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OMAHA e —— et T e DAILY BEE-~FRIDAY MAY 2. 1834, L THE UNION PACIFIC REDUCTION. Rosewaren had better pay his owa wotkmen before bg talks abouf, 1he von ality of tho U, I8 reduction,—=#epubli- can, TrwDee's men have been psid and are now being paid as high wages as printers receive in any newspaper office in Omaha, and the Republicar. knows it. The printers who struck did not strike against a reduction, but demanded an advance, based on false grounds. The striking printers know it, but vill not admit their mistake, If the Republican insists that Tur Bee shall pay higher wages than that paper does, wo shall take the matter under serious consideration. Of courre it is but natural for the Union Pacific official organ to defend the outrageous reduction of wages which has been made by that company. The army of Union Pacifle officials who hold soft jobs at salaries ranging from 2,500 to $15,000 a year can well afford a cut of 15 per . 0. Box | cent, but the thousands of workingmen, who earn less than $1,000 a year, cannot very well stand a reduction of ten per cent. Take the track men, for instance, who have been receiving $1.40 per day. e — They have been reduced o $1.26 per Tur tumblo in Union Pacilic stocks |day. Ina week of seven days they will was one of the main causes of Jim Keene | earn but $8.82. Of course the Llepublican being knocked out of Wall atroet. will defend such an outrage, and then as- e e—— sail the Ber, simply becauso the Bem A Onpusea, Maes,, man has applied | sould not accede to the demand for an for a pension on the ground that he is t00 | sdvance when it was paying as gocd fat to work. _He weighs 450 pounds. wages as the Zepublican and Herald, Frep Dovaras advises colored men to :lf :h“ ‘-Jn:;n P“m‘;m‘mld Ll e“?‘%’ lic lands in the possession of actually cul- carefully remembor that for *‘all we are | EL-PFICRC Mot ANC €han b tivators and settlers is an object that i p 1 dead-boats, -pullers, and shysters Ul gt and all wo have, we are indebted to the [ °%' dead-boats, wire-pullers, and shy worth attaining at the expenso of an repablican party:” which it carries on its pay-rolls, it would gt y — o make more of a saving than it will by " At San Antonio, Texas, the papers are [ reducing the wages of its workingmen. lamenting the deplorable ‘‘decay of po-|Itisbut fair in this connection, to say litical enthusiasm.” They evidently need | that General Manager Clark is in symp: our Dr, Miller down there to stir things | thy with the workingmen in this matter, up a bit, and has already taken steps to make the reduction lighter than at first announced. This is to be dona by increasing the hours of labor two hours a day, thus making ten hours a day’s work, but which will be * | subject to the ten per cent reduction. By this arrangement it is intended that Tuk latest estimate sent out by the | the men shallreceiveaboutthesamemoney Blaine bureau is that the man from |as before, but they will have to work Maine will have 458 votes and Arthur 45, | two hours a day more to get it. Now why don’t they say that Blaine will be unanimously nominated on the first ballot, and tell a good ' lie whilo they are about it? intsalaries, is too muuh a featurs of pres- This bill is in some meastto wn outgrowth of it. Otherwise it is unohjectionable enough. THE OMAHXA BEE. Omaha OfMoe, No. 916 Farnam 8t Connet) Biafls Ofce, No. 7 Pearl Streot, Near Broadway. i New York Office, Room 65 Tribunc Bullding. Pablirhed every morning, except Sunday oaly Monday morning dally. RME BY MAIL. 0.00 | Three Afonths 5,00 | One Month, .. Per Weok, 25 Cents. WKLY RRR, PURLISHED RYERY WEDNRADAT, vut legislation, Titr house committee on public lands has agreed upon a bill making some changes in regard to the settling ot pub- lic landa that will be of considerable in- terest in the west. The preemption and timber claim ots aro to bo repealed and the