Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 12, 1882, Page 3

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VMHESE nmmnmn DATS, " s e ubalsic 7.7 | A Plea For the Past and Its Speedy, Unerring Adminis- tration of Justice. The Vigilantes of Eaily Days Com- pared With the Courts of the Present Correepandence of The fee. Heuess, Mont.,, January early sottlement of Mentana, The owing to a varioty of peculiar circumstances, was made by a different claes than that which usually characterize new countries. The discovery of gold in 1863 by some hardy adventurors first gave the world a knowledge of the fact *that such a country existed and that it constituted a geographical part of the Rocky Mountains, This causod the first influx of the hardy, restless and often reckless gold svekers, But at this time another incentive to emi- grate existed. The bloudy war of the rebellion was at 1ts height, the bloody hand and murderous bullet and saber were uplifted and many non- combatants who ceuld no live in peace in their homes, were driven by force of circumstances to leave comfortable and often luxurious longer homes to seek peace in the far off wilds of Montana. Those coming from the north and south, minglingin the same social and business circles, soon discovered that there were good people in both sections. The bitter- ness of partisanship ceased, and the two eloments clasped hands over the bloody chasm, banded together for self protection and preservation against lawlessness. The distant rumble of the cannon, the shrieking of the murderous shell, and the sharp cracking of the rifle was not heard in this peaceful, far off retreat. The mail only reached us after the evenis were a month or weeks old. Thus the war progressed with scarcely a ripple on the surface of our society. But the roughs of the western border began depredations on society; the fortunate miner or mer chant who had accumulated the gl tering metal desired to sce his loved ones left behind, or business called him to visit old haunts and oldscencs. His journey to the states through desert wastes and mountains defiles cened the cupidity of the despe rado, and he was waylaid and shot for his money. This created the neces ty of good men of all classes uniting in forming the vigilant committee, whose rule was omnipotent, and al- most omnipresent, there being no other law or oflicers of the law at that time; and to their credit, be it said, during the time of their reign no fatal mistakes were made. Many were ex- ecuted and others banished for crimes against the peace and order of sogiety: not one was unjustly dealt by. To all even-handed justice was meted. No technical law quibbles or delays were known or regarded. The lead- ing thought, which ran with great precision without circumlocution, was to get at bottom facts and award justice. And I hazard the assertion without the fear of contradiction that no where on ‘‘God’s green earth,” dur- ing the reign of the vigilantes could you find a place or country where the rights of property or life were more highly regarded, and their claims more duly respected than in Montana. Under this rule life and property were absolutely secure, and lawlessness was on its good behavior. Would you ask how was this brought about in so wild, so rude and adventurous a re- gion? The answer is simple. The detection, convietion and punishment of crime followed swiftly, surely and unerringly. No technecalities, no «uibbles or delays defeated the de- mands of justice. And when the United States gov- ernment sent judges to Montana in 1865 or ’66 the first to greet those judges and give them welcome and co-operation were the vigilance com- mittee. The old settlers of Montana to-day sigh for the pe: order and justice which was so fully developed during the reign of the vigilantes in their palmy days. In these later days the true inwardness of the thief and scoundrel are beginning to “develop and the technicalities of law and the gabble of lawyers defeat the ends of justice and robs the code of its penal force. A new order of civilization is beginning to develop and crime goes unwhipped of justic But which