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The Omaha Bee. Published every morning, except Sun- ¥ Monday morning daily. TERMS BY MAIL— ©One Yesr....$10.00 | Three Months, 3,00 Bix Months,. 5,00 | One Month.... 1.00 CHE WEEKLY BEE, published every We inesday. TERMS POST PAID— Year......82.00 | Three Months, &'M:::m 1.00 | One Month.... oAN News CoMmPaNY, Sole Agents Alewadealers in the United States.. ORRESPONDENCE—AIl Communi- utc!oa- relating to News and Editorial matters should 'w addressed to the EDITOR or Tuk Bex BUSINESS LETTERS—AIl Busines Letters and Remittances should be ad dreseed to THE Bk PUBLISHING COMPANY JMAHA, Drafts, Checks and Postoffico Jrders to be made payable to the order of the Company, The BEE PUBLISHING 00., Props. E. ROSEWATER Editor. 50 20 Born republicans and democrats are docglog the tariff issue. The oue slde is afrald and the other daren’t. — TrEASURERS in the south are skip- ping the country with great regularity. The latest is one County Treasurer Woods, of Texas, who has gone to joln Polk and Vincent. Tuz motto “In God we trust” has been omitted from the new nickel leces. It is still retained on the standard dollar, where it is supposed to -refer to the 14 cents of missing silver. Or course Senator Reynolds is & orank. Every public msn who can nelther be bought or threatened into obeying the monopoly cappers is & dangerous character who ,ought to be placed in the insane asylum, Tz Fronch chamber of deputies has adjourned until the end of the week and hopes are expressed that a little common sense may be injected during the vacation into tha} mercurial and exoitable public assembly. Tre Michigan esenatorlal contest has been postponed until February 13th, It is generally believed that a new candidate will be selected before another ballot is taken, Senator Ferry has not only failed of a re-elec- tion, but his business is ruined and his firm hopelessly bankrupt. Tz proposition to increase the hours of work in the departments at ‘Washington has sent a chill of horror down the backs of every government olerk, 8ix hours a day with ten hours pay is thelr idea of a condition of af- fairs with which oivil service reform has no right to interfere, Thore Is no reason why the government should not recelve as much value for it's money a8 a private individyal, If it does not the taxpayers are being swindled in the Intereats of laziness. No merchant would think of rotaining for an instant in his service an employe who pro- tested that more than six hours of labor was wearisome and unprofitable, Em——— Tur growlng observance of Lent in this country has been especlally’no ticeable during the past ten years, This Is due Iargely to the fact that it has becomo fashionable to rest from nocisl amusements during its continu- anco, and the decrees of fashion rule ‘where the commsands of sect fail to ex- erolse more than a passing influence, For the coming thirty-nine days, or until Easter Sunday puts an end to the season of presamed fasting, beliov- ers aud unbelievers will generally fol- low the fashion and csase from thelr social labors. The flesh will be over- hsuled by the spirit. The pooket book will be replenished in anticipa- tlon of another sesson, and regular hoars and fresh air can give place to early morning dancing and the heated ball room, For this reason Lent comes as a sweet boon to the devotees of socisl dissipation, and has found as lasting a place in the dlary of fashion aa it bas in the calendar of falth, PRESIDENT ARTHUR i8 delaying the sppolntinent of the civil service com- missioners until he can be thoroughly satlsfied with his choice. Within a week, however, it is fully expected the selections will be made. So far as the newly enacted civil service law applies to postoffices the following will be brought under its operation at the outstart: Albany, Baltimore, Boston, Brockiyn, Buffalo, Olevelacd, Cincln. uati, Chicago, Detroit, Indianapolls, Jersey City, Kansas City, Louville, Milwaukee, New Orleans, New York, Philadelphia, Plttsburg, Providence, Rochester, 8t. Louis, St. Paal, San Francisco and Washington. Al these have fifty employes aud apward, and some others may be added when the full rosters are rcceived at Washing. ton, It is held that in making appli cation of the law it may be extended to postoftices and custom houses hav- iog fewer than fifty employes, The st requires the heads of departments, when directed by the president, to arrange In classcs the clerks ‘‘in other” offices, ard under this provision the system may be extended to offices having so low as twenty employes. Having thoroughly committed himself to this measare the president will doubtless extend the benefits of the system as far as the law will permit. e ——————————————————————— S e JINCREASING THE