Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 6, 1881, Page 8

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The Alliance Movement in Adams Connty. Correspondence of Tim hi Jusiata, July 4, 1881.—The mers’ alliance movement has far- become an important factor in the political as | well as county, We now have other interests in Adams seventeen subordi nate alliances in the county, with a total membership of 543, and a county | alliance, holding quarterly meeting The last meeti liance was held on Saturday July 2d, r of the county and was largely attended by deleg and interested spectators. It wasa gathering of men, who, forintelligence and culture, would compare favorably with [the average state convention; while tHe purposes they have in view, and the determination evidenced to accomplish those purposes, may well challenge the thoughtful attention, not only of politicians; but of corpora tions, and-of all the people. The proposition at the Saturday meeting that elicited the strongest and most animated discussion was that looking to the formation of a far- mers', or independent party. It was opposed with a great deal of tact, elo quence and vehemence by certain members of the republican I"\"r‘v' who were present, who remembered that their party had ever held the political interests of Adams county in the hol- low of its hand, and who were loth to witness the departure of any portion of its power. They counselied the do- ing of alliance work within present party lines by controllingcaucusesand elections, But the arguments in re- sponse appearedtobe conclusive, It is time to have done,” it was said, ““with clinging to the shirt tails of the old parties, and appealing for relief and protection, We have been doing this for years and matters all the while have been growlng worse and worse. The old parties care nothing for us after they ]mvo gottenourjvotes. They will make any demanded promise beforeelectionand then when they get to Lincolnor Washingtonsell out to the moneyed monopoly that will pay the largest price, and so rivet still tighter the chang upon us, It is time to set up on our own account, and have party and candidates of our own, upon whose integrity and in whose fealty to principle we can depend. We have wearied of giving one-half of our crops for the privilege of carrying theother half to market. You say we cannot succeed. Whyl Alreddy we have more than five hundred voters in our ranks in this county. By No- vember next we shall have at least one thouisand, and that is nore than one- half of the total vote of the county. In addition to this a large proportion of the voters not in the n&linncu are with us in sympathy, and will act with us at the polls, 1f we do not succeed this year wo may next, or the next; at all events wo will go on until we do achieve success. 5 These sentiments were warmly re- Cceived by the audience and were not without eficct, as, when the time for voting upon the pending proposition came, two-thirds of the do]euutufl cast their ballots in favor of the organ tionof a new party. The work of or- ganization was placed in the hands of a committee composed of one mem- ber from each alliance in the county— this committee to meet in Juniata on the last Suturday in August and dis- | g charge this duty. This movement will doubtless effect a change in the status of pending poli- tical affairs. It is too formidablo to be ignored by the party heretofore so largely in the ascendency; and the men who have committed thomsclves to the new departure are altogether too consequential to be trifled with. More than cver, “therefore, will the claims and interests of the farming community be regarded by the nomi- nations to be made this fall. Wheth- er with all the concessions they may be disposed to make the old managers will save themselves from deteat at the hands of the new party, romai to be determined, THER MA' ) Our entire community was startled and rendered indignant, on Saturday, on receipt of intelligence that a des- perate