of the two civilizations is the greater promoter of good society? I leave that to the wise men who are conducting the trial of Guiteau, Had Guiteau's ecrime been committed in Montana during the reign of the vigelantes on the 2d of July, ou the 4th of J 1881, he would have been er thar Haman at a cost of seventy-five cents for a rope. Nor would the world have been disgusted or the government disgraced by the rant and ravings of a murderer and the sickning sentimentality of some | effemencte creatures, misnamed wo- wmen, sceking fer his autograph. I would not have you infer that «crime runs riot in Montana any more than elsewhere. This 18 not the fac but I simply mean to be understoc to say that *‘evil communications rupt good manuers,” and since the in- flux of a larger number from the older states we are beginning to ape those pernicious examples, and learning to llmk upon crime as less criminal, There is another evil which is growing up under this new civilization now being introduce It is assuming the character of friends of justice and lovers of the government of the Uni- ted States; and used these insignias for the purpose of defeating the hon est pre-emptor or locator of land claims in Montana. They wear this garh and present themsclyes before the departments at Washington as protestants and ..mwlhnln against the patents and the rights of others, with their hands behind thew to receive a reward, or, in other words to blick mail the legal claimant and defraud him of his rights. These men have bean very successful and have accumulated large property by | these schemes. But if \lum.mu will do herself justice she will again put upon the door of these nefarious | | | | | baen nearer the earth than it is now. |i8 not much difference THE OMAHA DAITLY antes. They ate worse than the | rordl Agants of Tormer dage In miy next LA warning wor, T will give ¢ tive to the danger which threatens Omaha in - her com mercial intercourse with MoNTaNA. | THE STORY OF THE TIDES What They Tell of the Grow g Length of the Day and of the Birth of the Moon Nature From a scientific point of view the work done by the tides is of unspeak able importance. Whence is this en- ergy derived with which the tides do their work? If the tides are caused by the moon, the energy they possess must also be derived from the moon. This looks plain enough, but unfortu- nately it is not true. Would it be true to assert that the finger of the rifleman which pulls the trigger sup- olies the energy with which the rifle- Lul]ut is animated! Of course |§ would not. The energy is derived from the explosion of the gunpowder, and the pulling of the trigger is merely the means by which that energy is liberated, In s some- what similar manner the tidal wave produced by the moon is the means whereby a part of the encergy stored in the earth is compelled to expend itaelf in work. Let me illustrate this by a comparison between the carth rotating on its axes and the tly-wheel of an ongine. The fly-wheel is a sort of reservoir, into which the engine urs its power at each stroke of the piston. The various machines in the mill merely draw off the power from the store accumulatedin thetly-wheel. The earth 18 like a gigantic Hy-wheel detached from the engine, though still connected with the machines in the mill. In that mighty fly-wheel a stu- pendous quantity of energy is stored up, and a stupendous uantity of enorgy would be given out before that fly-wheel would come to rest. The earth’s ro- tation is the reservoir from whence the tides draw the energy they require for “doing work. Hence it is that though the tides are caused by the moon, yet whenever they require eneray they draw on the supply ready to hand in the ition of the carth. The earth ditlers from the tly of the engine in a very imy point. As the encrgy is withdrawn from the Hy-wheel by the machines in the mill, so it is restored thereto by the power of the steam-engine, and the fly runs uniformly. But the earth is merely the tly-wheel without the engine, When the work done by the tides withdraws energy from the earth, that energy is never restored. TIt, therefore, follows that the earth’s rotation must be decreasing. This leads to a consequence of the most wonderful importance. 