homeatead act is to be amended so that proof of four years' residence upon and cultivation of the land claimed must be made before the Jand can be obtained. The proof must bo made by two credible witnessor, and will romain on file in the general land office for one year before the protest will be mads out, so that full opportunity may be given for the discov- ory of fraud, or the appearance of other claims to the land. The repeal of the pre.omption and timber acts will not be much regretted by those who wish to make actual settlement upon public lands, Those acts, especially the latter, have opened the door to an immenso amount of fraud, and have permitted the owning of vast tracts of lands by persons In this way thou- The e Yoar 8ix Monan TRRNS FORTPATD, One Yoar, $2.80 | Throo Months. Bix Mont 1.00 | One Mon Amerioan Nows Company, Sole Agente Newsdeal @18 in he United States. ‘CORRRAFONDRNCR. i A OCommunieativus reisuing to Newn and Editoria) [Riiom should be addreeed o the Rerron oe Tan sUsDOS LTTERa.§ All Businoas Lewors and Romntvances shouldfbo 84 tressod to THA B PUALISHING COMPANY, QMATIA- Dt \fts, Cheoks and Postoffice orders to be o pay | wblo £o the order of the company. 5 BEE PUBLISHING 0., PROPS E. ROSEWATER, Editor. A. H. Fitch, Manager Daily Circulation, 438 Omaha, Neb, | “Braine instructions” do not seem to be very generally adopted at the conven- tions, who never saw them. sands of acres in the northwost territories have fallen into the hands of mere specu- lators and money-sharks which would otherwise be open to actual cultivation. The new restrictions on homestead claims are severe, but no well-founded exception can be taken to them. To have the pub- i . Mg, Epmunp's crushing reply to Mr. William Walter Phelps and Mr. Jay Gould’s New York Zribune completely exoncrates him from every charge of jobbery brought against him. It leaves nothing whatever for his accusers to do but to crawl out of sight as quickly and nimbly as they can. The full history of Senator Edmund’s ownership of B, & M. stock, ana of his action on the land grants of that railroad show that he could not possibly have been actuated by im- pura motives in voting for the extension. Besides that it shows that his support of the bill, which Phelps and the 7ribune The pleuro-pneumonia bill [passed by had exnng?rnud to a speech, co.miat.ed tho senate a day or twoago deserves only o{ulm;_le remark. The quiet dig- — attontion: It provides for the establish. | 1ity With which Senatur Edmunds repels Sr, Josern is wonderfully puffed up, | ment of a bureau of animal industry the maliciousncss of his assailants, catrics becauso Prof. Richard A. Prootor, the | within the bureau of agriculture, and to | ¥ith it the very weight of conviction, celobrated astronomer of England, is | which the collection of statistios and in- | ©7R if hedid not support all his state- about to take up a permanent residence | formation regarding the breoding of live | ™ents by referenco to the records. ~ He there, Prof. Prootor must have wanted |stook in the country is to be intrusted. has conclusively proved that tho claims a nice, quiet, retired place, in which to|Tho chief of the bureau shall be a com. | °f his opponents were lies. But if they prosecute his studies. petent veterinary surgoon, who is to inves. | 4id nottell the truth in one regard, how ——— | tigate and report upon the existence and | o3 We ba sure that they did in another. euuoxuuw to the New York Sun's course of contagious and _infectious dis- If they lied in denouncing Edmunds, did estimate, which was telegraphed to T eases among domes.io animals, He is to they tell the truth in eulogizing Blamne ? f.