attempt had been made upon the lifo of President Garfield, It car- ried us buck, in thought and feeling, to the memorable April days of 1865, when the whole country was electritied by tidings of the assassination of Pres- ident Lingoln. For the murder of Mr. L., the shadow of an excuse could’ be imagined, but for that of Mr. whatever, Some attribute this to en- mity growing out of the Albany im- broglio, and others to other causes,but none could conceive an adequate mo- tive. The assassin and ‘his accom- l»licuu (if there be any) should receive ittle mercy at the hands of the author- ities, Our crop prospects are still of a most encouraging character, and our grain buyers, Messrs. J. M. Sewell & Co., and Tra G. Dillon, are elevati their plans and arrangements accord- ingly. The wheat crop, we think, will be the best had for years, and the corn will do much better than was at hrst supposed, The rye is already secured and in good condition Pota- toes are being intertered with to some extent b{ the Colorado beetle, but the erop will be at least a fair average. While at Hastings, the other day, we stepped into The Gazette-Journal oftice to see so many. evidences of prosperity on the part of Wigton Brothers, They have not only an ex- cellent power press and several jobbers of mdmriur manufacture, but have | g recently introduced a mammoth iron paper-cutter weighing 2000 pounds; a very fine standing press, also of iron, for smoothing impressions already made, and a new-style paper-rolling maching, The necessary apparatus for a bindery 18 also daily expected; and not long hence, we presume, a steam engine. These,with the growing business of the Messrs, W. will neces- sitate an addition to this office. Good, we l:j’! for the prosperity is well de- served. JAuNTER, The Fourth at Greenwood. Correspondence of Tus Bik; Greenwoon, Cass county, July 4, 1681.—The day is beautiful and crowds have come in from every direction to celebrate. Ashland, Waverly, Green- wood, and the people ef all this region Jjoin the exercises. The Green- izens erected a beautiful & M. depot and furnished seats for a | thousand. Fully three thousand are | attendance. Col. Champion 8. Chase, of your city, was the orator of the day. Upon | his arrival lere this morning a brief | consultation was held and on his sug gostion the ceremonies here made to conform to the conditions of things at Washington arising from the a sination of the president. Col. Chese pronounced a very elo- | THE OMAWA DAILY BEE: WEDNESDAY JULY 6 1881 THE POPPY PLANT. Discovery of the Spontaneons Growth of Sapposed Opium Plants in Colorado. Denver Tr J. H. Lukins, chief en eastern division of the Central, while making a tour of ado during the past week, was attrs ed in a peculiar way by the thistle- like, white-tlowered plant that grows ineer o Pennsy quent tribute to Garfield and discuss- | gpontaneously over moumtain, valley ed the causes of his assassination. | and plain. Those who have observed The display of the horsemen was very | the plant will reco it at once fine, and the Elsmond brass band |as a useless wecd, noticeable only | gave us excellent music. J. W. Buck-| by reason of its pretty white enlust was president. Fully three| flower, whose petals encircle a pod of thousand people were in attendance, | yellow seed Mr. Lukins was at coming from three counties, and the universal verdict is that the whole af fair was a complete success. High enconiums on the address of Col. e are heard on all sides, His effort was equal to the oceasion, S A STATE JOTTINGS, RypeR, Loup City greatly needs a mill, Arapahos lopes to hav o w e is a great demand for building lots mah yards runni Madison’s Catholic church will soon be ready for oceupancy. A farmer near Juniata has walnuts on trees of his own growing. Wahoo's new Methodist church is aj proaching completion. Wark has commenced on the new hotel building at Pawnee City, stern parties are negotiating for o slen mill at Blue Springs. Pwenty-two londs of stock shipped ir--m Hardy last week, Canada hill, in Howard countv, wants to be made a separate precinct 1ew iron bridge at Tnv was blown down by the wind, J. G. Armstrong, of Beaver City, has ;.