1t tells us that the speed with which the earth rotates on ity axis is diminishing. We can state the result in a manner which has the merits of simplicity and bregity. The tides are increasing the length of the day. present no doubt the efiect of the tides i changing the length of the day is very small. A day now is not appre- ciably longer than a day a hundred years ago. Even in a thousand years the change in the length of the day is only a fraction of a second. But the importance arises from the fact that the change, slow though it is, lies al- ways in _one direction. The day is continually increasing. In millions of years the accumulated effect becomes not only appreciable, but even of startling magnitude. The change iu the length of the day must involve a corresponding change in the motion of the moon. 1f the moon acts on the earth and retards the rotation of the earth, 8o, converse- ly, does the ecarth react upon the moon. The earth is tormented by the moon, 8o it strives to drive away its persccutor. At present the moon revolves round the earth at a distance of about 240,000 miles. The reaction of the earth tends to in- creaso that distance, and to force the moon to revolve in an orbit which is continually getting larger and larger. As thousands of years roll on, the length of the day increases second by second, and the distance of the moon in>reases mile by mile. A million years ago the day, probably, con- tained some minutes less than our present day of twenty-four hours. Our retrospect does not~halt here; we atonce project our view back to an incredibly remote epoch which was a crisis in the history of our system. It must have been at least 50,000,000 years ago. It may hav been very much earlier. The crigis was the in- e ing occasion when the moon was bern. The length of the day was only a very few hours. If we call it three hours we shall not be far from the truth, Perhaps you may think that if we looked back to a still carlier cpoch, the day would become still less and finally” disappear alto- gether! This is, howeve not the ase, The day can never have been much less than three hours in the present order of things. Everybody knows that the earth is not sphere, but there is a protuberance at the| equator, 8o that as our school books tell us, the earth is shaped like an orange. It is well known that this protuberance 18 due to the rotation of the earth on its axis, by which the equatorial parts bulge out by centri- fugal force. The quicker the earth rotates the greater is the pro- tuberance. 1f, howeyer, the rate of rotation exceeds a certain limit, the equatorial portions of ‘the earth could no longer cling together. The attraction which unites them would be overcome by centrifugal force. It can be shown that the rota- tion of the earth when on the point of rupture corresponds to a length of the day somewhere about the critical value of three hours, which we have already adopted, Tt is therefore im possible for us to suppose o day much shorter than three hours. Let us leave the earth for a few | minutes and examine the past history of the moon. We have seen the moon revolves around the earth in an | ever-widening orbit, and consequently | the moon mugt in ancient times have | No doubt the change is slow. There | between the orbit of the moon a thousand years | ago and the orbit 1o which the mcon | is now moving. But when we rise to | millions of years the difference be comes very appreciable. Thirty or forty millions of years ago the moon was much closer to the earth than it is at prosont: vory possibly the moon was then only half itspresent distance We must, however, look still eatlier, toa cortain epoch not less than tifty mhi lions of years ago. At that epoch the moon must have been so close to the earth that the two bodies were almost touching. Everybody knows that the moon revolver now around the earth in & period of twenty-seven days. The period dop tween the earth and the moon. 1In carlier time the menth must have boen shorter than our present month Some mitlons of years ago the