& )-- .. "4 X-V V - -sr '3 1 4 . ? s i i i at A j a r ? v" J": X f si --r 5 Ji . 14 4 -"'i ' Y if f J . iMM M a"ss V. ( I'- j V t i &. !t, THE OMAHA B-K& - -TO COK.KISFOJfllC3sXS. WK w xot desire ay contributions winterer ef a literary or poetical tharacter; and ire will not undertake to preserTe, or to return he Ma, in any case whaterer. Oar Sta3 Is raff rfr'f JT to (Bore thin (apply onr Batted jVe in tb&t dirtet ton. BfUxTXaxa or Wxttes, In foil, onrt In each and ererr case accompany -any communica tion ol what nature soerer. This, is notta tended lor publication, but for ear own saus- f actios and ai proof of good faith. Oo Conarar Fkissds we win always be rlrasrl to hear from, on all mitten connected vita crops, country politics, and on any sub ject whateTer of general interest to the peo ple of our State. Any information connect ed with the election, and relating to floods, aecllcnts. etc., wCl be gladly received. All each commanlrtUonEi howeTer, must be tcfaf m passible; and tey must, in all cases, be written open one side ot the sheet only. , vouacxu Au. Asvo kcdcutts or candidates for office whether made by sell or friends, and whether as notices or communications to the Editor, are (uctil nominations are made) elsaply personal, and will be charged as ad- vertlaeoiests. AUeesuunnicetlons ahoaU. be addressed to & 06EWATEB,Editor and Publisher, Draw- 71" KOTICE. On and after October twenty-Erst, 1672, the city circulation of the Dailt. Bex is assumed by Mr. Edwin DarU, to whose.order all sub scriptions not paid at the effice will be payable, and by whom all receipts lor subscriptions win fee countersigned. E. ltOSEWATEB. Publisher Having disposed -of the -Indian Commissioners Secretary Delano now proposes to take the Centennial Commissioners to task. Tbk effort to work up another Indian war down in Oklahoma, is now pronounced a failure. The military authorities declare the recent depredations on settlers near ForfDodgw to be the work of rene gade whites. Cat,EB Ccshixg is never so hap py as when he has a case of diplotic arbitration on his hands. Just now -be is trying to gef up another Gen eva case at the Spanish court, but the outcome is-somewhat doubtful. Congressman Haj.e has recon sidered and reruscs to accept tho Postmaster Generalship- General Creswell declines to reonsider his resignation, and refuses to retain the Postmaster Generalship. And now the question is, who, if auy body, wants to tako charge of Uncle Sam's mails at eight thou sand dollars per annum ? The committee of thirty "who have been chrrged with the responsible and difllcult task offramiug a con stitution for France, bavo at last Concluded their labors. "If the in strument reported by them shall be ratified by a majority of the Assem bly, the Republic, witli McMahon - as President, is assured-for at least seven yerrs. Tho fact that no provisions have been incorporated, touching Mc liaboh's successor, or the manner of filling the vacancy, seems to in spire faint hopes in the Royalists, that their day may yet come. BAI1E0M) TAXATIOH. In defeating Crounse's bill to tax Union Pacific lands, without pro viding thn't Delano should issue the patents to them, Senator Hitchcock did the right thing at the right time, and in the right way. Tt was rather bad for the Judge, but it was just in itself, a we did not hesitate to de clare when the measure was pend ing the House of Representatives. Our people labor under a dama Kln delusion when they "adopt the theory that itl)enefitfl theta to em barrassnd burden the Union Pa- tlficRailroftd Company with taxa- Wp shall never doubt that, for the State of Nebraska, for the city of Omaha and the county of Douglas, and for all other cities and counties," the really wise policy would be to assess and tax all tho taxablo properties of all railroads within these Stato boundaries atjthe Jowestvaluatioa which" the lawwill allowi Herald. N " The views of the Herald touching the merit of Senator Hitchcock's defeat-of Crounse's bill to tax rail road lands, are not shared by the BeeT' We "believe railroad