Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
D] ~ LESSO The ONS OF THE HOUR. Attempted Assassination Monopolizes the Attention of Ministers, The Rev. Hinsdale, of Hiram Cnllege, Discourses on that Theme, And Presents His Dednctions ina Favorable Light. Wasmivaros, July 10.—Rev. Dr. Hinsdale, presidentof Hiram college, spoke at the president’'s church on Vermont avenue, Rev. Dr. Harri- son, chaplain of the house of repre- sentatives; Rev. Mr. Leach, of the navy yard M. E. church, and Rev. Dr, Shippin, who has come into notice as a fedlow-boarder of the assassin, each delivered sermons on the assassination, Dr. Shippin spoke on ““The Righteous Judgment of God,” and he drew a pic- ture of a judgment day on carth «llnt had oceurred during the past week. The president’s pew at the little Chrnistian church on Vermont avenue was empty. A bunch of evergreens placed in it by some friends indicated the hope and faith of his friends, The sermon was preached by Dr. Hins- dale, the president of Hiram colleg of which Garfield was formerly presi- dent. He took for his text: Isinah xlv, 8.0—“My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways My ways." The preacher be- gan with remarkin upon the extraordinary events u}‘tlm last week, They had made a profound and lasting impression upon the minds of men, not only at home, but abroad and they suggested the topic. One of the lessons of the hour was the danger of the high political excitement, especially when it partakes of a factional character., The current talk about plots and conspiracy is wild and foolish and tends to pro- duce an unhealthy state ot public mind, The would-be assassin of the president is a man of loose brain, depraved moral character and his murderous act is his own. Of this there seems no doubt, but the causes stimulating his dreadful deed was the exciting state of the political world. Such an in- tense and morbid state of the political u{:ininn and feeling is to be deprecated. ‘What political party shall be in the ascendency nnn} who shall represent periods of drought, the level ot the water in the lake is lowered, the sur rounding land becomes in & measure passable, and large herds of cattle obtain excellent pasturage in_the sa- vannas and swamp lands of the inter- rior. Then when the rainy season comes, four months in the year, the waters of the lake gradually rise, overflow the immense tracts of sugar land, the soil of which is identical to that of Cuba, and back to the waters of the river emptyinginto the lake, Tt is the purpose of the company just formed to permanently lower the sur- face of lake Okeechobee, which, accor- ding to the United States survey of 1879, is twenty-five feet above mean low tide, by constructing the drainage canal twenty-one miles in length to the St. Lucie river at a waterfall of one foota mile. This plan is similar to that recommended by Colonel Meigs to the mational gov ernment in 1870 In the pro- posed canal this waterfall will give a velocity of two and two-thirds miles per hour and a capacity of passing 733,708,800 cubic feet in twenty-four hours, Three stream dredging ma- chine of the Menge patent, construct- ed on the continuous ladder principle and resembling the buckets in a grain clovator, are now being put together at Jacksonville, the hulls being al- ready in shape. Each dredge will be cepable of making a clean cut of 22 feet in width, The dredges will be ashed in pairs, so that at one opera- tion they will open a canal 44 feet wide. To dig the canal from Lake Okeechobee to the St. Lucie river will require the excavation of 9,000,000 cubic yards, which, at a rate of 2 cents a yard (the Menge figure), will amount to §180,734, and at an out- side figure of b cents a yard will amount to $451,3306. In addition to this canal it is the design to build another canal from Lake Okeechobee to the Caloosa- hatchie river, emptying inthegulf; also to deepen and straighten the streams emptying into Lake Okeechobee, to dig lateral canals or ditches, and at various points to tap the ridge separ- ating the saw-grass marhses from the Atlantic and the gulf, thus drain- ing the remotest sections of that great region, The area of land reclaimed will em- brace every class of Florida land, in- cluding “‘high and low hammock,” ‘‘first, second and third rate pine” and “‘swamp lands,” and under the terms of the contract between the company and the state of Klorida one-half of the 8,000,000 acres to