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4 ?he-6m~ana Bee. T hlished avery morning, except Sund The onty Monday morning daily. | TERMS BY MAIL:— One Year.....$10.00 | Three Months, €3.00 8ix Months, 500 | One . 1.00 (LY BEF T PATD:— .$2.00 | ThreeMonths., 50 1.00 | One v published ev. One Year... Six Months, CORRESPUNDENCE—AI C ing to News and K d be addressed to the LETTERS—ANl Business Remittances should be ad 'HE OMAKA PUBLISRING CoM- OMAHA, Drafts, Checks and Post- Orders t» be mads payable to the \f the Company. OMAHA PUBLISHING 0., Prop’rs E.ROSEWATER, Editor. nmuni. yrial imat- Eprrox or s o full| son may Ir Yule gravoyard,” the coming ‘'a green mak be expected to bea ver ckly one. A xew national bank has been started in New York named after General ( ield. That city like institutions after Chase and Lincoln BrizuiaNcy at the expenss of a man's religion or nationality doesn't pass for wit in these United States, The attention of the Omaha Republi- ean is called to this fact. Ir was a sad holidag to scores of disappointed oftice-seokers who left Washington for homo with empty pocketbooks, and considerable experi- once of the trials of office hunting. Tag Springfield Republican declares that Mr. Kasson has not heen treated properly or courteously by his suceess- ful competitor, and our Springfield contemporary 18 eminently correct. Bex BurLer evidently has salted away & nice little pile from his various speculations. He now has his weather eye on the Sprague estate which is in bankruptey and has offered $:3,000,000 for it. Tue question for every citizen of Omaha to consider is whether it will or will not refuse to license schools of vice in which our growing generation are debauched and fitted to be bur- dens and charges upon the community. Carr Scuurz advises President Arthur to return Secretary Kirkwood at the head of the interior department. Very good advice, but the president haa never taken advice in that quar- ter and is not dieposed to pay much attention to it no Tur general abundance of money and the universal business prosperity was indicated by the enormous sales of holiday goods throughout the coun- try, which during the last three weeks are said to have been groater than for any year since 1870. Oscae WiLbk has sailed for Amer- ica and proposos to lecture to the be- nighted inhabitants of this country on wstheticism and art. Mr. Wilde will discover that long hair and the faint odor of pond lillies do not pass for genius in this country. Tue latest development of the Ohio idea comes from Xenia, where a band of masked men visited the low drink- ing saloons Saturday and demolished overy hell hole in the city. It is to be presumed that the town authorities had not been doing their duty. Tur New York Tribume has struck the nail on the head for once when it remarks: ““The promise of vigorous prosecution of the star route thieves is made again. The ‘public has had a good many promises; what it would like to see is some convictions.” Tue death of the daughter of Com- modore Perry, a sister of Mrs, Au- gust Belmont, roealls the stery that on the day of Mr. Belmont's wedding a check for $250,000 passed hetwoeen him and the commodore in roturn for the possession of the beautiful and aoccomplished Miss Porry, Grxerar Grorce H. Romerts, of Neobraska, late attorncy general for the state, is being urged by his friends for appointment to a territorial judg- AN OBJECTIONABLE CANDI- DATE. Washington rumor has it that Sen ator Kirkwood will retire from the cabinet immediately after the holiday recess, and that the name of Sargent, of California, will be sent in for the position of secretary of the interior, Washington rumor has been very correct in its present time, but in this instance it is to be hoped that there is some mis take. Mr. NSargent is the last man who shonld I select ed for the oftice named His record as a re from California was never one of the b He was known as a pliant tool of the the railroad monopolies of the Pacitic | const and as a professional politician always on the lookout for his owu in terests. Ho does not possess the con fidence of his own state nor that of the people in the west, and his « pointment would certainly not be in the line of civil service reform Above all the other departments, that of the interior requires a man above the taint of suspicion. No other portfolio in tho cabinet is brought so closely into contact with | the noeds of our constantly develop ing country. At the present time, ly when grave auestions in- oy \'nll\uu( the monopolizing of the pub lic domain, the restriction of corporate aggression and the improvement of our rivers aro being mooted, many of