com-' 'panies who have land" subsidies from ho General Government should pay taxes justjhe same as any other class of land-owners. e- Instead 'of being bad for the Judge the defeat of the bill is likely to re act upoirthe Senator. Wre do not believe thojeople of Nebraska de "Taire to erabarass the Union 'Pacific or any other railroad with taxation. All they demand is that these cor peratkns shall share the burden, of r 'taxation with all the other property owners in tho State. We do not believe it to be a wise policy for the people of Douglas county or any other county to discriminate in favor of railroads, nor would we ad vocate" .discrimination against them. Taxation to bo just must be impartially levied upon all classes. According to the Herald, low rail Wa4 texes would lead to low rail 'CWlir d passenger fares. This k eSStfossiBly be true, but why should iira-'iLrimtrifito nsminstrdther it interests that'lu-e com- rperjfthelr full share of taxes? that it takes a nam treMgle to make railroads vyr-sus-tniBinc in ane country, wffwoifld. ask wbaee fault is it? Did not .the GeverBmeatftfcmish ample eucowv simnt totfeeso roads? - Wa not their fmpccuniou ldM vsSHbhi tioeJetoughUibout by the Credit MijiBfnr bloed-aackers who squan dereiUnd -gambled away millions ofiileaarswIjiQS should have been laJeTswayiBrfctrd times ? r ;-lfelwuaiioV"of unsold andvna pMeated railroad, lauds may work a fectlsfiip" upon-th6 Company, but Ihelr exemption works a greater hardship upon the people who are compiled teliyXaU the taxes.in districts wJiere Jthe Itailniad Com-SpaowvBoue-ifair of the real eatate. v "One thing is certain. If all tho railroad lands were subject to. taxa i GWTE ABT) SCHXTBZ. Mr. William Gwyer is" a genial and social gentleman with whom we have -always maintained the most cordial relations. "WhenMn Guyer became the Republican can didate for the legislature, the Bee gave him a hearty support, and, jyhiie"hislegislatiTe career did not ToUymeefoiff anticipation, Tfeitere; inclined to charge -nw errors aca omissions Jto a xjyanr of tact and "aiscretIon,'Tather than tar a-wantof Btinciple. Tor some montns past, Senator Gwyer has 'been Rfflicted with a species of political monoma nia, that made him, itch for newspaper-notoriety. ,,,,, ,, When Carl Schurz delivered his famous speech on national finance In the U. S. Senate, Mr. Gwyer de cided to make'a "bold-strike" for "na tional fame by entering into a per sonal debate on finance with Sobunt. A very voluminous letter directed. to Carl Schurz over the signature of Wm. Gwyer was presented for pub lication in the Bee, but this bril liant idea was finally abandoned , upon our representation tbt Schurz was not a Nebraska Senator, and hence he would, in all proba bility, pay no attention to such bombast " " In this connection wo admonished Senator Gwyer to keep-out of the newspapers if ha aspired to a politi cal contingency. In 3pite of our kind advice Mr. Gwyer seems to have succumbed to Tiis financial 'delirium. In an evil hour he linked his fortunes with tho political bumnersvhp are trying to delude farmers and- meohanios into the meshes of the sham in dustrial coop. And now the great Nebraska 'financier takes Carl Schurz and the Bee to task in thefollowing fashion: Who understands best the finances of the country Ign and JSIorton, brought up under the agio of Republican Institutions, orSchurz. brought up under monarchial and dynastic institutions ? The two for mer, staunch supporters of the Re publican party, the latter an off shoot of the Republican party, who 'pft- It In Its time of malrwlth a Presidentis election Impending, and went over, body and soul, Woody chasm and all. to the Democratic party. Who shall the staunch Repub licans follow now? the soul-inspiring Logan, who is leading on the Republican hosts under the banner or financial reform? or the renegade Carl Schurz, who is acting as the paid attorney in Congressof the con tractionists and bulllonists of the Eastern States? Basing, of Chica go follows in the wake of Soburz, and the Br.E of this city