be reclaimed b; the lowering of (he lake waters will the people in high places is an important question, but they are far less important than the life of the chief magistrate and the good order and fate of society. The second les- son is the incalculable value attaching to sound habits and an orderly life and strong moral habits. Had the president’s blood been poisoned by alcohol or had his constitution been broken down by irregularities he would have been dead at this hour, nor would he have lived so long had he not been a man of great faith and self-control. The popular faith and hope has been based, in a great de- gree, upon these facts, and the ho of the president. The president's great qualities have given just confi- dence and stability to the public mind, and they are a strong pledge of his complete recovery. Mrs, Garfield’s heroism was also eulogized, The third lesson reveals human na- ture in its beat phases. The assassin has been umversally condemned. We are not a Mexicanized people, The pistol is not regarded as the proper political method. The universal expressions of good will and sympathy are most signifi- cantly beautiful; they are confined to 10 party or church; they are peculiar to no section or locality, north, south, east or west; republicans and demo- crats, men of all races, religions, and conditions have united in a chorus of honor and sympthy. Nor have these feelings been confined to this country. The old world has mingled her voice with the voices of the new. We have seen a touch of nature that makes the whole world kin, The religious man- ifestations of the week have been strikingly significant and beautiful, They revive the real hold that the un- seen world has upon the popular mind. DISSTON'S GREAT SCHEME, Formal Organization of the Com- pany that is to Reclaim Florida. Philadelphia Record, June 9. At the northeast corner of Third and Chestnut streets was established yesterday the office of one of the bold- ost enterprises ever undertaken in Amenica. Conspicuous in the man- agement is Mr. Hamilton Disston, head of the great saw works, Ex- mayor Stokely is president and Me, Disston treasurer of the new com pany, which starts under the rather {ung title of the ‘‘Atlantic and Gult Coast Canal and Okeechobee Land Company.” Engineers have been sent to Florida, the surveys made un- der the auspices of the national gov- ernment have been verified by the company, three large dredges are now on the way to Jacksonville, and work is to be pushed with vigor, The dar- ing and immensity of this scheme may be inferred from the fact that the territory in question exceeds by a thousand square miles all of the land ancluded in the four states of Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Jorsey and Delaware. The company intends to open up over 17,000 square miles of the most tropical portion of the most tropical state in the Union, The en- gineering features of the work aren- teresting, a report upon the subject having just been issued by Mr, James M. Kramer, C, E. Lake Okeechobee is the grand in- land reservoir for the waters of mid- dle Florida, having no natural or di- rect outlet. The principal feeder to it is the Kissimmee river, which pours in a constant supply of 207,360,000 cubic feet of water every twenty-four hours. The amount of evaporation from water surfaces exposed to sun and wind is set down in the books at the rate of from one-eighth to three- eighths of an inch per day, according to conditions, Lake Okeechobee hav- ing an area of 1,000 square miles, the evaporation from the surface of the lake ‘wwm, at the lowest rate, 200,400, eubic oot of water, which is more than one-third in excess of the supply from revert to the company. Valuable de- posits of hematite ore and marl are also reported. The same company has bought the franchise of the Atlantic Coast Steam- boat, Canal and Improvement com- pany for the construction of sixty-one miles of canal which, by linking the waters of the rivers and sounds skirt- ing the eastern front of Florida, o) up nearly 330 miles of continuou: land navigation connecting the St. John's river with Lake Worth and de- veloping a huge stretch of land which has been neglected simply because it was not accessible,and w{ich produces crops of the wildest scope, embrac- ing tropical and semi-tropical fruits and fibrous plants, and matur- ing to a degree developed at no other point in the United States. The cost of building these