Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 14, 1881, Page 4

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| 4 —— ‘The Omaha Bee. Published every morning, except Sunday, The only Monday morning daily. TERMS BY MATL:— Aoy £10.00 | Three Months onths.,, 5.00 | One o L FHE WEEKLY BEE, published ev- oty Wedneaday. BERMS POST PATD:— 82,00 1.00 Three Montha.. 50 One Year. n One Bix Months. ... CORRESPONI oations relating to News and Rers should be addressed to ¢ BUSINESS LETTERS—AIl Busines Letters and Remittances should be ad- dressed to THE OMAHA PUFLIBHING COM: PANT, OMAHA. Drafts, Checks and Post- office Orlers %o he mnade payable to the order of the Company. OMAHA PUBLISHING CO0., Prop'ss E.ROSEWATER, Editor. Edwin Davis, Manager of City Circulation. John H. Pierce is in Charee of the Mail Dlr:u?ziun of THE DAILY BEE, . Fitoh, correspondentand solicitor. Davap Davis has at last reached his latter day wmbition —an oftice. — Twe Trish stew is once more over the fire and simmering at a lively Tate. Waen the gravevine telegraph gives out, the Herald is in a condition of shear necossity. Tax bar'l in pclitics is not always aeuccess, Bookwalter registers the latest failure. Bfr. GrapsToNe has trodden on the tail of the Irish coat and must bear the.consequences of provoking a live- 1y row. Pre grindstone is working in the rear of Tammany Hall and John Kelly's little hatchet is brighter and sharper than ever. Tae lomber supply is said to be gradually giving out. This looks as if Qmaha may eventually be forced to lay stone crosswalks, BeNaTor Davis is the heaviest weirht who ever occupied the vice president’s seat. He weighs two hun- dred and forty pounds. Tre Union Pacific still continues its stock watering operations. Two ‘hundred and thirty cars of cattle passed over the road one day lust ‘week, MinxrsotA is discussing the ques- tion ‘‘honds or free.” The probabili- ty I that settling her bogus railroad «debt at fifly cents on the dollar will bail her out of bondage. Tas Iowa republiean roosters were out agin in full bugle blist on Wedneaday. The Iowa republican Toosters fur the last twenty years Lave always bocn cocks of the walk. THe secretaryship of the senate is still vacant and George O. Gotham aays he will accept it if his friends in- aist upon using his name. Geurge need not be afraid. They won't, Tae high walls of Boyd's opera house are the tirst objuct which greets trav- olers lo king across the fiver to Oma- ha. Siduey Dillun's cow shed depot is the nixe which attracts their atten. tion, ‘Waen Guitoau meditstes over the fact that more than 1,000 murders have been committed in the United Blates during the past year and that only seventy executions have taken place he feels encouraged to hope. Mavor Boyp has given orders that 6be Farnham street Macadam, dis. turbad by the laying of the street cir line, must be replaced whon the work is done Mayor Boyd deserves the thanks of a long sufforing commuaity E— Tar long haired men and short haired women who think that woman. kind is dywng for a chance to voto are respectfully referred to Massachusetts. Every woman thero is eligible to vote for achuol trustees upon paying a poll tax. Ouly 240 women paid poll tax last year, It is evident the women of the old Bay State are not pining for the ballot. Tur democratic stato convention, held in this city last night, was mainly engaged in going through the farce of putiing a ticket in the field that is sure 10 be beaten by at least 16,000 ma- Jority, and are ‘suppressing any ex- pression of the sentiment which the body of that party entertains with re- gard to the ageression of monopolies. Em—— BeNATOR BAVARD's speech in refus- ing to vote on the resolution to un- #eat him from the presidency pro tem, of the seuate was characteristic. He said: “T have mot sought office by my own vote, and I certainly shall not vote to retain myself in oftice.” Mr. Bayard is one of the few public men that refuse to lower their stand- ard of diguified manhood for the sake of ap office, W 1to mount PARNELL'S ARREST. Tho arrest of Charles Stewart Par- woll, which took place yesterday while he was on his way to address a meet- ing of the Trish Land League, will be recoived with painful surprise by all Americans and with an outbu rst o] of angry indignation by every I ish- that nes of man. Our dispatches indi Mr. Parnell's powerful spec the last in favor of proprietorship and