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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1800. White sea, a distance of over five hun- [ ganese, ns in manganeso stecl,, it be- pendent of the United States™ for her wheat RO | A TELEPHOVE TO THE SL‘ dred miles. It is proposed to furnish | comes almost completely non-magnetic, TO “A":R THE \Rll) [\\DS supply in 1890, Only three years ago those | Wmsnea, bt smf:"fi"fi'«';:?t adopted Omaha ManUfactUr’er’& the electric current from a series of gen- | says Engineering and Building. These ;mlm;ihrll:!h \r‘dt:nd:-\»\'or';xl‘-rrmnrkuhlo |h l‘htlu n-m:r-‘nll!h ‘?lnlo;'!-‘h; raska -: — erating stations distributed along the | facts show us that iron is not necessarily S eterioration in American flour,” asserting | Lhe twenty-irst session thereof, and spproved | sendttoen T " e, and the cost of theundertaking, in- | magnetic under all conditions, for d" |y, Fones of Kansss Hads New Sohems of | Fovrers nind Jost s ‘strength aud was | o t7 L tmatiintigs oF sl siate ol | s B00te and Shoos. The Marvelow Expriment Ediun Now Hu | €luding rolling _stock, {s ci{lmnlml at | mixture with a small quantity of another Irrigati CHROUADE 0T | siemontne thue sane weitars v Ssads | o g el el ey s (e B0 o only about £3,000 per mile. Archangel, | metal, and even mere change of temper- on, the appalline discovery that ican wheat | | Beetlof 1 esa Under Wiy inJersep, the proposed northern terminus, lies in | ature render it non-magnetic, Stranger — flour 1 “adniterated by the sdmiziare of | bs bejd o (o Hussdar themecaing tholee zml. .'u'nf.t.ffmffnf" BMS&SBM ©44= north latitude, close to the Arctic | still, some observers report that iron be- 7 corn-meal. All these statements are disproved | Monday of November, A, D180 there shailby | ASeols for Baion fupber Shoe Coo, 1eh 110/ ana 11t \ . cirle. [t isfar abovo the latifude of | comes magnutic when the tempersture | ARTESIAN WELLS ARE NOT NEEDED, | and our credulous Yankeo economists, who | MItted to the electors of this state for ap- m— S CLOSED ELECTRIC RAIWAY CONDUITS, | the northern shore of Hudson bay and | whiteness, but this lncks confir- fake matters for the sensational dailies, | BVl 67 this Wate o srads to DTloes Brewers, almost as far north as the narrowest part | mation, ; should occupy the time between drinks to manufacture sale and keeping forsale [~ STORZ & ILER, aits, the gestion of [ The hehavior of nickel ste G Belioves that Wate learn a few facts connected with American | of in ting 11quors as & beverage are for- IS Yey e | B0 BNTIVRS t1s to Be Had | Jhoo Cuiture and iis capacity fordevelops | SYeF Brohtotied 1n te. and the te Lager Beer Brewers, of Behring's st Description of One of the Latest De. | Crossing which bya railway has been | ived from the Near the Surface The Oper- ment. There are very good reasons for re- | MWFe shall provide by Taw for the enforcement - origed vices—A. flogister for Toleplone | Aumel by mangto bo impracticabie. | nickel steel with 25 per cent of atious HoW IR Meogress Susing to bellers that the Unitel States will | %3014 Provision.” [Aug, thers shall altoss | __ SHECOWhAneonatMNe - ¥ Itmaybe that ‘electricity will furnish | mickel is non-magnetic; and yet it is a Neas OgSial in 1900 be unableto produce enough wheat | £ this state tor thelt upproval orres | e 2 o Exchanges—Remarkable Multi- the solution of the difficulty of operating | misture of two magnetic metals, iron Near Ogalalla, for home consumption. In the first place, | ) n A ndment to the constitution of ... Cornice. plex Telegraph-Spark s. rallways in extremely cold recionswhich | and nickel. If, now, we cool this nickel- —_— ere are millions of acres of good | the state in words as follows: “Themanufn EAGLE CORNICE WORKE wheat lands in the United States | >s Fahr,) Mr. Jones, the well known irrigation | that are y i Y o i % | Mr., | '\ L 0! i are not yet umder 1re, g W e Ll et il o IR foy maghetic: | itch builder, s hard atvorkat Ogalalla | Eren with the preat. eshausting mothod power generationg sta- | and remains n it again returns a}brgisn i ots to oot | Of CTOPPINE wheat, the additions to area | e fron o0 @ mile long standing perpen: 1 proper intervals, | to the normal temperature. If, finally, | 2 Plan by which he expects to get | Gime would be suficient to carry us far be- | ments o tne Nloilas . . o g perpent | and b scomes only aquestion of | we heatit, it ains magnetic until it | from beneath the surface suflicient water | yond 190, should the nextdecade b printed the, i ‘"“” ar ';Iml ext '“"lw ""': the "”]-‘ *‘l“’ obtaining suMcient trafic to warrant the | reaches its critical temperatureof 580 [ toredeem the arid wastes of Knnsas and o B PRE R e HROlsstate selh Rad KeDInA [ A HOSPE. Jr. e earth to great but unknown depths, | cost of construction and operation. The | degrees C, (1,076 degrees Fahr.), when it | Nebraska. A correspondent of the Den. | POPUlation. Again, the American pr he fiquors as o Deverage," 1 N el said tocontuin several hundred million | electric locomotive has no steam or | aguin becomes non-magnetic, and Vet Nevs tell) Ho thie worl I8 dons: 10| Siotar Miats po L orapon fersulsors ot | provosed amndiient 0 the | AISES' Materials, Pianos and Organs, | tons of magnetic material. As the vio- | Vater pipesto freeze and burst in the in- | mains so