e th ‘broad jer| over the w that-Jics between the two rivglets thatsum along the center of Omaha's natural houndaries. V%l it Hiot be better to gutter and pave and cross-walk with our present means, restricting the sewers to a lo drainage of a few streets untila future time! Unless it can be shown that | there is an overshadowing necessity for a wide sewer system to protect the public health we see mo reason why this costly undertaking should now be begun. —{Herald: There are none so blind as those who will not see. The overshadowing necessity for completing the south Omaha sewer and a building a sewer that will drain north Omaha in the noighborhood of . the eroeks, is appar- ent to everybody” excepting the editor of the Omaha Herald. The wonthly reports of the ci physician during the stmmer seas: the complaints of our citizens, the noxious odors arising from the deadly creel all thesc facts have been too long before our citizens to need any repetition. There is an “ovérshadowing neces- " for completing the South Omaha ook sowar,' Which now remains un- completed. Delay in its construction means immense damage to Tenth strect as a throughfarc and practically renders. it impassible. It means the continuance of the rotten bridges over the creck, prospective accidents to citizens of Omaha and large and_costly damages to be paid out of the city treasury. The com- pletion of the South Omaha sewer would result in making a large and valuable strip of land available for manufacturing purposes, which is now worthless except as a drain_for the §ilth of that portion of the city. But all these considerations, important and practical in them- solves, must yield before the great question of the public _| health. In its present condition the South Omaha sewer is worthless. Its open mouth belches forth the nox- jous odors of pestilence, and under the heat of a summer’s sun will send desth to many aprecious life. Our people are bound to consider . the health of that seection of the city drained by South Omaha creck, a se tion which by the expenditure few thousands of dollars can be made as healthy as any portion of Omaha. The sewer over North Omaha creek is a8 necessary as that in-South Omas ha. There, also, the drainage of a large portion of - the city is carried sluggis Iy along in open air between the banks of the k and- breeds malaria and disease in a thickly settled section of our city. Reference to the reports of le proof of the effect of North Omaha Creek the community. ~Everyconsideration of health, policy and cconomy shows #he overshadowing necessity of build- ing a main sewer in this section of our city. The Herald is conjiring an ugly bugbear of costly improvements and throws upon the canv: picture of a mighty system of sewerage which will Swamp the Tnances of our city. this senseless performance the Teply is simple, If Omaha is ever to have a system’ of sewerage, and no one doubts that such will be the case, now s the best time to lay its foundati Main sewers will be necessary to camry off the surface and domes: tic drainage of the city. The plan which contemplates two main drains, one in the southern, the othet in the northem part of our city, running parallel and emptying into the river, has already been inau- gurated by the partial construction of the sewer through South Omaha crock. Qur city has now réachod a point where some. relief by meaus of sewerage is a necessity. Two large hotels are about to be constructed in the very heart of the city. How are they to be maintained with any safety to their guests without sewer- age outlet! . he nauseating smells oable rate, became convinced that the business was not a_ proper one for him to be engaged in just after the stock had taken an upward turn and cleared $900. History records that he kept the profits. Another winister, somewhat famous through a certain trial in the courts a year or two ago, is reported to have made $18,000. People never tell their losses in min- ing speculations. Tan refusal of the German Reichs- rathi to adopt law for biennial bud- gots and & quadrennial parhament is a »orious defeat for Prince Bismarck. Germany has a double system of legis- Iature not unlike that of our own. There is foderal