Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 27, 1881, Page 2

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D4 ~——gr (1) “ MONTANA. The Land of the Chinook and Ore, The Finest Climate on the ‘Western Hemisphere. Correspondenco of Tir Bex. Hreuexa, Mt., December 15.—This sitting like a guard upon a throne, reaching from the tops of the Rocky Mountains to their castern and base, covering an area of 100,000,000 acres, beautifully diversified with mountains, broad val leys, foothills, rivers, crecks, gulches and canyons, the valleys in many in stances cases tains, Iap west of the streams which flow to the Pacific. in the near future to command the at- western nearly extending up to, and in somo the divide of the moun and the waters of the Atlantic across This territory is destined tention of the world to her immense and wonberfully rich gold and silver veins, her agricultural products, her vast resources for grazing of cattle, horses and sheep; her pure, invigor ating and health-inspiring air; her abundance of beautiful crystal waters: and to the tourist, sight-seer and won- der-loving traveler, she presents a vastness of grandeur that would repay not only a trip across the continent, but also the ocean. But ot these glittering zenoralitios it is not our present purpose to dwell. ‘We will pass to its climate, which is a marvel to the astronoiaer and tho weather wise, and totally upset the old theory that the further north one es the greater the extreme of cold. fimking at the latitude and altitude of this young giantess queen of the northwest one would suppose that the dweller therein would have all the rigors of the frigid zone. Baut so far from this being the fact, we find in the broad valleys of this country a temperature truly marvel- ous. [ think, in 1869 (if my memory seryes me right), there was not more than five or six days during tbe entire winter when the thermometer reached below zero in portions of eastern Montana, and unlike zero in Mas- sachusetts or New York, zero in Mon- tana is by no means as rigorous, or at least the pure dry atmosphero does not penetrate to the marrow and produce the amount of discomfort which is felt in tho east when of twenty degrees less cold, and during the eutire winter you have frequent Chinook winds which in a few hours reduce the temporature te a soft balmy degree that will cause one al- most to feel that they have been transported to the orange, groves of California. Tnese winds come from the western coast, and are attributed to the Japanese current, or Curo Siwo {so-called by the Japanese). This warm current flows from the coast of Japan and China across the Pacific strike our western coast, and from this warm current these warm winds arise and sweap across Oregon, Washington, Tdaho and Montana, and the result is that the temperature is reduced from a frigid to temperate. ‘With such a climate, with an abun- ful richness of the lodes of this terri- tory. There is another potential power which combined with the men- tal and physical forces is greatly needed and perhaps there is not a place of country on this continent where capi- tal directed and controlled by intelli gence and good, hard common sense will yield 8o rich a reward as in Mon tana. During the early development of the country by the hardy pioneers, the time consumed in transportation of machinery as well as all the neces- ies of lifc was o serious drawback. ow the iron horse has madly plunged into the heart of the terr- tory, and has placed this territory a thousand, ycs, near two thousand, miles nearer to the marts of com merce than she was a fow years since, but railroads must have competitive ronds or they, like human beings be come selfish and_grinding in their op erations, But Mr. Editor this com munication is long enough, and if you desire to hear more from this terri tory, and think your readers would life further sketches of many things not alluded to, you may again liear from MoNTANA THE POLICE OF PARIS A Plotnre of the Men Who Protect the Frounch Capital The police of Paris are under the direction of a profect, who is appointed by t minister of the interior, and who is required to report at the pre- fecture, which stands on the Qual I'Horloge, adjoining the palace of justice and the prison of the Con- clergerie, He has under his orders a force of nearly 7,000 