until sgain cooled to —20 de- | 7 SRR O / 108, ! s manuf e . W p comes more valuable, a yulation increases Intoxic 1615 Douglas Sireet, Omaha, Neb. L T e tense and long continued cold of a far | grees C, t b s built an f S The overtaleiak of supply by consamos " _— dive al ¥ I northern winter, and electricity, by | s immense reservoir with a sixty-five foot | tion enhances the value of wheat. A simple printed on th Coal, Coke, Eto, duce disturbar the which trains can ighted, will doubi- K'lnlhln of Electricity and Light. fall for the storage of his water. Thisis | computation will sufice to illustrate the ca- | “OMAHA COAL, COKE AND LIME GO, tism which are recorded on the magne: | less arelong be successfully applied to What has electricity still in reserve | from a half to three-quarters of a mile DUy of the United States. Conceive the | o ymendment o the constitution Jobh i .H q dA Soft 04] il ’ % o s Haw ' 4 thar svis 1 ¢ - y or us? sa ‘ornu. io his address wheat arca to remain at its preseat figure, hat the manufa sale and ke o 1 S } wmeters atthe Kew and other observa | the purposes of h 0. Should | for us? said M. Cornu, io his addr 10 | Jong by 800 feet wide and twenty feet it b Sl R at, fgurs, | that the manu e, sale and ke or obbers of Hard an ] 01T Lol atten. degre he we of steam. Evidently an eel—20 degrees (, g go shall be ltecnsed and liquor Manufacturers of Galvanized Iron Cornice Window caps and metallc sky iights. Johr proprietor. 108 mnd 110 8outh 10th treet e ————— pre 1 1 Artists' Materials, electls ng foe t At Ogden,N. J, there it a miss of tions inthe sun pro- wrltten r voting for snstitution, th's magne- ¢ O 0 ey :h"l\\ '\I-hx\fl“(u:l-.‘\V‘A:it'.” be > 'T-l‘lv l.;i‘\ ot l-xln'x-:lx1“4.{.\\"‘-‘;”“::"m .‘fi'fn .U:Iu ffy\r:t deep, well walled by an immense embank- | 10 to have arrived and the population large :“ .}"“.‘.r’”{” ‘Kf?'\: -‘?\f'f'fi’x‘.i‘.' "ff .‘-"‘ ‘,',"1'5 ook 2 siys the Now ) thit the | o eried into execution it will not be much i expected ffomit, and | ment all around. Thirteen miles up tho | GRS ORI e 90RO BUSKS | ment o tho conutitution that themanufic. | sirength of the wlar d hard to believe imilar line may | f y side. The art of engineer- | South Platte from Ogalalla Mr, Jones | acres of land. Now fertilization ' is 4 boversge shall be loensed and RMSTRONG & GOy ¥ ’ erted in our planet could be pushed ska to meet at | ing urges’itto furnish the transforma: | began his work & year ago. A short | generally adopted. The capacity of the by law.” | RHUSTRONG & GO, enormously by utilizing & vein of m Behring's stra xtension of the | tion, and the universal distribution of | distance from the Ded of the wiver he | s Increased soas to raise the | iendent ol s v b s By | Whoiesale (igars, netie fron ore, and rumningarond the | Russian railvay system through Siberia | energy; medicine and surgery call for it, | has dug a long canal parallel to the | peracteof S e e, Sl clectors voting at the said | & N 16 Sereot Clello! 14 548 of otoe lovert] talles of Wi form- | and comg a continuous railway line | indifficult cases; physiology asks for it | now dry bed of the stream. With a | n¢ Yoo0 20U ME fud cirel s nsitute | twen e R bRAnstl s 7 i uniting America, Asiaand Europe.” for the secret of nervous transmission, | breadth of fourteen feet he has con- | e " The becond vear britgs b 9 et o Dry Goods and Notio ing an inductive current, into which hich is in such intimate analogy with | structed this cana r two miles along | results still and adds another bushel o th Tohn M. Thayer, ML E.SMITH & CO. powerlil clectric currents would be Closed Electric Rallway Conduit. the electric curvent. the course of the river up stream, keep: | “average,” implying an increase of 1,000, nodc 2 Dry Goods, Furnishing Goods and Notions sther thrown by any disturbanceof theearth's | An enormous amount of energy has [ As the pure theory, great results aro | ing all the way but a very shovt way | bushels. = The ~third year adds & magnetism,” By the use of instru- | been spent by inventors in trying to roaching, Geome who are the | from the bed of the stream.” The latter | bushel to the ucre’'s yield nd brings the lu- | act o ___ Cornerlith and Howard Streots. | ments every change,” he &, “could | work out the practicul solution of the s of .\finp l'{‘.l]'llf“iifl{Fl'\ll ier, | has a d ~n'unt{ or m‘u of eight feet in a zl 7 '“!‘x‘l\u lumln:‘vlw h-”\:.:;‘}‘r»l »\u\fi‘ I,IK],, prop, KILPATRICA-KOCH DRY GOODS GOy G e Ry very difficult problem of electrical true auss, Helmholz, Thompson, | mile. The fall of the ditch s but | greasesare suall when compared ] sy -y bo recorded, and the useof the tcle | Her¥ dificull protlem of el Maxwell, and have helped s much in | but two fect. In theso two simple | MiFrasssschicvedis Snd a8 the soil | LS, Importegs and Jobbeis in Dry Goods, tates is superior tothat of | [ S BY to predict that the “aver- | yuitoliP ST At Iveor less bushels to theacre in | w be beld on the 4th day of Novem Gents' Fufhiehing Goods Corner phone all sounds produced on tho | A]) sorte neGoods, Comer, 1 sun would be heard on our plan and Harney plans have schemed | connecting ¢ toavold the trouble, and of theseone of | mechanics ty with the laws of | facts lay the key to Mr. Jones whole | Franceit is s re preparing a great syn- | plan. age'’ of tw > Jle accordingly, erecting te the neatest we have seen is the closed | thesis which ~will mark an epoch | Asfar as the canal has been carried it | this country may be raised to tw Fuarhiture, graph poleson each side of theOgden | conduit recently patented by Mr. C.J. | inthe history of natural philosophy; | has been dug through sand. Every- | and more “bushe so that the '\[.