‘:' u:)l{d‘fi A"h":l i :!nl "h:ml;,:d} Th; have $3,000 a year. The rest of the bu-| g (failure of Jim Keene, the: aud- B.ap c.aulu ‘:lm i credib Trank | roan ia to consist of twenty men. Two|acious aud hitherto always successful m"" with sending this dispatoh, just | ¢ s are to bo practical stock raisers, ulator, is the t of the h as it did the Now York Herald's estim. L e O A TR O e ORe hich * | and they are to report upon the best|Ho was popularily supposed to be entire- ste, - 1 SO1WHA :;lqmpl\ed o8, by ouf mothods of traneporting stock, and of ly beyond the reach of the vicissitudes to specialopternounent. curing or preventing pleuro-pneumonia, | which ordinary dealers are lisble, being oc other dangerous discases. Thoy are | credited with one of the largest fortunes to have $10 a dsy ‘while employed.. The |in the country. A fow years ago he as- bureau Jis to prepair and issue direc- | pstonished the world by an enormous tions for the cure of cattle diseases,|deal in Chicago grain, which netted him and request the vxecutive of each state to | soveral million dollars. If he can go sasist in stamping out such maladies. | under things are getting into a bad way Special provision is made for ascertain- |indeed. The rapidity with which his ing the l?m"“"f di‘."“i““"}“ likely | fortune shrank away is instructive to with the tariff fire long enough to take it | © P° shippod abroad. Quarantines aro | those who envy the supposed wealth of ' up. to bo established wherever needed, and |guch men. 1t shows that though they — for this purpose special appropiations are | make money so fast, they are liable to Tae unfortunate gentlemen who were | set apart. The exportation of cattle af-|ge it melt away with even greater co- on the guaranty fund of the Cincinuati | fected with contagious diseases is to be Jerity, % . dramatio festival have been called on for | pravented by the interference of the sec- $30,000 to meet the show’s financial de- ! retary of the treasury, who is to be in. ficiencies, ~ This ends the career of | formed of such exportationabythe chief of , exulted histrionic art in Cincinnati, and |the bureau, Transportation companies that city will hercafter devote itself en- | are also forbidden to convey such cattle tirely to pork packing and slaughtering, | from one state to another, under a pen- snd other matters which it knows some- | alty of $5,000, or a year's imprisonment, thing about. or both.§ United States district attorueys Sm— are enjoined to prevent such cases, The Witex Sadio Roigh was sentenced to |, 00 ation is $150,000, to which the ¢ho penitentiary for killing a man who senate in a fiv of unaccountable economy, had slandered her, Chicago took no in-| 4 009 43 5 b b terest whatover in her fate. She was :I“w‘::_o 2IRAE0, 000 matipark by, the only an honest girl. When Teresa Ster- Mz. CrarksoN, who edits all the dis- patches sent out from Des Moines, says that Blaine will get all the votes of the delegates from Towa, Perhaps he will, but not this ye: Some other year. THE PLEURO-PNEUMONIA BILL, Tu prospects for the bankruptey bill in tho house are said to be remarkably good, and it is predicted that on the next day when the rules are suspended its consideration will be begun. Of the passage of the bill then there seems very little doubt. The only difficulty has been to inducs the house to stop playing A coop deal of welcome illumination is thrown on Gen. Adam Badeau's extreme bitterness against the state department by the discovery that he owes the gov- ernment $9,713.00 and is about to be sued for this sum. He incurred this debt by assimilating to his own purposes certain foes that he should have turned in to the government, on the ground that they were part of his compensation, It was a difference about this matter of fees that caused Badeau to resign and awak- . " enad all his patriotic wrath against Secre- lata was sentenced for shooting her para- ong:::?:izl‘::::uh: ‘::;:sl:nnb{m’;:tmth:: tary Frelinghuysen. mour, the whole town raved about her | ,o,0mical or eflicient. The tariff com- and good women distinguished - them- |\ iygioner was a groat fraud. The oivit Centennial Exposition, Now selves by weeping over