body for the whole empire and one in each of the kingdoms of which it is composed Both sit at the same time, and it has been found difficult to find able men for both systems. Ostensibly to meet this difficulty, but in fact to extend the power of the executive, Prince Bismarck propossd that the German and ~Prosisn Parliaments, in order that the same men could be in both, whould both be clected for four years, it alternate years, and pass appro) ations for two years at once. This plan, which would give to the Empe- ror relief from the political check of an anmial Parliament, has been em- phatically vetoed by the German Reichsrath, which refused to limit its own powers and increase the authority o Prince Bismarck. — Ir scems impossible for nature to check the flood tide of prosperity upon which the, business of the country is boing oarried along. Commerial re- turns for the first quarter of the cur- rent year show that in spite of the terruptions of a severe winter the the country has suffered no: ‘but has gone on in the steady. and“increasing growth charcteristic of the past two years. - The total value of exports and imports, &386,- 000;000in 1830 and £380,000,000 in 1881, was’ soméwhat less for the first | where except in the most severely rural |gration from Englan: quartér of this year than for the corre- sponding quarter of last year; but the excess of «xpofl- over imports was 73, against $23,000,000 in the first i wdlm,-xlmmmpmofpu from the d *“Grand Central” are still fresh in the mostrils of our people. No one who has ever stopped over in Lincoln will forget the terri- ble odors from the sinks of the “Com- mercial.” How do the Omaha hotels propose to meet the sanitary require- ments of the case? Again when our waterwork#, now incourse of construc- tiog, gre cofppleted, there will be an im e amount of waste water dis- é‘( daily. Is it the intention of the ignoramus s0es " Mo necessity for sewerage to throw upon our soil already permeated with the filth of innumerable vaults the labor of providing for this addi- tional sanitary burden? Owmaha does not propose at present to enter upon a system of sewerage which will pro- vide for every dwelling in the city She cannot affard to do so just now. But what she does propose to do, and what her citizens are practically unan- imous in demanding, is relief from the intolerable and unhealthy odors from which two of the most important sec- | tions of our city have suffered, with ample provision for extending connect- ing sewers to such localities as from time to time require it. Any other course would be “‘penny wise and pound foolish. poses who Lapon is the back-bone of progrdss, and Inbor in Omaha this year will find steady employment and good wages. Niew Yok and Texas have seven living ex-governors and Ohio six. The Age of Electricity. St Louis Globe-Detvocrat. .A.lt::lghlr Edison, fmn'l“hwlum 80 much was expected, s pro ly slow in supes gas "p an .u.'.'f.‘. | nator, the elecric light is rapidly com- | ing into general wse. The mastery | over electricity is difficulty of attain- | ment, and the inelectric| hshnnahnnuthumm great as was| hoped for when it first fairly arrested ale® *| shall jezted, and the part which icity will play in_the economic affairs cf the future is beyond the ken |of ordinary foresight. . When the locomwtive became a .-mm, shrewd intellects . differed greatly as to its effects in facilitating Mi""l traflic, }}m they penerally upon one thing—a rapid falling | eroy in the demand '{i.,{ I’:urwl:.I But it | soon appeared that wherever the loco- motive did the work of one horse it made work for two, and the effect of its introduction which appeared most tm:sfnnmlp ns in the whole industrial | and social which the locomo- | Rive cocial were beyond the percep- tion of any one. The creative power of anew invention, so to speak—its power to create a field of useful- ness hitherto unknown—is some- thing which is generally overlooked and indeed can_only bevery imper- fectly estimated. A great invention | is invariably applied to the world into which it is introduced, and the world which it is to make is left out of the | account in calculating its effects. We who live in the age of steam sce