Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 02, 1874, Image 2
"- ss-jjrv. '.- '. c- --. 5tjS "V"1" iv : t t? .". i '", " h " . V& m s. " ll.1 "fTt " "- :' nc- " "; v- ----- fc- ii-tm :-. -ed H& ameaVT T T fc f S: ''w i, : v, - ' - -- mm: - """" - aaaal K - it 't smaja"aBBi 5P ZS " - - -7,-., Ml, - i- - f-A. ItgKA. aw WM. ' T " Jamttrnm HaM amtsamUS t ,4s," HOhS" - aejem. Wh THE OMAHA BEE PAFEat OF THE CITY. -Oft iP)SDKXTS. lay eeatrlbEtlons whsterer fs or poetical thmcter; and -re to'aifarw.orto return ijaaas wtetarer. Oar Sufl t j gi to mn umb capriroBr la thai direction. ggUaTanewWHTza, la fall, mast inesch ftMj anj MBmraiB Barer. Thk k notin- JerylMiwrian.bntfgrgrowDsUs alwaairaaf at. aaod faith. Oaram Fhktm w. will always to to iw frwa, en all mstten connected try politic, and on any snb- jaes .Urn if iimril Interest to the peo khalMHlWtL Aay lnlanBation eonneet 1 it Ian aiartlni) tnfl raJatlaf to floods, . ... ... ... -taoir raeelred. AU stioaa, aowerer, bob m ; aad tiey most, in all cues. l.illaas iii. iianITi nf the sheet only. VOUXICA&. aW,Asjaav lot candidates for ome. Vy atU or friends, sad r aa nllr or eoamnnlcstions to the an (oatil noaalnatlon arc made) atatair .manail. and. will be charged as ad- lahenld to addressed to rATEK, Baatar aad PaWaaer, Draw- wmcfc .ad altar October twenty-first, 1872, the alii eticiikUan nf ttoTTtnT Bzx is atmitaed by Jit. Mais Davis, to whose order all sub amavataaw aataahi at the eOeawlJ.se payable. 4 wy wham aU neaipts fer sahaeripUeaa will itoaitapaf il ' K. KOSEWATZJL Fabllsher "now it is announced that BatUr prapoaea to follow in the wifcaof Hoar and Dwes, by de- "Ulminf; to-run for Governor of Mass-rartt- This announcement may, however, be made with the mental reservation that he will make a eeiteet Jer Wjtokburne'e scat In the JID fiSBTOKY tells us that President '"TayJoriraa literally talked to death "" $y saeloBg-windd, spread-earfe ' TTeurtb: of July orator, who kept his victim for several hours in the blis- teriag sunshine. This ought to serve as a gentle hint to all the Fourth, of July orators who expect t entertain the Grangers and other patriotic citizens of Nebraska. Spain has suffered a very serious Ueaster, in the loss of General Con- !, aad the repulse of tho Bepubli ean army under his command at Brttln While this victory will doabUeee encourage Don Carlos and ja brigands in their incursions, tho battle was by no means of such a decisive nature as to imperil the ex .Jeteaoe of the Spanish Republic OUR local Democratic contempor ary ilerivea great comfort from the reflection that the negro race is dy iag out at such fearful rate in America that its total extinction is eaMeatly predicted by an ex-rebel pklkMophefwithln the next 5,000 yean. There is a reasonable hope that the Democratic party will be aide to appoint all the postmasters and postal clerks in the country by the tynetbe last nigger is buried. 5iuc of tho leading Republican as 'of Missouri arc advocating " jo-party campaign in Missouri "iTu fall. Avitlentlv with a view of Making cure of the defeat of the 'Deaecracy. Such experiments aro "however, somewhat dangerous, and aeeardiag to our notions, decidedly priacipled, It isatbertja make- 'siuft peucjbt xnuet have a power- vto deraorelize and de- aror 1hV party organization. Tho lv2L, irhele movement simply degener m' antosaeeamble for the spoils of For our nart we should I s eeasMer it more gionous uu uuu- ,MiHefe be heatenin a square par VfrcauteaCtbAn'to winby playing imimX peesHm. - aSB WherVeh where, is the Omaha now? It has thrown effthe : and become the recog- of-ajset of political awftseiraton and dborganizers, who are tryiBg to organize a new ponti eiTiaty"iathiiBtafe, under the Maer rerotaB ana pfuiwiwu iu i"v dae&isl "eliennT The manager a4 .jroprietor of the XepuMican, rfc4 ! always attracted by the lt0 . pontic1 plunder, nas these path-bound sham The columns of his 'ere 'now "devoted to una r.jnadeup Jn great part - ,-ef jjhe, most unscmplous and cor- " Mf4 peUtaeeX k-kiuxes of Demo- '- -' aVaOea Repubiicaa antecedents. r"1 '!