canals with labor- saving appliances is placed at $203,- 984, and with the dredges now build- ing can be completed in nine months. In consideration of this work the com- pany will receive land grants of 400,- 000 acres immediately adjoining the canal, It is expected that both lines of canal, measuring eighty-two miles in all, will be completed within fifteen months, The Doane Law and the Railroads, Beatrice Expross, The law known as the Doane rail- road law, passed by the Nebraska leg- islature last winter, went into effect June first. For months previous to that time we read in certain leading papers almost daily that the law was o stupendons fraud that would work only mischief and be an engine of op- pression to shippers instead of a real measure of relief as intended. The law has been in force now one month, and from the same source we hear the jubilant cry, *‘we told you s0.” As was predicted the law has not brought the relief that was intended, and it is very natural that a great many people should already be asking for its repeal. Whether it should or should not be repealed. is however a debatable question, with a strong argument for the negative. To understand the matter fully it is best for the reader to take a glance at the law. Section 2 provides that no rail- road company in the state of Nebraska shall charge a higher rate for the transportation of any freight than the published rates on the first day of ovember, 1880, nor agreater amount —proportionately for hauling freight a short distance than for hauling it a long distance, nor give any secret rates, rebates or drawbacks, The provisions of the law are sim- lo, and need not be misunderstood, ho law itself is just and works, (or would not in a proper observance) no injustice either to the companies or to shippers It is a fact long known that the cost is often as great in shipping between local stations a short distance apart as for shipping from one principal point to another where the two are widely separate. The Doane law does not pretend to fix a rate, It merely says tlut one shipper shall have the same privileges as another; that shippers shall not be fleeced on short hauls; and that the rates shall not be higher than period—Nov, Ist, 1880, road companies of Nebraska could have well afforded to comply with the law in the spirit of the iuw itself, & spirit that would also have quieted any demand for more extreme logisla- tion. Instead of doing this, however, it 18 very evident l?mt they have studiously endeavored to make the law odious by tacking on all the tariff the law will permit, as though the law is construpd to mean that they must charge close up to the maximum of ratesin force Nov. 1,1880. This is espe- cially true on rates for long hauls, which are raised to the highest possi- ble limit to make them .Kmponiunutu, A8 near as ible, with the rates for short ha An_ action just the re- verse of this would have been better for the companies, +. ¢., a reduction the main feeder. Du; the ordina- ry seasons and particularly during on short hauls, as the law contem- plates, 8o that every species of freight were charged at a certain given |s The rail- | ? for short distanse should not be com pelled to pay for the drawbacks and special favors grauted to heavy long distance shippers. 1t must be admitted that the Doane law is weak in this point, no matter what the intention may have been; but the companies need not ex- pect to gain anything by _sliding through loop-holes to work their spite on a, people who has suffered much injustice at their hands. Such action will not be construed by the people as an argument that the law is unjust, or that a regulation of tariffs by legislation, in any form is im- proper, Human nature is much_the same the world over, and nowhere that we have yet heard of has the at- tempt to drive people been a success In this instance the companies have yet to discover their error—to learn that there is a golden mean between the spirit and the letter of an enact ment that it would be well for even a railroad company to consider. The Doane law is not un just to the railroad companies, and need not be to the people if the rail- road companies obey it in the spirit. A failure to do this will, we have no doubt, lead to the election of a ‘‘granger” legislature that will go to the extreme of the railroad legislation, perhaps poss laws that will in son respects be unjust to the companies. It would therefore be