elec- tricity making its appearance as a ser- iceablo force, and we must needs apply electricity to an age of steam, when its real application is to the age of electricity which is dawning upon {zs. Wonderful as the changes have {been which steam has wrought, it is no stretch of the imagination to pre- dict thgt the transformations to be produces "I!"B\ electricity will far surpass them. We seem slow to recognize that an age of electricity is at hand, doubtless from the gradual manner of its |proach. We have become familiar | with the use of electricity, but the use of it has grown so_slowly that its increase is not realized. Yet the ad- nce from the first experimental tel- egraph line of Morse to the present world-encircling system of subuarine cables is immense, and the bound from the transmisei signals to the transmission of light is still greater— 50 great that the possibilities it sug- gosts are bewildering. The transmis- sion of light means also the transmis- sion of power, and who shall predict what the ability to convey power will wltimately effect? The world's supply of fuel is being rapidly consumed in the production of available |force, the immense amount of { force constantly made available by the heat being _disregarded from practical considerations. The force of the tides is enormous, but is of little value in the localities where it can be utilized. The vast weightof water ut up into the clouds by the sun’s secks the ocean level again with isplay of almost incalculable force, but in channels too restricted for gen. use. The tides rise and fall and the rivers pour their floods steadily to the sea, while men burrow in the rocks for fuel with which to produce motion. Mhe sun’s rays which was stored up millions of years ago in almost inac- cessible placcs, 15 sought out_and put k, while the work which the sun’s heat is doing at present is suffer- ed to go to Because of a want of to utilize it. We as yet have small conception of dlectricity exocpt s 3 product of steam. Mr. Edison proposes to fur- | § to wi nish the power of a steam engine to the residents of a district of New fhe rivers and the tides be some day distributed over a_whole continent? ch 2 consummation is no further ahead of Edison’s little scheme than is the ocean cable system ahead of Morse’s first telegraph line. It is quite_within the range of electric growth, if we may use the term, but it brings into view a world of which we can form but a_feeble conceptic When the rise and fall of the tides turn the wheels of industry hundreds of miles from the sea, the old ocean will assume a grandeur of which the numerable poets who have apostro- phized it little dreams. Mississippi river shall lend its power produce the_coumodities which it transports to thefr_markets—when it shall do the work of the val it waters—its importance wi quire to be set forth by laborious and oft-repeated arguments. With the whole country overspread or under- Laid with a network of wires or cables, and heat, light and power sold_overy. where in quantities to suit purchasers, the world will be considerably t formed. In the age of clec il 4 i 3B e ouse by oo, the ago of steam, with its smoke, and dirt, and waste of work,will be deemed wmore barbarous than it is comfortable to imagine. Tt is humiliating to re- flect that the next generation will probably excel all its predecessors in lnughing at its ancestor The Tide of Immigration. « | here of emigra- tion, the current to our shores being 80 much larger from them that the latter is almost wholly overlooked. Qur own immigration statistics show that the wholenumber of Englishmer Irishmen and Scotchmen to this country to settle last year was 164,263. The London Times gives the et emigration from the British s to the United States at 140,- 022, If both these statements are correct, the mumber who returned from here to their old homes was 184, The gross emigration from British islands for last year i |at i those 164,236, showing that 67,306 w other countries. The emigration to the various countrics is not given in The Times, but the net | emigration to_Australia 18, ly about half of that of the previ year, while the net emigration to this twice as large as it was The net