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R, 1 THE DAILY PF ?l:;\e Omabha Bee. Pablished every momning, groept Sunday @ e oniy Monday morning d T HMS BY MATL —~ Three Months. $2,00 One \'sar..... $10.00 One . 1.00 Bix Months, 0.00 THE WEEKLY BEE, publisked ev. ry Wednesday, BERMS POST PAID:== One Year,, ...82.00 Three Months., 50 Bix Mcatha,... 100 | One 20 AxrricaNy News Cow or Newsdealers in the NT, Sole Agents nited States, (")IH(F“T‘(Y'\IIH.\( E—All Communi fons relating to News and Editorial mat- era should Ye addressed to the Enrtor or TrE Bre, BUSINESS L Ketters and R TTERS—AIl Business | ttances should be_ad. dressed to THE OMAHA Pratisaive Cox RANY, OMAHA, Drafts, Checks and i'ost. “fice Ordors to b made payable to the eder of the Company! The BEE PUBLISHING (0., Props. Ei ROSEWATER. Editor Meeting of the Republican State Cen- tral Committee. The membera of the Republican State Central Committee of Nebraska —are herehy called to meet at the Commercial Hotel, in the city of Lincoln, on Thurs- day, the 6th day of July, 1882, it 2 o'clock p. m,, for the purpose of (‘l-xllplt-le( the organization of the commitice, and tran- wacting such other business as may prop- erly come before the same. The following are lhcl\un-lm‘:vrn of the committee: lst Distric John J.. Carson; 3d, Ja . Dew; 4th, A. P, Grout; I-Lh vu"mm; 6ih, oth, T D.E Beadle; M,h W. I B. Colson; 10th, 3 A H. Yelber; 1‘.’!.1:, W. D, M. W Lmu)m.lflh, Matthew Abel Hh ) 'hilid th, o1 0o 'luh, l W. T Scot Wi Taluale 214ty 224, J. B. I\{cl)nwv], B, 5. W, S witze B4th, 7, D, Hayes; ith, A, W. 5 gee; a0 R Wil 27th, Tighert Ken: f 26th, A, 1 \Vllgl.nn‘ ‘;m, ol (v Tedlund; S0th, G Jinhop; 3ab, IE. J. Wyman, SRMES W AW, Chairman, Crerr, Neb,, June 12, 1882, Wi have heard the last of Guitean. Ir Guiteau has gone lo Heaven moet of us will want to go to some other place. Now that the bonds have carried we are ready to discuss paving ma- terials, Tur democracy haven't changed since Petroleum V. Nasby’s time. They are still for freo whisky and an appropriation, Wiiar means this sudden summons? Ex-contingent Congressman Pat O. Hawes has been summonsed by tele- graph to appear as a witness before the house of representatives by Ser- geant-at-arms Hooker, Oxne to\loh of nntum makes ail cranks akin. This accounts for the sympathy of the editor of the Herald with the assassin of President Garfield who has been removed by Warden Crocker. ComyaNDER VANDERVOORT Will pre- sently open the campaign in Douglas county us the dark horse in tho first congressional district, a very dark horse, a horse upon which we can mount our horse marines, A rooLnArny attempt te outdo Blondin will be made on the Fourth of July in Colorado. Harry Deveer, a tight rope walker, will attempt the desperate feat of crossing tho royal gorge of the grand canyon, one thous- and feet from the bottom and nine hundred feet across, on a tight rope. If the fellow does not bxunk his neck he ought to, Dox Cameron's new candidate for congressman-at-large, named Brosius, is meeting with a very cool reception at the hands of Pennsylvania republi- cans, When the nomination was announced in Pittsburgh an inter- viewer callen on Tom Marshall, when that eccentric genius remarked: “Cameron is civing me too many conundrums, The other day 1 had to guess who Cooper was, 1 figured that out. 1 am going to give this one up,” Wanren-—information of the where- abouts of Brigadier General Si Alexan- deor, whose name is appended to a document with the great seal of the state of Nebraska, Dispatches have been repeatedly eent from Washing- ton to Lincoln requesting the said Alexander to furmsh certain much needed information, but no answer has been received. Fears aro enter- tained that the valiant warrior has been waylaid somewhere or some foul play is suspected. Parties who can give the desired information will please address Congressman Robin. son, of the judiciary committee, house of representatives, Washington, D. C. Tue