which can be largely the proper kind of a secretary of the interior, it 18 of the highest portance that a man should bo se lected not only of ability and experi- which will guarantee to him and to his depart- mont the confidence of the poople of the country. Such a man Mr. Sargent is not, and this is reason enough why he ought not to be solected as the successor of Mr. Kirkwood influenced by ence, but of a reputat Tk glory has departed from Ohio. Pennsylvaniu received seven chair- manships on the committees including the Ways and Moans the most im- portant of all. New York is growling very loudly because her great commer- cial intercsts were not better recog- nized, and The Chicago Times raises the following wail on behalf of the weat, which had hoped to see a differ- ent composition of the committeo on commerce. Tt says: “(ientlemen who favor the Henne- pin canal contract, the improvement of the Mississippi, and the opening up of new routes of transportation from the west to tho east, will find but cold comfort in the composition of the committee on commerce, which is charged with the preparation of the harbor and river bill and the consid- eration of all questions of transporta- tion, There is not an Illinois, Towa, Indiana or Missouri member on the committee. It consists of Page of California, for chairman, and Rich- ardson of New York, Townsend of Ohio, Horr of Michigan, Washburn of Minnesota, Candlor of Massachu- setts, Ward of Pennsylvania, White of Kentucky, George of Ore- gon, Guenther Wisconsin, republi- cans, and Reagan of Texas, McLane of Maryland, Gibson of Louisiana, Rose of New York and Herndon of Alabama, democrats. Henderson ef Illinois servedfupon the committee when the house was democratic, and might fairly have expected promotion when his friends gained the control. He 18 dropped. The purpose soems to have been to keep Illinois out, lest it should agitate some canal scheme. Mr. Keifer, erstwhile of Ohio, now of Pennsylvania, ls not animated by an overpowering love for Illinois.” —— The great increase of German and British immigration during tho pres- ent year as compared with 1880 is re- markable. who landed in the United States dur- ing November, over one-fourth, or 5,823 from England and Wales, 3,284 from 16,900 were from Germany, Ireland, 8,807 from Canada and 4,164 from Norway and Swedon. figures wore as follows: prophecies up to the | Of the 51,H86 immigrants For the five months ending November 30, the THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: 'I‘UESD{\Y. ADECEMBPR 21 1881, So she mat- ter standsat present with good pros department operations. | pocts that the ex-senator will yet be | suitably provided for e—— The Kansas City Jowrnal does not Denver 7'ri | take much stock in the brne's arddcles on Miksouri valley jour- | nalists, It says: In arecent number of the Denver ! Tribune, R. P. Yorkston,of St. Louis, undertook a review of the leading journalists and journals of the Mis- | wouri valley. His acquaintance with the men who made the newspapers ten [ years ago ik 8o limited that he his article sadly deficient as a rev | There « any whose labor important part in the shaping | fortuncs and the destiny of the cities of thg Missouri valley whom he doc not know at all, and " w work [ has nover scen, but who are still in the editorial harness, though fortune | stranger itor can write the | results now seen where it justly | neighb ate has aronsed the poo o in all parts of Towa to the danger leadly epidemic, and precaution | ary measures are being taken in al- | {mot overy Towa town and villago by vaceination. Omaha being the gateway through which people coming from localitics infected with small-pox are passing every day, it would seers but a o that vaccinated. sonablo procau- tion should be ptent should be ongaged to tion our poj Com physicians the and pupils of our publc vaccinate teachers schools, and other measures should be taken to induce our people to sub- mit to vaccination. An ounce of pre- vention is worth a pound of cure, A NUMBER of congressmon announce their intention of kicking at the esti- mated demands to pay the expenses of President Garfield’s physicians and nurses. One of them says there is no more reason for paying the nurses 82,600 apiece, or ten times as much as they would be paid for nursing any other case, than there is for paying $28,000 apiece to Drs. Agnew, Ham- ilton and Bliss, and that it really makea no difference that the people and not Mrs. Garficld bears the ex- pensc, Cox:aressmMaN Bevrorp thinks that the railroads hate gress, Mr. Bolford speaks from ex- perience. controlled con- Edmunds on the Mormon Question. Phitadelphin Fress, The solution of