follows af ter Hesing. Can the Bee claim to be an organ of the Republican par tj', when It Is leaving the old land marks and ibllowing after strange gods." People who seek political elevation through dark lantern organizations have a natural tendency towards Know-Nothingism. Mr. Gwyer, whom we believe to be the author of these sentiments, Is evidently no exception to this rule. The idea that Schurz cannot have a proper understanding of our na tional finances because he was born in Germany could only originate in a Know-Nothing lodge. How about the slavery question, which was the vital principle of the Republican party? When Logan was blowing his soulinspiringbugle for JamesBu cbanan and the pro-slavery Dem ocracy, Schurz was an ardent sup porter of free speech, free press, and free men. Have the St Louis Globe, New York Times, and Rational Republi can become Democratic organs be cause they agree with Schurz in his financial views? "Was Logan's support of the slave obligarchy any evidence of his good 'udgment as a native American, and was Schurz imbued with Re publicanism because he was brought up under monarchical and dynastic institutions? Like Mr. Gwyer, the Bee would ask who shall the staunch Republi cans follow now ? Shall they follow George H. Pendleton, the life long Democrat, who not more than six years ago originated and advocated the doctrine of repudiation, which tho bombastic Logan, and the Omaha KuKlux are trying to pro mulgate; or snail they follow the voice of the Republican party as ex pressed through Its regular conven tions, and through Its national plat form. Pour out of the five Slate Con ventions held by'Republicans with in the past thirty days, have pro nounced against inflation and in fa vor of sound currency, Tased upon specie. With three or four excep tions, every leading Republican' journal in the country denounces and repudiates Pendletonism, just as it was denounced and repudiated by the whole Bepublican party in 1SCS. Has it come to this, that a secret cabal organized and managed by political bummers who formorly affiliated with the Democratic and Republican parties, shall dictate the policy and lay down ihe doctrines by which staunch Republicans in "Nebraska shall be governed ? Is it not about time for these po litical renegades to haul in their born.", instead of trying to Impeach the Republicanism of -en .who never have belonged to any other but the Rebublican party? - Tiir public debt etateeaent for July will show a. slight 'decrease. The slitrhter the better wtiis times 'are a little easier.--XmmlUtmn. v .:The public debt stateraeaten July let shows a decrease of rer two millions during thtfaaontlkef June, which is aboveathe Average decrease of" any similar .perfeei slisce 1872. Inasmuch as this" decrease has sim ply been a reduction "of the-bonded interest-bearing debt of the country, the BEEfails to observe wherein if can have a3iy bearing upon hard times. On the contrary, the ability of the Government to cancel any portion of the isterest-bearinr pub lic debt, witliout Increasing pubUo taxation, is a gratifyina; evidenoa of nmxr in taa duouc bctvscc le.1.1 Hoge a - aesp in Haoraaka. OMAHA, July2. JSditob Ojiaha Bee : Hojrsmaybe successfully and profitably raised in Nebraska; but not under the usual treatment which I have observed. They are awierally kept up -in 'small pan. which are-either very wet and-. iauddy or else very dry," dusty and hot Hogs cannot endure this. They must have a cool damp place and something green to eat. -ror cannot be made In Nebraska on corn alone; it is loo expensive. During the spring and summer hogs Biost have .their Jiving, on some thing green- Large pastures of low damp land where artichokes and other roots are plenty, are the '"beat " 7 ". The difficulty is the expense. fencing. Most Jjmall farmers a y thpy are too poor to fence, and, tney shut up their hogs in little dry pens. This will make a poor man poorer. hotter have no hofiTS at all. J Let me suggest a partial remedy. Make a strong movable post, and board fence, which can be pulled, from place to place over the 'grass, with' a" team. There should be a roof of some kind over a part, to shade the hogs from the hot sun, which they Ban.npt fHre. In tfeji way your hogs will thrive, and the saving of corn will soon pay for the fence. -, . I have had long experience In sheep-raising in Ohjo a,qd JlHnols, and have made some observations in Nebraska. 