-..-nu\» shipped 2,500 pounds of wool to ty will soon have two brick were and Tsland cornet band will e reorganized soon and several new pie added. Norfolk is discussing the advisability of donating land and money for Congrega- tional college. Ar icles of incorporation have been filed ullerton national bank, with a eap The United States land office, at Bloom- ington, has bean opened for the transac- tion of business, Mr. Reynolds, of Spring Green, Fu mty, shipped two hundred sheep to Chicago last week, The Reynolds “boys,” of I Bowght 12,000 western theep, will bring into Nebra . The Pennsylvaniad pany have put up five their range on South Loy Alexandrin Presbyterians are workin, hard to crect a church, The organization numbers forty-seven members, A new town lias been located on the line of the railroad through Pawr twelve miles west of Pawnee ¢ Three men were seriously injured lnst weak by the falling off o bridge at Hum- boldt, which was being taken down, A Nnckolls county girl has refused her lover till he has, alone and single-handed, in eleven wolves and laid their scalps at mont, have which they Live Stock com- es of wire Arapahoe precinct, Fumas county, will on the 16th of July voteon the proporition to bond the precinct for 81,500 to build a bridge across the Republican river, The sporting men of Falls City propose to organize o stock company and buy a tract of land near that city, to he fitted up for a driving park and for holdingstock nirs, Three thousand six hundred and fifty hogs and enough cattle to swell the cash paid out to ¥77,150 were shipped from Washington county during two wocks of the present wonth. he B. & M. sent ouf y tocut the weeds along the track, atent of the machine is owned by smpany, and they have g za, The macing mows down the weeds ale the track in an astonishing manner,—Lin- coln Democrat, novel machine 0w T'h ne week this spring four five s clai war o the ra i shundred of the venon ws i commendable job, unday even| ¢ five men and 1, Yellowstone dulged ina little sp going over into the G and bringing it te the the Yellowstone, - Ni. flour by tin valley for it wilder portions of brara Pioneer, Debt and Taxation of the United States Compared with Enrope. A table prepared by Mr. Edward Atkinson shows how much lighter are the burdens of the people of this country than are those of the people of Burope, and how much better are the opportunities for advancement on this side of the Atlantic than on the other, Itis shown by this table that while Europe has 145 inhabitants to the HTI“N mile, the United States has of only 16}, Since 1849 Europe has ne the debt ly trebled, wher our debt is now léss than it was in 1865 by over a thousand million of dollars, We have already paid more than a third of the cost of the great civil war, and our debt is but $1,800,000,000,aginst £2,907,380,303 atthe close of that contest. The debt of Europe in 1880 was $16,704,800,- 000, or an average to cach inhabitant of §74.64, while here the averago on the first of last March was only $36,85, though in 1865 it was $83.85. The natural expenditures of Europe were £2,282,800,000 in 1880, or an average to cvery ' person of 810 Our expenditures for the vyear ending June 80, 1880, were 17,642,957, or an average . of to each inhabitant. The stand- ing armies of Europe number over 2,100,000 men, Iwuin{\-u the still more numerous reserves who may be called into the field at any moment, More than one in every 110 of the popula tion is a soldier in active service. Reckoning one able-bodied man to every five inhabitants, each twenty- two men sustain one soldier., Our army is only 25,000 strong, and 'each 2,000 inhabitants, or cach 400 men sustain a soldier. In the light of these facts and statistios it 15 not surprising that the people of Europe, witnessing our prosperity and envying our comparative freedom from ~the burdens which rest on their industry, are now crossing the ocean at a more rapid rate than ever before to share in our goyd fortupe. It would seem that, luuglufiqunw of the Roman empireds to be exeeeded in the culmi- nation of th> grandeurthat awaits this e booth in a little grove close by the B. republic. v mill | .