(.E'"TTI?:""T].'S.‘."‘(].'.':"I',‘f.}“;"f(".“ . woe little | 93,000,000 acres under ¢ torepresent a producing ¢ Iture may b acoln thi DEWEY & STONE, pacity of 750,000,- thyearof the Wholesale Dealers in Furniture, ere four feet below the sur ns of water are struck, the per demonsti are sub Blectrical World. | they are 1l conduit witha | that the e near tro-magne ting | wi “ted } ore hill and parallel with it,on which he | Van Depoele, says the is coiling an insulated wircmany times | It consists of a very sr of Nobraska, Done aay of July. A. D, 1809, ana the ¢ sround the wholo area where theearth's | slot above for admitting the contact de- | 10 the same elementary laws s the opti- | tion being from et towest. Inboring | mie of five. buohels o o fhmeatt fa iy | it and'df tho nddpendeice of tie Unlted Seremie il magne lines leave the iron mountain | vic but almost complet. closed by | cal phenomena: that they are two mani- | into the earth st 200,000,000 ink ants in the United States By the Governor, JOHN M. THA YER. T GHARLES SHIVERIC and extend intospace, The twoendsof § flexible lips which are only separated | festations of a motion in” the same elo- | were penetrated. Tt to consume all that the prosent ¢ BEXJAMIN R COWDERY, © Bl eanan e o i the long wire will be taken intohisob- | a3 the plow attiched to the | ment, ether; the problems of optics are | coarseand comparatively loosely pa produce unde A i onetity of Jeaty Furniture. - servation station andconnected with the and carying the brushes | solved by equations of e magnet- | together, eeps through it very | ture. Go further, and conceive the wheat | TT¥ = T v =3 Omals, Nebraska. N receiving telephone. or rollers forces them apart. We have, | ism. From an experimental standpoint, | readily, and the interstices are filled | ara exteaded from 800000 to 000,00 FROCLAMATION. e From every point of vi then,uslot which is normally completely promising results are already ob- r. Thus the hydrostalic pres- 'ml,u‘:fl‘m'p",mi‘”'\,‘l_m‘h““m}l;‘u e will WHEREAS solution was adopted Grocerics. spiritual and sclentific—this pror closed by flexible walls, The thin plow d; the speed of light, fixed by opti- | sure forces the water to the surf Toan. & whest Crop of 1,500,000,000 busbels. Farkint, | S e be one of the most thiilling ex periments | simply ites these enough to allow | cal methods, is measured also by purely | when an outlet for it is given by me Density of population =~ ir “’IlUI(“‘-lll‘ Grocers ever made, Its successful conductor— | of its p sothat with the exception l‘lr}t'!r\r:ll»vm- sures: it has even been al- | of the pipes. It seeks its own level forced” intensity of pept ) o s ] like Wordsworth's of a short space imme under the | most possible recently, after the much- | as that is considerably above the t when once the Amoerican deposits of | fer 1.th and Leavenworth Streets, Omaha, Nebraska. § “Curions child, who dwelt upn a tract car and almost enti filled by the | bruited experiments of Mr. Hertz, that | the canal, therefore itoverflows, ‘‘Buf- | izers are brought into use, all crops will B TolIowE all read e = Of inland ground, applyivg tohis car plow the conduitis closed in such & way | the experimental identification of elec- | falo™ Jones, in hisunbound ithin the ?l‘*’"“‘ by Taising their acreago. Natural solls | section I That section two @ of article aix A brtost e covolutions'of @ smooltlippel shell” | as to exclude dirt, dust, and even water. | trical discharges, and of luninous undu- | inextaustibility of the supply of the | inthe valleys of Orogm and Wushiugton | @) of the constitution of the state of Nebrask (o miadies TETL T hearing “swnoros calences” and nold- | Of course itis almost hopeless toexpect | lationsof waves was an acsomplished | underflow, goes the geologists one better | to Ve gore . 1 b Jos forsitts e o | e e e LY 11 eon Dealers in Hardwood Lumber, ing converse with the unscen universe | that nothing of thesecould make i y | fact. If more decisive proofs are still | and declares there are lakes and seas of | to resemble those wonderful westorn soils, | $15t ot five 5 judzes, & majority of whonishall Yard 1810 4 166 Bo: OMIA: ' itseli—will be able tolisten to the ave- | into the conduit, buta very large pro- | Wanted, it can be suid that, in the mind | water underground. He doos not believe | wheat growing will ussime a maguitnde that | DIESSary o form a quorun or topronounce | e T inepiting rush and roar of the sun's | portions of the disturbing intruders | of physicists, the intimate connection be- | that man can useit up. Heciteseminent | would now seem incredible. 