DISTRICTS. The demand for an increase in the number of judicial districts is especl- slly strong In Douglas county, where the district court is two years behind in ita business, with no hope of relief, except from action of the legislatare at the present sessfon. Under the exist ing law the Third judicial district com prises the countles of Sarpy, Douglas, Washington and Burt, Two-thirds of the cases in the district arise in Doug- las county, while less than half the time of the judge can be deveted to thelr coneideration. In conse- qnence the docket ia constantly in- oreasing in size until at the present time a case filed to-day in Omaha can scarcely be reached for at least eighhteen montha to come. It is evi- dent that rellef {a necersary in the in- terests Both of suitors aud of the judge, Section 11 of the constitution reacs as followe: “The legislatare whenever two- thirds of the members olected to each house shall concur therein, may in or after the year one thousand eight hun. dred and eighty, and not oftener than once in every four years, increase the number of judges of the district oourts, and the judioclal districts of the state.” It is evident from the reading of the section that the number of judges in dlstrict may be increased by leglsla- tlve enactment whenever in the opin- ion of two-thirds of the members of the legislature such ircrease is necessary, and that the number of districts may also be increased at thelr discretion, under the restrictions of the law. The adoption of the first of these plans would perhaps solve the prob- lem in the Third judiolal district. With two jadges there would be no necessity for dividing the district and the dockets in the four courts could soon be cleared. One judge would be more than sufficlent for the needs of Sarpy, Washington and Burt countles, while the growing re- quirements of Douglas county will soon demand more than the presence and attention of a single judge. Durlng a portlon of the year both judges could eit at Omaha, dividing the work of the session between them and rapldly disposing of the cases on the docket and the motions which might ba brought before them. This plan has commended iteelf to & number of our leading lawyers, and is well worth the thoughtful consider- ation of the legislatare. If there are any doubts that It will conflict with the requirements of the constitution, the opinion of the supreme court might be requested as its feasibility. If adopted, it will obviate the necessity of redistricting the Third district for some years to come, and will afford relief to the overburdened docket much more rapjdly than if the distriot were divided. All that will be required is an act of the legislature authorizing the elec- tion of two judges at the election which takes place next fall, when a successor to Judge Neville ia to be chosen, The subject Is well worth the attention of the Douglas county delegation, CHANGING THE SESSIONS OF CUNGRESS, COongress has now before it two or three bills which propose changes both in the terms of congressmen and in the timo of sessions, The present ar- rangement of sessions has often been oriticised. It was originally due to the recommendation cf the conatitu- tional convention that the old congress As 800D a8 nine states had ratified the constitution, should fix a date for the ocholce of electors and congressmen, and one for the choice of president by the electors, the congressmon being notified to assemble at the same time, and that as soon as the president should have taken the oath, ‘‘the con- gress, together, with the president, should, without delay, proceed to ex- ecute this constitution.” The day fixed for this ceremony was the 4th of March, 1780, The term of the first congrees, therefore, began on that day, snd the term of each euccessive con- congress has begun on the 4:h of March cf each second year since. Inasmuch as the constitution provides that the term of the president shall be for four years, it is impracticable, without amending the constitution, to fix another date for the beginnivg of his term; but it is held that another date may be fixed for the beglnning of the torm of members of the house of representatives if it does not corfliot with the oonstitutional stipulation that they shall be elected every sec: ond year, In any change, two objects would have to be kept it view. One is to avold & moeting of the old cougress aftora new one is elected. The sec- ond is to secure such an arrangement of the sescions ws will ‘give cougress mor3 time to work, The businces of the country now requires more time for ita consideration than is given un- der the existing laws. Mr, Blanchard, of North Carolina, has introduced a bill to meet both these requirements, It provides thatthe Forty-ninth congress, which wlll be