the Mormon prob- lem is the prize puzzle of American politics. Every president in turn during the past thirty years has grave- ly considered it in his annual mes- sage. Congress has wrestled with it, the courts have passed upon it, but the difficulty of its solution scems only to increase with time. Presi- dent Hayes was inclined to make a specialty of the Mormon question, and President Giarfield hoped to signalize his administration by the extirpation of polygamy within the United States. President Arthur recurred to this vexed question in his message and recommended some specific legislation which will remove some of the present difficultios experienced in prosecutions for bigamy in Utah. How to over- come all the difficulties in the way of the enforcement in Utah of our laws aganst polygamy is a question still to be answered. The latest contribution to the lit- erature of this subject is by Senator Edmunds in the January number of Harper's Magazine. Mr. Edmunds is impressed with the impotency of all past legislation against Mormon polygamy, and in this article he deals more to the cause of this weakness than with the remedy. The difliculty in procuring convictions for polygamy under oxisting laws he ascribes mainly to two points of legal procedure. The first is the nature and constitution of juries. It is impossible to conviet a man of bigamy if there is a single Mormon on the jury, and the difti- culty of getting a jury of twelve none of whom are Mormons in & commu- 1880 1851, |mty where that class so largely pre- linnln-u SRR !v(";';“ lfl):g‘-' ponderaee and do not scruplo to SUARIACE ALY V. 1, 0 1o [auswer all questions without he y Vi regard to truth, s almost insu- bl t perable. How to meot this obstacle Tt was remarked by the ofticersat the various ports o f entry that the newly arrived imiigrants wore of a better class than thoso of former years and well fitted to make thritty and valua- ble citizens. With such a drain on the resourcos of the GGerman empire it is little wonder that Bismarck is ex- oceedingly anxious to obstruct by all ship.—Inter Ocean Correspondence. The “Trojan horso” of the republi- -can valloy would make an excollent judge—of sour mash and free lunches in almost any territory. Tug pope has made a pathetic ad- dress to the college of cardinals be. wailing the loss of his temporal pow- ers and the embarrassments which surround him at Rome. His speech is interproted as threatening his final departure from Rome and the trans- forring of the papal residence to the island of Malta. Wittiam E. Gray, who three years ago was arvested in New York for forgery, has been finally discharged, the evidence not being considered suflicient enough to justify lis further detention. From present appearauces tho case of August Arndt, who is uow eonfined in Douglas county jail under possible meaus the tide of his coun- trymen which is flowing on our shores month by month and depleting the population and wealth of Germany, —_— Tur New York Times Washington correspondent statos that ox-Senator Paddock has positively declined the position of First Assistant Secretary of the treasury in advance of its offer Both of the Nebraska scnators are said to to him by President Arthur. have called upon the president to urge Mr. Paddock’s name for a re- sponsible goverament position. Presi- dent Arthur replied that Mr. Up. ton's place was at the ex-senator’s dis- posal, and that he had always in- tended giving it to him. Upon hear- ing this, Mr. Paddock telographed to Senator Logan, declining the offer un- conditionally on the grounds that ho would prefer eceing some candidate of Secretary Folger's choice in the excessive bail, will be reachedin about tho samo apace of time. position, which really requires great experience in the details of treasury Senator Edmunds does not tell us, The sccond difficulty is the inability of the prosecutors to prove polyga- mous practices. Mormon marriages are made in secret, and when a Mor- won is called to prove the fact he has no hesitation in denying any knowl- edge of 1t, Notwithstanding these difticulties in the way of getting juries and wit- nesses, Senator Edmunds inclines to the opinion that if congress should choose to enact suitable legislation to meet the case, and the executive de- partment should endeavor to force such logislation with the same vigor that it exercises in punishing illicit distilling, the practice of polygamy might i & few years be entirely broken up. This is probably true. 1f adultery and fornication were made indictable offenses it would be possi- ble to punish polygamy by proving sunply cohabitation As for prosecu- tions for bigamy, however, it is not casy