hor. Showas &|,ovice commission was not much better. Orleans, fallen creature. Chicago is & queer|pilrad commissionsin the states are|To the Peoplo of Nebraska: place. almost invariably a\together useless, It| Appointed by the president of the el th:-uud—umi:nl has a|would be hard to point to any instance | United States, commissioners l.ur Ne- boom, It is not much of a hoom, per- | Whero business has beon woll done by a | braska to the ““World's Industrial and haps, in the eyes of the ungodly poli- |commission, That this bill establishes | Cotton o'fl'f“mlll Exposition,” New tician, ad it wouldn's do to buy any such & body is the worst objeotion to it. | Orleans, we aim to do our part, that the Saturessn it in the Ohioago convention. There are not wanting reasons to think _Iu\te be lully‘repmnmtefl with all her % And yot it in 8 good boom, & nice little | that this teature of it, too, is entirely | products posaiblo to obtain and transport. boom for @ cont, The ladies temporance | unnecessary. During tho late foot:and. | Notico is given thus early, that every sewing sosletiss ato unsnimously reising mouth diseass soare in Kansas, thesgri- p_n?eluner. manufacturer and artizan, de- thoir voices for Mr, Hayes for another |oultural department conducted withoat | siring to be repreaented, may havo ample term in the whits house ““bocause he was |80y difliculty, » searching investigation | time to provide. Especially, as we are sucha good .man,” Mr, Hayes will |intothe pest, which revealed the. fact an agrioultural 1egion, we desire to pre- nover go into the presidency on the |that thero was no foot-and-mouth dis- | sent every possible product of the soil. strength of this boom, but'ho can wrap |#as0 whatever in Kansus, Now this an. | Thereforo let proparations be now made, ‘himself up in it and lie down to pleasant imal industry commission is to, do little | to'plan and produce for this epecial pur- dreams, R more for the cattle of the whole country | pose. p R {oularl —— i tho agriolars dopacmantdid | o B igw prialry, i “Tue Republican, ' whose oditor was | the oattle of Kansas. The chitfbusinessis | ,(roduced grass formerly Valentine's clork, naturally goes (to investigate, and report, and|smoked and otherwise propared meat: into deep mouraing over the withdrawal | call attention to the existenca of digease, | fruita.of all kinds and in all shapes. of Valentine as s candidate for re-elec- [and advise xemedies. The question is, o S— The World's lndustrial and Ootton green, dried, preserved, jelled, ot tion to congress. Mr. Valentine's clerk | therefore, why this work could not have something so out of the |been performed by the agricultural de-|title; dsiry products— butter and cheese, surprise thxoughout the state. * * *|much more expense, and with results O iy s FAP T . welf out of the race, is an event for whose | such would have been the result seems [ Monday in Decembor, 1884, and close, & surprise to the people of the third dis. | existing in this country any way, and all time 03 to the proparation of artioles for The agricultural depart. | carry nut objects in viow, meal; tannivg eubstances; specimens that it ber grown since extivguishment Indian says thet it will doubtless occasi tment without further tuss, both both dairy, creamery and country made; Spiptag boat I Wil dpaitiey i Lo 5 b PAMNR 4 together v’vith any and all other produou' That such & mau as he, on the eve of a entirely as natisfactory to thoso who will | o¢ har paoplo may couceive and present. campaign, should formally declare him- |be reached under the new law. That| The exposition will open on the first logic one must look beneath the surface.” | veryprobable. There is notmuch pleuro- | B0t later than May 3lst, 1885. The withdrawal of Valentine was indeed | ppeumovia nor avy other cattle diseaso Further notice will be given in due Ay e, hibition, how, when and where ro- M“Mmmrpflndb ;q Valen- t.hudtu