board of education of Cleve. land has been wrestling with the pro- position to cut down expenses by lop- ping off certain studies in the high school including the study of Greek, drawing, book-keeping and yocal wmusic, A final decision was reached last Tuesday retaining all these studies, but making some of them optional, The Cleveland high echool ranks as one of the best, if not the best high school in the United Stater, and its excellence in every depart. ment is the chief caure why the sous and daughters of the wealthiest peo- ple in that city have shared its educa- tional advautages side by smde with the boys and girls of the mechan @ud men of small means, |sin of its THE ASSASSIN STRANBLIJD. Aftor a yoar's delay, in which American courts and American meth- ods of dealing with criminals have been made the laughing stock of the world, Charles J. Guiteau, the cow- ardly assassin of A. Garfield, has paid the extreme penalty of his atrocious crima on the eeaflold. The country will breathe more easily now that the wretch has removed. No other treated the assas- chief ruler with tolerance, In England the Jame blasphemous been nation would have equal gallows wonid have been decked with months from crime. In France the would have done its work almost before the body of his vietim had grown cold, his carcass within {wo the commiseion of his guillotine It has been a disgraceful epectacle to which the oucraged people of the United States have heen treatod dur- ing the past twelve months, A dast ardly miscreant with his hands reck- ing with the blood of the chief magis. trate of the nation has been permitted to pose as a sanctified martyr while air brained men and cracked wo- men have clasped their hands in pious adulation and groaned in chorus before his prison cell. It will take a number of years before the memory of the trial before Judge Cox with the foul mouthed blasphemous wretch conducting his own case with all the skill of a prac- ticed lawyer, browbeating witnesses, sereaming out his impious denun tions and acting with consummate art the part of a madman as he danced over the grave of his noble victim, Giuiteau was not possessed of a singlo redeeming trait of character. His history was that of an undutiful son, an unfaithful husband, a dishonest shy- ster and a chronic dead beat and fraud. His overpowering egotism joined to malice and failing to secure some of the spoils of ofce was responsible for his crime and his cowardice showed itself no less in his complote collapse on the scaffold than in his method of shooting James A, Garfield in the back. The last scenes very cftectual- ly dispore of the plea of inszanity ad- vanced on Guiteau’s behalf. In the sassin who claimed to be acting under Divine inspiration cringed lke the dastard that he was. Instead of walk- ng proudly into glory he swooned helplessly away on the prison floor and his bravado disappeared in the shad- ows of the ecaffold and noose. The law has finally been vindicated, not by the execution of a madman but by the hanging of a perfectly re- sponsible crank, who committed his crime with open eyes and trusted to his natural sbilitios as an actor and the leniency of the American pecplo to escapo the consequence of his deed. The general verdict will be one of un- qualifiod approval. Those who still beliove that Guiteau was not respon- sible when he shot the president, are in a vast minority, The ablest psy- chologist's havo aflirmed the verdict of the jury, and the most practical stu- dents of criminal annals have joined them in affirming the sanity of the criminal. The execution is no uncon- sidered revenge of a maddened peo- ple, it is the calm, deliberate opora- tion of a law which declares that whosoever sheds man's blood, by man shall his blood be shed. OTHER LANDS THAN OURS. The busy sound of hammers in the English navy yards, ronewed activity in the war department and the prep- aration of transports for the speedy dispatch of