tosve how legislation'can supply the lack of evidence and vigor reveal the sccrets of Mormon wedlock. Mr. Edmunds recommends the discourag- ment of the appropriation of lands by the Mormon church, and the encorag- ment of non-Mormon immigration, The Mormon church will undoubted- ly get all the land it wants irrespect- ive of legislation, if the Mormons themselves can buy and hold land. It was expected that the completion of the Pacific railroad, and the discovery of valuable gold and silver mines in Utah would increase the Gentile pop- ulation so greatly that the Mormons would soon be outvoted. But the church grows with the increase in popula‘ion, and the polygamists are 80 large | mons in the majority in either | | | proportionally stronger to-day than in 1869 Tt in conceded that polymamy must be extirpated, if at all, while Utah is a territory, Ounce admitted as a state, federal interferonce will be out of the question. Senator munds sugeests, as a possible solution of the difficulty, that Utah be divided and apportioned among the adjoining states and terri tories, The concentrated strength of the Morman hierarchy would be bLroken and the Mormons, being in a minority in each state or territory, could be dealt with by local iaw. Utah has a population of 144,000, Tdaho and Arizona already contain a Mormon population in proportion to their voting strength that any considerable additicn from Utah territory would place the Mor Ne vada has less than half the population | of Utah, and if consolidated with it |the Mormons would control both Colorado conld swallow Utah and out vote it, but why cannot polygamy be | dealt with as well from Washington | as from Denver? On the whole, we | canuot see that ator Edmunds’ in- Morm n of the aporeciable sting discuss que ward it UP AND ORGANIZE! fincouragement and Texts for the Anti-Monopolists of the Land, The Coming Convention at Has- tings State Press Comments. The Soldier Element. Nebraska Signal, It is estimated that to-day thereare thirty thousand old soldiers living in Nebraska, They are men who have seen something ot the world, men who read the current events of the day,— in short an intelligent class. In the approaching political contest this vote may have much to do in determining the result. It may, therofore, be well to ascertain the views of these old veterans in relation to monopolies. When the slave interest of the country severed its relations with the general rebellion, the citizen soldier, inspired with the spirit of the declar: tion of independence that this was a government of the people and for the people, and that freedom was man’s normal con- dition, before the tidal wave of revo- lution he planted himself and strug- gled in the doubtful and terrible con- fhiet, until the shackles fell from the oppressed millions and the country was saved: As he stood in the front in the great rebellion enduring the hardships and sufferings that neces- sarily fell to his lot then, so in the march of civilization westward he was again found at the front, with a fam- ily dependent upon hisefforts for sup- port. He has stood with that tenacity of purpose that he showed on the field in the defense of common lib- erty, struggling with all the misfortunes, hardships and pri- vations incident to frontier hfe and the development of the resources of our state. He has seen millions of acres of our public lands given to railroad corporations with the understanding that this munifi- cent gitt would prove a blessing to him in his declining years. He knows that the B. & M. and U. P. railway corporations received land enough to build and equip these roads and plenty to spare, and now when old age and the infirmities received in his country's defense are telling upon him, instead of receiving the -eturns from these corporations promised by {:oliticnl demagogues, he lives to-day y the sufferance of these corpora- tions. His only means of sup- port is the product of his hard toil, and while his crops are growing the argus eyes of these cor- poratiens are keouly watching its de- velopment, and by the time it ma- tures and is ready for shipment to eastern markets, these corporations have made an estimate of the aggre- gate amount ef his crops, and they are ready for him, If his crops are fight thoy scalel] thn rates down; if his crops are good their rates are scaled uKA If his cr“llw are good, and| addition prices advance, then the cor- {’,""“""’ scale up and up, keep- ng regular step with the ad- vance in prices, so that in any ovent and in every casc these compunies obtain the lion's share, and leave the old ran by a nice mathe- matical calculation just enough in return for his labor to keep himself