policemen in uniform, twenty-one officers of the peace, vighty district commissioners | of police (commissaries), H00 detec: tive, and a nuinber of agents secrets, or private paid informers, known only to himself and to the two or throe principal members of his stafl. This staff consists of the direct- ors, sub-directors and clorks of twelve sections, each of which transscts a special class of business; thus, therc is there is the] burcau des estrangers, bureau de I rete generale, bureau des Garals (for tho supervision of hotels and lodging houses), and so on. For administrative purposes Paris is divided into twenty wards (arrondise- ments) and eighty quarters. Each ward has a force of about three hun- dred and twenty-five policemen, com- manded by an officer of the peace, and each quarter a police station, managed by a commissaire The officer of the peace is the cap- tain of the police corps in his ward; he wears a silver-laced uniform and sword, ranks with a captain in the army, and is always a well educated gentleman, of a status much superior to an English superintendent. He is never chosen from the ranks ot the police sargeant, but is generally select- ed from what one may call the upper |7 or gentleman detectives of the pre- fecture, or else among the secretaries and clerks to the directors. His pay amounts to about £200 a year and he is lodged in ythe Mairie of his ward, where he is provided with a com- fortable suit of apartments, with coal and gas free. His duties are to su- perintend the men of the brigade, to go rounds of inspection in order to see that they are on their beats, and on important occasions, when great crowds have to be suppressed, he takes command of his brigade in the streots, Threegitnes a day he sends dance of rich nutritious grass, curing and becoming hay in July, and with little or no fall and winter rains to destroy its vitality, Montana is fast becoming the grazing field of the con- tinent, and thousands of the best fat- ted castle, horses and sheep roam over its foothills and valleys without other food than they gather them- selves during thoe entire year. Last winter was the most disastrous that has ever visited the territory in loss of cattle and sheep, and from the best sources of information I should judge that near 256 per cent of cattle and probably a higher percentage of sheep died last winter, In previous years they have generally counted the loss at from 1 to b per cent from death in winter, Mining is ceasing_to be a gambling speculation. The vast fields of gulch or placer mining is {muing from the hands of the original locators to com- panies, and the system of centralism 80 largely developed in our railways, as well as politics, is having its effect on mining; and now the hydraulic and fluming process is taking the place of the sluice-box, pick and shovel.¥From the development of new machinery and new processes which are being tested a new era may soon dawn upon many thousands of miles and millions of acres of mining lands as yet un- touched by the pick and shovel, and when this open sesame is pronounced we may look for developments which will astonish the world and perhaps «cause a future president and secretary of the treasury to call upon congress to cease the coinage of gold for fear of cheapening the metal as silver from its abundance. In the carly days of Montana, the learned protessor with his magic wand and eye glasses created quite a star among tfiu hard fisted honest miners who wore delving in the hills and mountains for quartz. They felt that their vocation was gone, that these learned men b incantation and peering lhrong[‘; glasses could leok through the strates of granite, con- glomerate, &c., and trace the lines of gold and silver from surface indica- tions to thadepths of thousands of feet, but experiences soon taught these aons of toil, that these ‘‘wise men from the east” did not open their earth pockets and present to the LDI‘"I goddess of mammon, gold, nkincense, &c., aud they were #00n, judged by the standard of com- mon sense and experience and fonnd to be sounding s and dubbed “‘rock cranks.” The mner of practical common sense and experience soon found that in order to know what was under und he had to dig and find out, ut 1t has also taught them that there are certain geological and geographi- «cal conditions, circumstances