-! CMZAP X8XIT. CbeefTmoney is just as assential Vv',,tlBS ieielepmrnt ef our industries Kk. ae chemi eeeJ. The supremacy of 3" IS-? 3 aSOtiw EBghmd; as f. pfee memmhetwiaig centers, arc eembk due to the factthat money - has been obtainable there at very lew rates of taterestThe chief ar- at of the advdBWOL of-cur- . maey wflatioa, k that the inaugn--jatloa ef their policy, woaW result JJJA fedeetJoaef rtho rates of intcr ' asLar m other words that an abnn- ef caper currency, would t cheap money market This 'O-SJemmvuOa m nowerer,- uhvi.-u aammaj - S''lMaBrnvertlblefacts.' Ja. 1 - . .. w Cheap . .mm mnFvv - , at lowrafes of interest, de- ii,. iMiBiMHnrin 9 nk. UpmvfaW'eheracter of the anmsteona, mxmtncta- far leans. j -, t k mmtarnaf la aatlv another m forbad 8ecrKy;t as high rates ate anewer ume lire risks. In Old Eng- ahd New agh)Bd maHuisctu- borrow money at from four per-oeat vpen reel estate se- eaase real estate es are tosouehiuctaation as ef the West and SoWh; and tAftf eneerpnscBre eoBaia Htahtaal. In 6)tcago money bshadfjon real estate mort al ton V per cent, wnuo in ThtoH atasjiy beeaaee umcage iLhaes mem eiintrannfi ralaation.'The seme wit to thewarioos tlsnsrn of bor- eredlt xJI " W from our banks at the legal rates of interest others who lack credit or collaterals, are forced to pay usur iousrates, ranging trom 15 to 50 per cent. This discrimination against one class of borrowers and in favor of another class'will always continue. And now let us examine the ques" tion of demaud and supply which governs the price paid for the use of money, Just as it governs all other commercial transactions. Amasa Walker, in his work on political economy declares that the more money we have had in circu lation the higher has been the rate of interest Professor Walker es tablishes" -the fact by taking the amounts of currency afloat at differ ent times, as shown by the bank re turns, and comparing theseamounts with the rates of interest at the same times, as stated in the market reports. The reason why inflation necessarily advances the rates Of interest are self-evident In the first place inflation caus es a general advance in prices, and this encourages reckless speculation, and hence a brisk de mand for money. For instance, in 1865 when the volumo of the cur- jency afloat was almost twice aa large as -it is to-day, the legal rate of interest in Nebraska was 15 per cent, and nobody grumbled about it, simply because everybody was en gaged in speculative pursuits which promised largereturns. Inflation nat urally begets a spirit of extravagance and money gambling which is always accompanied by a brisk demand for nior ey. Money Is cheap in Germany and France, while it is very high in Austria. The only reason for this Is that Germany and France have a substantial currency with a specie barfs, while Austria is submerged by Irredeemable paper promises. The Chicago ZIme in an able review on cheap money refers to this fact as follows: "For more than a century and a half Austria has been cursed by a swindling paper money system. In flation has followed inflation again and again, and the usual consequen ces have always been realized: de preciation, advancing prices, specu lation, fictitious wealth, panic, re vulsion, repudiation. The element of uncertainty thus introduced into all time transactions has worked fearful demoralization toroughout the empire, but most of all In Vien na. The people of that city are reckless, prodigal, and dissipated. Tbe city has become a city ofshams. And intelligent historians concur in the opinion that this is due to a variable standard of value more than to any other cause." Does anybody doubt that like causes would not produce like effects in this country ? The fact is cheap money can only bo had by stability in our financial system, which can only be brought about when a paper dollar will be exchangeable for a specie dollar. This condition can not and need not necesssarily be reached during the present year or tho next year, but it Bhould be steadily kept in view as the only safe and sure plan for securing cheap money to the people. Practical Beformsxw - The State Temperance Conven tion of