wise for them to call a halt if they do not wish this thing to come to pass, for the move- ment, once started, would draw largely upon the supvort of a cen- servative, disinterested class, whose love of fair play would induce them to take a hand in punishing arbitrari- ness and ‘‘pure cussedness’” wherever found. The convictions of the Express on this subject are strong. It believes that mi{rwul companies have rights that the people are bound to respect, and it believes none the less that the people have rights that railroad com- panies must respect if they value the safety of their charters, for chartered rights are not construed to mean the granting of priviieges to extort the tast drop of blood from the last pound of flesh of the people that made their charters the blood and bone of their organizations, ng the Doane Law. Plerce County Call, Certain journals are trying te make capital out of the fact that the Doane law proves to be inadequate to meet the transportation question. They claim that the different roads in the states haye raised their rates to what they were a year ago, and try to show that it is all the result of the legisla- tion last winter. The railroad com- panies will, by another two years, find that they have over-reached them- selves in this matter, and that laws will undoubtedly be passed that will be unjust to them, and they will have no one to blame but themselves. The present law would have satisfied most any reasonable person, but they wanted to show the people that if they at- tempted to interfere with them they could retaliate, and we take it the re- sult will be far different from what they expected; instead of the people bowing like humble slaves, they will assert their manhood and call a halt, and make such laws as will reach the case, Our advice to the railroad eor- porations, therefore, is “‘goslow,” and do not exasperate the people, Unrivaled As being a certain cure for the worst forms of d n]lepulni indigestion, constipation, im- puity of blood, torpid liver, disordered idneys, ete., and as a medicine for eradi- cating every species of humor, trom an ordinary pimple to the worst ulcer, Bug- DO 100 D Birters stand unrivaled, Price 81,00; trial size 10 cents, jylleodlw A Single Stone from a running brook slew the giant Goliath, ard millions of noble men since that time have died from a_sin- gle stone in the bladder, which War- ner's Bafe Kidney and Liver Cure would have diwolved and carried Jly7-eod-1w e Great German REMEDY FOR i nmcvwamsy, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, BACKACHE, CGOuT, SORENESS or Tug CHEST, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS axp SPRAINS, FROSTED FEET EARS, BURNS anp SCALDS, GENERAL BODILY PAINS, TOOTH, EAR axn HEADACHE, axp All ofber Pains nearth equals 57, J. sixrie and v Ex NS IN ELEVEN LANGUAGES. ORUGQISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDICINE, A. VOGELER & cx?' Baltimore, M NOTICE, Gilbert Wesson will take notie 18th day of June, 1881, Luther R tice of the peace in and for Douglas braska, issued an order of attachm he sum of 860 and interest from January 1, 1850, in an action pending before him wherein Richard 11 Darrow is plaintiltand Gilbert Wesso that property to-wit: Funds belonging o y have been attached under said order. Said couse was continued to the 10th day of August, 1881, at § o'clock & m. RICHARD H. DARROW, Plaintiff, vight, o LEGAL NOTICE. Douglas County Davis, Elizabeth devises of Henry In the district co To Samuel C. Da. B. Tomlinson and T. Tomlinson, deceased whose resl narmes are ur. known, non.resident deferdanta You'are herehy notified that John T. Davia PIAINtIfl and present owner of the land hereinaft er described, did on the 17th day of June, A. D, 1851, file his petition strict court in and for Douglas county, net you as defen Aunta setting fo 12th day of Jann. ary A D. 186 said Henry T. Tomlinson, and Elizabeth B., his wife, exectited and deliver. e to the said Samuel C. Davis a_deed of lands situated in said county in which a portion of the 1ands intended to be conveyed was by & clerical error erroneously describe A of the west § of the south township No. 14 north of range No. 11 east ‘ac cording to the true intent of the parties thereto, which deed is duly recorded in the office of the clerk of the county of Dougls iu book M of deeds at page 152 e object and prayer of said petition is that said error be correctid and that said deed be con wtrued