needed is & fair examination to | Geived with other details nocessary o » show auch good sense. were | find this out. z W at his "Mt’:l' for [ment is perfeotly compotent to do this Wa trust our ppople properly appreei " the importance of - this master, and will s _ they wanted to have the satisfaction next | investigatiog. Some of tho surplus labor | NS St wecord and el in * fall.of burying him under an avalanche of [ now devoted to mailing unneoossary secds [ ing to place such a display of Nebrask wotes. **Looking beneath the surface”to |and growing impossible plants could {products on exhibition st New Orleans, the logie for this event, it is easily | easily have been devoted to this purposo Ix :h':l sustain the reputation and claims | A 2 meen that Valentine ssw the }u.‘qiflng withou any injury to the public weal. . 4 the wall sd coucluded to stand from | An uufortunato tendency to croate too i w.'.”‘.‘l l"“m“n':'{ to the of | oder, < many offices and spend too much money ' the atate, an mwwflu have as nature had not been liberal in his stat- P! cision on which I relied, and was pro- ceeding to enl all possible ties of citizens, id: ling it I looked 'round for Mrs. McMena- | 2 my, but she was not visible; nor have I ever seen her since, or the promised fee of $20. te as & most wonderfully diver- ; but considorablo skill done more than all others combined, to make known to the world what we have and are, to aid in this, to the end thaca 1o good may be & result at large, We aro convinced thata plan produc- tive of most good, is te make the exhibit in the name of the state. Those furnish- ing articles compriring the exhibit, to have personal credit by having their names appear on their respective pro- ducts, We would be pleased to receive any suggestions any eitizen of the state may make looking to the successful further- ance of this movement. Ront. W Funnas, Brownville, Neb. AvsiNug Naxce, Osceola, Neb. being tightened with & sudden jerk. rolis over in the dust, The horse, 0o, has to learn his part of the business, and bear at the right moment in the op- posite direction, or he might be thrown instead of tne bull, to which indced he ia often inferior in weight, It is considered disgracetul to have to loosen the lasso, and to let the bull carry it off with him. A good hand at it will catch by either leg alone a bull galloping past at any angle. The most difficult feat of ail is to lasso him round the quarters when at full gal- lop at the moment when his hind lega are doubled up under him. Usually the noose slips off, and nothing happons; but if he be thrown precisely at the right in- stant, his hind logs ave pinned up under his belly, and he is brought to a stand- still in the position of a sitting dog, look- ing indescribably silly in such an uawont- ed position, These and othir feats of lassoing are seen at their bost at a hacien- da, on the occasion of the annual herra- doro, when the young buils are drivon in from the plains,thrown down,and marked with a hot iron with the initials of their proprietor’s names. Friends and neigh- bors come together rnd vie with one an- other in tho display of dexterity and horsemanship. Law the Protection of Human Reason, Elliot's Notes, My law office was ina second floor room oppositethe old court-house, where I had Blackstone, Chitty, Story, Greenleaf, oight Missouri, reports (all then issued), the bible and Shakspeare as & law libra- ry. The carpetless and dusky office and scant outfit of book lore did not trouble me, but I was very dubious as to my fit- ness for civil practice, though 1 thotght I might get on in the criminal court. I had a vague notion about that court something like the idea of Sol. Smith, when on one ocoasion he undertook the prosacuting attorney’s duties during the absence of that officer. “I like this,” he said to a friend, “‘better than the civil practice, There's no coutounded filing things!” My firat caller was Bernard McNulty, the Irish baker. Mrs. Mary McMenamy had been arrested by City Marshal Dougherty with a stolen shawl on her shoulders as she was boarding the ferry- boat to cross the river, and McNulty had gone bail for her appearance in court. 