and family from utter starvation. From the foregoing facts and condi- tions we think his status relative to monopolies and all other sources of public oppression is easily understood, and let theso and all other corpora- tions who mercilessly from year to year extorted from these old defend- ers of our country hear it. They stand to-day as im the rebellion, opposed to oppression, and will vote now as they shot then. The soldier as a rich reward for his risk of life, and in many instances loss of health, recoived a hundred and mixty acres of wild land upon which he other similar busincas men have their sustained at a large expense, a membership in many thonsand of all board of trade cities being worth several dollars Professio men classes, including ministers and edi tors, have their societies and assc tions. ple of the { iited S| itly organized both politically | You may rest assured that you a id in business pursnits, 1f tho | b ing epeediiy owred by hema farmers ex any. velief ftom the [ tic OIL i KitShees of sheumatiom burdens of transportation or taxation SoATy 10 § L, they n ‘ politically, they Wil must re 1 op themselves posted | f Hdward Wittig | upon the events of the day that when | cause | for the selec thy with them up and build up 3 hosen, our alliance! o3 n can mako them a ia- About two-thirds of the peo- ates are engaged in the pursuit of agriculture, and yet they are told that they have no right to effect and carry out political organ- turn; every act and word will be dis torted, and every man who is brave enough to oppose these organs or mo- nopely will be slandered and defamed., he people want equity and impar- tial justice measured out to all alike, They demand an equal didtribution of tax burdens; that corporations bear this burden with the producer. The lond 1 heavy and the people are wearied. And the people have tired of being plundered in the name of izations, that they have no right to|loyalty. They now demand fidelity, say how much they will take for their | competency, honesty and true merit. stock, grain or produce, yet the rail- They want a chance to say whether road ag and commission men | this isa government of the people, for have their stated and special meet- | the people and by the people, or ings, at which they set prices that the | whether it is a government of mono tillers of the soil shall pay for trans- | poly, for monopoly and by monopoly. n and receive for their To a great degree the welfare of the products I'he two-thiras of the | producers of Nebraska is in the hands | population haye been dictated to by | of the fortheoming convention. the one-third from the very fact that one-third ar thoroughly and | Vo Matter What Hoppens e 14th day of December, A, D, on to the Magor ani C ty O lice M [n source of much pleasure and profit, have readings, specches, de- bates, singing; got the ladies in- nmm\w"..c:\.‘l_..uu. L n A r A D, 1831, the waid licensa will by terested, get the young people inter- | o 0RCH N EowARD AW ISTo, ested, occasionally havo refreshments Applicant, « vite yi neirhbo iance i Trie DAy Der newspaper will v d fuvite your neighbor allianco in. [ TR DAy, Ben newepaper will “All work und ne play makes Jack o | apliiant. } dull boy.” Justso with the favmer, you will work from daylight till dark, then do your feeding and chores and you are all tired out, too tired to read, too tired to go to the spelling school, debating s bed you o, both young andold. winter is past and here time with the work pushing ov time, when there s time to eat or slee| ney 90c to 92c. discover that it takes ty or alliance and off to The mes seed 'y one, following close in its wakethe harvest hardly finally that is over and the threshing machine stands at your stacks, you commence to fig- ure up your summers work, Sixty acres of wheat, with fifteen bushels to the acre, 900 bushels, worth in Chi- cago $1.24 to $1.28; worth in Kear- You are a_little sur- prised and ask some grain buyer the cause of so great a difference; he will tell you that it costs 45 to H8 cents a hundred to get it to Chicago, b cents a bushel on margin and 2 cents a bushel on shrinkage and you soon one-third or | M ever to wet some grain to market, The City of Omaha ed therewith, — J, L L. ¢ WETT, City Clerk NOTICE, Matter of Application ) of MES. M. A, HIIGGINS, For Liquor License, |} Notico Is horeby given that M, M. A, ulg gina did, upon Lhe 13th duy of Decomper, A. 1. fasl, fifo her application to the Mavor and Ci y Council of Ornuha, for Li ense to scll Malt, Virituous and Vinous Liquom, gt No. 1624 Dodizo strect, Fourth Wsr1, Omahag Neh., trem the 1at day of January, 185%, to the 10th day of Aprll, 18¥° It here