as conveying the west § of the southwest quarter of said section No. one, and that the title thereto be adjudged ta be in said plaintiff or in those lawfully clain; under him the same as if said error had not been made and that you and each of you be xcluded from any inter est in mald lanc nt of #aid error and for fuch othet to further ellef a8 may bo fust And right in the premises. And your are and cach of you is hereby notified to appear and answer said petition on or before the Ist day of August, A D, 1881, JOIN T, DAVIS Dated June Plaintifr, Wi, K, MiLt PROPOSALS For curbing and guttering Dodge st doing the necessary grading, from the of Tith strect to 20th street. Sealed bids will e received by the undersigned for two weeks from the date hereof, for the curb- ing, guttering and the necessary grading of Dodge street from the cast wido of 18th street to 20th street. Plans and specifications can be soen at the office of the city enginecr. Said bids shall pecity the price por cuble yard for wich grading; also shall specify the p detail for such curb- ing and guttering, and shall be accompanied by the namg of proposed surcty wnnder the usual conditidhs, xud bids to be openied at. the first regular meeting of the city council after Monday, July 25th, 18 The City « any and a Envelopes containing sald proposals shall be Proposals for curbing ‘and gutterin and dofng the necossary grading, ared to_the undersigned not fater than 1851, at 12 o'clock noon. J.J L. C. JEWETT, Omaha, July 11th, 1851-d2w City Clerk. neil reserves the right to reject ORDINANCE NO. 467. An ordinance cntitled an ordinance “to empower the city truasurer to place the funds now on hand inthe special cash fund into the general fund.” De it ordained by the City Council of the City of Omaha, s follows: Sketion 1. The city treasurer is hereby author- iz und Instructed o place the funds now on hand i the special cash fund fnto the general fund Sk, 2. This ordinance shall take effect from and after its passage. W. L. BAKER, President of City Councl, pro tem, Attest: 3.3 L. €. Imwxrr, City Clerk. Passed July bh, 1881, Approved July 9th, 1881, JAMES E. BOYD, Mayor. ORDINANCE 468, An ordinance making levy for taxes for the year 1881, Be it ordianed by the city council of the City of Omaha, s follows: Sucrion 1, That the following taxes be, and the same are hereby levied upon the assessed valuation of all the property within the corporate limita of ¢ity Omaha,in the county of Douglas,and State of Nebrasks, for the year eighteen hundred and elghty-one. For the gencral fand of said clty a tax of twelve (12) mills on the dollar. For the sinking fund of sala city, to redeem at maturity, the_bonded in- debtedness of kald city, andals for_the payment of interest on its bonds, o tax of five (6) mills on the dollar. For the 'water rent fund of said city to pay rents for water for fire purposes and for public 1ise, a tax of two (2) mills on the dollar. For the sewerfundof sald city to pay all indebt- edness heretotdre incurred for the construction and maintainance of any main, sewer or sewers, or branches thercof, & tax of one and one-half (13) miills on the dollar. For the judgment tund of said clty to pay judgments entered against said oity o Jax of one (1) millon the dollar. For the school Rnd of the xchool district of Omaha in the county of Douglas and State, of Nebraska, n \tax of seven (7) mills on the dollar, For goneral fund for school sinking jund two (2) mills. For the library fund of said eity o tax of one-half (}) mill on tho dollar, 8kerios 2. This Ordinance shall take effect from and after itspassage, W. . BAKER, Prestdent of City Council, pco tem. Attest: J.J. L. C. JEWETT, City Clerk. Passed Julyth, 1381 Approved July 9th, 1881, JAMES E. BOYD, Mayor. LEGAL NOTICE. In the Circuit Court of the United States, for the the District of Nebraska; AU a session of the Circuit Court of the United States, for the District of Nebraska, continued and held pursuant to adjournment, af the United States courtroom in the city of Omaha, on the 16th day of June, 1881, the Hor. Elmer 8. Dundy being present “and presiding in gsaid court, the following among other proceedings were had and done, to-wit: No. €3G, Sherman W, Knevals, complainant, vs. Edward i), Melvin Hill, Agnes Hill, Altin 1ll, Flor Hill, Jo 1ill, guardlan of minor defen 3 1n ehancery.’Order on absent defendants, And now, on this 15th day of June A, D, 1881 being at the May