local gov ernment in Treland have been especia Iy galling to Mr. Gladstone's ministry, Mr. Gladstone has felt forced stump through the and reply in person to the telling which the great Irisb. agilator hns been dealing the policy of coerc while Mr. Forester, whose brain was not fertile enough to provide any other remedy for Irish discontent than the well-worn and thoroughly ex- ploded physic of habeas corpus sus- pension, has been busying himself with explaining why bayonets and bullets have not proved satisfactory in allaying the disaffection across the channel, Mr. Parnell's arrest is the confes- ston of his power by the English gov- ernment. Their previous attempts to belittle his position in the land league have been as laughable as they have been fruitless. What all England know no cabinet could conceal. The arrest of Dillon and Davitt, the imprisonment ot a score of under secretaries of local leagues, coupled with the announce- ment that the leaders of the move- ment had been dealt with by the gov- ernment, only brought into greater prominence the great agitator, who headed the movement for land re- torm. Mr. Gladstone’s Leeds speoch was the first official recognition of Mr. Parnell's supremacy. 1In that address the English premier was forced to admit that Parnell was the apostle of Irish nationalism and the leader to whom the people of Ireland looked most for guidance. In directing the full force of his re- marks to Mr. Parnell as a sub- ject Mr. Gladstone placed him at once before the liberal party and the English people in his true position among the long line of elo- quent advocates who have spoken and suffered for their principles and in their prosecution bave typifiea the sufferings of the people for whom they have been the spokesmen. The consequences of the arrest of Parnell are not likely to meet the ex- pectations of Mr. Forster. Throwing a firebrand in a keg of gunpowder is not the best way to prevent an explo- sion even if a pail of water is conven- iently at hand to smother any signs of flames, If the Irish agitation has been waning, as Mr. Gladstone would have us believe,theEnglish government have adopted the best means to at once fan the smouldering embers into a lusty flame. If Mr. Parnell’s popularity in Treland has been steadily decreasing #'nce the passageof the 1and bill no bet- teor method could have been adopted to place him at the topmost pinnacle of public contidence. The Ulster farm- ors may not have joined heart and hand in Mr, Parnell's program, but they are not Jike'y to falter now. The weok peasant himself the provinces blows is ¢n these grounds that Neheacka ofers unequalled inducemeals for ¢ olonies. In no state in the west is there so much available agricultural land at the disposal of new settlers, Hun- dreds of thousands of acres are in the hands of corporations and individuala from whom it can be bought in parcels to suit the purchaser and on terms which are exceedingly liberal. We venture the assertion that in none of the western states are there greater inducements offered to new settlers. Lack of advertising has alone pre- vented before thia the sale of thou- sands of acres of lands in Northern Nebraska, In the southern portion of he industry and enterprise : railroad company has peo- pled the state with a class of settlers who aro reaping rich harvests from their original investment. The fertility of our soil is unques- tioned. The latest reports of the corn and wheat crop of the United States places Ne- braska in a most favorable light when compared with her neigh- bors, While Minaesota has fallen off 24 per cent in her wheat crop, Mis- souri 32 per cent and Kansas 12 per cent, Nebraska has actually gained and shows an increase of 3,200,000 bushels over last year. In corn pro duction she is king, exhibiting an in- crease of 206,000,000 bushels over the last year's crop. The healthfulness of Nebraska's climate is one of the greatest induce- ments which it offers to settlers and colonists, Whileinotherstates malaria impairs health, and drives elsewhere the settlers who have staked their all on their little homestead, our own state is remarkably free from malarious fevers of all kinds, and a bracing air and salubrious climate stimulate industry and add new zest to labor. In no other of the western states are there such large tracts of fertile land adapted for colonization, and yet, at the same time, so accessible to ex- cellent markets, The rapid extension of our railmad system is biinging every section of our state into close connection with the centers of trade and affording transportation facilities for the moving of the crops. When compared with the cost of productior Nebratka farmerr procure as good prices for their crops as in states farther east, and when the railroad problem is solved in this state, as it certaiuly will be before many mcre sessions of the legislature, cheaper freights will rendor the profits from farming even greater than they are at present. 