1t was apparently a plain case for the prosecution, The shawl would be identi- fied, and Mrs, McMenamy could not ac- count for its possession. But the indict- ment had two counts—one placing the value of the stolen article at more than $10 and the other under that sum; $10 stealing being telony, with penitentiary, and less than $10 misdemeanor, with county jail, The supreme court, with that ineffable wisdom so often manifested by graver tribunals, had in one case ruled that felony and misdemeanor could not be joined in the same indictment, and I moved the court to ‘“‘quash” on the ground of misjoinder of two offences. My personal friend, Thomas B. Hudson, one of the ablest criminal lawyers at the bar, told me there was nothing in the point, and the prosecuting attorney, Miron Leslie, smiled pleasantly and said — Dotty Triumphant, A bright little miss of three summers was seated beside her father at the din- ner table. She waa full of mischief, and her father finally said to her: “Dotty, if you don’t behave better 1 shall have to spank you,” The little one remained in deep thought for a few moments and then an- swored, with a saucy twinkle in her eyes: *'Oo tant, pa: I's sittin’ on it.” CATARRH t’.% ) Sanford’s Radical Cure. Hoad Colds, Watery Dischargos from the Noso and Eyes, Ringing Noises In the IHead, Nervous Hoad- ache and Fev: r instantly relieved, Choking mucus dislodged, mewmbrano cleansed and b encd, smell, taste and hearing restored, and ravageschecked. Coughs, Branchitls, Droppings fnto tho Throat Paing in the Chest, Dyspepsia, Wasting of Strength and Flesh, Loss of Sleep, ete., cured. One bottle Radical Cire, 0no box Catarrhal Sol- vent and one Dr. Sanford's fnhaler, in one package, of all druggists, for §1. Ask for SAXPORD' RADICAL Cux, a pure distillation of Witch Hazel, Am. Pine, The Largest Stock in Omaha_and Makes the Lowest Prices urnit DRAPERIES ANC MIRRORS, CEAMBER SETS! Just received an assortment far surpassing anything in this market, comprising the latest and most taaty designs manufactured for this spring's trade and covering a range of prices from tho Cheapest to the most Expensive. ure’ Parlor Goods Now ready for theinspection of cus- | Complete stock of all the latest styles in Turcoman, Madras and tomers, the newest novelti-s in I Lace Curtains, Ete., Ete. Suits and Odd Pieces. Draperies. Elezant Passenger Hlovator to all Floors. CHARLES SHIVERICK, 1206, 1208 and 1210 Farnam Street, = - - - OMAHA, NEB ' WM. SN YDHE, — ¥ANUFACTURFR OF OF STRICTLY FIRST.OLASS . LaITianss, Brmes AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. 1819 and 1520 Harnoy Streot and 408 8, 18thiSkrest, liustrated Oataloguo furulshed frea upan appiication. Wi !Omaha. Neb Ca. Fir, Marigold, Clover Blossoms, ofo. Porrex 1n his good-natured way that it was well | ¢a. Fir, Mariold, Clover Blos enough for a young lawyer to make the “‘quash” motion, but that I would *‘make nothing by it.”s Law day came, The defendant was in the court-room, and I quietly told her that when I began to fumble my left ear as if it was itchy, she must get away and over to her home in Illinois in the quick- est possible time. Judge Manning was on the bench—a chair with double cush- ions, enabling him to look over his desk, i3 [ Colling’ Voltat Eleotrlo Plaster W stantly affecta the Nervoue tem and banishes Pam A erfect Klectrlo Hattery, com: = bined witn a Porous Piaster for I8 Tgfi_ CRY 2?(::‘;‘!;: w" ;unlr:ih‘t;u v?’-n. ora vital cak and Worn Ou- SUFFER/N NESUE Parta, rtronsthens Tired Mu, los, provent 418oase, and does more in oue ale mo thao aw other plastor in tho world. oid T. SENEOID, MANUFACTURER OF GALVANIZED IRON, CORNICES. WINDOW_CAPS, FINIALS, - ETG. 418 13th etro~t, + «.....NEB.RASKA. PROPOSALS FOR INDIAN SUP- 1 band PLIES AND TRANSPORTATION. aving my han ATMED £ INTE over the artillery, “here are other author. F'lrnfu.:M f&‘fi.'