term, A. D, 1581, of the said court, it having been made to_appear to the sat- isfactlon of the said court, that this is & suit commenced to enforce an. equitable claim upon within the sald district, and that Wi, “Melvin Mill, Agnes Hill, Alvin minor defendants not Hill, John 'HIN, guardian of herein’ are inhabitants of, and have not been found within the said district, and have not voluntarily ap- peared in this sult, on motion of James M. Wool- worth, Es., solicitor for the said complainant, it is considerci by the court and ordered that the said defendants above named be and they are hereby directed to appear and_plead, answer, or demur to the complainant’s bill of complaint, on or before the first day of August, 181, and that in default thereof, an order bo entered in thiy cause, taking the said bill pro confesso. 1t 8 further ordored by the court that at least twenty days before the said first day of Au- iust, 1881, a copy of this order be served upon Cward i, Seivin Hill, Agnes Hill, Alvin Pill, Flora 'Hill, John Hill, guardian ot the' said defendants, wheroever found, it practicable, and also upon the per- son oif persous in ! the real property described complaint, if any there cepy of this order be pul tive weeks in the *Omaha Hee." (Signed) ELMER 8, DUNDY, Tuk UxiTan STATES OF ANERICA, Judge. DISTRICT 0F NEBRABKA. }“' atson 1, Smith, clerk of the Circuit court ited States for the district of Nebraska, certify, that the above and foregoing i§ a true copy of an order entered upon the Journal of the proceeding of said court, in the Gause therein entit t 1 have compared the same with the original entry of said order, and it 5 & true transcript therefrow, aud of the whole thereof, Witness, my official wgnature, and the [SEAL) scal of said” court, at Omah in said district, this 1th day of June, . b, 81 WATSON B, SNITH, Clork, JAMES M. WOOLWORTH, jo 20wat Solicitor for Plailntit, PROPOSALS FOR BEEF, 1551 Beef,” and directed to the Commissioner of In dian'Affairs, Washington, D. C., will be recelved until 11 o'clock a. m., Wednesday, July 20th 1881, for furnishing for the Indian service, 14,260,000 pounds Beet Bids must Schedules showing the quantities to be deliver- ed at cach Ageucy, together with biank proposals and form of contracts and bond, conditions to be observed by bidders, time and place of deliv- ery, andall other necessary instructions will b turnished upon ion to the Indian Ofice at Washington D. gtreet, New York; W. H. York, ‘and to Commissaries of Subsistenc 8. A. at Saint Louls, Chicage, Salut Paul, on- worth, Omaha, Cheyenne, and Yankton, Indian Affairs, Washington, June 15, Scaled proposals, indorsed *Proposals for Leav and Dated Omaha, July 6, 1881, Jy6evw-st e Postmaster at Sioux City, Bids will ix opened at the hour and day above stated, aud bidders are in/ 40 be present atthe opening. CuRmIFIsD 7 [BOKS. All bids must be accompained by certified checks 11pon some United Blatos Depository or Amistent urer, for at least Aive per cent of the amount of the proposal. i H. PRICE, THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: TUESDAY JULY 12, 1881 AND STILL THE LION Roar for Moore(s) Harness AND Sa ddlery. (=] ; B 404 South 13th Street, 1have adopted the Lion as & Trade Mark, and allmy goods will he STAMPED with the LION and my NAME on the same. NO GOODS ARE GENUINE WITHOUT THE ABOVE BTAMPS, The best material is used and the mosb skilled workmen are_employed, and at the lowest cnan price. Anyone wishing a price-list of good will confer a favor by sending for one. DAVID SMITH MOORE. A SURE RECIPE Positive relicfand immunity m_complexional blemishes may be found in an-n’s Mag- nolia Balm, A delicate and harmlessarticle. Sold by drug- gists everywhere, It imparts the most brilliant and life-like tints, and the clo- sest scrutiny cannot detect its use. All unsightly discolora- tions, eruptions, ring marks “under the eyes,sallowness,red- ness, roughness, and the flush of fatigue and excitement are at once dispelled by the Mag- AR e gt © 0ne Cosmetic, Business College. THE GREAT WESTERN GEO. R. RATHBUN, Principal. Creighton Block, OMAHA, NEBRASKA. #ar8end for Circular. nov. 20d&wtt M. R. RISDON, General Insurance Agent. REPRESENTS: PHOENIX ASSURANCE C9., of Lon- don, cash nssets. . WESTCHESTER, K. V., capital. TAE MERCHANTS, of Newark, N, GIRARD FIRE, Philadelphia, capital FIREMAN'S FUND, Califoruia, . . NORTHWESTERN i\'ATIUNAL capit'l BRITISH AMERICA ASSURANCE Co NEWARK FIRE IN: ts. AMERICAN T , DSty . Southeast Cor. of Fitteenth and Farnl 3 OMAHA NEB. J.H FLIEGEL Successor to J. H. Thiele, MERCHANT TAILOR No. 280 Douglas Street Omaha, Neb. DON'TYOU FORGETIT WHEN IN NEED OF BOOTS: SHOES To examine the stock of 255 o 5 2888 1! 