chosen in November, 1884, shall be- gin 1ts first regular session on the b6ih of March, 1885, instead of the firat Monday in December, 1885, —that is, on the duy after the inauguration of the president,—and that no sitting of THE DAILY BEE--OMAHA TuURS that congress shall bogin on the first | The Spectral Morigsge, another of Monday of December; that the sec-| Frank R, Stockton's humorous ex- ond regular session of that congrees | travagances. shall begin on the first Monday in|ber is abundant and strong, The Con- The poetry of the num- |}, January, 1886, and that the ‘‘term” of that congress shall end at noon on the first day of December, 1886, at which time the term of the Fiftieth congress, olected in November pro- ceding, shall begin, to continue for two yea nd that thereafter, until otherwise provided by law, the term of each congress shall begin on the first day of December, and the annual sittings shall begin on the first Mon. day of December, This scheme is highly commended by & number of eastern papers, and notably by the Boston Advertiser, which thinks that the arrangement proposed would accomplish the two purposes spoken of, The new congress would meet soon after its election, and the new determination of the people regarding the conduct of the government's affairs would at once begin to be effective. Further, no sossion of congress would be prema- tarely cut off. Each session would be a long session, as long as necessary even if it ran through the year, An- other thing that would result from such an arrangement is that the pro- ceedings of congress sffecting the choice of president, whether simply the counting of the electoral vote, or, in case of no election by the people, the choice of a president by the house of representatives, would be In the hands of a congress newly elected, chosen by the people at the same time that the president was voted for, and, therefore, more likely to be of the same sentiment with the majority, It is not pleasant to think that it may be In the power of a con- gress controlled by a party the people have repudiated to make the candidate of its party president for four years ensuing. In case a powerfal third party should arise before the next election. defeating a cholce by the elentoral college, the next president will be chosen by the democratic con- gress elected last autumn, although the congress elected in 1884 may be republican. If the new congress be- gan its term and session in December following the election, such a thing could not happen. Of course the term of one congress, the forty-ninth, would be shortened three months, ending on the 1st of Deocember instead ¢ f the 4'h of March, Bat as the bill provides for two ses- eions of that congress, and the session of the next congrees is to begin at once, no harm would be done. Prob- ably the country would not object to their voting themselves the pay of a full term, Although there isno prob- ability of the passage of this or any bill on the subject at this session, the matter is ene of increasing urgenocy, and it is not irprobable that a change will be made some time. ASSISTANT GENERAL MANAGER Kiv- BALL has been called to Now York on important business connected with the Union Pacifio ratiway, and will leave Omsha for the metropolis to-day.— Herald. The Ames interest want to have a little talk with Klmball. They are not inclined to mince matters when they charge that the Union Pacific has been g rossly mismanaged In the inter- est of Sidney Dillon and a gang of Wall street speculators, and that Thomas L. Kimball has been the tool through which the job has been per- formed. The stock has tumbled with- in six months from 116 to 95, and those who are in a pcsition to know assert that Dillon sold out before the drop. When Mr. Thomas L. Kimball's interest in tho construction rings and contracts by which the stockholders have been swindled is fally exposed, the Boston interest, will have good grounds for making some more point. od charges than they feel inclined to make at present. S ——— THE supreme court has recently given three decirlons affecting the rights of states which eettle the fol- lowing queations. The flrst affirms the exclusive jurisdiction of the states over the civil rights of citizens. The second affirms the constitutionality of state laws prohibiting and making criminal the intermarriage of whites and blacks, The third denies the power of any state to abrogate or in any way impair the right of colored citizens to sit on jurles on account of their color. None of these opiufovs are in the line of a centralization which Horatio Seymour recenily do- plored as the most dangerous tou denoy of the political times. Tue Century for February opeus with an artlcle on American Etchers, which is less techuical and more popa