emigra- British North America was an advance of two thousand on nru The net emigration to all other countries was 5,995, an increase of about two thousand on the year before. It appears, then, that seven- ninths of the whole British em spite of all the attractions of British colonies in North America, South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand, a fact that fails to show any Overpowering affection for the “old flag,” and this is in_curious contrast with the remarks of Lord Beaconsfield a year and a half ago, to the effect that Canada was not _only country in cumfiutinxm for emigrants from the British islands, but that it was drawing largely from the settlers of our own western states. The net emigration_from Great Britain and Treland to British North America last ear was 16,214, while the United |cl beating this Comparing the net _emigration with the arrivals of emigrant this coun- try, it appears that, of 93,614 Irish- men, 84,857 came to this country. The gross emigration from Ireland was only 2,180 more than_the net, a fact which shows that Irishmen didn't return toa great extent. Nubstract- ing the arrivals here from the gross obvious was exactly the reverse of | what actually oceurrod. The immense | When the | tion came to the United States, in |l | | | | populae attention. Sl tho p s been considerable, and the electric | Jight has become so’ common as to number of emigrants, it appears that 11,563 Hibernians were lost; at least, cease to be an object of curiosity any- .communities. It is worthy of note that while it has become a certainty | that clectricity will specdily come into extensive use as an illuminator, , [there is mno visible effect on the value of gas stocks. This is rather re- ‘markable when it is remembered what i i stocks was memun eports of ison's It was then new_illuminator | . gas, but md.\f~ | they left Ireland and have not yet ar- rived in this country. The net emi- d s officially announced as 111,845, while only 164,471 English people arrived here, showing that 47,374 went astray. The net uugnhum from Scotland was 22,056, but e only 14,971, leay- ing unaccounted for 7,085 While we received only a little mare than half the English and Sootch emigrants we received about eight-ninths of the |trish. But, including the past twenty ‘years in the review, the n-uh emi tion to this country, as The Times ion to notice a few days ago, has len off, while the English emigra- ion has increased materially. ‘I)-hdfiult'\rflllldldtheln-h | smigration of last vccurred dur- tar, and_v. [ and Tish crgration is usually sinach pEnsqmmms v ey Tafayette, Tnd:; ves|- < - Thia Oldest Bstablished m ~ y larger in the last than ju et six “liore @ man‘suffered so 2 > OVED. months of the year, s excited some | _ “Brah,wmd. crack your dmh, choumatism that he cold BA“K'"G "nus E rise. . The results of the harvests 37 &uhwl to emigrate to'the “ He had most terrible Sulbeionily ansount for th. Tagt yeae | U8 " Micels o after the first A P e el B o s R e ew York Glothm House ‘motive for emigration was correspohd-{ Kentucky, b a2 he | pains were _gone and the swelling. c 1 ingly reduced. . Tn ordinayyears the 110 pounds. "’y el ol S & & Co, have' supplied the omigrants | par! BANIERS. s e with the mesns.of go soing away, nd by | o e e o | * 2 1" Aimest Grany. 7 leving toward the end of the v |3 2 s, . H{o:'hoft‘,:l o weis he f.'f'::'fi'.‘é T p——— 1309 FARNHAM STREET K ir ney ~ ing father straining eves e1 rated oank. scsson o begin farming with tho open- | i, Sadpiones LR, 1S, o muncle, mnd doing i utpost Lo aup-| heins Mg, e o ld bl o (fax Meyer's Old Stand) T z i e nap of binaty port his family. ~Imagine his feelings | "5 TS | b - ¢ = A AU T WEoks B Nabal| O oaeeie of dovest Mot i Gy SHALL KEEP CONSTANTLY O HAND AN DVESSE STOCK OF MEN'S BLACK - HILLS -NUGGETS, | Itis ot our Joho. Dillon, the come-{day's labor, to fand s family prostrate | densid it rarmt ST R — 0 is in jail with disease, conscious of unpaid doc P ———— . Custer has a Good Templars’ lodge. li‘;{'l";:t;;e;t:r-lmfl Teagler Dor @ | tory’ bills and debts on_eves y et | e O B horer: o s P ans & len vs e Bnly Gorham designates Postmaster |crazy. All his unhappiness e sight e o England, I, St | y ) e, : General Janies as the * Oabinet |avoided by using Electric Bitters, I andall port | enhe Spearfsh Gazette has lssued its | Minister.” 