be no objection, remonstranco or pro- test flled with two weok from Decombir 15th, A. D. 1641, the said lisenss will bo granted. M. A. HIGGINS, Applicant. By Geo. Higgins, Agent. Tun DAY B novwpaper will pablish the above notice for two we kn at the expense of tho applicant, The City of Omaha iy not to bo charged therewith, T2 3. L. C. JRWETT, City Clerk. Docl8-12tm or Liquor Liconse. NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that Markel & Swobe did upon the 17th day of December, A. D, 1881, filo application to the ayor and Uity neil of Omaba, for Ticenso to sell Malt, Spirituous and Vinous Liquors, at U, P. Depot, while the same gram is car- d First wand, % e & - > Omaha, Neb., from the 1st duy of January, ried from Chicago to Now York, | 154 4 the 10th day of April, 1882, 222 miles farther than it is from Kearney to Chicago for 12} conts Are you surpriscd that farming don’t pay and that railzond- will be asked next fall by these “railroad cap- per bushel. ing does pay? And yet you pers to support men for the legisla- ture who will vote for their interests Should you JoJLoC Should you read up? or do : and against_your own. organize? youprefer to let these magnates grow rich from your hard earned profita? They own our Congress and legisla- tures and will monopoly. ‘The Nebraska Readjusters. York Iribune, The officers of the Farmers State organization have called a spocial meeting of the KFarmers' Alliance of this State, to be held at Hastings, Adams county, on Wednesday and 26th and 26th, Thursday, January 1882, The object of this meeting is to take active steps toward extending the Farmers’ Alliance and putting the Anti-Monopoly party of Nebraska ina better shape for the on coming strug- corporations, into consideration such measures as may seem best fitted to more perfectly organize the farmers and thereby increase the influence of their organization and prepare the producer to meet the exigencies of glo with the powerful and also to take next fall's campaign. Under the call not only are the chosen delegates of each local alliance requested to be present, but each ac- tive member who can atford the time and expense is cordially invited toadd the weight of his influence to this There is no reason why ™ this meeting should not be largely at- cHch (0 tended, and there exists no doubt that convention, the representation will bo very great. The vast gathering of this younggiant organization and its deliberations will political com- t will show beyond a point of questioning whether determine the future plexion of this state, people will govern or whether monop olies and corporations shall rulo, The people aro ripe to take a hand in the management of their own politieal af fairs, right and what is wrong. choice, and that their most sacred im terests as free born citizens shall here- after bo guurdod as well as the spe- cial interests of wonied aristocracy and corporate power. Monopoly ammunition wagons are was compelled to live and improve be- fore receiving a patent, enduring all the privations and sufforings common to the pioneer of the plains, while the stockholder of the n&'old, a man of means, living in a palatial home, and surrounded by all the comforts that money could provide, reccived from the government and was put in immediate possession of thousands of acres to sell at will. These distine- tions the soldier has carefully investi- gated, and will not be slow in assist- already being supplied with political powder for the campaign next fall. 'he campaign will be between the The enemy is strong and well organized, and to meet the enemy on equal foot- monopolie: peeple and the ing the producers must thoroughly and effectually, work must begin now, organi; should be in the right direction, ermit political righten this convention into a weak- ing by his vote to control these cor- porations be prudencand just congres- sional logislation, Farmers' Organizations in the Railroad Journals. Kearney Nonparel, We often read and hear it said by their friends, that the farwmer's can neither effect or rotain a thorough or- ganization for political or other pur- poses. When we remember that some of our ablest public men, that 8 ma- jority of the successful business men of the land were farmer boys, and that coupled with our liberal free school systom, wo can hardly believe thatthe farmers are incompetent to effect and maintain & thorough organization. Common laborers and mechanics have their socioties and trade unions; mer- chants, grain dealers, commission and kneed position will be fatal, quer the people must fight the battloe. Auy convention is a viotory for the enemy. Allow neither bribes, threats great object