lar in character than most treatments of the same subject. Artists’ Models in New York is an illustrated article which has little beside the {llustrations to recommend it. Thero are blograph- {oal sketches and crit!ques cf George William Oartls snd Frederick Locker, and sn unueual number of continued papers, Among the latter are Mr. Cushing's deeeription of the Zuni In. dians; the first chapters of Mr. How- ell's new story; Through One Admin. istration; The Led-horse Olalm; and Featuies of the Now Northwest, by E. V., Smalley, Other articles of fu- terest are Evils of Our Public Land Policy; A Reception by President Lincoln; The Jeowish Problem; and stat Heart, by E. C. Stedman, easily ranking first. The Century Co.: New York, a— Tar experlonce of the city in mak- ing bargains with the reilroad corpo- rations should be a warning to It to be on gusrd in fatare bargains, The city gave up valuable thorough- fares and exclusive privileges to the Unlon Dapot people in constderation of having a million dollar depot erected, and was cheated in the trade. It made arrangements with certaln rallroad corporations about the bridges on Twelfth and Fourteenth streets, and was cheated in a manner that would disgrace ‘‘Hungry Joe,” the New York confidence man. It gave Poplar street up for raiiroad purposes, and no compensation was made to the poor people whose property was un- doubtedly injared. With these ex- amples before us there Is no excuse for allowing the city to be caught again making a bad bargain with rail- road enterprises,— Post-Dispatoh. Omaha gave over a half a million dollars in bonds and land in consider- atlon of having a magnificent union depot erected, and got & cow shed and | 8 the bridge monopoly in return, — Every dishonest cost mill justice in Omahs is trembling in his boots for fear thathe will be leglslated eut of oftice, and every honest lawyer and swindled sultor fears that he will not be. The duty of the legislature In the premises is plain. Senator Brown, of Douglas, ought to have something to say on the subject. THERE are fully 300 miles of rail- road sido tracks and switches in Doug- las county aloue, and not one mile has been returned for taxation by the corporations who are beating the state out of thetr just dues and howling agalost antl-monopoly oppression. TaE 8t. Paul Pioneer-Press says that there is a suspicion that senator-elect Sabin's methods are not always marked by the virgin purity of the fresh fallen snow, The same can be said of Tabor and Bowen of Uolorado, MonoroLY organs are boasting that the special ratlroad investigation was a farce. Itremsins tobe seen whether they can make the same boast over the railroad legislatton which is impend- ing. Avrexanper III has appointed May 27th for his public coronation. The dynamite trade 1s happy over the prospect of increased orders. STATH JOITINGS. J. J. Ballard was arrested at Dubuque, Towa, and taken to Osceols, where he ar- rived on the 27th. He was cha with seducing Miss Jennie Baker, who lives near Shelby, A Krelimuy ‘examination was to in this eve . when Miss Baker asked leave to b private inter- view with Ballard. It was refused, but the eheriff agreed to an interview if him- self and deputy were present, The officers stood apart from the unwise couple, who conversed brieflys A click was heard, but befo e they could intcrfere Miss Baker had red a 32-caliber ball into Ballard’a shuul- der, The wound will not hurt him, bow- ever, and he will yet have a chance “to marry the girl or go to jail.” Henry B. Tahor, of Cambridge, was taken to the state insane asy/um last week A few years ago, while working in & quar ry, he fell bacitward and struck his head upon a sharp ro-k, which occasioned ¢rad. ual softening of the brain, One of his fancies is that a large fly is on the back of hia neck, and he cannot dislodge it. A case of rubbers was stolen trom the depot platform at Weepiog Water lust Monday night, and the thief took two pairs from it, leaviag the rest in a lumber yard, He was venerous, and wanted to give some one else a chance, Teo Howard, the ex-convict who had repared a lecture on “‘Prison Lile,” has Ee.n arrested for burg'ary ut Linceln, and thinks he must have a couple of years more experience before he can complete the lecture, The Blair echool board closed the echools for the rest of the term on accoyut of small-pox, aud allows the teacheis to retain their places on a ealary of $5a week. A couple of thew ‘‘kicked” and got the grand bounce. Ashland is one of the many places where s:o le get their coal from the car: ona rk night. The thieving is being stopped, however, A watchman at Co- lumbug shot a thiet in the aukle recently e he was getting away with a lump, George Hartley and a tenant named Sipe had a cutting ecrape in Custer county