1In church and educitional tacilities Nebraska does not lay be- hind. An excellent school system fostered by the state brings the teacher to the door of every seftle- ment. With cheap lands, an excel- lent climate, a fertile soil and good markets Nubrasks presents her c'aims to intending colonists, confident that they cantiot be surpassed by any of her rivals, ReTurNs from Ohio swell the re- publican majority above the figures stated in earlier dispatches. There is absolutely no consolation for the de- mocracy in the result. A heavy vote first effect of the arrest of their leader will be to unify and ¢ement Irich sen- timent as it has never been before. Tho second effcct will be to strengthen the sinews of the land league by increasing the contributions from Irish-Americans, which have somewhat fallen off since the passago of the laud bill. The third effect will be to intensify the feeling of hostility toward the English government, to lose to the liberal party a score of parliamentary votes, and to divide its rank and file of supporters among the British mlddle and lower classes. Lookiog at it from an unpartisan and strictly American stondpoint, it seems a grave blunder which is likely to involve the Gladstone ministry in new and more difficult complications. NEBRASKA FOR COLONISTS. By general admission of the settlers the colony founded by Thomas Hughea and his English company at Rugby, Tonnessre, hus proved a miserable fallure, The soil whose fertility had boen #0 brilliantly dwelt upon in the ulowing circulars issued by the colon- Izers proved to be sterile or so thickly wooded that the labor necessary to clear, The ground exhausted an entire soason, the climate is malarious and the entire sect'on so inaccessible to ceutres of trausportation that the most bounteous crops would lose half their value through the cost of ecarrying them to market. I consequence tfie colonists are dispirited, disgusted and discontented and uro ventilating Mr. Hughes and his company, as either frauds orfools of the first water. The location of the Rugby colony was & mistake which was due to ignor- anco on the part of the projectors, Mr. Hughes, by a visit further west, could have found a score of colonies prosperous, contentod and happy, who started life in Iowa, Minnesota and Nebraska with fowor advantages than those possessed by the met- tlers in Rugby, In our own state there are now & number of colonics, notably those in Greeley and Valloy counties north of the Platte who have proved the fertility of our soil, the healthfulness of our climate and the excellence of our markets. Tt was polled for ‘‘an off year,” and the republican majority diminished but slightly from that of 1880, Governor Foster’s plurality is placed at 15,000, and the republicau majorities in bith the senate and house guarantee that that party will control the coming legislature, The prohibition element, which was so much feared in some quarters, does not appear to have materially affected the result. Book- waltor's bar'l played little havoc with repul ins, and seems only to have been operative in keeping shaky mem- bers of the democracy in line, There i8 no doubt of Ohio’s staunch repu'li- | year. canism in all natioeal issues. ‘That republicanism is no less scaunch be- cause in local contests the voteis of the Buckoye atate often refuse to sup- port candidates of bad reeord. The fullness of the republican vote in the late election was doubtless due largely to the feeling in the party thit a heavy republican victory would aid strengthening the administration at Washington. Tue United States supreme court has reassembled and the dispa'chos state that a quorum was gotten to- gether withdifliculty. During the sum- mer vacation Justico Olifford has died, Justice Field is off on a trip to Eu- rope, and Justice Hunt is ivcipaci- tated from performinz the dutics of his office. Itis believed that Pr.si- dent Arthur will shortly send in 1ho name of Chief Justice Gray of Ma.