3Bulls and bears, | {n cuses relating 16, revenie. oVl cios in JOHN A. WAKEFIELD, mountainous billows of fireas they splut- | mustbe kept permanently out. tween electricity and lightis very mear | authoritiesfor hisbelief, andsaysthat the | foreign possimists native “blockheads and | which the state shall be & party, n s, Wholesale Lumber, Etc., Ktc, ter forth in_inconceivable fury fromhis | The conduit itself may be very small, | being rigorously defined. underfow is going o redeem the great | EVblers o @rain th world over “shonld | guo warranio, hubeas corbus arid Eh 001 | Lmportea. ad Ameriian Vuriiant Coment. Siate f yelopean fur Wiat @ sermon |and the main conductor - may be carried b e American_desert, - Western Kansas, he | 5OV the “importing date of the Usited g e ay g phoRtded oy e or sijpaukes iy llc comant, aad will be preached into the receivingin- | with cable underneath it andtapped | Soft-Boiled Eggs Prepared a 1a Kemm | dec s, will one day be a beautiful, pro- | © . «0f the constitution of the state of Nebrask vl — strument! A yolce from the central orb | into the conductor sirip at intervals. | Thenovel experiment of hoiling eggs | ductive plain, and prophesies the same To Dispel Colds, L LR T I CHAS. R. LEE, of our plinetary system—type answer- | If theflexible walls can be madeso asto | by electri was tried in the office of | glorious future for allthosebarren tracts | Headaches and fevers, to cleanse the system | shall be elected by the clectors of the Dealer in Hardwood Lumber. ing to anti-type thundering forththe |retaintheir elasticity andther the electric supply compan the | of land that have hitherto not been mar- ! effectu yet gently, when costive or bil- .n.xr the r) tarus 'II'Iumf(.“ O || Wooa eacssti i paruet B )] bR 4ad Dosiink eterml power and godhead of him whom | bly long 1, very much of thetrouble | Masonic temple, on Third Of | ketable. g fous,or when the blood is imp slu Ry e LS HEOE & DO P treets. Omaha, Nobraska. the Christian pulpit, often too feebly for | that has hererofore sood in the way of o, they were boiled i or, but As can be seen his system is sim|,|e to permanently cure habitual constipat Section tlon ve (5) of article six | = po LR EY. our dull es procluims “the lightof |the developmentof conduit traction will city was the heating agent, sa and com: tively inexpensiv The | awaken the kidneys aud liver to if"'v’ h )f Nolras. b . . s B this world, have been removed. Rubber in varios Luke Lillcy, | only question can be the limits of the | tivity, withot irrit CHES: ST Lumber, Lime, Cement, Etc., Ete. From ascientific point of view the [ forms, packing strips of cuny 0\'1\1”‘!')\‘. y's nssistant electrician, was chief sullllxr:_\. Tm \\'hfllnlu\'(;r he docs Mr. .r[..,..u em, use Syrup of Figs. b e Tarihe S T S tcer e oD Gisaes oih Ral TO AR DL LS Ol valueof this experiment may be im- |permeat with waterproof insulating Char! Marshall, the under- | Will be thoroughly testing this, t is | Sioux City Cc s TP A onof this amentnient to the NSl Hon, | ey mens, Erery new fact brought cor. |tompounds and supported by metallic agent ate the fitst ege bolad | vorthy of noto that the beauty of this | 7t Gy SR e et (1RSI U Latadth soa (B1E]ucliRe ot th Millinery and Notions, tuinly to light respecting the actua strips, fibrous packing o s X gency cf the subtile current. It | svstem is that it exemplfies at s | omahg fitoad [depit 1Bt e v & top | fOF the tern of one (1) year,one for theterm oo e e phenimens in “tho regiins heyod, vips of rubber and canvs, | required six ampere (quuntity of elec- | Known in logic us the mutuality of cause | QrBisailrond (depot 15thand Webster | o vhree fyeiriand out: for e ttrm of Gt tors and Jobbers in Mili however insignificant it may se and fibrou drg strips driven with ity) and ninety-six volts (pressureof | and efflect. Nothing s ever lostin nat- 5£0 Sloux Clty and. retire. Bon. | atcertheroshatl } PRI Importers and Jobbers in Millinery, first, becomes toscience in her onward |sufficient elusticity by stecl spring, are to accomplish the operation with | ure. The water brought to the surface Soptember 23 and Sunday, October | JLBIEME court for the term of five (3 ¥ %08, 210 and 212 Bouth 11th street. g pathof research the keystone of an |among the forms proposed. about two quarts of waterin a huge tin | by these artificial means is spread over 15 OMmale 68 AR it b PO LU . ;rlfll:;lar”;lu:‘ mplll—————— archserving to bridge some hithertoim- T cup. The news of the egg-boiling |the surface of the earth, and the U 5p.m.,and returning | time of holding the general election of 1591, otions: \ pasuible chiasm, Almost every great | A Remarkablo MultiplexTelgraph. | tpread quickly, and,as it was about | by far greater amount after bav- | lugveSioux Gty at 7 pr my arriving as | dikiontnse to hoid thelt ofee 107 the re: | ——3 " FORINSON NOTION Co5 outhurst of a solar cycloneis followed by A most remarkable developement of | lunch time, brokers, bulls and bears, | ing done its service sinks into the | Onahg atl 5p. m. One fare for” the [ pectively elected under the presentconsti- | Wholesale Notions and Furnishing Coods A magnetic storm on our little planet, [the multiplex telegraph has just been | bankers, insurance men and law arth again to be brought to the surface round trip DR DENED AT tution.” 4 and simultaneously the icos of Its polar | dewised by Lieutonant F. Jarvis Potien, |crowded the off About thirteen | again and untilized in the ssme manner : S e R e nsabenon Foiinx th favor b A i) circle glisten inthelightof the aurora |who has boreali in this field, s ! 