and sur- roundings which, when properly ob- served, lead him to know thatb digging in certain places he will almost invariably find satistory results, in developing gold, silver, copper and «oal veins, or lodes, Beientific mining when it is put into practical common sense channels proves a decided advantage to muscle, and the two forces. mutually working Zogether, are developing the wonde re&)urla to the chief of the municipal police at the prefecture concerning all that has occurred within his ward. In addition to the brigades in the twenty wards, there 18 a ‘‘Brigade Centrale” of two hundred and fifty men and an ofticer, who, like the A division of the London police, form a reserve available for wpecial duty. As the area and population of Paris are barely equal to half those of Lon- don, the seven thousand Parisian po- licemen form a stronger force than the ten thousand and odd who guard the British capital; and we must add to them the gendarmes and the Re- publican guards, who, though under the orders of the minister of war, may really be described .as mounted po- lice, The Parisian policeman, who used to be called sergent de ville, but is now termed uunrfilen de le paix, has nothing to do beyond keeping or- der in the streets. Itis the Republican guards who escort prisoners in the cellular vans from the juils to the law courts, and stand by them in criminal dockets; who attend at theatres, ca- sinos and all places of public amuse- ment, and who line the streets when- over there is any pageant. On the raco-course soldiers are generally pressed into service to keep the course clear, and thus policemen are never diyerted from their regular beats and duties. 1t is considered so important that & police should learn to know all the people in the district where he is stationod that a man’s beat is scarcely ever changed. The aver- age term of service in the force is fif- teen years, and during that time a man will have to walk daily and nightly, the same set of stroots till he knows the face of every man, woman and child in the locality, By day each policoman walks singly; by night they always go in pairs, at least, in the populous quarters. Their pay be- Rins at £50 year,and rises gradually to £80, A Lady's Wish. “‘Oh, how I do wish my skin was as clearand soft as yours,” said a lady to her friend. “‘You can easily make it 80,” answered tho friend ““How(” inquired the first lady. By using Hop Bitters, that makes pure, rich blood and blooming health for me, ns you observe,” \ Read of it. ~=Cairo Bulleti D 156-Janl A NEW DERARTURE. * Mr. H, G. Krause, long well known to the citizens of North Omaha "l the l)mpr.iuwr of one of the best saloons in that part of the city, has decided to take a new de) rtul{-’, or, in other words, instead umh pensing liquid refreshments, to hereafter sell the solid life-sustainers, He has stocked his store, corner of Thirteenth and Webster, with a choice and full line of both staple add fancy groceries, and remember everything is new and fresh. Mr. Krause buys his goods direct for cash, and can thus give his customers the benefit of many discounts which long-time buy- ers never get. Now is your chance to get your groceries at the lowest possi- ble price, and be assured of havin, overything' first-class, new an fresh, Give him & trial. You will never regret it. ITIE OMAHA DAILY BEE: TUESDAY DECEMBER 27, 1581, IOWA BOILED DOWN. Dubuque will make a bid for the next wtate fair, Kroknk shipped during the past season 10,500,000 doze « egg The cost of Odebolt’s building improve- ments in 1881 toots np to 8H: Marengo i to be made & d i nus of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific rond. T'he German Methodists of Tda Grove, 1da county, have raised $700 for a church vuilding. A Proshytecian fair at Cherokee of three days’ durati y was patronized to the ex The waterworks at Decorah are com- ploted, and were sucsessfully submitted to pound test. ood vein of con five feet farion county Mr. Cowell, of uscatine, has closed a ontract with' the authoritics ef Jan town, N. Y., for water works to cos 000, Thompson, Casteel & Co,'s creamery at Waterioo was burned the other nig t, in a loss of §,000, 00 which there 1st, & tailor named Frederick Bear, suicided by cutting his h s throat from ear to ear, Cause pecun £ and dome trow 1w, He was 43, and five children, is