now in view—success! The railroads will attempt to pack the next legislature with their tools and paid agents; they will attempt to repeal the Doane law which they say is orushing the people to death; they will thwart justice and the desire of will endeavor to the people. They accomplish this through such news- papers as they may own and control, 5’henu papers have opened the battle by calling the farmers “frauds,” and the alliance ‘‘the thinnest kind of a fraud,” and that ‘it deserves to fail.” The people will be slandered on every oceasion; thoy will have taunts and vilo epithets hurled at them at every ntinue to own them he laboring classes are sufficient- ly aroused to support no one for any office who is not thoroughly Anti- Anti-monopolists as well as monopolists are interested in what is The peo- ple have a divine right to oxercise a Solid Methods must be agreed upon and those method To demagogues to To con- ession on the part of this nor promises to drive you from the one If there be no objection, 1 exionstrance ox protest filed within two weeks fromn De- cember 17th, A, D)., 1881, the said license will be granted, MARKEL & SWOBE, Applicants, the above once ench weck for two weeks at the expense of the applicant. The city of Omuha is not to be charged the ewi b, 3. JEW. Notice of Matter of Application of J, W Murphy & Co., for liquor license, NOTICE, Notice is hereby given that J. W, Mur- phy & Co, did upon the 22d day of De- cember, A, D,, 1881, file their application to the Mayor and City Council of Omaha, tosell Mait, Spirituous and Vinous Liquors, at the corner of Douglas and Fourteenth streets, Third Ward, Omaha, Neb., from the 5th day of January, 1882, to the 10th of April, 1882, If there be no objection, remonstrance or protest filed within two weeks from De. cembor 22d, A. D., 1881, the said licensd will be granted. J. W. Mureny & (o) Applicant, The Omaha Daily Brx newspaper will publish the above notice unce each week or two weee at the expense cf the appli- cant. The City of Omaha is not to be charged therewith, J. L Matter of Application [of E. Dallow for Liquor License. NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that E. Dallow did upon the17th day of December, A. D., 1881, file his application to the Mayor and City Council of Omaha, for license to sell Malt, Spirituous and Vinous Liquors, at No. 1014 Chicago Street, Fifth Ward, Omaha, Neb., from the 15t day of Januory, 1882, to the 10th day of April, 1882, If there be no objection, remonstrance or protest filed within two weeks from Dec:mber 17th. A, D)., 1881, the said li- censs will be granted. K. DaLrow, Applicant, Tar OMAHA DAY Brx newspaper will publish the atove notice fur two weekn at the expense ot the applicant. The City of Omaha is not to be charged therewith, L. C Jewerr, City Clerk Matter of Application of M, W. nedy for Liquor Liceuse, NOTICES Notice is hereby given that M, W. 1 Ken- nody did, upon the 19t duy of Decimbur, A, D. , 1881, file his application to the ‘ayor and_City Council of Omaha, for & nse to sell Malt, Spirituous and Vioous Liquors, at No, South Thirteenth street, Third ward, Omaha, Neb., from the lst day of Junuary, 1852, to the 10th - | day of April, 13 1f there be no objection, remonstannce or protest tiled withm two weeks from De cenber 15th, A. D,, 1681, the said license will be grauted. M. W. Kexsroy, Applicant, Thp DALLY Brr newspaper will publish the above notice for two weeks at the ex- vense of the applicant. The City of Owaha is not to be charged therewith, . L., JF declf-12t ty Clork, Matter of Application of R D, Curry & Co., for Liquor License. NOTICE, Notice is hereby given that R. D, Cury ber, A. D., 1881, tile hi. plication to the Mayor and City Council of Omaha, for license to sell Malt, Spirituousand Vi s Liquors, at No, 116 Tenth street, Third Ward, Omaha, Nebraska, from the 3rd day of January, 1862, to the 10th day of April, 1882, If there be no objection, remonstrance or protest filed within two weeks from December 20th, A. D., 1841, the said Licenso will be granted, 151, Crney & € The Dty Bri: uews) the above notice once ea week for two weeks at the oxpense of the applicant, The City of Omaba is not to be charged there- with, J.J. L J dec21-26 Matter of Application of A. H. Gladstone for Liquor License. NOTICE, Nottoo v herchy given that A. I, Gladstone did upon the 14th day of Decvmber, A. D., 1831, file hi« application to the M yor and City Coun- cll of Omahs, for license to sell Malt, Spirituous #nd Vinous Liguors, at No. 1305 and 1310 Douglas Stroot, Third Ward, Omaha, Nob., frons the 1st dey of January, 1862, €5 the 10th day of April, 1583, It the ro be no objectioo, romon <r pro tdst flled within two weeks trom D or 1ith, A. D, 1881, the said license will Lo granted. A H. Gusvsrony, Applicant, Tie DAY Bux uewspnper will publ sh the above notice for two weeks at the expense of th applicant. The City of Omaha i not 1o bo argod therowith, 3.0, L, € JEWE Declé- 121, Matter of application of Markel & Swobe Tir DaiLy Ber newspaper will publish | * & Co,, did, upon the 20th dny of Decem- | i\ STT, ciy ek | ODLAELA HOUSES FARMS, Lands. For Sale By BEMIS 5 FIFTEENTH AND DOUGLAS STS., —— N 0. 