1f ho calls the dose he | which expel every dincaso fromn the T [T g posas P - i is giving the Star route. “taffy” we | systew, bringing joy and happincss to PRICES ALWAYS THE LOWEST. Bzml-' hyl-Lr:\(hc \“Jrkn are being op- | would like to know what his salt and | thousands. Sold at fifty centsnbfl( 57 'W—* —_—_— erated at’ erville. vinegar would be. tle by Ish & McMahon. nited tes ])epofito - BN AMINE | A temperance society has been or- | - Olive Logan says there is very little - Y. cAaxrny. AND = GOoOODS AND | ganized at Rapid City. love of the beautiful in humorists. | (b o ieen REMEDY KNOWN. EIREST ARy — The Deadscood pmpers are publishe| That is becauso she saw Mabel Sane-| G . Tl st g e bt | b Koy o i | N0 H. M. & M. PEAVY, | et sumption 15 certainly the greates e 'P“‘ medical remnedy over laced within the —oF o¥AIA— 1309 Farnham Street, Omaha, Neb. City. “Every man must work at some. [F4ch of sueriug humanity Cor. 13th and Farnum Sts. M P I th E Fatin produce and vegefables aro | thing,” says and old proverb, and or — e e e e Sunki . Aoy ok no R 1242 oo ol pavkise BT s 21 Lottt b TR her summer socks and getting ready ot eI OMAHA Bee culture has beensuccessfully ex- | 07 Warm weather. SRR € b P Voot sty o) ROk an saprians THE GENUINE serimented upon in the vicinity of | Hashim Khan, the new Afghan cm(E, Asthma, Bronchitis, Hay EstAsLsmRD 1850, woo e ‘;' c“é',""'““‘fl}‘,'.‘”};.‘::, lumh‘x;ss Fever, Hoarseness and ,11{ affections of | Organized ae a National Bank August 20, 1365, w strikes of quartz are constant- | 2Viser Shumsud the Throat, Chest and Lungs yields el - . o |1y Demmg miade i Fonnington and Cos. | Khant wonder Herat, but it is Ameer |af once todts wonderful carative pow- D ecooco New Family Sewing Machine. | ter counties. f};‘“‘“ “f’:;"fw“““"'fi*‘*lltflkfi-*m er as if by magic. We do not ask you orie by the Secrtary of Treas | Tho poputar demand fo the GENUIYE SINGER in 1670 cxcesed that of any previonn year g |- A rich pay has been discovered on a H'E{E::n'nl‘ltu[)i:c\::g ellow. ) m] lu;ya large bn:tblllfll;::i yxt»lu kx;nw ATttt o) quarter of a century in which this “Ohl Reliable™ Machine has been befurs the public. iy a o pieces. what you ase getting. We' therefore ol I 1878 we sold 66,422 Machinen el o Gold Run. The sand runs| My, Beecher's prosceution in Dela: | earnestly request ou to call on your |4 Per Cent. Funded Loan. 18 ";.T";:";: 'mm s CRL e oW i hoad | 228 Tormot lesturing when ho agred | drugyite, T & McBLutox, and et a 2 = R mukm"b’“ e Grizzly Bear mie, on the head | go et b experience of | trial bottle free of cost which will con- T : S ¥ of Paimer's fulh, n st el | B Perti, who, 1o alogoh. wan|s-nco Dho mon shepien ot wonder. | Hessss Koo rasie OVER 1400 SEWING MAGHINES A DAY. e el fee g d rod Lt ented with a purse by the lycewn | ful merits, and show you what a regu- oramey Kot Vi et £ e formaton from nion Bl is o | commitoe of Sillwater, Mih, for o Ir one dlla size bottl wil do. For e e S the effect that a considerable body of | filling an engngement. sale by Ish & M ) ot & Ousiom good ore has begn struck in the Sum-| The Rev. Stephen H. Tyng, Ir., of ¥ b, At curier.| REMEMBER : iy it location. A good working foroe | New York, has quitted the pulpit to hia baak reckires Wegets wHbont reasd 60 “ OLD RELIABLE” is employed. | Ak e G poun gt or s 2 Tt tone ceritiates ben o, The long expected clean up of the | American insurance company at a Times denthot cn B Prsc A TR SYRRYS KNAL Suxoni SINGER Battlo Crock Hydraulic_company was | large salary. Mr. Tyng loves the o oy oot Biatons e Londoey Ponts | sEwrG uAcaw s s madelast week and resulted in §1,200| Lord, but' the insurance company ey A L L T 1S THE STRONGEST, SIMPLE. & warth of gold. made the loudest call. Fom |, Sl pussenzer ticketa for emigrants n the [n. IR LA, I THE MOST DURABLE SEWING Deadwood's Mechanics Union have | Galusha A. Grow has had a danger- REETHATION, SR T TS [ THRIROW: SR ANIMNE: oL, R passed a resolution favoring the build- | ous forer since the senatorial struggle, ] BEDDED I THE ARM OF T A |ing of @ court house, and pledging | but looks fresh and vigorous again, D Xte L T]l &B sTRECTRD themselves o voto innccondance. | Blaine offerod him tho A neveace, | UBXUET Li, LNOMASAETO, |rus uscuree The organiaation can ontrol 290 sote. | sion, but h):::nre;:le;x!