- sachusetts, who is a jurist of eminent ability, and who possesses the aldi- tional qualification of cowing from the same geographical section as the late Justice Ciifford. ‘Tue public mind may now rest per- fectly at ease ubout the possible re- petitionof Guiteau's crime, As long a8 David Dayis rem in the view presidential chair there is no danger that any man,"however crazy, will at- tempt the assassination of President Arthur, The independent groenback party is supremely content with the vice presidency by brevet. — Tur paid emisearies of the railroads were 1n full force in the convention and when the resolutionspresented by I'E OMATA DALLY BEE: FRIDAY Mr. Doane, of this city, were under discussion they made themselves very numerous and succeeded admirably in demonstrating how the Nebraska democracy ean be muzzled by a few brass collared bulldozers. e THE LATE FAIR Goneral MoBride's Dofence of the Managers, To the Editor of Tux ine. Lincorn, October 13-—1 have real your article of Wednesday on the aub jeet of “The Late Fair” and desire to say a word in re| *“The stozk ex hibit was small,” says Tre Bee. Does Tue Ber know why? Because here tofore (and the comparison is made with other years) the railroad com panics earried cverything for exhibition free of charge both intended ways., This year they charged both ways. This they had a porfect right to do. To he sure they donated to the board a sum of moncy sufficiently larce to pay treights from the fair, but exhibitors had to pay one way. This had the effect to keep away one-half of those who contem- k»'luwd showing. When Mr. Fry, of ork, an extensive dealer in Norman horses, found that it would cost him $120 to ship seven or eight horses to Omaha (to say nothing of the return), he gave up the idea aud remained at home, as did dozens of other stockmen; and if Mr. Rogy of Sherwood, who was charged §110 for hauling seven horses to Omaha had asked what the freight would be before the horses were shipped he would not have been an exhibitor either. When the Gage County Agricultural society learned that it would cost them 20 cents per pound to ship farm produce one way they saw no way to make money for the society although they took n{] the first premiums in that class, They ther«fore wrofe the recretary that they should not come. The same was true of Hall, Kearney, Polk, Hamilton and Butler, they could see no way to get even and hence remained away, although full arrangements had been made by each of the above named counties to exhibit. Itis a matter of regret that the railroad compavigs could not have done better by us, but they did not, and therein lay the chicf causes tor what TnE Ber says was the fault of the management.” The premiums for atock and farm products were the largest ever offered and the fair was fully advertised, hence nothing else could be done by the management ex- cept to provide space for those who come. The agricultural exhibit was fully up to last year, as it was, al- though the sea:on for fruit, vegetables and grain was very uufavorable. The eéxpenses heavy, says Tue Bre. Bo they were; labor never was so high; the groundsand buildings needed much cleaning und repairing; material Whs up to the highest notch. Mercantile hall was not hia'f full, it is true, but that was chiefly for want of ente%riae among Umaha merchauts. 1f Omaha merchants had turned out like Dewey & Stone, Max Meyerg Bro., A. L. Strang, Jawes Bonner, C, N. Briscoe and A. Cruick- shank & Co. they would have added urently todhe exhibition. Bo tar as trotting premiums were concerned the puises were larger this year than ever before, and theve could be 1o reason+b e objection to the ar- rangement of the purses. The heavy storm of hursday night and Fridny certainly was a loss of $10,000 to the state board of agriculjure, Thursday’s attendance was the largest that any year ever witnessd, ten thousmd dol ars, or theceubuute, being the gress rece pts, aud noone duulits but that the at- tindance Friday would have been fuly equal to Thursday but fur the storm, No management can make a successful fair with bad wenther. ‘The writer is not one of the man- agers and has no authority to spiak for them, but would lke tosee suh criticisin as is mdu'ged in on the ri:ht track. Fust, criticise the weath:r, for with good weather we