to be re dar Rapids, y 10, 000 cap tal is being organized, and at list acccunt three-fourths of it had been snb. werited, and the balance it was expected to wecurs without dificulty. r Rapids foundry has just made )r the main landing of the iron an church Vinton, which is ¥ix feet four inches by thirteen feet ¢ightimches in length, biggest plate casting ever made in this state. The Fontenelle Observer favors the levying of a 1 per cent. tax for the pur- jose of buil ing » public hall. It says a ilding could be put up which wounld have stores «n the first floor, and they could be reuted for enough to pay the in- terest and leave something to apply on the bouds, Tows ranks first, according to recent sta- tistics, as o hog State—it produces more hogs than any other States. She is second to Illinoia in cows, and second only to Texun in cattle, Desides this its product of corn is wonderful, and it rapid progress in manufactur d dairy products is attract- iny the attention of the whole country. Al Hynes, on a drunken spree at Cedar Capida the other vvening, took possession of the Northwestern hotel, and with a revolver drove proprietors, employes and wuests all out of the house. The police finally gathered him in, when the occu pants of the house turn-d out of closets, from under beds, and all sorts of hiding places, feeling much relieved. Of the 150 members of the coming Towa legislature, 63 served in the Union army during the war. Accerding toocoupation, the 150 members are distributed as fol- farmers, 41 lawyers, 14 merchants, ans, 6 bankers, 12 real estate, in- surance and grain men, 5 editors, 1 prescher and the rest distributed among varions occupations, Thirty-seven are from Ohio, 21 from New York, 11 from Indiana, 9 from lllinois, and the 1est from other states - England, Scotland, Germany, Wales and Sweden being represented by one each, Five of the members of the house were born in Towa, and two of these, W. S, Lewis of Mills, and N. H. Merton of Delaware, were born in the counties they reprosent. Grandmother Used to say: _“‘Boyw, if your blood is out of order try Burdock tea;” and then they had to dig the Burdock and boil it down in kettles, making a nasty smelling decoc- tion. Now you ket _all the curative prop- erties put up in palatable form in Bun- pock Broob Birrens, Price 81, tiial size 10 cents. The Central Pacific of Wyoming. Cheyenne Sun. Wyoming is on the eve of a rail- road and mining boom, and 1ts iron mountains, its coal fields, its soda lakes, its oil springs, and its agricul- tural resources will in the next year receive the attention of capitalists and of a large class in the over- crowded east who are looking to the westward for new fields to couquer. One of the initiatory steps to the opening of the resources of the terri- tory was a little transaction that took lace in the secretary's office last onday. We refer to the filing of articles incorporating the Central Pacific rnilrnnJ company of Wyom- g, with a capital stock af §13,500,- 000, the trustees and incorporators being Charles Crocker, C. F., Crocker and W, V. Huntington. These men being the principal owners of the Central Pacific railroad company, it is plain that the new road is to be an castern outlet from Ogden to the Mis- souri river, The route through Wyoming is de- acribed a_commencing at a point on the boundary line botween Utah and Wyoming where itis crossed by Bear rivor; thence through the counties of Uinta, Sweetwater, Carbon, Albany and Laramie, to the eastern boundary of Wyoming. It will doubtless run through the Sweetwater valloy to whero it empties intothe North Platte. The principal oftice will be at Evans- ton. It is apparent to anyone acquainted with the resources of central Wyom- ing that this railroad will open up tho most valuable portion of the ter- ritory to settlement and bring to Wyoming a large emigration. What effect it may have upon Cheyenne, Laramie and other towns along the Union Pacific, depends upon branch routes that may hereafter be con. structed. It did it — P THAT COUGH. If you are suffering from a Cough, Cold Asthma, Bronchitis, Hay Fever, Consumption, loss of voice, tickling of the throat, or any affection of tho ‘Throat or Lungs, use Dr. King's Now Discovery for Consumption, the groat remedy that is causing so much excitement by its wonderful cures, curing thousands of