troops indicate that England is determined to meintain British supremacy over Egypt at all costs and at all hazards, Lord Sal- isbury declares that Arabi Boy must 2o, but the defiant rebel is increasing his force of insurgents, and suaps his fingers at the allied floet which is riding in the harbor of Al exandrin, The position of the porte wakes it quite ocertain that the Turkish troope will not bo used to overthrow Arabi. The sultan's promiso to use every means in his power to strengthen the pres- ent khedive's authority counts for very little so long as he is constantly sendirg to Arabi messages of similar purport and expressing entire satis- faction with his courso. The refusal of the porte to consent to the hold- ing of the conference is another strony indication that in ts matter Turkey's are not Europe's ways. The Ottoman empire hasa polioy of its own in Kgypt, and knowing that the inter- ests of the six powers are by no means identical, and that thero can be no violent interence with its plans without their concurrence, it thinks the present a very good time to make its suzerainty of Eyypt something more than nominal, 1f Arabi cannot be suppressed through Turkish interference, Eng. land and France must use their own troops or give up their control over Gzypt. But it will be next to impos- sible to obtaiu the assent of the other powers to such a move, The Euro- pean concert is not easily brought into tune, and thero is fur loss probability of an agceement upon joint or repre- sentative action, as by France and Englaud as delegates of the concert, thau in the Daloigno demonstration. If Turkey be the chosen instrument of the conzert, Germany and Austria tuce of cortain doath the cowardly ns- |, will join with ostentatious heartiness | ]I in the recommendations of lhe con- forence, well knowing that Turkey will do as it pleases about obeying. Beyond this it is not probable that either of those powers or Italy would go, unless under provocation of far- | ther massacres, a contingency not to 1@ reckoned upon now that nearly the European residents of Ezypt ha lefu the country, For a fit of resentment against the reactionary couree of her France has decided to put an end to and the chamber of deputies in spite of some opposition from the ministry have voted to make the judiciary elective instead of appointive as hero This is, in spite of all that can be said against the judges now on the bench, a step in the wrong dirce- tion, It is true that in France partisan feeling reaches a height unknown in England or America;—or at any rate, known only in America in the yreat crisis of our history. It is true, also, that party feeling has led French judges to adopt a course of conduct which would not be tolerated, even on the Irish bench. Yet, after all, a judi- ciary idependent of popular currents or favor and of government resent- ments, is the one upon which alone the people can depend for absolute equity, Our Amcrican experience with an elective judiciary has not been such as to encourage any other country to make the same experiment, This new departure is the more re- ‘markable, as it is in sharp con- tradiction to those traditions of ad- ministrative centralization which have dominated France ever since the days of Louis XLV. Evidently, there is in France a reaction against centraliza- tion which is stronly represented in the membership of the chamber of depulies, It contributed to the speedy and unexpected overthrow of the Gambettist ministry, that M. Gambetta was known to desire the maintenance of those peculiaritics, which, since 1660, have characterized every French government, monarch- ial, imperial and republican. But the chamber would have done far better to give the election of the prefects to the paople, and leave the nomination of the judges to national authority. tofore. There are ominous signs of a break- ing out of the land agitation in Scot- land. The condition of the Scotch tenant ia truly pitiful. The