wonjftBfwhich met in Ohio recentlyfpassed a resolution in favor of- reviving the law whioh provides for an "inspector of the quaUiy of Hqrors, and to punish their adulte ration. At last the friends of tem perance have made a wise move, and one that will commend itself to the better portion of tho community, which uses wines and beers, and to the German brewers themselves, who have been tho most active opponents of the temperance move ments in Ohio. That State already has a law of this kind, passed twen tyyears ago, which has become a dead letterand its revival and en forcement would be productive of great good. It is a notorious fact that the poisonous adulterations of liquors aro the sources of most of the evils attending the use of intoxica ting drink, and are the direct means rf maddening and crazing men. In countries where pure wines and beers are sold, drunkenness and its attendant crimes ard horrors are comparatively unknown. No ar gument can be adduced which is valid against such a law. Suppose that grocers were selling flour, or 8igar,or tea, bo adulterated with poisonous compounds that they endangered not only the health but the safety of the family and the community. How long would it be before inspectors would be appoint ed and tbe poisonous stuff con demned and destroyed, and tho sel ler of itpunished? if the public can thus be protected in what it eats, why should it not be protected in what it drinks? If liquor must be sold and men must drink and both these facts are pretty con clusive if the experience of cen turies is of any "account then let it be imperative that only pure liquors shall be sold. .Let the drinker have a remedy against the dealer in a law which will protect him, and let him have a competent chemist up on whom he may call at any timo to ascertain whether he is drinking pure or poisonous li quors. There can be no objection against such a protection, and the temperance people of Ohio have at last made a demand which should be insisted upon by the whole pub lic Those dealers who would op pose it are pri ma facia guilty, and their opposition should have no weight. Chicago Tribune. Sam Slick didn't admire opera. "What's this?" he exclaims, "just look at that gal at the pianny; airth and seas what a crash; it seems as if elio would bang the Instrument in a thousand pieces. I guess she's vexed at somebody, and she's peg ging the pianny .Hit of, spite. Now comes the shagis'; see what faces she mckes; she stretches her mouth open and turns lm -the white offer eyes like a duck in a thunderstorm; she's in a musical ecstacy; she feel good all over. But, hello! what un der the sun isshe about now ? Why, her voice is goin' .down her throat and comes out as hoarse as a man's; and that dandy feller along aide of her is staging,, the fateetter. Why, theyvataally changed voices; tbe gal sings like- a man, and that screamer --like, a woman. This is science ; this lslaste ; this is fashion; but bane me it'it's uatar'." fw " . 3tt appears from statements which may be regarded as perfectly relia--ahkvthat the' warlike Bkxur.-4be' nest troublesome' tresheros and bloodthirsty. of all the- savage tribes' within the boendarfea of Montana -are inirAli"r their forces with the design of making a xormktaMe -sM teth Yellowstone And GaUa- PTOGEBTISTIC. These "dog days" are very warm. We havn't seen a mad dog, but we hear the reverse of it frequently. Family physicians are carefully noting "the promising state of the greenApple crop. This is given as a Delaware obit uary: "His hat wasn't always cocked over his left ear, but" he didn't owe a butcher in the town. "Thou rainest in this bosom," as the chap said when a basin of water was thrown over him by the lady he was serenading. A Leavenworth paper notes the death of a man of "thirty-five years standing." Chairs must be scarce out there. "Change cars!" is what a city bootblack said to a countryman the nthfir dav. when he had finished blacking one of his brogans. A Detroit father keeps his boy Jn niguts by varnishing a chair and fitting him down. It's a novel plan, but awful Uugh on thatrowsers. A Detroit boy propounds the