hopeless cases, Over a million bottles of Dr, King's New Discovery have been used within the last year, ‘and have given perfect satisfaction in every instance. Wo can unhesitatingly say that this is nmllr the only sure cure for throat and lung affections, and can cheerful- ly recommend it to all. Call and get a trial bottle free of cost, or a regular ni]wu for §1.00. Tsh & McMahon, Om- aha (3) © BOCCS & HILL REAL ESTATE BROKERS No. 1508 Farnham Street, OMAEA, -~ -~ NEE. vrica—Nor b slde opp. Grand Central Holel o. | 1Ot t0 take Buitoc 1t yon suffer from Dyspepsia, use BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS 1t you are afflicted with Pilionsness, e BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 1t you are prostrated with sick Teadach BURDOCK BLC 1 your Bowelsare disordered, regilate them with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, L with YD RITTERS 1t your Blood s mpure, purif BURDOCK I 1 you have Indigestion, you will hind an antidote in BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 11 yon are troubled with Spring Complaints, er | ilicate them with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 1t your Liveris torpid, restore it to healthy action with BURDOUK BLOOD BITTERS 1 your Liver is affocted, you will find a enre ro- storative in BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 1t you have any species of Humor or Pimple, fail BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 1t you have any symptoms of Uleers or Sorofulous Sores, & curative remedy will be found in BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS For imparting strength and vitality to the sys- tem, nothing can equal BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. For Nervousand General Debility, tone up the sytem with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. Price, 81.00 per Sottle; Trial Bottles 10 Cts FOSTER, MILBURN, & Co., Props. BUFFALO, N. Y. Bold at wholesale by Ish & McMahon and C, F. Goodnan. o 27 eod-me CELEBRATED OSTETTER STOMACH BIYTERS In Hosts of Families Tostetter's Stom a8 & houschold nceessity as sugar o coffee. The reason of this is that years of experience have proved it to be perfect y reliable in those cases of emergency where a prompt and convenient rem- edy is demanded. Constipation, liver complaint, dyspepsia, indigestion and othcr troubles are overcome by it. For uale by all Druggists and'Dealers, to whom apply for Hostetter's Almanas for 1852, PR Rt TRUTH ATTESTED. SomeImportantdtatementsof We Known People Wholly Verified. Tn order that the public may fully realize the genuinencss of the statements, 48 well s tho power and value of the article of which they speak, we publish horewith the fac-simile signa- tures of partics whoso sincerity is beyond ques- tion. The Truth of these testimonials is Abso- luto, nor can tio facts. they announce be - nored. OMANA, Nan., May 24, 1881 ® & Co.: have frequently used Warne i Liver Cure for local aflections attendant upon severe rheumatic attacks, and have alsays derived benefit theretrom, 1 havo also used the Safo Nervine with satisfactory re- sults. [ consider these medicines worthy of confldeuce. 31/ o &SI, Hettsrs Deputy Treasurer, Owana, Nuy , May 24, 1581, IL 7. WARNER & Co., Rochester, N. Y.: Grys:—1 have used your Eafe Kidney and Liver Cure this spring s & iverinvigorator, and 1find it the best remedy 1 ever tried, I have used 4 bottles, and it has made me féol better than ever I aid before in the wpring. G 664 U. P. R. Shops. o QuAus, Nuw,, May 24, 1881, much i ony Hver disea 0y urin .y o great s also being affected, I tricd a any medicines and doctors, but I grew wor v day by day I was told 1 had ned mysell dead it I ot have speedy f. 1took your Safe y Liver Cure, knowing nothing else Was evor known to euro tha - discase not boen disappointed. The medi me, and 1 am perfec ly well to.day, entirely This is | fi throogh your Safe Kidney and Liver Cure 1 wish you all suc ss in pubiishing this velusble remedy through th Thousands of equally strong many of them In cases where hope was doned—bavo becn voluntarily given, sh remarkable powcr of Warner's Safe Liver Cure, in all d soases of the kidn or urinary organs. If any one who ha: any phy-cal troublo remember the danger o1 dcl Matter of Application of Frederick Lange for Liquor License, NOTICE, Notice is