4 Familiar examples of this arvefoundin [The improved system depends forits | go with each egg. and reused again and again, uncon- ady done yeoman's service | dozen eggs were consumed, the only dis- | ¥ith the same result, and so on inynend- ays the New York Sun. [appointment being that a drink did not | ing succession. The water will be used d upon his ballot the following: “For the proposed atiendment to theconsti- tution relating to the number of supremie 11 ast ical and magnetic observa. h ! d sciously, of course. The Ogalalla_canal Judges CONSOLIDATED TANK LINE GO, all sstronomical and magnetic observa- [ operation upon the synchronous an sciously, of o galalla_can dagu 29 ; L tions _ Tho magnetic storn of Novem- | unform moverent of two or moreelectric | The Electric Light Unpopular fn China | ¥il1 not be of any benefit to the citizens the ¥ Wholesale Refined aud Lubiicating il ber 7, 1882(succeeding theappearanceon | motors placed at distant points, the of that countrythis season, but net in Axlo groass, otc., Omaa. A. I1. Bishop, Manager. 1If report is to be relied on the Chinese tee pre the 16th of a sun spot whi _— , measured |synchronism being in this instance, ot | have stili a long v ar they will “have the opportunity of the uet entitle de the yto go before th at Allepheny observatory, covered | Jelicate, asit usually is, but powerful | will be in a positi Y | testing what ance theyfmay place nerof proposing all Paper. at Tvalory, cover g s, but poy a position to avail themselves ] Ty emay, g Stitution und Suby : - 2,200000,00 square miles), setiously in- |and trustvorthy. The' possibilities of | of tho benots of modern scientifio. pr e __Ilil“g-flv Jones is gonfident torsof the s ehraary 15¢h CARPENTER PAFPER CO, terrupted the telegraph lines at New | thisarrangemeit point tothe wonderful |rress It is stated that the imperial | hatthey will be unable to exhaust 1t, A D, mendment wil and his York, and cablo mesages were delayed | concl sons for this belief must be Wholesale Paper Dealers. clusionthut with repeating stations | palace, by order of the young emperor : be presen nearly anhour, while at Chicigo, the |t suitable intervalsand branches con- | was fittel throughout. with electie | *dmitted tobe well founded. 8 Or s ut thegoneral | Cury m mice siock of printing, wrapping and tom %o be ield on the st day of Noveu A S e s OL L ORI Inwitness whereof Thave liereunto set my | T ed to be aflived the A News reporter obtained Mr. Jones® o switchbourd wis a dozen times on fire. | nected to the same synchronizing circut, | |igh o opinion a Asan experinent one of the Western [an entirenetwork of lines and instru- 8. The imperial cabinet was called together to witness the formal opening to the feasibility of sinking ‘ Vash i ¢ A o q i hand and t seal Ete. | Union wires between Washingtonand |ments canbe operated with the dis- | of the new system of illuminati artesian wells all over the arid belt 3 Y Safes, Fte. 4 r a g 5 i ol umination. In- | ¥ ; of the state of Nebraska. Done Line o | Baltimoro was worked with the earth | tributing brushes from Maine to Cali- | stead, however, of their expr:‘h.‘:g ’l“l_ which it hus been suggested the govern- This Bh day of July. A, D: 1500, and the twen- A L. DEANE & GO, ) current glone. There is every rewson | fornia, kept on the same sergments by | miration of the brilliant light they stood | B¢2t might undertake. Speaking of CASH CAPITAL (U] DU e bt h T aHes B o i oo ool Astnse 20f therefore to expect that the strength of | the impulses emanating from New Ysre. | aghast. This wonderful sheen,” which | (P18 he said, “there has beena great | U2 APITAL, (FULLY PAID UP,) | Bendincectst 1 Halls Safes, all sich disturbances will be increised | Lieutenant Pattent affords a brilliant in- | eame and wentat the touch of a button deal of inquiry m_ul speculation on this By the Go-ernor, JOHN M. THAYER. ‘ " enormously in Mr, on’s inductive | stance of what canbe done inanun- could only be the offspring of su A rnmu I know, W er, of course, can be 00 O Ur»;ll‘::x‘l». Owbhr";\'; e 881 and 523 South 10th St.. Omaha. cirait ofthe Ogden ron nountain; that | familiar feld by any oo who hasthe | natural powers and wis' probably a | had i iwhere by boring far enough into , y y Algustlagm oY OB Toys, Bio ’ by the use of this instrument the varia- | grit to concentrate’ himself upon it. | machination of evi i L 4 > earth’s crust: the further you go the - = A ey Py e y Eic. ) tiow of htonsity canbo recoried, and. D E s waE edioned sut maotinnon o thél :A’:';“&:Hnfi“"'lz:':d":ij more water you ob There are now OFFiC RS "ROCLAMATLON, I HARDY & CO., as he hopes, “sounds produced on the |west withhis regiment. While onthe |and in a few days the electrical plant :I great many s inthe country sunk | WM. E MIDGLEY, |RIH'DK. SHELDON, 3 ‘VI’HII:!A‘ A Joing resoldtion sdapted Jobbers of 113 b6 haea 1. =il - S el sald L 5 e als, oing o 5 the legi Fe of the stat askit, sun will be heard onthe telephone. trackless plaiis, whiers g0 muny | wus remored. Syparale pnd ridus rragtigallihe President Treasuror, | e trenly it Slion 1 aproved | Toys, Dolls, Albums, Fancy Goods of he officers attemp elieve e 'y APS 4 severs | March sith, A rend- : . A Register for Telephone Exchanges. nmufiium of the weary days by the Frras thousand feet. But itis too e k,p. . | JonNGILL, JORN J. JACKSON, ," Il‘,o\' ant Lo | House Furnigbing Gouds. Chlidren . With the growth of