‘ltm’ What oo SCIATICA, T THE SINGER M ANUF ACTURING co. 7 around’ St. Petersburg? I'd rather bo LUMBASO, REAT., ESTATEH, THE BRAMEL MINES. at home. Tm comfortable there, and BACKACHE, A0 ALL TRANSACTIONS Principal Office, 34 Union Square, N. Y. Toms s 3 independent of office in any form."| { coxercTeD TR wITE 1,05 Besas e 1t T S o 08 ol 'u“.n - Cviys Crry, Brassn MINING [ Sowe time since Maj. Selover drop- QOUuUT e A L obivieior! BENY9; TS o' el Thy Goitld Howis, Srsiies Tt SORENESY oy, Taxes, Rent Housos, Etc. ShN a ing district is situated about thirty | this .:m ot prevent the two gentle- RENESS 1 YoF wAST 10 5T 0% sRL ! S o Lo Gite i | men from fraternizing at the Windsor cattat o, crlghton Bloek, . uiles southwest, of Tacamie City, in {2 Nes Vo the' other evening: D o hime o e S a.nd L uxr‘w;-nwry nI‘m Wyoming. Sine the Belden row, Jay Gould has TN T ST e T n leaving Laramio we cross twen- | not been on speaking terms with him; N b k L d A ty-five miles of plains, a drive of about | but Lhefit)m nfit;:pfo;m the two were S;‘éfif:fis 8 I'H,S fl. flll genfly MRS e It o | soen walking up Fifth avenue, Gould reo hours, and ithen armive at the o L 1o ing on his old, bro: DAVIS & SNYDER I HT Laramie river, which we leave behind | foes: oo! ¢ SPRAINS, s usand take our course to Cummins —_— f omn FEE,T 1606 Farnham St., . .. Omaha, Nebraska. AGENT. FOR—r—. City, the capital of Bramel mi Straight, Decent English. 400,000 ACcRES distrisl, On arrival ‘we find that wo | ibury Clighice. ; mLonir THE ave in the heart of the mountains and| We are x||s{mmd to look at this ..,'.‘;‘6..‘,‘;_""""' in improved farms, and L] } surrounded onevery side.Then wo | “eourteay of the Tf{f:.f" ns something R B oomsr v, b, RETER AN IDER, AND SOLE AGENT FOR { ascend these mountains and there sec | cigryck for truck” trade. SCALDS, . e b e Ty Pt Fr— wen s, | Hallet, Davis & Co., James & Holmstrom, and uarts, and prospectors at work every- | ators are in tho habit of quoting; 5 's Pi . qucs e D o BODILYPAINS,| BYRON REED & CO., J & C. Fischer’s Pianos; also Sole Agent About one and a half miles south- “S{:{i“x“‘ifi?‘}‘l’“t 1?.’."‘.;'“ "‘"—j‘"‘; ROUTILEAR T for the Estey, Burdett and t e Fort cast o A g on JAln Thoti | I paai et says N6 prasider ke ¥ ’ Bk 1 foafa P Rahthert mind | ey g anty B el il PEADRUE, Efl.l Estla:tfl A (31l Waytiei Ok et g =il eans: the advice and consent of the which shows to be a_true fissure vein, | so te" shall *appoint. ambassndors = and which produces some of the finest | gitr bublic ministers and. consuls, IN NEBRASKA. 1 DEAL IX PiANOS XD o . . A quartz ever found anywhere, On the _;u.l;,u‘..( e e S Keep s complete_sbetmet of fitl o al Real | THE BUSINENS, AND HANDLE ONLY THiS BRgt |1 0 A0 VEATL BXPERIENCE same mountain is lmml th\, West- “HM offcers of “,L mel Statos, Bstate in Owaha and Douglas county. . mayltt P ~<"‘ e e )vro\nlul lnr, and which (% A"n sTILL THE ”0" . . e e il : 218 Sixteenth St City Hall Building, Omaha and assay high. On the opposite- n el "‘?f]fi"'::‘l“}fm‘t‘;d:cfl‘fr‘: 5000 BY ALL BRUGAISTS AND DEALERS N WEBICINE, COSTIURS a0 . 4 z ot o ver s tho Gold | 3oy st Tein oo, sraight, docent A.VOGELER & Co. Roar for Moore(s) HALSEY V. FITCH, Tuner. ill and Betsy Janc mines, on which | gyl ™t wmeans the president, not 2 Lol = - considerable work has been done, but | e e | T4 mEwns the presilent, ot | . o i v bt | 10 senators, shall nomingte. Tho Harness DOUBLE AND SINGLE ACTING wmsurpassable, bt tro s p | Vrkdene action, or shey may wit| NGW HAIESS Sho o POWER AND HAND ver can bo scen the Shell Rocks | hold their cousent. ~ But they havo no p- S ddl hich work for the last two weeks | \y¢hority, no right to nominate, or to ing had nine seary expe- a ery. has heen pushed forward rapidly. ALoe eary expe Messrs, Beard and Thons are atoady | $a 0 D¢ Tresiconts Bocaume you put | X now s S P Engine Trimmi - [hotel, which building, on_crection, | nai aother man in his st "f‘tllrml-lu\\lnmmmol.hu