Scotch landlords are even more powe.ful, feudally, than the Knglish. Such inen as the Dukes of Buecleugh, Ar- gyle and Sutherland own not merely largo estates but counties, The curse of game preserving is also ten times worgo in Scotland than in England or Treland, and large tracts of land are being yearly depopulated to make grovse moors and deer forests. Al- most all of Northern Scotland is now one vast game preserve, in the hands of a comparatively small numbor of landlords, and the demand for Scotch moors for hunting purposes by tho successful merchants and groat capitalists of England has been s0 great tha has been an enormous increase in the price of rents for them. Scotland is essentially a poor country, except in the valley ot the Clyde, where com- merce and the abundancs of materials for manufacturing have built up vast and prosperous cities. But the Scotch peasantry, thoughas a rule thrifty and economical, are poorer, ewing to the lack of natural advantages, than the French or Germans, and their condi- fion is growing rapidly worse on ac- count of the vast increase in the amount of land set aside for the preservation of game and the con- sequent increase in ronts. With a succession of bad seasons, and with Amwmerican competition, the vast bulk of Scotch farmers have been practically ruined. It looks as though this odious system of game preserves must be abolished, or that the Scotch peasant farmer must disappear from the north- orn and western highlands, Already the distress in the Isles of Skye is so great that armed resistance has been wade to the servico of notices of ¢joct. ment and writs of arrest, and it is greatly to be teared that, unless some reform be promptly instituted, the British government will have a very sorious and diflicult problem on its hands in Scotland, thero The remarkable growth of the Aus- tralasian colozies since the discovery of gold, which occurred in 1851, is attestcd by recent wtatistics, The population incressed in the period 1801-81 from 214,000 to 2,000,000. The wool clip has more than doubled in the past ten years. There were over 82,000,000 head of life stock on the pastures, and 7,000,000 acres of land under cultivation last year. Since 1851 gold to the amount of $1,400,000,000 has been produced in the colonies, In 1881 8,500,000 tons of shipping entered at and cleared from the ports. The London Standard (tory), tak- ing the auniversary of the battla of Waterloo as the text for a comparison between the reputation of Groat Britain in 1815 and 1852, remarks that ““ in June, 1815, all Europe was looking to Kogland for assistance, and in June, 1882, England is looking for assistance to all Europe. In June, 1815, not the greatest power in the world dared to offer the slightest in sult to the British flag; in June, 1882, judges | their tenure for life for good hehavior, | one sees British murdered within gunshot of a British fleet, and | their bodies buried at sea for pruden- tial reasons, without anything bemng | done to show that the English peo- ple are sensible of having suffored Would the England of seamen |any injury. 1815 have borne for a moment what [the Kngland of 1882 seems to be | expected to hear with resignation? For the five years ended last year there wero found in the river Thanes, £ 1 836 human bodies, of London, which 68 were in the city district, and | 1,815 within the Metropolit | specting those found in the city, the result of the coroner's inquoats were 25 verdicts accidental death, 2 | of willful and 9 of suicide; while in 32 cas pressed as to the caus the cases in the Metropc 1,084 accidental death were returned, 8 of willful mur- der, and 112 of suicide, whiie in 599 ceses an open verdict was given, the total being accounted for by no in- quests being thought requisite in cer- tain cases, The few cases of murder and suicides in these totals is remark- able, individual years the totals were these: For the city dis- tricts—in 1877, 16 bodies; in 