should have added 816,000 to our receipts on Fii- diy and Sat rduy, which would have mido the faur a grand success financi- a'y. {uull cri‘icisa the action, of the railroad compaies forchurging freight on exhibits; for had such been car ried fiee the show of stock and agri- cultural products would have beun three times as larse s any previous Next criticise the merchants and manufaotvrers of Omasha for tryi g to muko o success of the Afier that fire away at the board, Yours truly, J C McBgipe. POLIIICAL NOTES. Ex-S nator Powell Clayton is spoken of for Potwaster-Genoral, Ex-Senator Platt, who lives in (wego, New Yook, was appointed on the New York republicin central commiitee from New York Cit 0 nkling men have a major- republican contral comwitt o of of Louisiana, is seriously ill, and Dkely to die. Ho has' foru 1 Lieut.-Gov. M s inabi ity to d shurge the duties ol his o 5 Beginning with the enting with the For buen twelve sessions at the which there Las been no pr T o Bostou Globe is di flattery that cortain Repu il peadent journals sre besto s eral Hancock b hore is no b sincerivy in it, according 60 the® holisf of that paper, 7 ate fortune of Queen Victoria 30 000,000 und her annual in- u tod wich the come iy §8,20,000, And yct she cow-|” d 1ife @ poor girl, She couldn’t have done apuch better if she had been an l’: eriean Ceauty avd captured Vandur- ilt. “Bill Nye” has been writing about the bhumpbacke l old patriarchs of the Mormon church, and he says that there isn't s gravel train on the Union Pac that dues not eontain gr intellect tham the churc City @& rount of Salt Lake The Boston Advertisr quotes Judge Story as saying that the Presid nt and not the Cabinet is responsible for all the meas- ures of the nimiutt.r-ulun;und it govs on to say that it is a cust wfor the President to choose men whom he trusts and who trust him, Another example of Yankee “‘cuteness™ is discovered by The London Truth. Find. ing that the boxes in which apples were sent in such large quantities to Kngland were afterwards of little use, the Aweri- 1 e rilroad | OCTOBER 14, 1881 cans now pack the apples in coffing, v hich mand ready s le, Wolfe, the independent can'idate for the trei ip of Pennsylvania, who is running ly as & protest against Cam- eron bussisio, i showing a front sa ener- get ¢ and ferocions that the Clan Camersn is mightily scared. Wolfe will not be el- ectedl, of course, but he may pull down the sapporte of the Cameron wigwam, Gongresaman Moore, of Tennesseo, who is represented ns nuine southern re- publican is pushed by some of his neigh- bois for a place in the cabinet, Of course he will n teet it. He was elected 1y n scratch, and, if he were t u, his place oo would be filled v democ Mr. Ar thur is too much of a po to make gaps of thas kind in his own ranks, When General Butler got tired of run: ning for Governor of M ssachusetts and paying the cawpai n_ bills, he pated the uomination al to his friend Mr. Charles P. Thompron, of Glou Doubtless Mr. Thomwon was sati with the beat. i t last ye r, butat is one of the lawa of the husotts that a G idate entitled to retire, seb up again CURRENCY. George Fran Train announces that he has spoken his lust speoch and written his last letter, A lady of Pekin, TIl., has given birth to a boy on every Fourth of July during the 1.8t four years, The flag of the rebel pirate Ala- bama is on exhib tion in Boston. Its possessor says that he values it at 810,000. The army retired list is limited to 400. There are at present only seven vacancies, whil¢ fifty officers are eligi- ble te retirement. And now tho democratic candidate [ ! for tate treasurer in Wisconsin do- | wid clines to ru 1. Tho state central com- wittee should call for volunteers. Secretary Blaine has been asked by a Hartford publishing house to write a life of President Gartietd; but accord- ing to terms he muat do the work in #ix months, which he thinks too short a time, Mr. Le Duc's tea farm turns out to be even a greater failure than was at first supposed. For the 815,000 put into the venture the goverament hus an iron safe which c.st $400 and some no account tea plants, “Facts not creditable to the condi tion of American surgery” were re- vealed by the autopsy of Garfield, according to The London Spectator Undoubtedly the high standing of American medicine with the profes- sion abroad has had quite a blow, Some wealthy Berkshire county, Mass., manufacturers