\f:fif&l?i‘.‘.’fi“)nf"m‘l' ities.” Sealed proposals, inlorsed “*Proposals for Beet” ( idy : for beof mast by sunmitted in_ssparate envelopes,) ‘;'NOFd"““““Y- T'll hoar from the | oiuan Fiour, Clothing, or Transporration, &0, (ot other side, the case may'be,)and ¢irected to the Comssiner Mr. Leslie made & strong speech, full of Indian Aif-irs Nos, 65 and 8 Wooster strect, Nev of good sense and sound argument, but it York, will be raceived until 1v. . of Tuo-day, May T d 27, 1834, for furnishing for the Indian service & sout could not dispel the ruling of the supreme court. 520,000 }rounds Bacon, 88,000 0v0 pounds Boef on tho Moof, $00,000 pounds Beans, 45,00 pounds_ Baking “This indictment is quashed,” #aid his honor. Powder, 780,00 pounds Corn, 450007 vounds {offes, My left ear was itchy, and after fumb- ure. I had taken over my library, and had it on a desk in front of me, with the volumes pointing at his honor like a bat- tery of cannon with their breeches de- ot the range. Stating the indure, I read the sole de o on the importance of to the rights mddhber- 7,500,000 pounds Klour, 70,00 pounds Feed, 195,000 ponn s Hard Bread, 48,000 pounds Howiny, 18,0.0 pounds Lard. 700 barreis mess ork, 150,00 pouuds oo, 7,600 pounds Tes, 100 pounds ‘Iobacco, '00 pounds Salt, 150,000 pounds Soap, 8,000 pounda Sods, 860,000 pounds Sugar, and 40,000 pouuds Wheat, Also, Blankets, Woolen and_Cotton Goods, (con- sisting 11 part of Ticking, 20000 tanoard Calico, 136,000 yards; Drilling, 0,000 va freo {rom all sizing, 80,600 yiru; De ds The young lawyer may deduce two rules from this case: First, to get his feo in advance, and second, if there is but one point in his case, however fiimsy, try it on. But if he simply wants to be |°. 8 good citizen, he may possibly inquire if |} we have not placed ro many guurds *round the rights, privileges and imuuni- ties of the criminal clacses, that but few securities are left for those of honest folks. If Talleyrand ever said that language wasinvented to conceal thought, I think we could better suy that many features of our modern jurisprudenc scem to have been inveuted to shield scoundrels. It is thirty-seven years since Mrs, McMenamy slipped away, but in all that time I have never been able to aco how that double-loaded indiciment did her any juztice. She was guilty, but a technicality saved her. jona Hary ware, Modic a long Jis. of m scellanious articl:s, Plowe, Rak W gons s equired fo Kausas b Wgons o ko, &c., and fol Vo to be od it Ciry. be required, w lapted noast, with Calioruia o. ation for susn 1 tho articles, goods, not be contrac'ed for to bé Also for to the cliwate of tne Vaci Brakes, deliver: d at van Fr Also, transp and supplies b deliverer at th + showiug the kiruds sappl es roquired for ench Agon and quantities in en Lyon, No, sarics of subsista e — e The Mexioan Lasso, The Saturday Review, ned pl ;sxu Km‘)!u: Arksam Clty, :umnmui . . ) dgo ¢ ity, iy, Rk, The lugn itself is a rope made of the zoward, Huteninmoh, l:nn:x;:nlw Ph;:‘.., twisted fibre of the maguey, or aloe, Modicino Lo we, ton Osage City Sedan, speks, Wl Wichita and Wunfield Bids wi 110 ofenea at the nour and day above stuted, and biddews arolavited to bo preseus ¢ tho openin g known in European warkets as Sisal |" hemp. There is a great difference in the quality; the best and strongest are twisted #0 extremely tight that it is almost impossible to untwist the strands, One_end is worked into a small loop, lined inside with leather, through which, when about te throw the lasso, the other end is passed. The rope is about 30 feet long, about one-third of it formed into a noose which 18 grasped a little above the locp—i. e., where the rope is double, the CERTIFID. CUKCKS. Al bids vt bo