| most actively propagat | tracted especially by its rescmblance [ to the poppy or opium plant, Having in his earlicr years been a student of | botany he made an examination of the | plant in various portions of the state, and the result was almost invariably in accord with the history and dc seription of the poppy | tions of America the poppy isacommon In'some. por plant, growing lusuriantly in field |and garden. Yet while all farmers |and gardeners are familiar with its uses, the product has never been lutilized as a merchantable | commodity. In_ many instances |in many states the natives have ex- tracted the juice from the stalk and ndered it into a compound resembl- ing and serving the purposes of opium, | marketable opium has ever been de- rived from it. If the American pop py can be utilized in this way, and if the plant hitherto unnoticed in Color- ado should prove to be the genume opium plant, there is wealth on the plaing surrounding Denver equal to the gold and silver in the Rocky Moun tains, In order to ascertain some factscon- | corning the plant, a reporter of The Tribune yesterday visited a number of learned gentlemen with a specimen of the stem and flower in hand, The result was unsatisfactory, Nearly all avowed that they = kmew mot what it was, while :ntleman un- conditionally dec it to be a species of thistle, The reporter then took the plant to a number of Chinese wash houses and interviewed the Celestials, young and old, but found mnone who knew, or at least would acknowledge, that he was in any wi familiar with the plant or its uses, One old fellow, who looked as_ though he might he spent o half century in the tlowery kingdom, cast a suspicious alance at the rey 1 he askea if it were an opium plant, and de- clared he had never seen a poppy or a specimen of the opium plant in his country. Some enterprising botanist might enrich himself now by an in- vestigation of this mattes Too ILate for Lies About the River Route. From the New Orleans Times, A few solid, incontrovertible facts are worth all the theories that any combination of so-called scientists can make in a life tune, and never has the truth of this saying been more conclusively established than in the rise of New Orleans as o grain port. For Tyears interested parties have declared that grain could not he safe- ly shipped down the Mississipt river and through the Gulf of Mexico, be- cause of the risk it ran of being dam- aged by heating or fermentation. True, there were no scientific rea- sons why grain properly rivened and cured should not stand this climate, since it is well known that grain can 1ot be ¢ d by the heat of the most tropical climates, but that the presence of a degree of moisture which would be highly damaging in any climate must be conjoined with the heat before any injury can result to grain stored or in transit in these latitudes. In spite of science, ho ever, such an outery was ed against the climate of New Orleans that until within the past two or three years the lvantages of the Mississippi river a8 a route of transit for the grain products o tho west were totally neglected. A trial was finally made in spite of the most violent opposition and the prejudi That tral, exposed to eyery possible condition necessary to make it com- plete and thorougl, has been going on for several years, and has ended in the incontrovertible estabhshing of the fact that the climate of the Gulf coast and the Gulf waters is no more unfavorable to the safety of sound grain in good condition than is the climate of New York state and the Erie canal. This fact has been triumphantly established by the safe and satisfactory shibment from this port through a term of years, at all seasons of the year, of many :million bushels of corn and wheat and mil- lions of barrels of flour, This overwhelming burden of testi- mony has just been crowned, if it needed any additional emphasis, with the reception here of three barges containing thirty thousand bushels of wheat for foreign shipment, trans- ported on the river all the way from St. Paul, the head of navigation of the Mississippi, to this port, in excel- lent orcer and condition. 