1878, 10; in 1879, 18; in 1880, 14; in 1881, 10; and for the metropolitan —in 1877, 239; in 1878, 876; in 1879, 217; in 1880, 209; in 1881, 277. The unusu- ally large total for 1878 in the metro- politan district i3 explained by the fact thav the number drowned through the wreck of the Princess Alice is in- cluded. muraer, no opinion was ex- of death, In itan district verdicts of For the Tuk special election just held has demonstrated once more the rotten- ness of the present registration sys- tem. Gov. Nance has persistently iz- nored the spirit and letter of the law that invests him with the puwer to appoint the registrars, He has kept ino flice registrars who have time and again failed to discharge their duties, and who deliberately disfranchised citizons in their respective wards. For instance the registrar of the Sece- ond ward, Isaac S, Hascall never has OMAHA SATURDAY, JULY 1, | continued on to St. L made an honest registration cf the vo- ters of his ward and at evory election has put scores of citizens to the trouble of swearing in their votes or 1eft them without voice in the elec- tion, The registrar of the Fourth ward, Colonel Wilbur, has been out of the state for months, and no substi- tute has been appointed. Governor Nance never consults the city author- ities or leading citizens of Omaha as to the character and qualification of the men he appoints, but he simply goes to John M. Thurston, whose word is law, and who in such matters 18 defacto governor. The wholeregistra tion system as now conducted is o farce and a fraud, The voters do not get timely notice to register. T 'he lists of names are published at the eleventh hour, when nobody can make a correction Hundreds of names of non-residents and dead men are car- ried on the lists, and no comparison |/ is made between the lists of diffsrent wards. Many voters are frequently registered in different wards, which alfords an incentive to repesting and fraud, We ot, of course, expect to change the system until the next legislature meets, but our peo- ple ought to a solemn pro- test against the fast and loose manner in which registratioa is car- ried on here, and the reckless disre- gard of the public interest in the ap- pointment of registrars, Some deci- sive action will have to be taken by our citizens ere long to prevent whole- sale frauds in the important elections enter that take place in November, AccorpING to latest advices the colored people of Texas are about to take a now departure in politics, They propose to act independently and support men who favor them, re- gardless of party. At an emancipa- tion celebration at Austin on the 19th there were 5,000 present, and they were addressed by numerous speakers, both white and black, The most striking spoech was made by Rev, Allan Grant, an iofluential colored preacher, whose vociferously applauded, especially his remark that “‘our eyes are now sul- ficiently opened by experience to the wisdom of fixing wupon principles adapted to the wants of the colored people aud not upon men, If there is an honest man who represents the principles and platform upon which we stand it is our duty to support him, sentiments were Tue Illinows republican platform, which was adopted at Springfield Thursday, declares that the repub- lican party now asin the pastis i favor of such just laws as shall pro- tect the agriculturist, the manu- facturer and the workingman from the oppression of monopolists, That may mean a great deal and it may mean nothing, Such general expres- jons are usually a mere device to evade a specific declaration on a par- ticular issue. Tue Chicago T'imes expresses the opinion. that the refusal of the roads which which formed the Towa pool to put a fast train between Chicago and Omaha will probably result in the es- tablishment of a fast mail service be- tween Jmaha and . Louis, The comparics have explained that the govervment does not offer enough, 1882 but the probable reason for their re- fusal