1 have seen several lots of sheep in Nebraska that were fed exclusively on hay all winter, with no grain whatever and they are in good condition. Sheep will do better without grain in Nebraska than in Ohio or JUinois, on aeoouiit of the dryer air, and because it hardly ever rains here in winter. The grasses oi . eurasHH are aura uu- tlalj the earnest grass oi spring pro duces no bad effects. I saw a flock of sheep of about, 200 wintered al most entirely on straw;I saw them in March; of course they weretWn, Sheep in Ohio as thin a these put on grass would have remained thin and weak, and many of them would have probably died from the scours, as it is called. But I saw these sheep again in June, and they were rnore fcealthy and iMfclqg well- I liaye novrno doubt of the fitness of Nebraska olimato and feed for sheep, andl predict that wool-growing will, be one of her principal sources of wealth. But no man should go Into this business unless he Is first fully pre pared, Sheop must have constant and particular care, both as to feed and protection. Start with no more than you can fully protect and feed. No animal pays better for special good treatment than sheep. WAITER CBAIG. PERSONALITIES. Senator Spencer, of AJfttJama, has gone South, Mr,' Beecher jg said to be reading Hawthorne's "Scarlet Letter." The son of Gen. Sherman enters the scientific school at Yale this year. Miss Anna Berger leads the band at Flint City, Mich. She plays the cornet The youths twho -do the rest of the tooting find that their hearts are the fiddle strings and she plays on them also. The full name-of the Frenchman who recently struck Gambetta is Louis Marie PhiUbut Edoaurd de Renonard de Saute Croix, and noth ing makes him mad quicker than to havfl it get into the papers wrong. Prince Metternich has, according to a correspondent, the careless and almost dreamy ease of an-Eug-lishman. MontebeUo did not find him so very dreamy, though. The pocket-book which was taken from Major John Andre, when he was captured with Benedict Arn old's treasonable papers in his boots, is now in the possession of the Con-, necticut Historical Society. Senator Morton will spend most of the summer at Indianapolis, hav ing given up his proposed California trip. The Indianapolis Journal says he "seems full of mental life and energy, and Is feeling better than formapy months past." Alexander H. Stephena has sent to Washington for a stenographer, and It behooves Mr. B. H. Hill to be on. his guard. Mr. Stephens has evidently come to the conclusion that this carrying on a correspon dence with live-column letters is a picayune business anyway.- The next letter will probablyapproauh in size an unabridged dictionary with a full quota of hard adjectives. Mass., is ninety-three years old, and during the last season has spun forty-two skeins of yarn, knit twen ty live pairs of hose, and 12 pairs of double mittens, carded one pound of wool, made a pair of fine shirts, liesides doing a large amount orhousewora. ene is tne motner of five children, lias thirty-two grandchildren, sixty great-grandchildren, and two great-great-grandchildren. . - - Eugene Hale, suggestsltlie Bos-' ton JLrantcnpu win ne we eigaui person,, from (New 'England who has served as postmaster general. The others were Samuel Osgood, of Massachusetts, 1789; Timothy Pick ering, of Massachusetts, 1792; Gideon Granger, of Connecticut 1802 to 1814; Jacob Collarr ore, -of Vermont 4849; - Samuel 1. Hub bard, of Connectlctl852; Horatio King, of Maine, 1M1 Recently the venerable and kind hearted Thurlow Weed, while rum aging about some of taeokL book stores and.prtatabopsYsf Nassau street accion tally jell upon a lith ographic portrait oLHorace