aw ful theory : "Which had you rather do, be eaten up by a tiger, or have all the maple sugar you can swal ler?" The last Congress is triumphantly pointed to as one in which there were very few jobs. We'll admit it, provided Jobs is spelt wima cap ital J. It is pleasant to remember that Thomas Jefferson was a famous fid dler, but it is sad to think what trouble the Democracy have now in dancing to his music Augustus Leonard dressed unlike an Indian, and descended on the cabin of a Missouri family for fun. They kept the body on ice for three days for his father to come. Itochefort, in four words, gives all the evidence needed to prove that first-class American hotels are the best In the world. He says, "I wasn't bitten once. "Beg pardon, sir," said a colored waiter to a stranger at Lake Geneva hotel, the other day, "but Mr. Chit tenden am undevoidably obtained with a transum guest in tho excep tion room." AnAlbany man who was demon strating to a crowd that there was no such thing as hydrophobia, was tho first to shin up a barber's pole whpn a small yellow dog came rush ing down tho street If a reservoir should burst up in Vermont and carry away ten or a dozen Republican candidates for Governor, there wouldstill be enough le'iior tnree or lour diuiiuh uiw ters. Boston Fast. A stroke of lightning mado a Leavenworth womon dumb, recent ly, and now husbands in that vlcir nity want to move farther west They havo heard that lightning never strikes tvlco in the same place. The collecting of an Infamous dog-tax has compelled a poor man in Sangamon, Illinois, to take his children out of school that they may go to work and earn money to pay the law's exactions. Harrisburg, Pa., Is again com plaining of tho scarcity of water. The male residents, to be sure, can got along well enough without it but as they remark, women and children want something to wash in occasionally. A man named Weston was re cently killed by lightning in Vir ginia. But it appears the lightning did not hit the right man by a long rod, for it ,8truckan JnnocenqpeK" son while the pedestrian was in another State training fbr his next failure. Kansas Ci 'y Isn't a good place for a young man to'learn to fiddle in. After the third or fourth night, he is invited to walk beside ty e purling river, and the next thing seen of him some coroner is purling his body out for an inquest TerreHauto Express: "Gimme 8 cents worth of ginger-pop and a nickel's worth of ginger-bread," exclaimed a rural rooster from Lost Creek, yesterday, as he rushed into a confectionery. "Dad died last week, and sincel've come Into my fortune, I'm kinder reckless." Says an Arizona paper: "Small pox need not be feared here it wont come here. The gnats and mosquitoes are occupying the entire ground, and arc now working it vig orously, and under the mining law extension, no re-locations can be made before winter." Miss Saltgivcr, of Crawford coun ty, Kentucky, would be a fashiona ble Nero if she had a fiddle. "While her father was absent investigating a little transaction of hers, where she attempted to get some dry goods under false pretenses, she set fire to the house and cooperage shop and sang while they burned. Two hundred and fifty dollars will be offered at the next Georgia State fair for tho man who will produce tne best living for a family of eight persons on the smallest number of acres. And this leads the Louis ville Courier-Journal to denounce the offer as an open, direct, and most infamous attempt on the part of the State fair to bribe some poor Georgian to starve his wife and six children to death. "How do you do, Mr. Jones?" said a stranger, blandly smiling as he entered the store of a dealer. "Well, thank you," stiffly rejoined Mr. Jones. "You don't seem to know me; I am Brown used to' live here," said the visitor. "I beg ten thousand pardons, Mr. Brown," said Jones, relaxing and shaking hands cordially; "excuse mo, I. thought you were a drummer. "So lam," said Brown. Tableau vi vant San Francisco Chinese vegetable peddlers are, as a rule, very accom modating to their customers A Celestial who had been serving a family with garden-Bass, was re cently stricken down .with small pox, since which time the vegeta bles have been procured from an other quarter. The lady of, the house overcame'' her scruples the other day, .called in a passing pedd ler, and purchased from him a quantity of'strawberries, potatoes, and turnips. As he was dealing these things out she said, "John, you no got small-pox, .eh?" 