1t is now being put on board the British steam- ship Winston, for its European des- tination, and in twenty-four hours doubtless will have passed through the jetties and be riding the blue waves of the Mexican Gulf, This wheat, coursing the entire length of the Mississippi river in the midst of the hottest season known in this latitude for half a century, and arriving hore in such perfect” order, 80 completely sweeps away the last vestige of a doubt as to the entire safety of the river route, that its ene- s have nothing left to mak: argument of save deliberate and ma- lignant falsitication. The entire mat- ter has come now to bea question of freight, in which, as the shippers have decisively declared, the river route has immense advantiges, The last doubt as to the superiority of the river has had its back broken, and argument is at “an end. The most able-bodied liar that ever cleared his throat and blackened a reputation can make no headway against the solid facts that have established the river grain route, hat the ailwent may be; a wralgia, lameness, asthma, bronchitis — if other treatwents have ailed—hope on! o at once for THONAS' ELkerrio O, Tt will secure your imme- diate relief, eodlw, | But it is not known that an article of | hters, Sons, Fathers, Business Men, Farm- honld be warned aga their HOMES Have no such “‘Warner's Safe they are claimed ntain only medi czetable what n debilitated fr A perfect Spring o Summer A Thorough Blood Purifier tizer., A Tonic Appe- rating to the body it physicians recom ¢ propertics. Once used always For the Kidneys, Liver and Urinary organs, use nothing "WARNER'S SAFE KIDNEY and LIVER CURE." 1t stands Unrivalled. I J ands owe their health 31,95 por hottle, al contidence, H. H. WARNER, Rochester, N. Y. Je 16-tu-th-sat 1y AGENTS WANTED FOR FASTEST SrLLING BOOKS 0P THE Aok ! Foundations of Success S AND SOCIAL FORMS, The laws of tra act business, val gnl forms, how to trans. tables, social etiquette, , how to conduct public busi. complete Guide to Success for necessity. Address for cir- culars and special terms ANCHOR PUBLISHING C0., St.Louls, Mo. |ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. Opvice in Hanscomb's Block, with Prichett, 1606 Farnham St., Omaha, Georgo E. _BRO%N EI?.LV HALL. YOUNC LADIES’ SEMINARY OMAHA, NEB. Rev. R, DOHERTY, M. A., Rector, an’ ablo corps of ¢ s, Scionces and THE NINETEENTH YEAR WILL BEGIN SEPT. 7, 1881: THE RECTOR. The Oldest Estatlshed BANKING HOUSE IN NEBRASKA, Caldwell, Hamilton & Co., BANKERRS. 3 in English e Arts. Business transveted same as that of an incor- porated oank. Accounts kept In enrrency or gold subject to sivht check without notice Certificates of deposit 1ssued payable in three, six and twelve months, bearing nterest, or on demand without interest, Advances made to customers on approved seen- rities at warket rates of interest. Buy and scll gold, bills of exchange, govern- t, state, county and city bonds, United States Depository. EIRST ~——OF OMAHA,— Cor, 13th and Farnam Sts, OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHMENT 1IN OMAHA, BUCCESSORS TO KOUNTZE BROTHERS.) STABLISHED 1856, Organized as a National Bank August 20, 1863, CAPITAL AND PROFITS!OVER - 8300 000 o HERMAN Kovyz, AUGUSTUS K President. W, Y Atks, Cashier. A, J. Porrikros, Attorney, . CREIGHTON, F. H, Davis, Asst. Cashier, - This bank receives deposits without regard to amounts, Iisucs time certif Draws drafts on San Francisco aud principal clties of the United States, also London, Dublin, nbiirgh and the principal citics of the conti nt of Europe. Sells passeiger tickets for emigrants by the In- man line niayldtt e interest. AGENTS W. D ¥ok ovi NEW BOOK BIBLE FOR THE YOUNG,” being the Story of the Scriptures, by Rev, George Alexander Crook, D, D., in simple and attractive llustra- pressis ¢ ecure this it. Price irculars with extra terms, J H. CHAMBERS & CO, St. Louis Mo, Nebraska Land Agency -‘DAVIS & SNYDER, 1606 Farnham 8t,, . .. Omaha, Nebraska. 