moon completed its journey in a week, instead of taking twenty.ecight days, as at present. Looking back earlter still, we find the month has dwindled down to a day, then down to a fow hours, until at that wondr us epoch, when the moon was almost touching the earth, the moon spun round the earth onco every three hours. In those ancient times I seo our earth to be a noble globe, as it is present, Yet it is not partly cove with oceans and partly clothed with vendure. The primeval earth secms rather u fiery and half molden mass, where 10 organic life can dwell. In- stead of the atmosphere which we now have, I seoa dense mass of vapors, in which, perhaps all the oceans of the carth are suspended as clouds. 1 see that the sun still rises and sets to give the succession of day and of night, but the day and the mnight together only amount to three hours, instead of twenty-four. Almost touching the chaotic mass of the carth s another much smaller and equally chaotic body. Around the earth 1 soe this small body rapidly rotating. The two revelve together, as if they were bound by invisible hands. The smaller body is the moon, e 18h Farming. Setn Green, the most practical, suc- cessful, experienced and enthnsiastic fishenlturist, in his new Fish Hatching and Fish During the few years which have intervened sinee the discovery of fish culture, its practice has advanced with rapid strides, and although it is still little more then in its infancy: the laws which govern its manage- ment have been so far ascertained and epplied that it is now an es- tablished art, capable of yielding vast results tor the benefit of mankind. The days of doubt and uncertainty have passed away and qumerous expo- riments leading mvariably to thesame end have established it ona firm basis. Success in all well considered and properly couducted attempts has swept away fear and hesitation, and experi- ence may now be said to have tully confirmed the highest hopes of the most sanguine. The possibilities which fish culture suggested were so far beyond what can be obtained in other fields of human labor, 8o sded the best results in hat it seemed impossible they could be realized. But day after day and year after theory has been put in practical operation, where all its steps could be and were accur- ately noted, and the incredible in- crease aud profit obtained left but one conclusion possible. The public can give perfect credence to the claims of fish culture, provided it be conducted as iutelligently and wisely as other de- partments of modern human labor. The culture of fish has been gradu. ally extended trom one species to an- other until we have a fairidea of what can be done in all cases. The great- o8t promise for purely artificial mani- pulation is with the salmon, the trout, the lake trout and the shad, but the close study of habits of other varieties which followed the attempts with them have so familiarizod tho fish-culturists with the necessities of their growth and merease that a subsidiary branch of fish-culture has grown up in which the nataral process is assisted, pro- tected and developed. CATFIS These have habits some- what like the black bass. They make nests and guard _over them and their young. They spawn in June, and are exceedingly prolific. The young grow rapidly and should be transported about the time the mother leaves them, which they still in schools. As food, there few better fish to eat than blue catlish, while the yellow ty, though not quite so dainty, is equally satisfying to the cravings of hungry nature. They dig out & room two fect across in the solid mud at the bottom or sides in the stream or pond, and de- posit their eg in that, and lay over them and fan them with their fins until they hatch, which takes cight or ten days. They leave a hole open s a sort of door to their hatching cham bers to give them egress and ingress. Buckun's Arnioca Salve. The best salve inthe world for euts, bruised, sores, ulcers, t rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chillblaing, corns and all kinds of skin eruptioms, This salve is guar anteed to give perfect satisfaction in every case or money refunded. Price, 