the long-distance | perusal of the highest possible lite Captain Williams of J " One well often costs £10,000. You can Pe0n T8 | of the constitutic s ate; satd 5 hig S “apts effersonville, ¥ v A Vice President. s otion snde ad as follows, to- | T telophono system hus cono the need of [ ture, and other amesements ol a more | Pa., fwenty years biind, s recovering fernib oo fan Telow e | A0E St B¢ Vi o el Water Supplies. an “entiely new sel of devices | exciling chacacer, ho took up the study | his'sight,” Ho thinks ‘the glure in his B g RO SR iR D OB AT clesix 1 ot thetonsutotionof theatatant Ko | o e = ) or | fwilitig work n - tele-| of alectricity, with whichle occupied ail | room of an electric light hus ‘something oing very Second Vice Pres,| As retary. | brack beamended so as to read a3 follows. +/8. WIND INGINY, & FUMF 00 ki bivies e e i o ane tene LS ‘»‘m-r“"(“ of fhis | to do with bis recovery. “Why do you select the vicinity of DIYEOTOTS, sbitl] Sl Locdlra n Bhiary o Ch B A doust Steam and Water Supplis, :lly‘xu\n UJ"‘:‘&?HO» l‘l‘r"‘;*;hl"“:‘h{“fl;' :1:?- Xl‘xpxlt’:\llut‘x!\:‘::{‘ n:_]l.lithn‘l;-lr:lhlnnfi ;t:"exob Ttis stated that_ the German electric | pivers™ « ° o 2 VSRR 0L Beiliw. W, BRENCE: CHAS, D. FISHER, .1';‘ d doliars (§4500) por anium wsd the jadges | Hallidsy wind mills 18 123 0% Jones it Omaha. 1Ryt ¥ get, S ands, = | any A 88 in dontes N AeET 4 of the teourt shull rece salury of i 088, 3 forunt frum those onlimarily mut with 10 | joetof curicsiy to. the Tutans at Fort | SomPAnYof Midrid has in cntempla- | Vel itis generdlly almitted that Balumore, Ma| Baltiuore, | hires thousnnd doiiam (E500) por whmam. and | emm—— demand special apparitus, says the [ Sidney, Neb. He came east to put him- | ;o0 Tl Plec- | the water flows more freely in the neigh- AMES y % A th ary of each shall be payable quarterly, e Elutricl World, The dovicothatealls | elf i lins with the lniest work and | (hic Jloughing on o large property in | borkeod of the underflow of a strenm, | JAMES A- GARY. OBERT SEWELL, | Seetionts’ Euch purson Yoring 1atfhsor o EIIBAVIOeRS: = for attention in the present urli;‘lc isone | ideus, buteo far from having anything to | S centrl part o ‘; m-r lectrio | BUE lllcn%wxlllun the same plan find Baltimore, Md, New York. | upgn inds ballot e tllowls ; PAXTON & VIERLING IRON WORKS, intended more especially to facilitate | Jear e WAS i ce accepted ¢ _Trees do mnot suffer from electric | water notfar down on the arid ins = = p P “For the posed amendment to theconsti- [ i [’ inisndal mor Sl it il :.‘);::“‘fl;?:n‘;:i Ail“(\{x.;:‘\mn\u‘]‘)‘::ldt:\ii q:fi‘?; A e e e el ot hore. Sroudont have rive el | WA A FISTER IPNY B. BEECHER, | cutlon. 4o o Ul Salary o Judges of e l\‘\r?ughhl and Clast llu‘flr Blilldlllg‘?\()[l(, tramsacied inan exchange, and patticu- [ arenow attracting univessal attention. | Mens is siid to have proved by experi- | drift gradually for your water and will Baltimore, Md.| New YORK. | ) ikt W A e T ' iffe call d gene! L Jigass = s de. | ment that the electric light aids vegeta- it like aminer his vein. I don’ e | s ateof Ry and I7th street, Omaha. | larly of the different calls and general | He has not only been workin g at the de- | ™ g 5 1L | JOHN GILL 'N" 3 i ] service of long-distince lines, vhere the | velopment of alternating current | HO% think the government will ever try any | *CTY G110 B BT R OO, TR or The conkiTbasiom st Bhe pros 7o = charges are necessarily high and min- | dynumos and motors, but has brought to | _Inthe Sikkim expedition a telegraph | plan of boring artesian wells on an ex- Balthmore, Md.| Brooklyn. | slonsofan nctentitied: to provide OMAHA SAFE & IRON WORKS, utes mean money. 1t proviles means jce some of themost beautifuland | office was opened which enjoys the dis- | tensive It may to a certain ex- | ppw - S AT themanner of proposing amenduicnts to nf q 3 1 pr R not! ] RERLD. pene joys th & g 9 EDWARDAUST! A. R. GRAVES, the constitution an bmitting the same to for vegistering the various cirum- | comprehensive systems of telegraphy | tinction of being the highest in the |tent. Butindividual companies cannot theelectors of the state.”” Approved Feb, Vaults, Jafl work, lron shutters and fire eseapes stances occurring in the routine of ex- | everdevised. He has other ideas on | World. Itis situated at Bhutong, atan afford to carry out ascheme of this kind. Baltimore, Md, New York | Lith A.D. 1577, thut said proposed & g G- Andreen, prop'r. Cor. 14th 3nd Jackson Sta. chinge service; " the mmber of calls | which he is at work, andhe hs already | altitude of 13,500 feet, two and three- | Especially when the system I am devel- WILLIAM E MIDGELY, New York:s B halie s atied ta thp quiliBidve) T S made inthe day, the time at whichcalls | secured an en le reputation in |quarters miles above the level of the | oping is much cheaper and product Sash, Doors, Etc. | B thell fed Aol il T Pty o | better results 1 do not think it — aromade, thetime occupied in comect- [ Eurpe. Lieutenant Patten is a phe- | Sed better results hink it w - e A. 0 du sad dniss i aralipieeomn il fu noucnally rapid worker, wnd Lis inven- | = An electric company in Germany has tried. With my works I can bring more BEECHER, SCHENCK & BENEDICT, s whercor [ hato horeunto set my M. A DISBROW & CO, ~ printed form, 5o tha o closest check | tions ha een brought to perfection in | announced itself as prepared to transmit el e S| C an can arte- P s )- e of the state of Nebras Do Lineol 3 280 be kot o the io: helines, T 5 F k e isfigl g ielia il an wells costing $10,000 apiece. General Managers, this “6th day of July. A. D, 1490, s pocih, Sash, Doors, Blinds and Mouldings. \ pt on the operation oft a remarkably short time, 300 horse power from the Neckar at ~ g P ol 4 i\ ¥ Y The meuns adopted are comparatively e Lauflen to the Frankfort exhibition, a [ Mine —costs 20,000 and you can | EQUITALBE BUILDING, 120 BROADWAY, | bniimcoot the Uniied Sidtes tho one bac: | _Braseh offce. 