400,000 ACRKRES Carctully selected land in Eastern Nebraska for sale. Great Hargaing in improved farms, and Owaha eity property 0. F. DAVIS, Late Land Con'r U, P. R. R A W, NASON, Dentist. Oprick—Jacobs’ Block, corner Capitol avenue and Pifteenth street, Omaha Nob. WEBSTER SNYDER. Apdebts Notice to Contractors- Sr:.u.r:n propasals for the ercction and comple- 1D tion of the new Grand Contral Hotel at Ot , for Kitchen Bro's. will be received at the Withuell House, Omaha, and the Pacific House Bt :',m’quh. Mo., from July 1ith to 4 o'clock p. w. July 181, Plans and speitications on view at both of the abovementioned housce. Thg right 10 reject any and all bids is reserved. ECREL & MANN, ) Architects. NationalBank| | Kinds of sorc WISE'S Axle Grease NEVEB CUMS! Used on W and Mill M KRS AND , Reapers, Threshers 1t 18 ISVALUABLE T0 PARY: tris, It cures Scratches and all on Horses and Stock, as well as on OLARK & WISE, Manuf’s, 386 lllinols Street, Chicag RZFSEND FOR PRICE Je 24-6m-be A 2os the sys tulanceand wind eolic, and sut t to great bodily suffering, A sin tem, Jects the patic gle dose of TARRANT'S SELTZER APERIENT, wil correct the acidity, off the save sonetimes 4 1org sy 1ts effects are gentle and thorough ild prevent mucd SOLD BY ALL DRUGGIST rry offending 1 illnes and its gon PROPOSALS FOR BEE l EPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, Office of Indian Affairs, Sealed proposals, indorsed “Proposals for and directed to the Commissioner of In Il be received J0uh 1881, 14,250,000 for furnishing for th ponnds Beef on th Bids must be n Government blanks, itics to b deliver her with blank proposals and form of ¢ nd bond, conditions to be observed by bidders, time and | cry, and all other n i furnished at Wi ce of deliv 47 Wooster B Now Postuiaste Bids will be opened at stated, and bidders are fn openi hour and to be pre Crrivien Al bids must ve pained by certified checks npon some United States T ory_or Assistant Treasurcr, for at least five per cent of the amount of the proposal, PRICE, RORS, Commissioner, To Nervous Sufterers THE GREAT EUROPEAN REMEDY. Dr. J. B. Six;;sou's Specific MBDICINE. 1t §4 2 positive cure for Spermatorrhea, Semina Weokness, Impotancy, and all discases rosulting from Self-Abuse, as Mental Anxiet , Pains in the Back or Side, [Ty TER ful succe l‘:\mrhl!"n I par- sent frco to all. ticulars, Price, Specific, 81,00 per all package, or six pack- 1 ages for £.00. to Nos. 104 Sold in Omaha by J.K Ish, and all druggistse AND STILLTHELION CONTINUES TO Roar for Moore(s) Harness AND 2 £_ 404 South 13th Street, terial is used <l a asn 1z a price-list of good will favor by sending for one. DAVID SMITH MOORE. v. R. Mackey, DENTIST, Corner 16th and Douglas Sts, Omaha, Neb, Prices Reasonable. ap 2 J. G. RUSSELL, M. D, HOM®EPATHIC PHYSICIAN, Diseases jof "Children and Charonic Discases a Specialty. "Office at Residence, 2000 Cass strect, at the lowest W Hours— t0 109, m., 1to 2 p, m., and after € p. m. anlidim Notice to Gontrnotors. 