is that they are pooled in order to prevent compatition, and that for any one of the roads to run a fast mail train would give it advantages over the other that would break the pool and set them all competing for now a fast mail There is New York as far and it 18 not at bugines: from west as Toledo, mail will be and Omaha, all unlikely that this making the transcontinental fast mail route to the south of us, Itis true that this city is promised a fast mail from New York, but the appropria- tion for the postoffice department was fixed at figures intended to pay for an expedition of mails across the country, or at least as far as Omaha, and the fact that Chicago can not get the fast pool leaves mail on account of the I the field protty clear fcr St. Louis It was well known whilo the question of a fast mail by way of this city was pending, that St. Louis was making cfforts to capture it, and now that city has no competition, Oxmana will now prepare to s her highways respectable by solid and substantial pavements. PEPPHRMINT DROPS. The last Norfolk boat brought over eight thousand watermelons, We shal expect t# hear of the doubling of our population in consequenc -, —Boston Transcript, The new depot at Hannibal cost $150,. 000, and was opened with a ball and ban- quet. If you get round to Hannibal with- in two years you may be able t» get some relics of that banqu-t at the r rant counter,— Boston Post. “Yes, judge,” said the prisoner, “I ad- mit that the back of my trousers was tan- gled in the dog’s teeth, and that T drigged the animal away, but if you call that steal- ing a dog, noman on ear:h is safe from committing crime,”—[Boston Post. A San_ Franciseo car conductor, sus- pected of cheating the ¢ r was ar- rested and was found to hav top har- monican with a small bell attached, ud 1inst snocking is supposed to bave (i tiis 1 of thut in the bell-punch when down, The Do Aya there ha cen more lynel in the United States this s ring 1 any for the past four- teen years, have come to_the con- o 4\!.1\2'.1"4 chezper to lynch obnox- ions 15 than to send them to the legis e The lluu,. ians have a national dance— ““the csardus”~ inteded to represent ‘‘the unquiet course of true love.” We have never teen the dance, but presume the greater part of it consists of an elderly gentleman kicking a young man off the front; stoop —Buriington Hawkeye. A French scientist has made some ex- periments recently which go to show that all classes of insects, ia propo tiom to their size, are from fifteen to fo times as strong as a horse. If you don’c believe in the strength of insect life, watch the vel- vety little bumble bee, with the tropical polonaise, and see him lift a tw> hundred- pound picnic man out of the grass, An act recently passed_in Holland for- Dbids the retailing of spirituous liquors of any kind to any persen holding a public office or appointment. One can fancy what a hardship such & law would be in this country, bat then the Hollanders always were a very sluggish and behind- the-times kind. of people, and have very slow ideas of the righté of the office. holders. Good Bables. Tisn jolly day from east to we: For children thive, and mot, The dar ing g Aud wi h the t s fact, t Am the While swe't Castors Gives them health and makes them geod D. WELTY, (Succesior to D.T. Monnt.) Manutacturer and Dealer in | | Saddles, Harness, Whips, | FANCY HORSE CLOTHIN Robes, Dusters and Turf Goods DESC of ALL for Jas, R. Mill & Co'a | CE L ERIBEL AT ED CONGORD HARNESS "*T'he Best in The World,” 1A13 EATIN.A N S, :.)fv‘hl;-’ ~ollcited, OMAMHA,NEB SEGER & TONER|.: PR &OCTICAX. HARNESS MAKERS ! Have 1emoved from thero old stand, to No. 116 North Sixteenth Street NEXT TO CARRIAGE FACTORY, Have always on hand a good assortment HARNESS AND SADDLES. OMAKA NATATORIUM | [AND SWIMMING SCHOOL, Corner 9th and Farnam bu-eal-. Running water—experienced teacher—coolest n ho city—size of basin, 69335 depth of ¥ Neasu ticket : single bath:, 25 cents, Free