on the 27th ult, and Sipe's injuries are be. lieved to be fatal. Haitley left the coun. try. The trouble arose over a land trans- action, Wm, Pouett, of Precept, was fatally in- ured the other day while going Lome fom Boaver City, Hia team' rau away, he was thrown out and several ribs broken, from the effects of which he died. No clue has yet been found of the where- abouts of “icEAnl Malloy, the Atkinson teacher, w' o is suppose to have fr zen to death. Tt is reported he had three or | four hundred dollars with him, Isanc Best, one of Madison county’s plonecrs, suffered a stroke of paralysis while doing chores in his barn one m rn- ing recently He was r vived somewhat, v later had another stroke, n Miss Amelia Church, who had been teaching at Norfolk, left there on Decem. ber 29, intending to' go to Madieon, She has not been heard of since, and foul play is 8 epected, The seaffolding supporting three men who were plasteriog the ceiling of the Wymore opera house fell on the 24th and the men were more or less injured. Prof. Drommond, principal of the Plattsmouth high school, was fined a #mali amount last Tuesdny for *‘dressing” an unruly pupil with a swited, A number of Tecumseh merchants who went into geain buying and have large quantities ou hand, now find they can not get cas to ship in, We:t Point expeots s great building boom the coming reason. number of business men contemplate erecting brick blocks, A subscrip'ion paper was circulated in Tecunsch Ins’ week to buy leg for one of t{u citizens ~the said leg to be made of ocork, Jerome J. Collis bo perished on the Jeannette Am‘t’lc '.‘:'p:anfi"f:. was local on The Lincoln Statesman a dozen yesrs ago. A high wind last Mouday blew down a number of Ceatral City mimg. and the People looked towards their cyclone caves, The achool house st Bargent, Ouster DAY FEBRUARY 8 county, was burned on the 19th ult,, with all the books of the thirty.nine echolars, The Hill county Agricultural socie'y as boaun work with & view to again se. curing the first prize at the state fair. Robert J, Kendall, an old time editor in the Elkhorn valley, has bacome private secretary to the governor of Texas, Charles Heyden, a York county man, tried to wuicide with etrychnine on the 25th inst., but was pumped ont. Several parties huve been arrested in Juniata for stealing railroad ties, and it cost them 850 each to get out, and wife, of Norfolk, ¢+ ebrated the sixtieth anniversary of their marriage on the 16th inst, The Methodist church at Lone Tree was dedicated on the 28th ult, It is the first church in Custer county, The Christian church at Arapshoe was dedicated on the 28th, and 8180 25 raiced to liquidate the debt. Sidney talks of a Burlington and Mis- souri branch to Deadwood, from Akron, on the Denver line. The Grand Army folks at Minden will have a picnic on the 22d. It will be held in the court house, A Humboldt man has got up an im- provement on the harrow, and expects a patent and fortune, A large part of Nuckolls county was visible to Fairfield people in a mirage the other morning. Columbus has one csee of varioloid, & little girl recently from Wisconsin, There is no alarm, The teachers of Butler county held a convention at David City last Friday and aturday. There is & coal famine in s number of :\flnwd towns in the upper Elkhorn val. oy. There is one case of small-pox at Her- ‘man and several in an adjoining precinct. ~One Ph:lps county man lost over 200 sheep in the storm a few weeks ago. Louisville has & long-felt want supplied ~The Observer, published week!y. The Baptists of Weeping Water will build » $2,000 church in April. A “‘Sons of Veterans” society has beea organized at Weeping Water, A farmers’ institute begins at Brock, Nemaha county, on the 20th. There is talk of establishing a barb wire manufactory at Grand Island. The Congregational church at Wymore was dedicated las Sunday. ‘The Signal is the name of the paper just started at Guide Rock. ‘The records of Furnas county are being overhauled by an expert. Exeter wants a steam mill, a public hall and a jail, The estimated number of cattle in the state is 509,000, The ice is 24 inches thick on the Repub- lican river, A Masonic lodge has been organized at Steele City. Nearly $50,000,000. The immensity of the business done by the Pennsylvania railroad company east of Pittsburg in the year 1882 is made apparent, The faot that the average dei'y income was $140,000 from {ta traffi-—-nearly 850,000,000 tor the year. A review of their annusl statements of earnirgs shows that there bave been only two periods in the history of the company in which the earnings have been so high, bat the monthly average for 1882 is great- er than the largest earnings ever re- turned for any single month previous- ly. Ia September, 1873, and in Octo- ber, 