1 proposils Wil De received by the f s of llnu&l:n u o dnesday, July A, D, 1881 p. ., 1o the on of" of use building at Omwaha, in sald county, in accordance with plins - fnd - specifications made by E. Myers, urchitect of Detroit, Michigan, and now onfile i the county ‘elerk’s ofiee it Omalia. I bid must be accompanied by a good saflicient bond in the sim of tei thous- and dollirs bidder will énter Into's e good and swiieleut bond, should i be Wil him, copy of tlie specifieations wil 1 wirded “upon application to the ¥ clerk at Omalay, Neb., and in all eases must ipany propoals, The hourd reserves the right to reject any or all bids, ' By order of the Board of County Commis- sloners, OMANA, Neb,, ANCHESTER, June County Clerk, T an it for COLUMBIA BICYCLES, ..ivafshey i gt and price list containing full inforiation. N. I D, SOLOMON, Paints,Oils and Glass OMAHA, NEB. REMOVAL, THE ANTIQUARIAN BOOK STORE Has removed to 1420 Douglas Street, between Léth aud 15th (Opp. Bushman's) New and Second Hand books bought,s sold and exchan ged " DIRECTORY OF LEADING WESTERN HOTELS. HOTELS. UNION PACIFIC HOTEL, LEWIS HOUSE, HARTNEY HOUSE, McHENRY HOUSE, SBUMMIT HOUSE, JUDKINS HOUSE, MENDIN HOTEL, THE CENTRAL HOUSE, IVES HOUSE, COMMEROIAL HOTEL, PARK HOTEL, BELDEN HOTEL, LUSK HOUSE, GOMMERCIAL HOTEL, BURKE'S HOTEL, GLIDDEN HOUSE, SCRANTON HOUSE, ASHLEY HOUSE, HEAD HOUSE, MERCHANTS' HOTEL, CHENEY'S UNION HOTEL, CITY RESTAURANT, CHAPMAN'S SESTAURANT, FRANKLIN'S RESTAURANT, NEOLA HOTEL, WOODWORTH HOUSE, CENTRAL HOUSE, EMERSON HOUSE, CROMWELL HOUSE, WALTON HOUSE, CITY HOTEL, MARSH HOUSE, GRAND CENTRAL HOTEL, CENTRAL BLOCK HOTEL PROP MARKEL & SWOBE, JOHN 8. LEWIS, W. P. HUNTER, T.W. BUTLER, SWAN & BECKER, JUDKINS & BRO., ADOLPH WUNDER, JOSEPH SANKEY, 0. T.IVES, WM. LUTTON, W. J. GARVIN, A.W. BELDEN, JAS. A, LUSK, ©. F. CASBADY, E. R. BURKE, 8. M. LEWIS, JOS. LUCRAFT, DAN EMBREE, JOS. SHAW & CO,, CHENEY & CO., CHENEY BROS,, J.J TUCK, T. G, CHAPMAN, GEO. FRANKLIN, F.SIEVERTZ W. A. WOODWORTH, 8. P. ANDERSON, A. L. SHELDON, MRS. R. COCHRAN T.C. WALTON, CHENEY & CLARK, W. W, E. D. COTTRELL, FRED, STADELMANN, RIETORS. TOWNS. V. P. Transfer, Council Bluffs, Dow City, lowa. West Side, lowa. Vail, lowa. Creston, la. Red Oak, la. Mendin, la. Walnut, la. Hastings, la. Villisca, la. Corning, fa. Woodbine, la. Logan, Ia. Denison, la. Carroll, la Ia, Scranton, la. Grand Junction, la Jefferson, la Sioux City, la Mo. Valley June.; Dunlap, la. Stanton, la. Shelby, fa Neola, Ia Atlantic, ta, Maivern, la. Emmerson, la. Cromwell, la, Onawa, la. Blair, Neb. Brownvile, Neb. Nebraska City, Neb. Plattsmouth, Neb' BROWNING, MAX MEYER & BRO,, the Oldest Wholesaleand Retail Jewelry House in Omaha, Visitorscanhere find allnovelties in Silver ‘Ware, Clocks, Rich and Stylish Jewelry, the La- test, Most Artistic, and Choicest Selections in Precious Stones, and all descriptions of Fine ‘Watches, at as Low Pri- ces as is compatible with honorable dealers. Call and see our Elegant New Store, Tower Building, corner 1lth and Farn- ham Streets MAX MEYER & BRO. MAX NEYER & BRO,, O M A EL A . THE LEADING [ MUSIC HOUSE IN THE WEST! General Agents for the Finest and Best Pianos and Organs manufactured. ur prices are as Low as |any Eastern Manufacturer |and Dealer. | Pianos and Organs sold |for cash or installments at | Bottom Prices. | A SPLENDID stock of |Steinway Pianos, Knabe |Pianos, Vose & Son’s Pi- |anos, and other makes. Also Clough & Warreu, |Sterling, Imperial, Smith American Organs, &c. Do |not fail to see us before pnr- | chasing. M7 ONALD AND HARRISON, 12408 FARNEHANM STREERT, ARE NOW 0. ERING FOR ONE MONTH ONLY DECIDED BARGAINS —XN— 7 Liadies' Suits, Cloaks, Ulsters, Circulars, Ete., AT COST. 200 Handsome Suits, at $5.00; 300 Stylish Suits, $10.00; 756 Black Silk Suits, $17.00, We have several lots of staple goods which will be offered at SEVENTY-FIVE GENTS ON THE DOLLAR. All lIadies should avail themselves of this great sale of CORSETS AND UNDERWEAR, SILK AND LINEN HA LINEN AND MOHAIR ULSTERS, DKERCHIEFS, LAWN SUITS AND SACQUES, Jo 20-cod-tf McDONALD & HARRISON. EDHOLM & ERICKSON, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL MANUFACTURING JEWELERS. LARGEST STOCK OF MRS. LOUISE MOHR, Graduate of the St. Leuls School of Midwives, at [l lifornla Street, Between Fifteenth R north side, where calls will ho‘rmmptl) respond- ed o at aiy bour during the day or Bight. o w (fold and Silver Watchesand Jewelryin the City Come and sec our stock, as we will be pleased 10 show gooda. .q & DODGE 2 PrOITE FOSTOFFICE. d EDHOLM & ERICKSON.

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