accomjanid by certified checks up n omo Unite] Statos Depository or the Virst Nutional Hank af Low Angoles Cal., for at lease five per cont of thio awount of trw proporal. I Pl Recently of Boston, has opencd au elegaut wow joner. ) rost of it is coiled round and held in the geg left hand, ready to let go, the extreme ) : : l end being kept separate and of course ro- G]l s “rnls l]l s tained. The noose should hang well clear M of the ground when hald level with the UNDER THE shoulder, and, when open, forms a circle of four or five feet in diameter. The lasso is swung over the head and left shoulder, and back over the right shoul- der, a peouliar turn of the wrist as it be- ing to return keeping the noose open, ?c is thus mads to circle round and round his head by the thrower. until he is within distance of his object, when it is launched and flies off at a tangent, the FINE In Spring Weighta, unobkiean [Erd MILLARD HOTEL. AND HDSIERY, Lt arsaer s rsssn NEWEST AND LATEST noose assuming'a circular form, and -set- BESIGNS IN ting quietly round the object aimed at. | NECKWEAR, Reforo it settles the thrower seizes ihe JEWRKLRY. other end with his right hand, and gives HANDKERCHIFS, it two rapid turns round the cabeza of his saddle 50 as to get a purchase. 1f he is not quick enough at this, and the bull tightens the rope before a good purchase has been effected, the result is that the fingers got caught between the rope and the cabezo aud very much injured, It is no unfrequent thing to eee a man who had lost one or two tingers in learning the art. It is beautiful 10 see the exac- titude with which an adept will throw the 1asso from or to auy point, over eith- er shoulder, behind or in front. There no eredit in catehing a bull by the horas, for he caunot be thrown by them; is required to piteh BRACES, ETC, Coaching, ngkin? tvening Gloves. FINE WHITE & COLORED SHIRTS, English, Pigue,snd Full Dress Shuit . SHIRTS MADE TO MEASURE, EYE & EAR 1 Untll offices aco ropairod trow result of are, at © falk. “gallop, so that next step he treads it it; them, oni i A LOUg e NSO , Street and| & 1. ARMSTRONG, M. D., ' | the noose just in front of him when he is Voulist ‘and lAurtfln - | | with De. Farker, Koom 6, Devighon Bosh mu: Steam Packing at wholesale and rejail. AND SCHOOL BELLS. Corner 10th Farnam St., Omaha Neb. Double and Single Acting Power and Hand PUMPS, STEAM PUMPS Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, ' Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fittin, HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, OHUREB Paints Oils Varnishes and Window Glag C. F. GOODMAN, 1 Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN OMAHA NEBRASKA. LAGER/FRANZ FALK BREWING . . Milwaukee, Wisconsin. | BEER. - oo & C0, Sole Bottlers, =8 OMAHA. M. HELLMAN & CO, “'Wholesale Clothiers! 13071 AND 1303 FARNAM STREE? rOR. 13Th Roows 75c to $2.00 per day. i P, 8. CONDON. “QNEW MARKHAN HOTEL The Palace Hotel of Denver. Cor. Seventeenth and Lawrs nce Sts, Specisl Rates by iho Month. THE FINEST TABLE IN THE WEST. Conducted on the American and European Plans, Day | Board $7 per week. PROPRIETOR, ing off, G U.AaYT IMPROWYVEMENT IN ROOFING AND COVERING WALLS+»> - VAN Fire Proof, Cheap and Durable. same, TIN 109-111 T PAPPELENDAM | PATENT TILES! Mado of Sheet Metal with Pressed Ornaments. 1.u Leaking, No Cracking or lcy- The Most Ornamental Roof Made. fracl‘mally Tested for Nearly Ten Years, With the Most G:atifyig Resalts, SULLIVAN BROTHERS, Agents. Fig. 2—View representing a number _of 'liles as arranged upon a roof, Fig. 3—Dotail sectional view of- the Fig, 4—One of the Roof Tiles, Fig, 5—Wall Tile, the whits part of which is covered by the one sbove ity and requires no description., SULLIVAN BROTHERS, Broechings and Generel fron Wark, TIN, IRON & SLATE I Guttering and Gendrel Jahbing OMAHA, MANUFATURERS OF ROOFING ! SMOKE STACKS, FING, AERM{REASONABLEY SOUTH SIXTEENTH ST, NEI’ASKA. §