hereby given that Frederick Lauge did, upon the 11ih day of December, A D, 1ty le his application to the Mayor and City Coun cil of Omaha, for licenso to eell Malt, Spirituous and Vinous Tiquoms, at 002, corner Thir- teenth and Ju.kson y Second ward, Omaha, Neb, from the 1t day'of January, 185, 10 the 10th day of April, 1655, It there be no objection, remonstance or pro- test filed within two weeks from 14th of Decem- ber, A, D., 1851, the said license will be granted. Fuormiok Laxos, Applicant. Tik DALY Bixe newspaper will publish tha hove notice for two weeks at the expense of the The City of Omaha is not to be therewith, ~ J.J. L. C. JEWETT, 11t City Clork. NEBRASKA State Gazetteer and Busi- ness Directoy, Containing a desoription and a list of all business men in_the state, will be issued early in 1882, Price $1.00, J. M. WOLFE, Publisher. 120 Bouth Fourteenth Strest, Omaha, Neb e1-12m ch Bitters Is a8 much rogarded | WM. ROGERS Manufacturing Company, MAKERS OF THE H. SCHONFELD Propietor of the ANTIQUARIAN Book Store! The Antiguarian’s Warning. Do not trust hin oinivetiniieihon, | Fiesh Siiver Plated Spoons and Forks. Gentle reader, trust him not, 21 The only and (g tional plate that Reader, once there lived a student, original firm of (8 is giving for in- Rogers Bros, And he falsely led him there, And he talked to him of TrADE SALE Porren's hooks and SCHMUCKER'S lore; y stance a single All owr Spoons, , And T met him plod With a hundle to hi ng homeward 4 Forks and plated Spoon a Gentle reader, T hav+ waited, — e ly I have walked tie street, Knives plated triple thickness for you on the corner, _And this happy honr we meet! with the greatest wise your eye to yonder window, Where our student, in the night, With a M SCHMUCKER'S history, Rises up his pipe to light. plate only on of care. Each ¢ the sectio s lot being hung Reader, turn not from me coldly, i = The truth o ve I told; I would sa_e thee from the book stores, Where the customers are “sold,” — 1w uld shield thee from all danger, $hield thee from the plate gla<s knare; Shun, O, ‘hun the gilded cornters, I have warned thee—now BEWARE! H. Schonfeld, on a scale while where expo d being plated, to to wear, thereby insure a full de- making a single sit of silver on s e plated Spoon " them. PROPRIETOR OF THE wear as long as We would call ANTIQUARIAN BOOK STORE 3 a triplo plated Invitos tho attention of the Jovers of good rend- especial atten: ing to his extensive and valuable ccllection of " GHOICEST WORKS in all departments of Literature and Scicnco Not only are the wost estcemed Foglish and American works to be found .nhis shelves, but All Orders in the West should be}Addreseed to THE ANCIENT OLASSICS, OUR AGENCY, and the Standard Writers of Medimvalages and Modern Europe are we | representod. Owiug to hia opportunities for securing these Books at low prices, he cffers them at figures . . » which can not be met by any other house in this P Wholesale Jeweler 3 OMAHA, - - - - - NEB 1y termed hooks, but which deserve the titic in Bood Books at Low Prices are requested to call clsewhere before coming here that they may prove the truth of this as- 4 eertion, - Desiring to keepa stock of the very best works, 1 carefully sel ct only such as could meet the ap- EL GUT T E R' L] ® the language of Charles of Lamb, (IPhi i {] [} " Things in Books' Clothing. R — . It is to be regretted that so many booksellers, il'iterate und i il thisspec their stores into proval of a cultivated taste, In theso days of cheap literature it is very casy to buy for a little money a large »tock of printed Mers Charnal Houses |ELGU for the gilt-edged and hot-pressed mummies of ELGU ci ppily unforgotten scribler ELCU tion to our sec- Wi i, matter, bound in well gilded covers and popular- Novelties in Childven's CLOTHIN Novelties in Boys’ OLOTHIN Novelties in Yonths’ N Novelties in Men's CLOTHIN SHIRT R Al | mmmmmmmmm =00 ) to read books of into my storo and they Sl geadmlind | 114 Rencmber that by the cheice of your hooks y ur character is judged. 1t is an axiom that ELGU Juill not be bettor than the books tuey | FJ B Dr. A. Potter o cal, w|ELGU architect, the ny over of poetry or fiction, or those who look for work in ELGU foreign laniuages, can be supplied with what is desired. 