'No, no; me don't habo got; bringee he tc-morrow." Various are the ways of celebrat ing the Fourth of July, and crack ers, rockets, excursions, multitudi nous drinks-and warm, eioentkHL are always appropriate on ithat "geloriOBs" day. Bat "we are, net sure of the propriety of therejoio-: lag proposed in festive -Obekla Ohio, where the anniversary ieto be marked by "A Hook ami i adder. Tournament" A ladder, tie, sqg gestive of getting high," and a hook, may.-prefigure getting eaqght-in' consequence of getting toohigb; . but what has this to do with "a tournament?" A Sir Aught might, for jrant of alsnoe, brandish ahoch: bat what m the mm of A10aiGHALITlE3 The Apache warriors number one thousand. Several Indians- wcrereoently drowned while attempting to cross theRtoGiande. -- -- ss- It is estimated , that there are, at iu( fi non Patholte Indians m Wash ington Territory: v . Jj There are 927 converts to Chris tianity among the Nez Percesand .Spokan Indians. " The Comanche and -Cheyenne Indians are on the war path down south. Many of the Indiansbout Win nemucca, Nevada, are moving their household "goods to the mouuttins to avoid the small-pox. r Jn the Circuit Court .of Jackson countv. Orejron. the -case of Scar Faced Charley, a Modoc brave, was recently dismissed mr want oi eyi aence to .convict r The chief of the Umatillas re ceuUy traveled 210 miles to receive baptism, and to present a petition for missionary labor among his peo ple. Antelope Jakea chief of an In dian tribe in Utah, who 'was bap tized and. proclaimed an Elder of the Mormon church last Fall, is now trying to convert his tribe to .that creed. The vote of the Indians at the Santee Agency last Saturday upon the question of abolishing the sys tem of hereditary chiefs, and in fa vor of the annual.eleotion of a chief for each band, was defeated by three votes only. Major E. A. Howard, Indian" agent at Spotted Tail'jj agency, Is endeavoring to secure the removal of the agency to some new location, whioh will be better fitted for sup porting, his 6,000 wild Sioux and cheir ponies. The Montana .Courier says the Crow Indians left the Agency about a week ago for a forty "days' trip, in which they will interview any rov ing bands of Sioux found 'around loose, with avjew toftddingto their herd Slonxhorscs and collecting or naments for their wigwams, such as scalps and. like legitimate troph ies -of Indian warfare. APescott A.T., dispatch of June 8th says: Yesterday forenoon the Indian Chief Quatcheakelo surren dered at Camp Verde, bringing with him his bandit 83 persons SO men, 27 women and 26 children. These Indians are believed to be Tontos, but they claim to be Apaohe Mo haves, and say that they have been driven fro.o the Four Peaks, where a couple of weeks ago they were at tacked by Lieut Schuyler and se verely punished. Irataba, the well-Known Mohave chief; died May 4th, at his residence near La Paz, on the Colorado river. His remains, with his household effects etc., were burned to ashes, according to tho Indian custom. His horses were slaughtered, and his tribe thrown into a period of deep grief, during which time they abstained from food of any kind, and would not so much as touch salt They even carried their dem onstrations so far as to burn their old village. A company of Pawnee Indians in their painted costumes, With their ponies and trappings, passed through southwestern Nebraska last week, on their way to visit their neighbors of the Otoe nation. The Pawnees from being the mosHKt likc tribepnAhwcstern'pIams, ade saA&tace, are now sadly dwindled down, until they would scarcely be recognized as the "noble red men" described by Fennlmore Cooper. They have woefully degenerated, and the remnant left are as low in the scale of civilization as