12t 6nd lrard sirests, On 0"'.__1"’*”" simple. A tape is passed automatically Refining Silver by Electricity, distance of about one hundred miles, on | figure out the difference” without NEW YORK. drel fifteenth, 2 = through the apparatus at & kiown and | = According toa foreign journal devoted | cordition that an ordinary overhead [ much trowle. I got eighteenfectinto | Insures manufacturers. merchants, [ pl7 theGovernor, — JOIN M. THAYER S | ] determined rate and on it areimpressed | to the mining and kindred interests, the | cable, connecting the two places, is pro- [ the earth and they over one thousand. | rajlway and other corporations, and | PE{EENN R COMPIME | e outh Omah ay the various characters required toshow | method of refining silver electrically is | vided free of cost. Theplanloutline and am following is | a1l empioyers against claims for ac. | Augustldsm T UNION STOCE TARDS CO. the nature of the service, A largotime [ nowcoming into a somewhat extended A simple method of curing the trouble- | COMmparatively cheap. It will save mil- [ cigental death orinjury of employees e 3 wheel keeps track of the inter-| use,saysthe Chicago Journalof Com- | some o eeping wals _between the different signals [ merce.” It is most suitable forthe refin- | goribed by M. recorded, while these latter are|ingof auriferous silver containing about mear the surf rinted by one or more printing | 11 per cent of gold, the cost in thiscase | u thin coat of v evers and wheels thrown into action | being only about 14cents per 1 lions of needless expense to the country ; ) [ S . Limited, ot e 0 the countrs | when abie for suen accitents.and | DR, J E, MoGREW —0f South Omaha, Limited. water. It will reclail this whole barren | '™ the_event of no lability, insures NEBRASKA wasto, The irrigating ditches will not | 2&2inst clatms for lavility foracei- | ‘T he bDQGIUIISta P aseline is | 0 drying up and the rivers will not be | 4ental death orinjury to the public. tteries is de- This is to ces 10 be preserved with aseline. Tk e jound, The | unchange: ¢ air, is not attacked by » ansurpased in the eron: p during the operation of the system; fou | principle uponwhich themethod isbased | most chemicals, is chsily applied, § l;‘.. taxed so. To get a1 this subterrs Insures property owners azainst ST Bererainsis e s | a lOl]d afl exumple, at the momentof calling u'star | consists in using anordiniry electrolytic | in place, and does noi cover up from | W&ter has been the question, and the [ 1083 or damago by reason of the ex- B A oihARe will be automatically impressed upon the | bath anodes of an argentiferous matte, | siy ) par st e oblem to be solved has been one of ex- | Plosion of steam boilers or operations i iclaiving the bla dir, o Ly P ¥ g s | sight the parts to be protected. A : Tasivins \the bisader, | S Y, = ritbon, and when the necessary conn and a thin plate of pure silver | T;ihecourse of recent experiments in | PEPS¢: This scheme gives the solution, | of engines, elevators, hoistways and PIILES co | .. BB PEROSIFORT, QAT A, iR tion with thestation called is made the | asthe cathode, ~The bath consists of a | g “‘d“‘ iyl ‘\\I’*r‘ll',"’" iy | L believe, You, see, as youstrike the | specifi «d machinery, furnishing rigid i e e fi: | Capital. - - - - §400,000 suall dotting wheel shown prints along- | very weak solutionof nitric acid, contain- | ;T80UE 1 THONES BEOCE WS BOSSRVEd, | water in this way yoy give it an outlet, [ scientifis inspections of ssme with 4. Heart an | SurptusJan, 1st, 1800 - B7.800 sido the time scale arow of dots, con: | ing about 1 per cent of the acid. The | po il o (oZ0ne 1s | and there are walls of 1t on each side it | attendant oficial cer tificates s B ook ¢ - A » h 008 4 k¥ hindered by the presence of oil of tur- | § i | i i tining until the station called is dis- | anodes, vhich are about onehalf inch | AaEred B¥ UG Brefuaee, o O of t Is forced immediately 1o the surface. | fwues bond of indemnity guaran- L Ladles fro OMotra.ant Dirsciors. Janzy . ¥oiss. Eresidery comnected. The star then locates the | thick, with a surface of ahout13.5 square | X g " noe disappoars | Lhere canbe no qusstion that the sub- | teeing the honesty of clerks and Wilts for B i oo S L B ductivity of the air atonce dis ragiving pi V. Morse, John 8 Coiliny, R.'C. Cusbing, J. N. B DPears | terrane momentof cll. The intervil botween [ inches, are placed in muslin bags whick : an waters sre inexhaustible. P : : ” - 5 S Which | wopa) » of the vapor introduce d austivie, | oehers in positions of trust- chof the Patrics, W. I 8. Hughes, cashiler. ) the star and the appearanceof the dot | retain the gold, platinum, peroxide of | Yoo Some of the vapor 1s introduced. | and T believe, as I have said, that m. Afford g Ot 1ne I P ' ya N v rpenti U Se Vel 8 o 5 i J v - g 8 indivad e d 08t remarkable cires. Of- D \ ' line shows the time taken to make con- | lead andsimlilar foreign qul\"riuls con- }"‘.