1 have also a large and well selected stock of elogant Little Books for Childrenat home, who should be remembered in_this holiday season. And those who wish for chaice and richly bound T<INSIC VALUE, will find whatever the, Novelties in White Novelties in Under W Novelties in Fancy Novelties in Fancy Novelties in Holiday AAANRABHADBNYL o o o ELGUTITER'S MAMMOTH GLOTHING HOUSE, 1001 Cor. Farnham & 10th St, 100} Special Attention Is Once More Called to the Fact that M.EHELILNMANGSCO. Rank foremost in jthe West in Assortment and: Prices of CLOTHING, FOR MEN'S, BOYS' AND OHILDREN'S WEAR, ALSO A COMPLETE LINE OF Furnishing Goods Hats and Caps We are]prepared to meet the demands of the trade in regard to Latest Styles. and Patterns. Fine Merchant Tailoring in Connection & RESPECTFULLY, M. HELLMAN & CO,, 1301-1303 Farnham and 300 to 312 13th 8t Article VII, The officers of this A e e maiteed, 12 110518k Bth WI]OI.I.EY & D Aws D%Pogita elected from among the stockholders, and streeth Stationers, Paper Dealers and Engravers, &ift books, whose contents will be found worthy of ther esternal appearance, will do well to cal at the ANTIQUARIAN BOOK STORE 1420 Douglass Street. HEADQUARTERS OF THE LITERATI. de20eod1m Articles of Ivcorporation of the Millard Farmers' Club. Articles of incorporation made and adopted this 20th dny of October, A, D, 1881, by and between the undersigned in- corporators, as follows, to-wit: NAME. Article I The name of this clubshall be the Millard Farmers' club, PLACE OF BUSINESS, Article IT, The principal place of busi- ness of this club n{mll be_at Millard sta- tion, county of Douglas, Nebraska, NATURE OF BUSINESS, Article IT1. The general nature of busi- ness to be transacted by this club is to conduct a general literary and social busi- ness and other entertainments of a social character. CAPITOL STOCK. Article IV, The amount of capital stock of this club shall be two thousund dollars, divided into shares of one dollar each, which shall be paid in the manner pro. scribed by the directors, COMMENCEMENT AND TERMINATION, \ Artice V. This club shall commence to transact business and exercire its corporate powers the 20th day of October, 1881, and its powers shall cease on the 29th day of October, 1981. AMOUNTS OF LIABILITY. Article VI The highest amount of _a- bility or indebtedness, which this club shull at any one time subject itslef, shall be three hundred dullars, DORI other officers as by law is required. KEEP ON HAND A SELECT STOOK OF} BLANK, SCRAP, POCKET AND BILL BOOKS, FINE PAPER, INKSTANDS, PAPER WEICHTS® Latest Novelties in Wedding Goods, Menus, i John Dwyer for| Visiting and Advertising Cards, Ball,Programmes, &c.. & druggist, STATE OF NEBRASKA, ! CouNTY oF DOUFLAS, On this 20th day of October, A, D, 8881, sersonally appeared before ‘e, Charles Eirandes, » natary publio for sald county; Julius Schroeder, J, Blum, Claus Schu. mann, W, Gerndodf, o me. known to be the signers ot the foregoing articles of in- corporation, and acknowledged the same to T | be their voluntary act and deed. [kAL.] CHAKLES BRANDES, Notary public in and for Douglas county, Nebraska. Matter of applicatic pormitgto vll iy NO' Also, Paper Bags, Flat and Wrapping Paper, Envelopes, Bill, Lme}' and Note Heads, 'W. J. WELSHANS & (0., ~WHOLELALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN— Notice is hereby given that John Dwyer did upon the 19th day of Decewber, A, D, 1881, file his applicetion to the Mayor and City Coun il of Omaha, for permit to Il Mult, spirituous and Vinous dquors a8 a druggist, for for medicinal, mechanical and chemical purposes cnly, at No, 701, 16th stree# Fifth ward, Omaha, Neb,, from the 1sf, ary, 1852, to the 10th day ot nosodeodLes. f there be no objection, remonstrance or protest filed within two weeks from the 10th day of December, A, D, 1852, the Flour, Feed, Grain, Baled Hay. said poruni will bogranted, * PROPRIETORS Applicant, i Tre Oyana Darey, Bre newspaper will ublish the above nofice once cach woek ¥ or two weeks, at the expense of the appli- cant, The City of Omaha is not to be charged therewith, Jo0 L O, JEWETT, City Clerk, ~CHOICE BRANDS OF— Winter and Spring Wheat Flour, Rye Flour, Graham Bran, Gom?Oafs and Chopped Feed of all Kinds. C. F. Manderson, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW (Cor. ‘3 Furobam . = TELEFEHONE CONNBOTION. Eighth and Farnham t aeets, Oflmghm

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