a total want of thrift and filthy habits can make them. Little Joe was the medicine man of a tribe of Indians, near Big Pine, California. Sapsey had a fever, and Little Joe killed him in a clum sy effort to care him. The tribe were indignant at the malpractice, ank as a punishment dosed Little Joe with the medicine that had killed Sapsey. But the doctor did not die of his own physic. Then he was stoned and stabbed to death. Four of the tribe have been arrested for the murder. Tney confess the deed, but do not regard it as a crime, arguing that any doctor wh" cannot cure ought to be put to death. The first anniversary celebration ever undertaken by the Chippewas, occurred at White Earth, on the 17th Inst, when, the farmer Indians celebrated the sixth anniversary of the establishment of the settlement at White Earth, by religious ser vices, music, military display,' pub lic dinner and speeches; the religious services were in theEpiscopal Mis sion Church, conducted by the Rev, Johnson, a native priest: music by young- people of mixed and fidl blood. The military display was by a full company welL drilled in Uncle Sam's uniform and equip ments, officered by men who saw service in the rebellion. The speeches were made by White Cloud, head Chief, the Beaubien brothers, influential mixed-bloods, the native priest bis white assistant and Agent Douglass. In the course of White Cloud's oration, he described' the changes wrought upon the Chippewas by contact with the whites, and the de scription was illustrated by a tab leaux, showing the nation before discovery; then impoverished by loss of hunting-grounds; then the victim of alcohol ; converted to re ligion, and last prosperous farmers. . Cachise. the Chief of Chiricahua ApccheSjdied in tho Dragoon'Moun tains, 'Monday, June S, 'last He had been in ill health for some time past, from dyspepsia and probsJbly an affection of the lungs. He was about 50 years of age, and of late years has been much addicted to dissipation. He was possessed of a good deal of shrewdness and quite a capacity for controlling men. The extent of his command has, been greatly over-estimated. He proba bly at no time Had under his control more than 300 warriors, and of late tbe warriors belonging to his band undoubtedly have not exceeded seventy-five. It is pr babie that in the historyof Inuianwarfare no band of equal size has ever murdered more whiter men thau this one For twelve years they inhabited the meet rugged, mountains hear the overland, road, between :BJoMim bres aad the SaPedro, a distance of about 208. miles, keeping a 'close .watch for favorable opportunities to , attackjany and 'all .who might pass along; and hundreds have, been ahvsghtered doringT that ".'time. Large trains have jbeen taken and .destroyed, and. stages, mails, driv eea'andrassniiigers, shared the same Ate. ju After'.Cwmhya death, .the paebee kilted and ate his horses Jhea- ebbse behlee's oldest' ion feftheirhie in4Jbebkejeanip. awi moved to'tbe ageaiey.iThe new. Chief is about' 22 years "of afe,- stoat, Athletle Apaohe, withoe any a-jftearanee of poanesaiaf any BANKING. L1X SAUNDERS, KNOS I.OWE President -'Vice PresdentT ben wood, Cashier. N. W. Cor. Farnhaa and 13th Sts., Capital- $ ICO.000 jAnthorized CsplUi. l.QOQ.UOJ ' rrvEPOSUS AS SMALT. AS ONE DOL-I , I J lar sece'Ted and compound Interest si-1 CwadoB.tbe same. I ' i i - ACLVAnTAgAS OVER Certificates of .Deposit: rBUIE-WKQUt OR ANY PAST OF A DE X poiltaftrTema!ning In this Beak three months. -waV-draw interest from d.te of depos UtopsTBMat. Jhe whole or any part of a de posit eaqlkadrawB. stur time. auj2Stf The Oldest Estaoiisneo BANklNG HOUSE laraTXasftABKA. ! Caldwell, .Hamilton & Co., Basuess transacted same as that ef anlatoreoraied Rash. JtMeeatskentjaCHrreacTerGeld subject to tiflMcheek withoat no tice . -m. .Certificates ef- deposit issued par able on demand, .er at axed date bearing Istereet at; six 'percent, per a&BSK, and aTaltetye In in all parts ef the ceuatry. fj Advances m'adjTjte easterners en anpreTed sernriMi at market rates ef -interest. Bar and sell flMUVBills ef Ex- fjeTemnent, state, CeBntj, And