“'?l‘\l m'lllmmlm-" bd‘:)T"lrm g{_"‘” method, perhaps improved on, will be .ncc,:lnde'r"ll‘;:u‘r‘:.ll ::‘:(:(il""l mn.‘"' fce, N. E. Cor, lith m}l py : RHE [RON B AN, nections, The length of the dot line de- | tained in the matte PRMONR Dt Nash B0 VROR. 1Y e | tha one thak will Dagand most fessable) | 2R BISEE LRGIAL Belicle tothass | Sy R Cor s pad Fieem Ol ehimeace on Corner 12th a0 Faraam Sis. termines tho exact time during which | ~The currentused is 150 ampheres, and | MosPheric air, transform a portionof it | 15 gey at them, ¥ pAtione. Comnmer ——— C1al rAYCIOns and” olhore Rtex0090: | T rrumen Rectatary o deniar? srmsnntiymng | -dsnsrsl Hatking Busloses Transssiad, the telephone was in service by the sub- | the potential difference between the | 1010 0zone, and again, turpentine will - Y sriber, Olviously this forn. of sppa | p % gttty Daring the - whole | #bsorb ozone without decom posing it. Fits, spasms, St. Vitas? dance, nervousnes | ingly low rates. B LT e s o fom i ) WANTED ratus can be claborated to any_ desired | period of work brushes are keot moving | . The question whether ornotelectricity | 81 bysteria um soon eured by Dr. Mile s BANGWALE BROL, Ty fom. Farics can be tnsied 183UC0 BY CITIES, 4 tured is now being tried in . Free samples at Kuhn & Co. s, 15th General Agents, Omaha, Neb. b e andy COUNTIES, SCHOOL extent, so that, for exumple, it will bo | up and down the silver plates, which | 18 manu no Hartos l possible to read from the paper ribbon | sweep of the silver deposited into | Certain courts, If it is manufactured, L - an exact acount of the ussmade of a | troughs put for the purpose at the bot. | the producers in numerous states are AMERICAN WHEAT. NOIE. long distance line within a day ‘sopera- | tom of the bath. These troughs are re- liable for taxation. Benjamin Franklin CORRESFONDENCE WITHd GEN- tion, and when, as is often thecase, | moved from time to time, and the silyer | Deld that electricity was not manufac- [ No Danger That We Shall Be Com-| ERAL MANAGERS, 120 BROAD- oo, (ut with DISTRICTS, WATER b 13 Correspondencesolicited. oy paniES, ET8 | N.W, Harnis & Company, aken, o expense o challenge 1 charges for such servicoare madeon the | taken out and sent to the furnace. If | tured, but was taken from onebody to be pelled to Tmpore, WAY, NEW YOURK, SOLICITED BEMEDT €0, Orndhar 163105 D Streot, CHICACO. busis of the timo oeccupied, thouse of | the matte containscopper, this is dis- | delivered to another, and that practic Superficial writers on wheat growing are | FROMMEY OF ABILITY AND 4 £ 08 te BOBTON. such an autonatic registering device as | solved by the nitric acid, but is not de- | 8lly nothing was lost inthe transition. | just now asserting and ressserting that the | FERIENCE REGARDING LOCAL Of | 012 St Clalr Hotel Cor13thand 1)1+ | THIS PAPER 15 PRINTED FRON that here deseribed cortaioly means a | posited on thecathole. The electrolytic | Hitherto our scientific men have held | United States will be compelled to jmport | BSTATE AGEANCY APPOINTMEN 18 | — very considerable saving in many cases. | method of treating mattes containing | this to be true in a broad sense, wheat grain in the year 15, says the Milling | 1N UAOCCUPIED 1 ERRITORY, W AK | ome——— the precious metals will doubtless come Atalltreein front of 19 Stuyvesant | World. This ussertion took its latest start at STATING QUALIFIOATIONS, ' § £rom the Slecws of youth | A Railroad in Arctic Regions. into general use when its value is better | street, New York, was discovered to be | the recent convention of the 2 nal Asso- | 7T i Lt bl I alle treatise (ealc ’ London Xron gives the following par | understood. alive the other afterncon. It held o | Sidtion of British aud Irish Millers, when P et et s SRor e rond b o — ¥roM TUm — ticalam of & projec, thesuccess of vhich —_— group of men and boysaround 1t {or o | Tuade useof thepredicion, Averians shouid JflSEPH GILLOTT’S erof . oW mosausconn: | Great Western Type Foundry, would doubtless bo "followed by similar Heat and Magnetism. long time. The bark had boen Wet by | Bot bo too reads o acept arees noans should Mosunvens. | IO yp Y enterprises on thissideof the Atlantic: | Itisnow pretty widely known that | the rain, and those whotouched it got a % LADIES ONLY.+ 1114 Howard 5t OMAHA, o back four or five years to find British b remedy n fro T “The boldest electrical project yet sug: | iron suddenly ceases to be magnetic | pretty strong charge of electricit gested s one which is under considers- | when heated to the eritical point of its | 1lar tothat from a medical electr v MAMNHOOD on 50 Rusi fora Lizo feom St Foters | Procalocencs” or “afterglov,” and that | ebine. Blectric light wires were s | Wers ahilauily deduring viat lodias pro GOLD MEDAL, PARi3 EXPOSITION, 1889, | BY pregsancy, am: Fil Co. loraily Erope.’s WE A Fariy Decsy ard Abase burg northeast re N i 2 ce t0a bracket naile " uction of wheat would develop so rapidly Qedh Ganaine by Baernan & Neooumell, y ¥ A birg o el vl | gl S 1 e " | S Bt e W il G B Wl SSULITRSY | THE MOST PERFECT OF PENS, | Doatorusieln.s rist R REAIANS | maitsiny i