Gree ley. It had been taken in the ear lier days 'of the great,, editor, and though erode jraa an excellent like ness. Mr, We.percha8editatonce. andcarrie&itrto lhe.AtotHouse, where he skewed It to ks old friend Col. Charles A. Sf rtm. ' After gaz ing at It for abase "minutes, with so much emotion that the"-tears came to his eyes and ran down his cheeks, the veteran saWwith a brokTen voice : "Taat is exactly his look aa It was When I-'ktiew him thirty years ago, 'If X had not forgiven him in my,beartvaBd asked to.be forgiven before he toed. I should for get all thwduHeroBCjSB that have been between hrv as Llook on, this sweet, honest, nbbWfaceet the man whom " I have so sincerely honored and truly loved. That face calls baek all-the. past, and makes me. see, aa I have never seen before, that a genuine friendship for "a good and true man is worth ail the empty glory, the world can fi ?''. mx. weea nas taKenuie pt home, had K IaandsomelVrrri t and put in his library It b one-of the things nothing would induce him to part with. He regards it as a treason, .daUgfats in it as a vivid mJA Mr. Grw- DRAMATIC 30TXS. Mr. Sothern, Vmjproceea "front Chicago to San Francisco. A new theater Is" to be built at Forf-Wayne'ImdlanaPat a cost of -AaeVpUylMr?Sa?douJjs al rerl TMmlaetlrfor ilextaeason'at Booth's Theater. --rl "r,r. Mlas Charlotte Thompson appear ed at the Urooklya Theater, last week, taThs-Seaof-Iee. jfrHenrV :Jiyfiigi; act.Ham- Mr. Charles Pope.will accompany, MrJetieiscm on a sporting expedi tion Into Sullivan county, .N..-Y.-: . Wallack's Theatre Is to be pro vided wjth a .new stage, and other lmprovem ntsTdurinf ue Summer i .. t rec. .j , .!. .o.. .. Miss Jenreys.lifl.wjs Wc -Mr. Ed ward Arnott join the-dramatic com pany JtX Maguirey' Theatre San Francisco. -;,",- :,-;" -C,"J Mr. J, S. Clarke is now resting at hk.viila, at Boulogne, in, Frfwe, Ho will visit ,th9 Uitd States in August .!.''": W. JFlorencerthB-comedian, "is at "Ems, itf Germany1.- He has been promised'a"1 new comedy -by Mr. . TonrTaylor,s''Ciancartyr' "seems to be the tjonlyi ewi play that amounts, to .'anything, noon the London stage, v .. , . .. . ,B: gLtmr4staree QfMaara, toga" has beerrdonrat the London Oourttbeater," onder the name of Brighton.,M. ,:jI, ; "Mr. Alherry's play of jPride," at the London VaudevUle, is a failure as all -his pieces have been,: since Ttap Two -Bosee.". ' Choice seats at the Opera, on tho first night of aWa-.posthumous work,"Thfr Talisman," fetcLelSlo .each; in-London." ' Mr.Jlowehaa adapted" theFronch play of "Thephinxi" by: Octave FeBiUot,!-fcrr.tha: Unton fiquaro Thatr, iMtos Morris will,. act the chief part--f3 Jeu.i . The interloir ofthe Chestnut street theater, Philadelphia; has been torn out,-and the theater is td 'M'subr sfomqally rebuilt; lt-la to"have seats' fprfWTpeisons. - Mr..Frank-Mayo has made a tour of the theaters of NewiEngland, as -"Davyrockett," and we are glad to learn' that-his "fine performance has everywhere'hecn well received. 'Wallaok's Theater was closed at the end- pf Miss Leclercq's engage ment, on Saturday, and will remain closed till theadvenfof Mr. Toole, which is assigned for the 17th of August The Park Theatre opened on the 1st of July, for a short summer season, by the Mortimer Brothers, who have leased it, and -who -are ssid'tb be among the best of illu skmlstft, " ' " Edwin Booth nA suffered a great deal from overwork,' ill-fortune, and the misrepresentations .and cal umnies of those who are naturally the foes of. all true merit His health has been injured, and he will now take a considerable time for rest from all active professional labor.