City Beriasc J We giTe-sneeial attention tenego tlatiag Bailread and ether Corpo rate Leans issued' wHhl the State. Draw' Sight Drafts' enEHglaaa, Ireland, Scotland, and all parts of Earepe. , , Sell European Passare Tlcketa. COLULECTIONS PBOMETLTHADE. anltf ' L E7.BA. MILIiABD, President J..H. MXLIiARD, .Cashier. OTMLA.TT.Jf. NATIONAL BANK Cor. Douglas and Thirteenth Streets. i " OMAHA, - . NEBRASKA. ' I CaDltal .1260,060 00 .'Su.000 00 Surplus and Profits- FINANCIAL AGENT BFOtt THEUNITED STATES. -N AND DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY FOB DISBURSING OFFCEBS. THIS BANK DEALS in Exchange, GoTernment Bonds, Touchers, Gold Com, ' t ? BULLION and QOLDDUST And sells drsfts'and makes collections on all parts of Europe. S9Draft8 drawn-parable In gold or curren cy on the Bank of California, San Francisco, i TICKETS FOR SALE TO ALL PARTS of Europe Tia the Cnnard aad National Steamship Lines, aad the Hamburg-American Packet Company. Irtftf TJ.S.DEPOSITOBY The first National Bank Corner oCFaxnam sutd 13th Mrtets. THE 0LDB3TBAH"raO EBTABLIBHMEBT IH HEBBA8&A. (Successors to Kountze Brothers.) ESTABLISHED IN 1858. Orjanitad u a Hatiooal Bank, Angnst 28, 1883 Capital aad Profits OTer $250,009 omens asd dibjcctobs: E. CBEiaHTON, President H. COUNTZE, Vice Pres't A. KOUNTZE, Cashier. H. -W-TTATES, As't Cashier. A. J. poppleton, Attorney. TCio Santrloe Hydraulio, Cement, AND WOULD INFORM. THE PUBLIC THAT they are now resdr to furnish HY DRAULIC CEMENT, of the Tery best quality, andlnany quanUty.eltberst tbe factory, which is located at Beatrice,Neb., or st the Pipe works in Omaha They also are prepared t 'urnish aU kinds ofC-MENTPIPINGIorSEWEBAGE. DRAINAGE, ETC. Abo manufacture all styles of CBDfNETWOKK. WEGUaRAN TEE OUB CEMENT Ttl BE EQUAL TO ANY HYDRAULIC CEMENT MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES. n-OBDERS FROM DEALERS RESPECT FULLY SOLICITED. bkatbick htdbauiic cemeht . PIPE CO. OMAHA - - NEBRASKA. mjU-ia CARRIAGE, BUGGY WaGON MASTJFACTUKER. N. E. CORNER of 14th aad" HARNEY 8TS, WOULDTespectfally announce to tha pub lic tost he Is now ready to 11 sil con tracts in the shore lines with neatness and dispatch. VEz 'Ezereas wacons coaataatlf oa hand aad or sal. 400,000 ACRES! OF TUB FINEST Elkliorn Yalley lands I reR,SALK BT 03 2fb mHESE LANDS ARE CONVENIENT TO JL the market and th ' FINEST in the STATE ! JAM win be soUatireat $2.50 to $5.00 PER ACRE! Far Caan r an Ianr Tie. ia-LAlvDJEXriXmTNGl'rCK-ET3 ior sale at O. N. W.,-De- bearinar eennons which -will taken at JtaU cost- in fnavment for land. . tii . : s. ' (MBIMtO, kyflKATlirBS OB 6 - 4 .aT9ra4aaaaaaaat.eruer tVtaai FlthMaUh t V- - Prictical Wttelmjiker, mraaa-m, t&Oa 11 It. JaWSKJKEI ifk DEWEY STONE Furniture Dealers Nos. 187, 189 and . 3NTE mar2dtf MILTON TXaTWaAKlfl and Wholesale Stoves -SOLE WESTERN AQENCYFOI STEWABT'S COOKING and HEATING ST0YES, THE "FBABLESS." COOKING STOVES. CHARTER OAK COOKING- STOVES, Allenyhlch Will bo Sold at MasHfactarera' Prices, With Freight a dded. apStf Send. Toar .T. A. THORTJP. NEBRASKA SHIFT MANUFACTORY 159 FARNHAM ST., OMAHA, SHIRTS IND GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, AG., &C. J-Sliirts ofaU kinds made to order, sausiauon guarram seu. sprllyleod . Fort Calhoun Mills. MasnfaclHred witk Great General Depot, Cor. may 9-1 y. W. B. RXCSa&RDSOXr. OSdCAJ PITCH, FELT AND GRAVEL ROOFER. A(t Manufacturer ot Dry aail Saturated HaoAaa; and SheaiblBg F lf . ALSO DEALERS IN Roofing, Pitob, Goal, Tar, Xto Xte. 9r ROOFlliO In any mhitreet. Ad ait ot Nebraska or sd.olDing States. itwa P O. Box 452. -rf W H OLESALE CANDI S Tam now inanulacturing all varieties of candies and will sell at BASTEE1T :f:r,ices Dealers .In this State need not want to sroEutfi! CANDIES. 1. trial Is saliclted. SE1TB.-Z w X)ouclas St- Ooxr- XStla.. Bchllttr or' Tha Klnjol the SEWING MACHINE WORLD as pre-eminently as Gold Beicns In th Kealms oi Flaance. i, SALES EOR 18T3: l In Round Numbers 232,444 Machines! X ItEelng oyer Om Handred and Thirteen Thousand mora Mschlncs than were sold by any other Sewing Machine Company during the same time. It willhar ly be denied upon such eridence that tna suprlorMy ot the Slngstls JullTda aonitrata d THE SINGER MANF'G CO. J . 