are proposing to buy Mrs, Garfield a home in Wil- lamstown. The money is pledged, and they only wait.to learn whether it would be agreeable to the w.dow of the dead president to live near her boys. There is a talk of a syndicate of Philadelphia capitalists to put 100 English hansom eabs on the streets of that city. The rate to be charged will be 25 cents for one persun forany dis- tance in the cicy inside a circle of twe miles, of which the new post oftice wiil be the center. Miss Kate Shelley, of Towa, who saved a train from wreck in a washout, | : has been presented with a watch by the railrond conductors of that state On the case is engraved a picture of the scene at the bridge where the young woman at the risa of her life stopped the train. A girl's seminary in Oakland, Cal., has a male monitor. Heisa brother of the lady who 18 the head of the school. v takes the girls to church, and he is only 30 years old. He goes out boating with them, and while they are at the Alameda baths he hovers round. They have fun while in swim- miug, knowing that they are safo. 1f they do not wear the right kind of bathing suits he reports them to his sistor, the head of the school. The Right Sort of General. Jacob Smith, Clinton street, Buffalo sava he has used Spring Blossom in his family as a general medicine for cases of indigestion, biliousness, bowel and kidney complaints and divorders a:ising fron im- purities of the blood. He speaks highly of its efficacy. Price 50 cents, trial bottles 10 cents. eodlw wtelll T work, Tore brain nierve use Hop B 1t Gwo 0 one in the recen ly ap- | @ Bl have been presento.. 8 by'a cTiudly um of Hopiitters fie: or stivmulating, witbout (ntoriouting, thko . Hop Jluse or”opium, tobacoo, o narcotics. etired It you s Hop Bitters, e 3N it Bnd for » X o D ehiheity SHomiiar: 03 PR has 76 08 saved hune) Rochoster, 1. Y. reds. & Toroato, Out. ~ PROBATE NOIICE, 1n the matter of the Estateof Ferdivand Thum, decensed Nutive is hereby glven that tho creditors of u i acecused, wil executrix of said €, wge of Douglas “ourt Room in rs to present ouc year for the executrix to wottle suld Extate, fiom the 12th dwv_of Neptem- ber, 1851 this notice will e published in Tue OuAIA WEEKLY Tink for four woeks successively, prior o the 12th day of Noven.b r, 1881, A M. CHADWI K, County Judge PROBATE NOTIE, n She matier of the Estate of Thomas Blackmore, duern-ed 21 wit otice 1 hereby wiven that the rt n he Int dayof November, 1881, CONTINUES TO Roar for Moore(s) Harness AND Saddlery. -404 South 13th Street, Lave adopted the Lion as o Trade Mark, ana allmy goods will be STAMPED with the LION and my NAME on the sme. NO D8 Atk i THOUT TUY ABOVE BIAMPS The best material i used and the mosd skillec workmen are emploed, and at the loweat cash ishing a price-list of good wil} OF by sending for one. __DAVID SMITH MOORE. SEALED PROPOSALS 3 For the Construction of Sidewalks. Sealed proposals will be received by the under signed until’ Thursday, October 20th, 1851, 12 o'elock noon, forthe conktruction of and repairing ofsidewalks in front of and adfoining the follow- ing described premises, to-wit: The west 26, fect of the south 132 feet of lot 2, of Capltol nddition, on the north side of Farn- ham street, 8 feet wide, Also in front of the south 192 feet of lot 3, In Capitol addition, north side of Farnham strect, 6 foet wide. 0 1ot 4, north side of Farnham stree, 6 fect Also lot 6, north side of Farnham strect, § fect e. J.J.L.C. JEWE T, ocl3 6t Reading and Elocution ~TAUGHT BY— JULIE B HARDENBERGH. Voice TYII'\'I\%,PPIVI‘G Lessons and asses. City Clerk, 2011 Case Street, betwecn 20th and 21st, BICYGLES. v.s3/85 3 v "sene Ao pric T Sontining i information. N. L. D. SOLOMON, Paints,Oils and Glas OMAHA. NEB Dr. Amelia Burroughs ‘of January, 1352, and on the s 1. each day, almy for ex- ane. 8ix resent their car for the administratrix to clam, and ono scttle sald estate, from the 1st duy of september, 1851, this notice will be published” in Trr Oxaud WREKLY Bre for four weeks successively, prior to the 1at day of November, 1851, HOWARD B, SMITH County Jn C. F. Manderson, ATTORNEY -AT- W. 3 Farobaw §t, Omaha N seldwit AT THE WITHNELL HOUSE. Tuesdays and Fridays, 10 a. m. to b v. m. PN ol s 80p26- ACADEMY OF THE SACREDHEART OMAHA, NEB. 8. E. Corner 9th and Howard. The plan of Studics is the same as that pursued in all the Academies of the Swcred Heart. DIf- forence in religion is no obstacle to the adwis- sion of young ladies, Terms: Including Board, Washing, Tuition and U strume: tal Music, per session uf five months, $150, References 1 ro re- quired from all perxons unknown to the Inmitu- tin. For further iwformati'n apuly to Tho Right Kev, Bishop o Omaha, or to the Lady erior. 