268, Full lot fenced an with su h o trec bulta 00, 270 fect om onew, near 15U ,000. 53, Two lots ow Conter strect, near Oum. ing Ktreet, $00 No. 262, Lot onSprace street, near 6th strood, 9, Hall ot on Dodge, noar 11th street, 0. 247, Four beantiful residence lots, near Creighton Colluge (or will kell & parate), §8,000. No. 246, Two lot« on Chatles, near Cuming street, €00 cach 246}, Lot on ldaho, 'near Cuming strood, Oreacre lot en Ciming, near Duttom 0 4, Lot on Fambam, near 1sth stroet, 1ot VK 3 Lot on Douglss, nesr 20th street, foet on College atreet, 241, Lot o0 Furuham, near 263 a reot, «t on South Aivane, L near 2 treet, 1200132 fect on Jlarney, UL it np), #2,400, *310 foof on Skerman Aveuue , near Grace, $1,000, ot on Douglas sirect, nea or sirect, near 0 feet, mear C tol . 1000, 'wo lot« on Decatur, noarIrenc ot 175 cach. seas th o, Lot on , near Nicholas trect, L Two lots on 16 b, near Pacifle street, 05, Two lots on Castellar, near 10th trect #100. No. 204, beautiful ro wtrect, near Coming, Lot on’ Saunders, near Han.ilton ence lot on Divinion. N30, 94, Lot 15th street, near Pacitic, 600, . 1951, Three lots on Saunders stroet, near 1,300, 93}, Lot on 20th street, ncar Sherman, near Grace street, two lot* f King, near Hamilten ), two lots on 17th street, ncar White , ¥1,000. No. 185), one full block, ten lots, near the bar- ks, 400, 01, lot on Parker, near Ireno strect, $300. No. 153, two lots on’ Cow, near 21st vtreet, (gilt edge;) $6,000. No. 181, lot'on Center, near Cuming street, 300, No. 180, lot on Picr, near Seward streot, $650. No. 176, lot on Shérman avenue, near’ lzard 1, 0. 1ot on_Cass, near 14th, 81,000, lot on Pacific, near 14th street; make 000 each. full block on |26th street, nea and three lots in Gise's addition near Sauncers and Cassiun streets, 82,000, No. 129, lot on Callfornia streef, near Creigh 24 t, near the head of Bt. Mary'e: avenue, #3,000, No, 128, - bout two acres, noar the head ef St Mary's avenue, 1,000, No. 126, lot on 1&th street, near White Lead ‘Works, 3625, NO, 124, Hixte lots, near shot tower on the per ot. fect (2 lots) on 15th street, %1,600, balt-acro lots in Millard and . 11, thirty Caldwell's additions on Sherman avenuc, Spring and Naratoga streets, near the end of green strect car track, ¥800 to ¥1,200 each. 50, lot onl Chicago, near 224 strect, 51,500, . 8%, lot on Caldwell, near Sauuders stroot, 86, corner Jot on Charles, near Saundere 100, '35, lot on lzard, near 21st, with two small nonses, £2,400. , two lots on 18th, near Picroe street, 78, threo lots on Harmey, near 10th street, No. 76, 90x132 Hroct, #,0 75, GOXS2 Teet, on Pacific, near Sth stroet, ct on Oth street, near Leaven- ) 10th, %2, No. 60, vighteen lots on 21st, 22d, 2 Saunders stroets, near Unwee and Saunders street bridge, #400 each. hth No. 6, one-fourth block (180x135 Leet), 1 t of Yoor Claire oni Hamilten rtrect, n 3 d of red stree car track, €360, 5, lot on Marcy, near 9th sticet, $1,200. lot on Califcrnis, near 2ist, 1,600. No. 4, 1ot on Cuse, near 22d stroet, 32, No, 1, lot cn Harney, near 15th, §2,000. U 's first and second additions, s, Nelson's, Terrace, E. 566, Lake's, and all other and terms. near Tlanscom adaitions, it wny price 302 loth in Hanscom Place Park; prices from $300 to $300 each, One’ hundred and_ fifty-nine besutiful rest- lots, located on Hauiiléon street, balf way between the turn table of the red strect car line and the waterworks reservior and addition, and just west of the Convent of t Bwters Poor Uliro in Shinn's aduition. Prices 1ango trom #76 10 £100 each, and will bo sold on cary terma, Tractof 5 10, 15, %, 40 or 80 rerow, with Idings and othr improvements, and adfolning olty, at all prices. ’ %00 of the best residence lota in the city of ny location you derire—north, east, t, and at bed-rock prices. jice businews lots in wll the principal cus wtreots of Omahs, varying frowm 5600 to 00 oach. Fwo hundred houses ard lots ranging from $000 10 316,000, abd Jocuted 10 viery part of the Large number of excellent farms in Dougl Barpy, Saunders, Dodge, Washington, Burt, othtr koo countics in Fastern Nebraska. Bemis'’ Reau Estare Acency, 16th and Dcag's Street, NEBEE.