MINING MACHINERY, BT ING, AT WHOLESALE AND Rimart T FIFF. STEA 1l prove to be one of the finest spec! | Tomp g omiins b and ill 11 il onjors in his line imetts of worksanship in the terts-| g = @ inaxrs v, ponpic, HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS. Elder Toots on Alarmists. A L. STRANG, 205 Farnam St Omaha Detroit Free Fros, NoTICH. s E ix hun R ey it Any onc. having dead animals I will remove '.,:'u;lanlr'lélfifi T“‘ et iny gan the old ma, s Eldor Toots hnnl thew free of charse. Leae onlers southeast is .nldltmm\l ml.mx S allilists b a‘l ! M dhqone f| — DUARLES SPLITY. e % | of de solid enjoyment T could take in WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER I3 e tints an 3‘;’;_‘;11::3;““’::“:;_‘:‘ dis world if let alone am spilt by a set J. H. FLIEGEL, =3 favorable, and. thin s o doubt o |0 e whon Taimestly o de nex ‘ capital invested here increasing a hun- 5;"0:‘"‘]“‘:;{‘ “;“‘}l S S Ll By T, E) dredfold. ! ick up a paper widout bein = = ° Oty & ottt vo MERCHANT TAILOR i i A Lath, Shingles, Pickets, eat too much, slecp too little, sit up e AT ok (e b too lnte, go to bed too airly, dress t 29 Douglas Stroet, Omaba, Neb. Veking s prie st of ‘goods el Chambers Jourial, warn or too cold—walk too. much o Ui o i e s ot oo vt | SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOLDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, The Russian Peasant has a great | too little. Do croakers am constantly : PnasTER, BTOC. dislike to doctors, and will rather suf-{at work to put the rest of us on the A. W NAS[]N De]ltlst JW' &STATE AGEST FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY fer anything from a village quack than | ragged )Iligt of .ulxxlet) Y . . T i BT T put himself under the treatment of a| One day we hear dat consumpshun Jacobs® Block, corner. Capitol avenue B G H ear Uni acifi S MAHA, NE Tnedical man. Among the laboring | hus became our nashunal mm[‘-hlm and Pt sect, o gy P! 1SINess 0. Egfl. Near Union Pacific Depot, 0! = ?j class the treatment of diseases x..ll‘lu day it am predicted dat de fewel affections of all kinds is confined |supply of de world am runnin’ short. Chiofly 0 tho 0ld women, who not | Next fing wo har af am do statement THE GREAT WESTERN s ) anfroquently ars” looked” uponas|dat de_siversgo of human e am | A, L, witches, and, as a recent t in’ shorter, or dat eight men out H GEO. R. RATHBUN, Principal. ° (Y |ample has shown, are occasion o o hikve livir complaint, or dat a . 4 treated as such. It cannot be denied proachin’ de airth. Dur's SANCPACTORER ASD DBALER £ Creighton Block, it thibms 613 ronics pofica's fodetati | snEhin beun! WATESQT SR Dot ot idt | knowledge of the virtues of herbs, |at us ebery day in de yar, and it has ) NEBRASKA. drugs, ete.; and many cases are on | got to dat pass dat the man who lies| SADDLES AND HARNESS, |75 for circuir. novIdkwit record where the succeeded in curing (lu]h]u at u{gn dreads dat he may &, inveterate affections that for nebber see de moon again, an’ he gits resisted the doctor’s skill. up_to wonder if de conflagrashun 1412 Farn. St. M. R. RISDOM, - all kinds, 4 : wine on in de sun won't up his gar- Omaha, Neb, s e e | bl et g 2 Goneral Insurance Agent. —diseases which it is currently be-| I has bin finkin' all fings obe ol . lived haunt the country in the shape | has bin worried an’ harrassed an’ Foatt of invisible women, who go from vil- | half scart to death ober de drift per on g% 0 o 1om, , |lage to_ village, and from house to |de predicted climati - w0 in scarch of some human being an’ do sudden di m they may conveniently take | kiveries dat human life am shortenin’ n\\md» There are said to be | up like an olé clothes line on a rainy | or sisters, as they | day. 1 has got to dat pitch dat I'm that is, kinds, | goin to sot down in my cabin wid a A e ftm paticnt. sepa. | pan of apples on de right han’ and a Southeast Coc.of Fifiecnth and Dilas St y. Tho fmt visitors are, s a yan of pop corn on do left, an’ let de — _ owls N rule, only troublesome, not dangerous; | world turn bottom up an’ be hanged but those tiat come laier weaken him |0 her, |1 white folks want to ot . J. . RUSSELL, M. D,"|The Lar, gest Stock and Most Com- and the “twelith