towe s, bathing tranks and nlr.mn'muua DIECKMAN & WITTE 115 dm“ "E_VOLEM! IER, PIONEER BUTCHER, Has removed ) his elegant now quarters on OOV X N G =a., In Krug's New Block. CHOIOE BEEF, MOTION, PORK. hl"xduh Poultry and CHOICE CICARS., | Imperted and Domestic Finest Selectivn in Town | Pricos to Suit Everybody. From Half a Dollar Down to He. Schroter & Becht's. Vegetables always on | nd 6 per cent per month. | th | near she cud of the red street car track, 1,050 =nr Houses, Farms, Liands. I BEMIS FIFTEENTH AND DOUGLAS 518, Bewatiful building sites on Sherman avenue 16th street) south of Poopleton's and J. J. rown's r sidon cs—the tract belongi g to Sona- tor Padd for s0 many years—being 853 feeo frontage on the avenue, by frm 500 to 650 feet in dopth, running castward to the Umaha & St, Paul R, R. Wil sell in strips of 50 foet or moro frontage on sue with full depth to the railroad, will thove onabou: any terms that purchaser ‘o partics who will agree to build co-ting $1200 and upwards will sell with- payment dowa for one year, and 6 to 10 Al pryments the reafter &t 7 per co ties whe do ot intend ' mapro will sl for < ne sixth down and ta therealt.r at 7 per cent Choi 6 4 acre block in end of Farnam stre ill give any length of ime requirsdat 7 per coat nte Also & splendi 1 10 acre block in Smith's addi- tion on_same iiberal terms as the forog ing. No. 805, Half lot on izard ncar 20th sireot, ith's addition at west #700 No 804, Lot on 18th street near Paul, No 302, Lot 50x280 fect on 16th sirect Nicholns. No 200, One quarter acre on Burt strect, near Dutton 3500. No 207, Two lots on Blondo near Irene strect, $200 and $300 each No 208, Two lots on Georzia near Michigan strect, $1200. No 05, Twelve choice rectdence lots on Hamil- ton etrect in Shinn’s addition, fincand sightly 260 t0 £500 each, No 204. Beautiful half lot on St. Mary’s av- enue, 30x180 feet, rear Bishop Clarkson's and “0th strect, $1500 near lots on_Park avenue, 50x 150 each, on strcet raiiway, $300 each, No 291,8ix lots in Millard & Ca'dweli’s addition on Sherman Avenue uear Poppleton’s, §3.0to $100 cach. No 239, Choice lotson Park avenue and street car line on road to Park, &4 0 to 81000 cach, No 285, aur and rene ttreets, near Kaunders um 875 to $150 Lot on 19th near Paul strest, €700, No ot 55x140 foctoar St. Mary s aveaue, and 20th ktrect, $1600. No 219, Lot on Decatur near Trene strect, §525. , P m‘lo(»on Caluwell, near Saunders 00 c Loton Clinton strees, near shot ower, 12 No 2 Blondo, Kagan's addit , Four lots on McLellan strec §225 each, Three lots near race coursc: t, near ake Beautiful corner acre lot on California sirect, opposite and adjuining Sacred lcart Cou- vent grounds, $1070. No 2o, Lot 300 lorsin 5, just soutk ‘epots, rangi sy teruns, Beautiful Kesidence Loty ¥ toshops 100 to om 15 ery full particu ars. 1wo lots on Contor street, near Cuw- ing strect, §500 for both or 600 e 0251}, Lot on Seward, near King street, No 245, Halt lot on Dodge, near 11th stroct, 2,100 “No 217, Four beautiful residenco lots near Crel l;,mun Coliege (or will soparated £8,000. No 240, Two Jots” o Center, ncat Cuming 5 1o 45, Beautitul corner acre tton strect, near new iot on Cuami uvent of Sac d 1,600 i4, Lot on Farnam, near 18:h etreet, 3,750, No 243, Lot 66 by 133 fo't on Co'lege strcet, near S Hary's avomio, 6100, “Nu"fl Lot on Farnam, near 20th strect, No 940, Lot 66 by 09 fect on near \lmmn street, §650. No 240, Cornor lot on Burt, near 224 strcet, South avenue, et o1 Harney, near 2ith, N street (will cut it up) 2,40 4, Lot on Douglas strect, near 24th, Lot on Pier strcet, near Seward, 7, Two lots on Decatur, near Irene strect, 4l foct on Shervan ave. 2 400, will di vilo Dodge, near L | | [ 216, Lot on Hawillon near Ki No 20b, Lot on 1Sth etrect, b $000. No 207, Two lots o 10th, near Pacific 1,600, No 204, Beautitul resi'ence lot ons Divislon street, near Cuwing, 8 00. M 190} Lots on 15th strect, near 500, r Nicholas strost, Picrce, Lots on