25e per box. For sale by Ten & McManox, Omaha, Sheep Breeding. Says the American Merino: Never breed from weak and degenerated stock becawse his ancestors have been of noted families. If you buy a good sheep you will receive as a reward u fulfiliment of the saying that like produces like. Remember that the sheep wus created for wool and for mutton. Better lose the farcy points of breeding than surrendered the principles of oreation, Where sheep are kept for the double purpose of direct incoma in wool, multon, ete., and the manure they make, it is important that the ux(l.l food, or that outside of whet the pas- ture furnishes, should be chosen with care. It would he wise for the Amer- can farmer to become better cquainted with cotton-seed cake, lin and like concentrated By feeding, and feeding lib erally of such food, the sheep grow N]vmh The ulu\\vh of animals is a means to an end, and when the mosat money is made from the fluck, and the land enriched, the most rapidly the end is gained, —_— No Such Word as Fail I ha ised your SrrinG Bro dyspepsia, headache and consti ation, and find it has doj v great deal of good. shall r.c rmuulul it to 1wy friends ‘Hexky Bewrospr, ““May 24th, 96 Main St., Buffalo,” Price 50 cents, trial bottles 10 cents, jand lw som for 18 upon the distance bo- | BEE: THURSDAY. 4 RIS, Gentle Women | Who want glossy, luxuriant and wavy tresses of abundant, hvnnfim{ Hair_must uso l\'ON‘S KATHAIRON, This ant, cheap articlo always m ;e8 the Hair grow freely and fast, keeps it from falling out, arrests and cures gray- ness, removes dandruff and itching, makes the Hair strong, glvll:‘; it a curling tendenc; keeping it in nny desired position, ~Beau- tiful, healthy Halr is the sure rasult of using Kathuiron, Minulanis and use Hop Bitters. waste, o Hop B anffaring from any | ton 10y " U, Sul 1y (10 e A B S sick NS 1K af. 1y £ somo preventa, ey e of ttors $ Hop Blitera, Ry yondys Ritney You will be cured I you sl Hop Bittors 4 Ityouaresm ' ki BITERS) | NEVER {FAIL Ahy drog Kol 101 saveyour, 1ife. It has| & saved hun-| e co. oehester, 8 ¥ HAWKEYE PLAINING MILL 00., Des Moines, lowa, Manufacturers of SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, BRACKETS, MOULDINGS, &C. Great reduction in Bank Counters, Plans far nlshod, and work tur inall kinds of hard or soft'wood. Conntors finishod in il when de wired. Shelv all kinds furnished and put into huilding ready for paint on short notice Our workmen are th best mechanics that ean be procured, Savo money by giving us your con tracts. Stalrs, Newels and Balusters, Oue foroman in this department way f with ile' and has dono somo of tho fiost Stalr woek n the Northwest Orders by mail vromutlv attended ro Sioux City & Pasific THE SIOUX OITY ROUTE Runs a Solid Train Through trom Council Blufts tc St. Paul Without Change Time, Only I7 Hours. —1T 18— ACPC® MILES THE BHORTEST ROUTE PROM COUNCIL BLUFFS TO 8T. PAUL, MINNEAPOLIS DULUTH OR BISMARCK and all points fn Northorn lowf: Minnosota and Dakota. ~ Thi line is equipped with the Improved Wostinghouse Autonmatic Air-brake and Mille Platform Coupler and Buffer: and for SPEED, SAFETY AND OOMFORT s unmrpuocd, Pullman ealscs dlosping Car run through WITHOUT CH hotween was City and 6. Paul, vin Council Blaffa and Sioux City Traiu lcave Union Pacific Transfer at Coun- eil Bluffs, at 7: ul) on arrival of Kansas City, St. Josoph il Bluffs_train from the South. _ Arriving at Sioux City 11:35 1 and at the New Union Dopot st 3. Paul at 12 noon, TEN HOURS IN ADVANCE OF ANY OTHER ROUTE £72r Remember in taking the Sioux City Route youget s Through Train. Tho Shortest Line, the Quickest Time and ‘omfortable Ride In the Through Cars hotwy COU 'S AND ST. PAUL, Koty ra wl v the “Bloux owl "J.R. BUCHANAN L Gon'] Pasy, Agont, Ass't Gon'l P Counci Blufls, lowa 1880. SHORT LINE. KANSAS CITY, St. Joe & Council Bluffs RATLILO.AXD T Tie ONLY Direct Line to ST. LOUIS AND THE EAST From Omahaand the West, No chauge of carw botween Omahn and by, sud but oo botwoon OMATIA wnd m W_YORK P UL A » Daily PawengerTrams " 1880, chlx‘tvu- HA RS This entire line 1 Palace Sleoping Cars, Pa safety Platform and’ C