- J r The Louisville' Courier-Journal indulges in the subjoined reminis cence f John Dean: "'"Old Dean was a solid, thick-set Cerberus, and watched his daughter with the aus terity of a Crummels, and the pride of a Cbstigun. He wore a blue coat with metal buttons, and carried a silver-headed. cane, the" terror of the larks who 'hung "about the stage door and the box office to catch a glimpse of the Fotheringay. What a girl .she was, to be sure; a sylph like thing, ;Wltn .brownhalr and hazel eyes, which glanced from pit to gallery 'and from gallerj to pit in a ravishing, "way, quite irre- bistible.. All the beaux and bucks of the jeriod 'were in love witn ner, and there wasno.end to the flowers and the, verses contributed' to her gloriflacation. She married, and was unhappy; she died and. is, let us hope, in heaven: Perhaprwe should not think her much pf an actress now. But she was an ornament in her day to Hhe-stage, and passed through a singularly checkered ca reer, without ever having incurred a breath of suspicion or slander." Tkt Playfal Oraukef per. .The'grasshopper has Indeed be come a burden m Iowa and Illinois. He eats the crop, the fence-rails, and many old clothes', laid around by accident He comes up with his" vast army of fellow-soldiers going carelessly with the wind,- sitting down at evening, ' spendiBg. a few days In a locality,-.- ind 'leav ing nothing- behind -when he departs. Gate-hinges- he doesn't like, but takes them as a matter of duty when they come iiC his way. Grindstones are his particular con tempt, but he eats a hole in them just to show that his abstinence is a matter of taste, not inability. He EaTbeeh knowB,whenhardpressed, to eat the shoes oft" a kicking mule; and it is on record in Iowa that one flock settled in a graveyard, and la bored very effectually with a granite monument A.Dea Moines paper narrates that a half-dozen were sent -to its office as samples, and got loose in the building during a moment of carelessness. v About fifteen minutes after, one of thenvwas heard shout ins; un the.speakinfc-tube from the press-room t "Hi, boys come-down 4 nyar 5 . neres me juiciest oiq set oi cog-wheels you ever saw !? . Seriously-, they are'becomlng al most as great a pest as the locust of old. They.Btrip a nela or its grow ing crop in anight, leaving it bare as if swept by fire. Their, numbers are not llmited-to.a'few armies; but they, are residents of but a few years and may, for aught My one can tell, extend as, rapidly, as the Colorado potato-bug which atarted for the sea coast from the Rock Mountains only 'a few summers .ago, , and is now.known-fronr-ocejin to ocean", abd already considering . a trip -to Europe. Between clinch-bug and potato-bug, grasshopper and the in numerable 'other-members of the' bog family the -fcrsaer. stands a Mr chance of ihavinsr to zive up the -aeld to superior numbers. Cindn- natt JfmeaT c ' . - r - - -' - ' lit Vaw'CMCTwiMuS firam- The election of Xa Dow will be surprise to jthat gentleman, and jhay" inrow mm -into-another fit -or wretched illiwKr.'ItiaBtated-asa fact that he failed to-caaTaea for the doobleresfdiathSrafraid, 6f- ine,oivesuotiiMswB ana inatne cpiitoseehAwlieeoWstandthe rt2oi dottar-J-IahWgb'.downtharto" theWilHaaaette andgb to'speechifj-: Jn't Jt ud probably costmct hafl. dred tad fifty tfoUan!' I Bow will BT0r set how he is to pay tbt tor gotng to waawnfton, BANKING? A1VIN SAtTNDEKS; ENOSTiOWE j jp " jrresiueuu vice jrresaeni' ;Ey.woop, Cashier. T l" N. W. Cor.larohtm and 13th Sts., 3C2T-T- Capital- 1 100,000 AuthoriieTjasttUr. -p-EPJiSITS AS 6JIALJ. AS ONE DOL J lar sece Ted and compound iDjerest al lowed pa ice Awiages r "i r-. OVER- Certificate qflDeposit : TnE-WH')LB OSAJMCFABT OF A, DE pot it alter-TfiHrinlaf ,1a- this Benk rbree months, will drawJatere-fron d.te ot depos it to parment. "The waoWox anj part of a de !Kiitcanbedraw9a.CaTtMaj a.Wi28ti -The Oldest, Ettwiishea bankmoSquse Cdwell, Hamilton. Co., "3mIhW traaacte'saja'as thai of aa iBcorporaied lailu,. ' -: AccoHBts' kept in Cf rrewr er Geld SHBject to sigkt .cheek -wiihwat no tice. CertiDeateffof -flepwrtfaamed pay able on demaad, or at-lsed date hearlag'JBterestat gixlsratat. per ,aBBBBit an available-la ia til Baits ef -tke oowitry- - ) w'.ii" . -Adr'aaees suae taLeassssBsn, bb -amirATd swuritiM at aaSrkstraiete f interest.' - , ' , s hb J Bay awl jcU GH, BUls ef ;JBx. and Citr Beads. ,. &-A We gire special atteatioB ttBegt; UatiBg Railroad aad otker Cerpe-, rate Loans issaed wlthia the