sister” | worryin’ oher scienco an'” philosophy : : HOM@PATHIC PHY! < 2 ably takes fhe paticnt’s|an’ predickshuns an’ prophecies, lot SICIAN. By the latter name the peasants | ‘em do it, but my ‘ml\'im to de cull'd CONCORD HARNESS I‘"‘Wfi (;‘_;(hmm:::‘d Chare sie D . plete ASSOrtment n call the fever and night-sweats |raco am to worry ober nuffin’ higher’ L B I,“" o S 500 Cage B cll | the fovor_and nightavonts| et s i wory obor i’ igher'n | vy st it stor, s oo+ 0 2, FRETR N RIS The West. advanoodconsumpion. Kach of these | dobottom of 8 cllar. When your day's | avaio] Ths barnem af the Centenial EXHIL e tivelve rs is supposed to have a|work am dun, sot down in de big| " Common, aler Ranchmen's y gront dislike to soms. apocial moda of | chear, light yor pipe, an'Tot de chil'n | DLSR. e bevp . gt escl o he Sy J. R. Mackey, mumnmt d will at once leave the |:an’ de dog loose for a good tim SR T T D E patient if it should be resorted to. N T I s T E : hus, for example, sister No. 1 -is Confidential. e s ok i’ GEO. H. PARSELL, M. D.| _covc o v i o sharp tools; and .L‘; f(nvngly S The other morning when Mr. Jones s A T R R T mended to surround the patient’s bed | entered his family drug store to have | foma In Jacobs' Block, up stairs, corner Cap- | o 6 W ol e, i, s, o ot o found | s b John, & Jacobs, |We Keep Everything in the Lins of Carpets, Oil saws, etc., which must be laid with frow 7 699 1. m., except Wednesdays. o & O . 7 " flmr_fim,l,_ml? ¢ i the door ,.‘1\"”"“"1{1“"": caroiy, A whil o | gRRELATY (KA 08 H o Yomer UNDERT AK E =3 cloths, Matting, Window-shades, Fixtures cific against sister No. 2 is an al-| waited he bega T i P olic extract of twelve kinds of wood; | *“Boen hers lang? o e b Peesiagh o, 3 cob gla and Lace Curtains. il iisiaeNal S ban gbeNaellaol sy “Only two day by Teegiaph Solciied: . agatiy swallowing a large dose of gunpowder. LEGAL NOTICE. L Vas Cawr, 3D E L% o, 4. D, The ninth sister dreads cold water| I think so. Charles G. Lot, non-resident degendant NEBRAS s aboveall things, and will immediately | *OId clerk gone for good/” Vo ihs ety eoliiet e oo B i, 130, . = leawe patent vl akea 3 cod bt | Yen” SRR Medma‘l an[)/ 'c e — i : = ", Surgical Sikinec o Savar it oy floss ST RNt T from St. Lo T, power if employed by the uninitiated. “Dulntl?l::‘:h: ek l‘:ppole e et e e INST_ITUTE. Mhe_folloving s mher & cutios| Ol iy s specimen. The village wizard or| Gl a boiterofe here, T p ‘VE HAVE GOODSTO PL S and leads wim o he open felds. | *Druggist rlated o you'” Hero they look about for an_ash-tree *'g" SE which st bo ltle alle than he| ot tomarry his daughter?” pationt. The wizard then produces his | *Haven't thought of 1t * knife, carves the tree in two from the| There was a hriof rest until the clerk | ' e "oid and the yroceeds « "‘w""" top t0 the ook Hoth halves of the | had Anished his Isbors, and then he |48 topther vt it e T ton aro then tried togother vidh o | beckoned Mr. Jones 'nio_the back | F e tient's ‘belt; and the quack |room and said: = i ,,,“’,""’“’ e TEER PLACEH olds the two lower parts of| *‘You look Lke a person who can be mpm»'r‘b-ufrm‘.:x:.\:“.“.?‘ o fre: : the trunk apart, so as to form |dependedon, and T'll tell you in con- |263nd o sencry et yon --,r-ammnm an_opening, thmugh which the. pa- | fidence why I came here. Fliked St |0 el S o 1 'y i, o e | o 20 s ot ke g 13 Farnham St., Omaha. e o kg clothing. Bu happened to kill three or four persons | P10t =4t Piska, o clothes arsthen handed to him one by | by puting up wrong prescripions aud e one through the same openin Ilhougm-c;nngu location would b s et Greine hitesell, and is Bow cpnutiared | elievs my stbcev, "ThIR s o tho & : 1HL. B. MYERS, - to be cured of his ague the | square, you know, and nothing is to B Wt sop e 1oth day of | Private Hi 1 ke B i s 12 i Ty ot o 5 e 2 i Finte Rl 5727 DEC'ORATIVE PAINTER. certain mysterious words, which are | of your leading citizens, mwhxchme i i for | And SURGICAL DISEASER" of i """"" < supposed & some niraculous X sl give up he . bus RS 5 power. popular remedies B D, ESIGNS, LATEST STYLES. ARTISTIC WORK. -«-m-tiever-nd mAfln‘~nndl 2 gmo tobmoco, | Jones mco-.c ‘i‘-'fiug N — HANGING, PLAIN PAINTING OF Al KINDS, at REASONASLE RATES.