Westinghouso Alr-brake £4r 500 that your ticket roads VIA nANSAS CITY, 8T, JOSEPE & COUNCIL BLUFFS Rail- via Bt. Joseph and 6t. Lo Tickebs for salo at all coupon stations tn the W J. F BARNARD, Gon, 8pt., B, Jose d Tick ot Axt., Bt. Jos A B Bakwaun Gonera) Ageut, OMAHA.'NE \|nlh~r of Am-lmuu.u of M. Parr for Permit to dell Liquor as & Druggist. NoTie « that M. Parr did, |||mu the 2 y of January, A, D, 1882 file his application to the Mayor aud City Co of Omuha, for frinit to vl Malt, Spirituons wnd Vi Aquors, as n Druggist, for wedicinal, me- chanicdl and chemical purposes only, at corner Tenth and Howard street, Third ward, Omaha, Neb., from the 16th day of Jannary, 1832, to the 10th day of April, 1882, if there be no objection, remonstrance or protest f within two weeks from January 1n, 1852, the raid permit will be grante M. Pans, Applicant Thr DarLy Bree newspaper will jublis the above notice once each week for tw | weeks, at the expense of the applicant. | The City of Omah to b th m. s Ik VICTOR'S RESTAURANT 1016 Faruham Street, MEAXLS AT AX.X. HOURES. Ogsters, Chops and Ganio Cooked to Order, And Berved Under Personal Bupervision of Proprietor, VICIOR DUCROSS, JA ARY 12, 1882, o e Tl ' T No Changmg Oars PRTWRRN OMAHA & GHICAGO, | 10 with Th~mxh KS for ING CAR LU NEW YGRK, BOSTON, PUILADELPHIA, BALTIMORK, WASHINGTON AND ALL EASTERN ITIES The 8hort Line via. Peoria Eor INDIANAPOLIS, CINCINNATI, LOUIS. VILLE, wnd all pointa i the SOUTE-EF.AST. TH BT LNE For ST. LOUIS, Whoro direct connoctions aro made i the Unlon Dopot with tho Through Sieoping Ca Lines tor ALL POINTS SOUTEX. NEW LIHE v« DES MOINES TUHE FAVORITE ROUTE FOR Rock Island. by this ltne LMAN (10 whowl) PALACK SLEEPING CARS run’ only on this line & Q. PALACE Horton's Rechning Clinirs, No extra o Tho uneqvaled (nducemonts off tacke rovolving clusive o of first-class passen o superlor cquipment coniblx t throuigh car areangoniont, ma o favorito royts to tno Fant, Bouth aid Souteast. Try it, and you will find” travollng a luxury tn- otead of a discomtort. Through tickets vio this celobratod ino for sale atall oflives 0 the Unitd Statod and ¢ fon aLaut rates of jons, Time Tables, ing will be IWELL, , Chicago, BR, ror Chicavo. ‘ G* a,t Rmk It Dot Woat for bowng the moat direct, quickoss, an eafost line ing the great Motropolis, CHI C w, Nowti-EAstrnN, § ourt , which terminatob hore, with KAKkAW Ciry, = LRAVENWORTII, ATOMIKON, Coukcit, Biuvrs and OMAIA, the ' COMMBROIAT CrxTakn from which radiate EVERY LINE OF ROAD that ponetrates tho Contluont from the Missour) River to the Pacific Slope. The CHICAGO ROCK ISLAND & PA- CIFIC RATLWAY 18 the only line from Chicago owning track into Kansas, or which, by its own road, reachos the Ints ahove nanied. No TRANSPERA BY CARRIAGK | 0 MissING cONNKoTIONH| No huddling in ill- ventilated or unclean cars, s m‘ul( passengor s carried in roomy, cloan and vontilated coaches upon Fast Expross Trains, DAY Cans of unrivaled magnificenco, PULLMAN PALACK SLKEPING CARS. and 01r own world-famous DINING CARS, upon which meals are served of un- surpasod excellonco, at the low rte of SwVENTY- Fixn Crnts macH, with ample time for healthful enjoymont. Mrough Cars betwoon Chicago, Peoris, Mil wankoo and Missourl Rivor Pointe; and closo con nections at all polnta of Iutersection with othor roads, Woticket (do not forgot thin) directly to gvory rlmuul importance in Kansas, Nobraskn, Black ml», Wyoming, Utah, Idaho, Nevada, Calitorn Oregon, Washinizton Torritory, Colorado, Axizona Asli horal arrangoments rogaraing hggago s any other lino, and rates of faro alwes asl ow as compotitors, who furnish out e titheo the cow- fort. Dogn and tackle of wportamon freo, s wnd foldurs at all princiys ond Canain, ¥ 5T, JOUN, Vieo Pres't & Gin, Guin, Tk wad Pass'r Ag Managor, Chicaia Cnleaco. THOROUGHBRED JERSEY COWS & HEIFERS For Sale By GRAHAM P. BROWNE, PILES! PILES! PILES! A Sure Cure Found at Lastl Ulcerated Piles has boen discoversd by Dr. Wil- Liwm, (a1 Indian remody,) callod Dr. William's Indian Ofntment. A winglo box has cured the worst chronic casos of 2601 80 ycars standing. No one neod suffer fivo minutes atter applying