22 1m W.dJ. CONNELL, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. OmvitaProwit Kigms "(ap stairs) in Hanscom's aew brick building, N. W. comer Ftteenth ad arnham Streats " The Oldest kistarusned BANKING HOUSE IN NEBRASRA. Caldwell, Hamilton & Co., BANKERS. Businoss transvcted eamo as that of an {ncor- porated oank. Accounts keptin-currency or gold subject to sloht check without notice Cortificaten of deposit ssued payable in threo, six and gwelve months, searing Interest, or oo demand without {nterest. Advances made to customers on approved secu: rities at market rates of interest. Buy and sell gold, bills of exchangs, govern. mons, state, couny tad city bondar L Draw signt drafts on England, Ireland, Scob- tand, and ll parts of Europe. Sell European passage tickets, COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE, supldf - |United States Depository. EIRST NationalBank —OF OMAHA,— Cor, 13th and Farnam Sts, OLDEST BANKING KSTABLISHMENT IN OMAHA, BUCCEBSORS TO KOUNTZE BROTHERS,) BTABLISHED 1850, Organized aa & National Bank August 20, 1865 CAPITAL AND PROFITS OVER - 800,000 OFPIOKRS AND DIRROTORS § HRRMAX Kouvtze, Preadent. Auaustos KoirwTak, Vice Prosident, H. W. Yatrs, Cashicr, A 3. PoPrLKTON, Attornoy. Jour A. Criionrox, F. H, Davis, Aset. Cashier, Thi bank recelves deposite without roxard to smounts, Lueues time cortificates bearing interest. Draws Urafte o San Frauclsco and principa) cities of the United States, also London, Dublin Edinburgh and the principal cities of the conti nent of Europo. Bolls passeger tickets for emigranta by the In man line mAvI I8, J.H FLIEGLE uccessor to J. H Thicle, MERCHANT TAILOR N, M0 Donelne Sbe s Amaha Neh J.P. ENGLISH, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, 810 South Thirteenth Street, with J. M. Noolwaorth, J. E. BRADLEY, RESTAURANT. Corner 16th and Webster Sts. Frosh Oystey constantly on hand and et wta lo. ofism E.iD. McLAUGHLIN, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW And Notary Public. lock, Opposite Post CMcs. SIBBETT & FULLER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, D2 VID CITY, NEB, a2 eclal attention pisen bo collocti n Butler ™ Edward W. Sime.:;l, ATTORNEY AT-LAW LOTS. A NEW ADDITION ! U, | o IS Omaha. THE BEST BARGAINS Ever Offered IN THIS CITY. NO CASH PAYMENTS Required of Persons Desir- in to Build, LOTS ON PATMENTS Ox $5TOB10 PER MONTH. MoneyAdvanqed Aegsist Purchasers in Building. We Now Offer For Sale 85 Splendid RESIDENGE LOTS, Located on 27th, 28th, 20th and 30th BStreets, between Farnham, Douglasand the pro- foeed extension of Dodge 8t., 2 to 14 Blocks from Court House and Post Office, A'l" PRICES ranging from $300 to $400 which is about Two-Thirds of their Value, on Sm 1l Monthly Payment of 85 to $10, Parties desiming to Build and lmprove Need Not Make any Payment for one or two years, but can use all their Meaus for Improving, Persons baving $100 or $200 of their own, But not Enough to Build such a house as they ‘want, can take a lot and we will Loan them enougn to com- plete their Building, These lots are located between the MAIN BUSINESS STREETS of the city, within 12 minutes walk of the Business Center, Good Sidewalks ex - tend the Entire Distance on Dod Btreet, and the Jots can be reached ¥ way of either Farnham, Douglas or Dodge Streets. They lie in a part of the city that is very l{n ing and consequently Increasing in Vulue, and purchasers may reasonably hope to Double their Money within & short time, . Some of the'most Sightly Locations in the city may be selected from these lots, especially on 30th Street We will build houses on a Smal Cash Payment of §150 or $200, and sell house and lot on small monthly payments, Tvis expected that these lots will bo rapidly sold on these liberal terms, and persons wishing to purchase sheuld call at our offico nm{ their lots at the earliest moment. secure We are ready to show these lots to all persons wishing to purchase, BOGGS & HILL, Real Estate Brokers, 1408 North Bide of Farnham Btreet, Ocp, Grand Contral Eotsl, JMAHA NEB, 1dly Tmproy. > ¢ ¥

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