Sauuders siret, uear Sew- ) Two lots on 220, near Grace street, No 192}, Two lots ou 17th street, uear white lead orks, §1,050. No188k; One full block ten lote, near the barracks, $400, No 161, Lote on Parker, strest, uear 1reno hu 183' Two lots on Cass, near 21st street (xilt edge), $6,00, No 150, Lot on Pier near Seward, $650, No 170, Lo: on Pacific street, near l!lh make offer, No 160, 8ix lots on Farnam, near 24th street, 0o No 168, F course, nudlhla»lou In Giee's a Baundere and Cassius strects, 32,/ Ot on 1sth strect, uuu whije lead 23x132 feet (2 lots) on 15th strect, pplcton's, §1,600. No11%, Thirty half acro lots in Millard & Cal- dwell s additions on Sherman avenuo, Spriug and Saratoga strcots, near the end of green strect car track, $850 to §1,800 cach . No s, Lot on' Chicago, ' near No 88, Lot ou Caldwell street, near Saunders, 224 sticet, 0 86, Coruer lot on Charles, inear Saund. dors stroct, #100. No 75, 60x82 foet on Pacifle, near Stn stroet 3,000 No®0, ighteen lots on 2st, 22, 234 and daucders sticets, near Grace and Baunilers street bridge, 3000 cacki No 6, Ono-fourth block (180x135 fect), ne Jorlveut of Foor Claire, on Hawilton st BEMIS’ TR MLGALLUM WACGON BOX RACKS. WEIGHT UNLY 100 LBS R Can Be Hand'ed By a Boy. The box necd never ba talen off the all the «hielled Grain and Grs Tt costaless than ¢ standard w wagon and Seed Is Save old etyle eacke. Every 1 with our xack comple. BUY HOKE ITHI]UT IT. Ot buy the attacocnta aed apply them to your old wagon bos. , For salo in Nebrasis by J. €. CukWg, I MANNING & o the wost. Ark ciptive creular or sead direct Hanuf’g Co., Street, Chica them for d to us, J. Holallum 75,000 TIMKEN-SPRING VEHICLES NOW 1IN US They surpus il othor vehicies for 38y riding. style and d ty, Sl’R[NG GEARY & BODIES For gale by Henry Timken, Patentec and Builder of Fine Carriag s lms IlDDRnnd 1010 ¢, Charlos t., t. Lous. Co ogue IEXED Nebraska National BANK. OF OMAEA NEBRASKA (No, 2665.) TREASURY DEPARTMENT. ) Office 0f COMPTROLLER OF Tilk CURRRKCY, WAs#INGTON, April 25th 1852, WHERRAS, Dy satis v evidenco prosented i made to sppear Al BANK OF i 1a, in the county of Douglas, and State ‘of Ncbraska, has_complied with all'the provisions of the Rovised Statucs of the United 8 before an aas: 1, John omptroller do hurey certity, that “The " in_ the city Kt unty of Douglas, and state > commence the provided in Section Fifty 1’ Sixty-Nine of the Rovised tod States, estimony whereof witness my band wnd seal of oflico this 25th JAY KNOX, of the Currncy pared to receive bnsiness y pad up pital of 3260,000.00, with officers and direciors ollow 5. R, JOFINS: som & ( A. E, TOUZAL R. W. V. MORSE Statutes of © In Prrsioest, of Stocls, . Wholesalo Grocers, ., ViCs-PResiDRNT, of K., Hoston. of W John- &Q. Morac and Co,, Whole nd Shoos, . H. & J. 8. Coilins, and 8 ddlery. ollor and Attorucy , of Byrou Reed & Co., Real shier, lato Ct ashier of the A XX YA MOKITORCILSTOVE Improved tor 1882, THE BEST AND ONLY ABSOLUTELY SAFE OIL STOVE IN THE WORLD. Every housekeeper feels the wantof something that will cook the daily food andavoid the excessivehcat, dust, litter and ashes of a coal or wood stove, THE MONITOR OIL STOVE WILL DO IT, better, quicker and cheaper than nnynthurmnunu, It isthe ONLY OIL STOVE made with the OIL RESERVOIR ELEVATED at the back of the stove, away from the heat; by which arrangement ABSOLUTE SAFE!Y is secured; as no gas can be generated, fully twomy per cent more heat is ohmuud the wicks are pre- served twice as lullg, thus eaving the trouble of constaut trimming and the expense of new ones, EXAMINE THE MONITOR and you will buy no other, - Manufactured ouly by the Monitor 0il Stove Co. Cleveland 0. Send for deseriptive circular or call on M. Rogers & Son, agents for Ne braska CITY LOTS FOR led propesals wi'l by rec woiil Friday, n, r the pur | leeterty May 1 SALE, un- & of lot 1ONOPOLY LEAGUE Rean EsTare Acewsy 16th and Douglag Street, O AEXS - NE lea for the ant t of prine p N