5355388 99. g 2 o = |OMAHA ;THURSDAY, JULY I14TH. The Date is Unalterably rFixedflr | This is the show that has MISS KATE STOKES, THELHANDSOMEST WOMAN IN THE WORLD, and who reccives more salary than any lady artist living, Positively Coming With Four Great Rings, WW. C. COU ™S NEW UNITED MONSTER'SHOWS THREE TIMES LARGER THAN EVER, In Glittering, Mighty and Incomparable combination with PARIS HIPPODROME NEW UNITED MONSTER SHOWS. 7&-RIVAL CIRCUSES unable to compete in open opposition with Coup's Monster Shows and Hipyodrom, are following this gigantic exhibition, (as sharks follow in the wake of the noble ship), and circulating anonymous pub- lications,? and Jadvertisements either without dates or with false dates, in a frutless effort to deceive the public about the coming of other shows or the not coming of this great show. These communications bear the imprint of falsehood and deception, and the public are warned to brand them with the infamy they deserve, BEAR CONSTANTLY IN MIND, that this mammoth exhibition, which causes them to quake with fear and become sick with jealousy, will positive- ly be here ON ’FHE DAY ADVERTISED, rain or shine, without fail, and as sure as the day arrives. Look out and you may hear little dogs bark. Omaha, Thursday, dJuly |4th. CIRCUS with Three Circus Companies. MUSEUM with Marvelous Wonders. MENAGERIE W™ RARE AR nimarvs. HIPPODROME ™ RS LA0R05E4N™ THE ONLY SHOW IN THE WORLD HAVING 4 reat Sircus and Hippodrome Rings | ! Full Circus and Hippodrome Companies A ROMAN CE TRACK, 40 feet wide, and nearly a half mile round. Exhibiting at every performance in all the large cities to an audience of 16,000 people, Thousands turned away from the doors, A mammoth tent, covering eight acres of ground. Seats for 14,000; standing room for 2000, ONE PRICE of admission to this Entire Confederation of ENRAPTURING WONDERS. Exciting Hurdle Races, BASWITZ & WELLS, House 1422 Douglas ., near 15th OUR STOOK is large and always the lowest prices. e3eod-6m DexterL. Thomas&Bro. WILL BUY AND SELL RBEAL BSTATE AND ALL TRANSACTION CONNECTED THEREWITH, i Pay Taxes, Rent Houses, Etc. 1¥ YOU WANT 70 BUY OR SELL Call at Office, Room 8, Creighton Block,"Omaha, aph-d W.J. CONNELL, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW., Orpice—Front Rooms (u new brick_building, N, Farnham Strects. stairs) in Hanscom's . comer Fiteenth ad D. F. Manderson, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. 842 Furnham St., Omaha _ WISE'S ARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, Office | ™ 'Axle Grease NEVER CUMS! Used on Wagons, Buggies, Reapers, Threshers and Mill Machinery It 18 INVALUABLE TO FARM- s AxD TrAMMTERS, 1t cures Scratchos and all kinds of soreo on Horses and Etock, as well as on " OLARK & WISE, Manuf's. 386 lllinols Btreet, Chicago. 4&rSEND FOR PRICES. Jo 24-6m-be A. W, NASON, Dentist. Ornes—Jacotw’ Block, corner ol avenue and Fiftecnth street, Omaba h"b.w Thrilling‘'Roman Chariot Races Four Horse Standing Races, Terrific Steeple Chasing. An Tmmeasureable and Paralyzing Flood o GRANDEUR. A CONSOLIDATION OF GORGEGUS ' EXHIBITIONS. UNEQUALED FOR Two 10 10 SIZE! NOVELTY! SPLENDOR! MERIT! SENSATIONSI ORIGINALITY! rading Carnival stwrendous and gorgeous repre. seatation of all the sports, past- imes, diversions and recreations of g anient and modern time, Mie intensely thrilling European senation LU 'X. TU! A human being terrifically hurled through the air from a huge iron Catapult, attaining an altitude} of feet, and descend, ing & of nearl 1200 fee daring anc blood-c rdling act, nev- er before accomplished THE ROYAL 2 Prinoess Amazula & Suite Daughter of KingGetawayo, § of Zuzuland. Bl Watch “for the areat Free igtree Pageant of Oriental Splendor. Y Two Exhibitions Daily ! ' Admission only 50 Cts, Children under 9 years, 25 Cents CHEAPEXCURSIONS For the Multitude, ! Don't Forget the Date'l OMAHA, THURSDAY, JULY 14. Phose wishing to avaid’ the crowd’at the Ticket wagon can progure tickets at EDHOLM & ERICKSON'S, on the day of exhibition at & slight ADVANCE 10 COVER COST. Bluffs, July 12; Plattsmouth, July 18; Omaha, July *Towa; July 11; Couneil Red Jak,Towa; uly s Cancior July 16; Nebradks Oity, July 16,