1876, the earnings reached $4,- 000,000, In the latter named month the centennial traffic was very heavy. The monthly average .for 1882 fs $4,089,985, while the largest earnings of any month previous to 1882 were in September, 1873, and aggregated $4,039,196 1n 1880 the gross earn- ings were $41,260,072; in 1881, $44 - 124,182, and in 1882, $40 079,826 The operating expenses were: 1880, 824 625,047; 1881, $26,709 809; 1882, $50 647,379 While the gross earn-| - ings have been large, the cnst of ope- ratiog has also been heavy. Over $30,000,0C0 was pald out during the year, and the benefizial effects pro- dusced uponthe communities interested by the distribution of such an im- mense sam canuot well be overesti- mated. The vrespoects for 1883 are such as to warraut the belief that the earnings will be fully up to those last year, The roller ckaters’ friend.—It cures their sprained wrists, skinned limbs, cut ‘moses and bruized bodies. No roller skater, or other skater canafford to be an enemy of St Jacobs Oil. . The First Locomotive in Iowa. Globe-Democras, ‘Pho statements in your papor this morning regarding thefiret locomotive brought into the state of Iowa were incorrect. I was upon the ground and saw that interesting event, The first locomotive on ' the eoil of Towa vas the ‘*Antoine Lo Claire.” It was brought across the Misaissippl river from Rock Xsland, Iil., to Daven- port, Iowa, upon elrhor skids ora temporary track laid npon the ice, and not in a ecow, «8 stated I do pot re- member the yoar, but it was about 1854 or 1856 I rewember distivctly seeing the locomotive havled across the river and ap the bank at Duvenport, and rodo upon it frequently, as a boy, while it was haalivg eoustruction trains upon the Missiasippi and Missourl railroad Bexs W, CLarx S > BERMAN mevEDY FOR P AIN. CURES . Rheumatism, Neuralghla,SclalIca, Lumbago, Backache, He: , Toothache, Bore Throat, l'nlll-'? prains, Hrulses, ’ Burus, Bealds, Frost Hites, AND ALL OTHER ODILY PAINS AND ACHES. Fifty Cente s ARLES A. VOGELER ELER 4 20.) Bal IMEPORTED) BULBS ‘& Tulios, Crocuses. And all other for Full Planting. Large:d assord ment ever shown {n Chicago- Tlustrated Catalogue tree. Send for It Hiram Sibley & Co., SEEDMEN, 00-8¢ = WINE CARDUL™ tour Gimes w by Lousehold DOTUEI.E HNE) SENCHLE ACTING POWHR AND HAND 8team Pumps, Engine Trimmings, #INING MAOHINERY, BELTING, EHOSK, BUASS AND IROR FITTINGR PACKING, AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, (ALLADAY- WIND-MILLS CHURCH!ANDGSOHOOLELLE Cor. Farnam and 10th Streets Omaha, Neb. PIFR, T84 SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Ground Oil Cake. 1t is the best and cheapest food for stock of any kind. One pound is equal to three pounds of corn. Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the fall and win- ter, instead of running down, will increase in weight and be in good market- able condition in the spring. Dairymen as well as others who ure it can tes- tify to its merits. Try it and judge for yourselves. Price $25.00 per ton; no charge for sacks, Address 04-e0d-me WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO., Omaha, Neb, M. Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS, 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. 13th OMAHA, NEB._ "McNAMARA & DUNCAN, WHOLES ' LE DEALERS IN KENTUCKY AND PENNSYLV NI W hiskieN! in Eond or Free. Also dirsot mporters of WINES, BRANDIES AND ALES, Jobbers and Manufacturers of Fine CIGARS. Agents for Jos. Schlitz’ Milwaukee Beer, Bottled and in Kegs. 214 & 216 8. 14TH STREET. OMABA, NEB. ANHEUSER-BUSGH w, Brewing Association, CELEBRATED 0 KB0 & BOTTLED REER. L) THIS EXCELLENT BEER SPEAKS f" ~< SLLOUIS MO, FOR ITSELF. Orders from any part of the State or the Entire West will be promptly shipped: All Our Goods are Made to the Standard of our Guarantee. ‘GEORGE HENNING, Sole Agent for Omaha and the West. fice Corner 13th and Hax{pq_y; Strests, Omaha, Neb. ; McMAHON, ABERT & CO,, Wholesale Druggists, 315 DOUCLAS STREET, OMAHA, NEB. GATE OITY PLANING MILLS. MANUFACTURKERS OF Carpenter’'s Materials SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, STAIRS, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window and Door Frames, Etc. Firs-las taaltioo for the Mamnfscture of il kindesof Mouidings, Palating aod tchi Specialty, Orders from the country wi promptly executed. Sirgens]] corimunioatinps to A MOV ER, Proprietor The Original and Only Regular SEED HOUSE in Nebraska. J9. EVANS, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN cultural "‘ N. W. Cor. 16 Grasa; Hodgo, " Ouaba, Neb, W ke & specialty of Ovion Seeds, Onlon Bets, Blue Grass, Timothy, Red Alfalfs and Whis Clover, 6':-::’: Aah Hloncy Locust. Dealers and Market Gardenors will save money by buyiog of uay 68 dead for On alogus, FREE.