this erful woothing - me Lotions, instru- nts wivd clectuaries do i good, imm's Olntment the tumors, allays the ntonse iching, (particulsaly at night after wotting warm in bed,) acts 8 & poultice, gives in- Wtant and painless rolict, and isproparcd only for Vi, Iwchiui of the private parts, aad or oth ing olwo. fiad what the Ton 3. M. Cefnberry of Clove and ways about Dr. Wiiliam's Indian “Pile Oint. ment: 1 hisve used scores of Piles cures, and it affordy o p casure o say thathave never found wnything which gave such iumediat and p reliot as Dr. Indlan Ointme rwale by wll druggists or mailed ou receipt of | price, 1.00, HENRY & CO., Prop'rs., CLBVELAND, Q1110 For salo by C, ¥ Goodiwan, Oct10deodwaowly Nebraska Land Agen DAVIS & SNYDER, 1606 Farnham Bt., . Omlhu, Nebra RO, 000 A ? Care.ully seloftod land 1o o i wle. Great Hargaios lo lwproved farms, and Ouiaha clty property 0. F. DAVISY WEBSTER SNYDER TAFCE TR | uu\ N" W AND cvunn.'r MAP @ any reasonable question that t & MORTH.-WESTERN RY Jor helwenr the Wosi, Nart! and Nophwesd \ Ouy,, . ,.“flfl'—jq(\‘ 3 s S ‘_.Vfi‘: ) Anasa “I ¥ h o o I"zmnce N ~A~" s “- i .Erv\/ "\ umc‘p Vi Quinnesso 8 8 < & JourFalls’ Q \fl' 4 s e 'l,.s,‘-'-c 4 \. ; N\: 0 Q, A A e e > 1une "n,, ”-y,,"”/ %, N v HCAGB E NORJ‘ - THE CHICACO & NORTH WESTERN RAILWAY "Overallofits prinelnal lnes, rang each way daily from two to fout of moro ¥ Trains. - 1S the ouly road west of Chieago hat uses e . The Imperial Palace Dining Cars. OB o St rans Pulluian Slening Cara North or Northwest of Chiloago. Tt bas 3000 MILES OF A0, 1t forms the following Trunk Lines : e i b fornia Line Tiinesota & Central Dakota Line L& Yankton Li al and Minneapolis Line. Focport & Dubiatie 1 v & Lake Superior iine 113 0ver This Toad 0ro SOId By M1 Coupon LIkt Agents (n tho Uuited States ekel o ts via this road, be sure they read over it,and take nono othae. ker, Chicago, . W. I. STENNETT, Gen'l Pass. Apent, Clivage . Tlekot Agont,C.9& N, W. Rallway, 14th and Pasnhamstroots. Asistant Ticket Agond C. & N W Railway, Lishjand Farabam stroots t'Agent ¢ W. Rallwi . R. Dopot. FAMES B OTARK Ganoral Avont. AAXMEYER:BRO. (JEWELERSS:MUS ICDEALERS.) " OMAHA, NEB. The Oldest Wholesale and THLE LEADING retail JEWELRYHOUSE [MIUSIGC HOUSE in'Cmaha. Visitorscanhere IN THE WEST! General Agents for the find all novelties in SIL-| [Fitasasd Be%st Piatosand VER WAR® CLOCKS, Organs manufactured. Rich and Stylish Jewelry, gpl;ices la\.i‘e a:f Lotw as : 5 s 4o any Eastern Manufacturer vhe Late.sh, Most A}'tlstl.c, sl and Choicest Selections in| Pianos and O rfians sold PRECIOUS STONES and | for cash or ins ents at Bottom Prices. all descriptions of FINE A SPLENDID stock of ‘WATCHES at as Low Pri- \Stemwa Pianos, Knabe ces as 18 compatible with Pianos, Vose & Son’s Pi- €all |anos, and other makes. Also Clough & Warren, Sterling, Imperial, Smith American Organs, &. Do unot fail to see us before pur- chasing. MAX MEYER & BRO,, MANUFACTURERS OF SHOW CASES! Large Stock Always on Hand. EDHOLM & FRICKSON (iive the Bargains —IN ALL KINDS OF-— JEWELRY WATCHES,CLOCKS, SILVERWARE,SOLID AND PLATED WARE AND DIAMONDS. At Prices that Suit Any Customer Who Really;Wlshus a First- Class Article, STAR TINTED SPECTACLES Are also Sold Exclusively by us. ALSO WESTERN AGENTS SMITH AMERICAN ORGAN GO.'S ORGANS. EDHOLM & ERICKSON, THE JEWELERS, Opposite the Post Office. W. J. WELSHANS & GO0, ~WHOLELALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN= Flour, Feed, Grain, Baled Hay. PROPRIETORS OMAHA CITY MILLS, her to ask for MARVIN HUGHITT, Gez HARKRY P. DUE D. k. KIMBALL =z honorable dealers. and see our Elegant New Store, Tower Building, corner 11th and Farnham Streets | dieod ¢ ~CHOICE BIANDS OF— Winter and Spring Wheat Flour, Rye Flour, Graham, Bran, Corn, Oats and Chopped Feed of all Kinds. TEHLEPHONES CONNECOTION. Cor. Eighth and Farnham Streets, Qm%ha. FEARON & COLE, Commissson Merchants, 1121 Farnham St., Omaha, Neb, Cor wt @ tention, References: Bm Bauk, Omaba; Pletd 1 ¢ Land Com's U.P.B. .. ignmenta wads us wil ecolve o [ altimore; Peck & Bansher, C1icago; M Werk & €0 Cincluoat s Ca,

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