5 je z. C. Z.. JL. KLATTE, 3CJBEOI3A.lsrT TAILOB, 288Dodge Street, 2d Door East of 16 th Street. I keep constantly on band tbe finest stork of Broad Cloth, Caaslmercs and. VasUa&i ; which I aa prepared to make up In tbe most laihionabto st lea and to suit the most fastidious, st the lowest pesdUa prices. l JelOdly B. & J WILBUR, Books and Stationery, SOLESALE AND RETAIL, Tourtenth, Stroot, - O2nah.au, XTob GENERAL AGENTS FOE ALL SCHOOL BOOKS O. F. GOODMAN, WHOLESALE DRUGGIST. "N, - And. Dealer In. PAIOTS, OILS AND WINDOW GLASS, ? Omaha, Nebraska. w GR5bND CENTRAL -- S-.SBW.M. OatAnA,'1 j - v- mnlSXX TI liiaiil and bestbotd betweea Cblcaga lad 8aa fnaaataco. Oeced aavSeptesaber 86th, 173. aM at w GEO. THRALL. Prevriatar. .1 . . icxir IXXWS DEALEaiH i Its, Confetiomery, JABS AND TOBACCO. Tiiaaaai mi Btrcatk atfaats, ryyyrv.-r Ajg g- -r?" gg? 'aanaaaaaaaaaaaaaaVanA MMMMrSwW anaaaaaaaaaaaanvLanaW BBBBBBBBBBBBBBr aW , .SaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaET slaaal vl.llB.lli.lllllllllllllHlwiVL 191 Farnham Street. ROGEBS, JParxoo .JLumim. 169 FARNHAM ST., NEBEASKA. Care from tie Best Grail. 14th. A Doggo-Sts, ELAM CLAKK. ZaZ23 OfflM opposite .tha Gss Works, on W, N. NASON, Agent. HO. 212 DOUGLAS STREET, OMAHA. "Established 1858. a3T- BICBBBBBwJaSBBWBWBTW Ml caiuci MiifuricToiT i i & 'X.J1 . (OaVa mW ,)OaaabB.V n. ft- Uitmt MAX MEYER & BROTHER, OMAHA, NEBftMKA ,ri m p?n aafaV -?S rt So II Q So IS hi taaj r3 S-a m 0- g CD k r w c OstasLlBsol tte Union Pacific Railroad 1 Ud Orant of 12,000,000 Aemof tka oait FABMMO i MUTElil. Laa4s rf Aaarte 1,000,000 ACURJ O KEBJIASKA EI THE HREAT PLATT1 TAliH TIE QASDES OF THE WEST I0W F0 BALI I Tnasa iMdsaralntba twitral portion of the UnltadStatM. -if g?. HSn ltude, tbe otntral llneol the great Temperate ZowJ5 American jCUaa,aMiara a growing and stock raising onsorpaaMd by any In the United Stttai. 01EAPES I PM(irlsTOraot.aaimofacaTiiaia FIVE and TEN TEABS' credit giren with latersst at SIX HI CaWT O0L0SIBTS aad aOTUAL SETuXEBS caabsy oa Tea. Taars OraifcV Ltaaa ariot to all CREDIT PUS0HA8EB3. A Dednctlon TEN PEK CENT. FOB CASK. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR ACTUAL SETTLIES. And tlio Best Locations for Coloies! Rniriifirs Entitled 1 fin jrxoo Fanaes to Ixax'OlAniora olT Xaanancl. m.l.-l i- t ..li.a. n AwVl Send for new DescripUTe Tsmphlet, with and DsnI.X msiled tree sTery ulrrJdawU ihtfO. Land A. B. HUBERMANN fc CO., iCTIOAIi WATCHMAKERS, S. E. Cor. 13th. WATCHES JEWELRY AND AT WHOLESALE OB RETAIL. Dealers Can Save TIME and Ordering of Us. ENGRAVING DONE JS-ALL lin31-t GOODS WARRANTED B O. AaaoTT s. C. ABBj Booksellers D5ALKK3IU "V7"I3ST3DO"W" No. 188 FariLham Pattlfshers' Aret fer School Books im l ?Trttifc. GEO. A. HOAGLAND, Wholesale L urn be OFFICE AND YABD COR. OF DOUGLAS AND 6TH STS., U. P. 1. 1. 1 HACI. OMAHA anllU wmTm. rOSTEE, "Wholesale Lumbe WINDOWS, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LC. Plaster PariV;llair, Sole Ageats for Bear Creek f OFFICE AND YAB1: 0a T7. P. Track, bet Fsrnham and Dooglss ats. aprttf N. . D. SOLOMOlf, -rxV-rrrOX.-BlSAXjHJ JBAJUST'. oixs aitd window "gijlb, COAL OIL AND nmui "'"'- " FAIRLIE & BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURE! Stationers, Engravers and' Printers. Masonic, Odd Eellows and Kniskts of TJ ISf I P1 O B.MS. LODGE PROPERTIES, JEWELS, BOOKS gKS, 52803301X1 Clja Streot, ABTHTFB BXTCKBEE FZNT.XB, BTJXX..O AS5" -AKD DEALER IX- i w y CO i&it&)lmfctlk i t has aim udOa&ta: anaM.MiKarar. w A a wXaAAA. SO wSiiaHJHHalaHHaal'V S jjjjrgjjy,-- ! fl7.RIH '? "-wgHpr,) i" j raw"""" 'Ml: 4. 2! fS 5f! I I LUSlUEBBaBBaBBBI wiaairawga KVBD to a Homestead ct Anres. new maps, pcoiisaeajH -f. SSS ima . Address ,u.:lt5r'SS5ec. Cotninlssloner . xx tx r aa. o a'ir OF JEWELBT & Douglas Sts. & CLOCKS. PLATED-WaRE, FREIGHT FREE OF CHARGE ! TO BE AS juurxtaiaxov. 1 Station! SHADES, Street. Oatalia, If n xnthj: Dry and Tarred Eelt. Lime a-d Lo-iTniCe9at: OMAHA, - HEAD - LIGHT NEBR) MONELL, &j Vi Ctawk rMk mU. E -'-. llTTl mti at ;jl - 1 MwinmmmmT