Stale. Draw Sight Drafts or EaglaBd: Irelaadf Seotbud, aad all parts ef Earope. Sell EareBeaa Fassam TIekeM" COL1XECXIOXS raOMTTLY SCADKJrW. aultl :S?S KXRA MILLABD. I J. H. President i MtLLABD, Cashier. NATIONAL BANK Cor. Douglas and Thirteenth Streets. OMAHA, - h NEBRASKA. Capital .1200,000 00 Surplus and Profits - 30,000 00 FINANCIAL AGENTSFOB THE UNITED , SrATES. AXr DESIGNATED DEPOSITOBY DISBUKS1MG OFFCEBS. FOB THIS BANK DEALS In Exchange, Gorernment Bonds, Vouchers, Gold Coin, BULLION and OOLDDUST And sells drafts and makes collecUons on all parts of Europe. aVDrafts drawn parable In gold or curren cy on the Bank ol California, San Francisco. TICKETS FOB SALE TO Alii PARTS of Europe via the Canard and National Steamship Lines, and the Hamburg-American Packet Company. Jj27tf U.S. DEPOSITORY The First Rational Bank OM Corner oTFartuun and I3tat atrtett. TEE OLDEST BAHiTJJG E8TABLI8HMBHT IH HtBKASKA. (Successors to Kountie Brothers.) ESTABLISHED IN 1858. Organized ai a National Bank, Avgut 26, 1883 Capital and Profits over $250,000 OmCtU AND DIRECTORS : . CBEIGHTON, President H. COUNTZE, A. KOUNTZE, Cashier. H. W. YATES, Vice Pres't As't Cashier. a. J. poppleton, Attorney, TIxo eatrl'oe Hydraulic, Cement, AND WOULD JNFOBM THE PJBLTC THAT they are now ready to furnish HY- DBAUUC CEMENT, of.the.Yery best quality. and in any quantity .either at tbe factory, which is located ai ceamce.neo., or ai ioe ripe wotu in Omaha They also are prepared ti 'urnlsh allkindeofGXENTPIPINGIorSEWEBAGe;. DHAINAGE, ETC, Also manufacture all styles of CHIMNEY WOBK. WEGOaKAn TEEOUB CEMENT TO BE EQUAL TO ANY HYDBAULiC CEMENT MANUFACTUBED IN THE UNITED STATES. S9-OBDEBS FBOM DEALERS BESPECT FULLY WHJCITED. uBkx oxtass, BtATEICK HYDRAULIC CEMENT & PIPE CO. OMAHA - - NEBRASKA. my21-3ia :bc. a. wbvcmb, CABBULGE, BUGGf .aC WaGON ' MANUFACTUfiES. N". K. tOBNEK of Hth and HABNEY STS. WOULD respectfully annousce to the pub ' lie that be U now ready to all all con iracta In the abore lines 'With neatness acd dispatch. ' U W-Expresa wagons constantly oa hand and or sale. - 400,000 ACRES! OF THE FINEST Elkliorn Yalley Lands ! FOR BALK IT 3B. "Wi2irf - - ITb tTUTESE LANDS ABE CONVENIENT TO the market and the" FINEST in the STATE ! j .Asdwlllbesoldatfroai $2.5ato$5.o6aPERACRE! zi - Far Csishrwr twBgTiaae. BS-LAND EXPLORING 1 ECK ETS for sale atO. N. W. Depot,- bearing coupons which will be taken at-fall cost in 'payment jorland. " , - .. ' r - "MUtMenmm svaxB saauoi ix- IirtT'tBjBtfjHajh jWMnr; Saaiio, snreEATnws a '. TicrnMK'fsjitlh. Ui -. x - t. S.t;arksM stet,cerar.Ff teeata SIAVBiaUa, v&Vi 9m - 3r Vt! Practical Watcl DEWEY -tiifCi STONE, . '"3 tfcl t- Furniture Dealers Nos. 187, 189 and 191- Faniham Street. KT3 marSdtf MILTON : i Wholesale Stoves THTW.A.RE and -SOLE WESTERN STEWART'S COOKING and HEATING ST0YES, TUB "FBABLESS," COOKIE STOVBS. , ' O E LBBBATBD. CHARTER OAK COOKING- STOVES, rlllBf Wbicli Will bo Sold at MaBBfactBrers Pricey With- FreitW a dded. apMtf Send dTOT? J. A. THORUP, NEBRASKA SHIFT MANOFACTOBY 4NFARNHAM ST., V FARNHAM ST., OMAHA, IILJ NEBEASKA. SHIRTS AND GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, &C &C. rShirt3 of all kinds made to order. Saturation guarram sea. aprllyleol Fort Calhoun Mills. IFiLiQTTiH, FEED &c MEAL Manufactured with Great Care frost the Best Grata. Genor&l Depot, Ccr. 14th dS. bod Sts, tOMfS-lj. 1 "97. B. HICSlIUDSOIT. OM. PITCH, FELT AND GRAVEL ROOFER. Aad MauCctiirer at Dry sal Saturated HeDBajc and SfetMibias F alt. AISO DEALERS IX ' Roofiaig, Pitcla, Coal, Tar, Etc, Xtc. ROOflUa inany pa' t of Nebraska or adjoining Slates. Office opposite tho Oaa Works, on 12thi treet. Addrtos P O. Box 452. WHOLESALE CANDIES I am now inanulacturing all rarietics of candies and will eell at ESTEiRIISr PBICES Dealers la this State seed sot want to o E ut tn CANDIES, v A trial is solicited. i L. XJovcl If. Oor- Xatla. mchllti The King of the SEWING MACHINE WORLD as pre-eminently aa Gold Beigns In the Realms, of Finance, ? ALES In Round Nximbers V ItBelnz OTerOneHaadred and Thirteen Thonsandjnore Macbincsthaa were sold 3 J any otaer Sewing It wi 'hln f!ouiDaDT during theaami. tlce. It will har ly be denied upon such eTidenco monstrate d THE SINGER MANF'G GO. , 1 . W. N. NASON, Agent NO. 212 DOUGLAS STREET, OMAHA. Je C.L. A. KLATTE, 1 EI TtGTZAJlSTrr TAILOB, 288 Dodge' Street, 2d Door East of 16th Street. I keep constantly oa band the finest stork ot Broad Cloth, Casslmerc and Testings ; which I am prepared to make up in tie most fashionable :; les snd to suit the mast fastidious, at the lowest possilt priet a. - jelOdly B. fc J WILBUR, Books and Stationery. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, Tourtatla Straex. GENERAL AGENTS FOB art lmy - -jt t -Jii G. 3P. GOODMAN, WHOLESALE DRUGGIST, " Ajnd. Sealer in. PAINTSOILS AND Omaha Nebraskau Ixroa-rxa axd Joaaza or WINES and . Tobacco v No. X42,-rARNHAM ? Ol &MIMKJ ffiuua s iccaauj. " iisrACMTFOE THE ELDORADO Jnljl QUAlirEY!3 U, V. fjap Tactoryl JaP afesBaW. fsBB bBW"bBBBsBT ROOEWSr a Uj : t AQENCYFOR IioeV Xalaati XXAM CLAZK. TSTXirB FOR 1873: 232,444 Machines! . that the superiority of tbe Singer Is f ollr de- Omfthiu, U"b ALL SCHOOL BOOKS WINDOW GLASS ) ' u o jmf. Foanos aD Domksttc LIQUORS, and Cigars, STREET, OMAHA, NEB. WIKE C0MPA5Y, CAUTOJWIA,- 3 AS. M. McVITTm WHOLESALE DEALEK.IS CTariled Cidex. MAX MEYLJL&. BROTHER, OMAHA, NEBRASKA JaMlS M 7JraHilaW -" Usf tawVlBBa1 ? mJk4 HalaHallaUlIn ,- H I BBBBssrBBsBsB.flHEaalV I i M IBB..EBMU.flB ifl 2ssBaaBsH o J ,m00i! 'm WrmWM9mfM c 'HbwV wiUF1 iffi m I aV WKmWFMMfff VMl ? n . a -amiSr km? t s CSSAP FAH1CSI Oataaliaaot taa- Union Pacific Railroad 1 Land Oraat of 12,000,000 Aemof tl oaat FAWUSd ami MCTBKAL Laada of Aatriaa 1,000,000 AGKFS IN NEBRASKA IN T11E UREAT PLATTE VALLEI THE QABDEI OF THE WEST I0W I0S BALE I These lands are in tha central portion of the United Sutea. on tbe 41st degree of No.th Ut ItodthTcentral Uneol tie great Temperate Zone o the American antlnen and for graia. growing and stock raising unsurpassed by any In tha United Statu. 0IEAFES H" PBICB,miaa ftToraHe terms r,, aai mora ooaralt t aatkt tia aa. bafatadElaswatra. FIVE and TEX YEA3S' credit girea with Interest at SIX PER CENT 00L0B1BT3 ud aOTTJAL SETULEXS oaibay oa Tta Tsars' Craill. Laai ta price to all OBEDIT PUBOtfaBEta. A Dedurtlon TEN PElt CENT. FOR CASH. FREE HOMESTEADS FOB ACTUAL SETTLERS. And tho Best Locations for Colonies! Soldiers Entitled to a Homestead cf 160 Acres. Sx-oo FjaaBsvea to Iuroliorai of XaAZxeX Send for new DescriptiTe Pamphlet, with new maps, pnbHshrfEnallsh, qman, Sweed SlrJdawU m,lW tnB T"TWhCr8 flnduimlsaionuTna.Neb. A. B. HUBBMLANN & CO., WATCHMAKERS,! OF JEWELRY S. E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. WATCHES & CLOCKS. JEWELRY AND PLATED-WARE, AT WHOLESAlE OR EETAIL. Dealers Can Sayc TIME and FREIGHT by Ordering of Us. ENGRAVING BONE FREE OF CHARGE ! B.TALL GOODS WARRANTED TO BE AS REPRESENTED.- lanll-tf ' - S C. AaaoR S. C. ABBOTT & CO., Booksellers 1 Stationers DEALERS IN "WAXIi PAPERS, DECORATIONS, "WIISrXDO"W" SHADES, No, 188 Farnham Street. Omana. Neb1 Pahllohen' Atroata for School Beekg aged ! yehrasfca. GEO. A. HOAGLAND, Wholesale Lumber OFFICE AND YABD COB. OF DOUGLAS AND 6THSTS., U. P. B. B. TRACK. OMAHA - - - IsTEB, anllU WM. M. FOSTER, "Wholesale Lumber, WINDOWS, DOORS, BUNDS, MOULDINGS, &C. Plaster Paris, Hair, Dry and Tarred Felt. Sole A jests for Bear Creek Lime ami. LoaUrllleCeaeata OFFICE AND YAK1.: '. Track, bet Farnnam and Doujlas Sts. On u. P. aprttf N. I D. SOLOMON, . VsTHIOriESAXjE 'AJUSTTS COAL OIL AND HEAD-LiaHT Oj 0MAHAv - FAIRLIE & BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURER! Stationers, Engravers and Printers. Masonic, Odd Fellows and inights of Pjthia TJiTIPOBMS. LODGE PROPERTIES, JEWELSr kuslMi mtrmt. ARTHUR BUCKBEE. ?-AND DEALER U " I A. - A S & : : tTv'ssSiiw -' ' 6 Far Taria, Lawa, Ccaatterka Caweh 6rw4s tM Pjiklls ParlUfJ v- ii.t.i -rnar-aTTiTYi-r- A'f. p Si I 'Jaa JHTHB J. CacurrxD- f A TT A JJ3XJt. JJ.XX, NEB. NEBMSK.1 MONELL, BOOKS, BLANKS, ETC., Ai majlti ta Ua a( taa UaUa ladle BtottsaoaM: t MM AM Utkl kat.