TRE OMAHA OFFICIAL PAPER OF UJF. PITY , ro CORRESFOSOEXTH. deal" contributions whatever Wz DO aor ny ol literary or poetical character ; and we will not undertake to preserve , or to return be same , In any case whatever. Oar Staa IB sufficiently large to more tiinn .upplfour limited space In that direction. fiKAi. NAVB or WKOTB , In full , ruu.t In each accompany anj couimunica- and every case tlon of what nature loever. This U not Intended - tended lor publicaHon , but lor our own satis faction and as proof of oS * < iith. Ous COOTUBT FSIEMDS we will always be pleased to hear from , on ell matters connected with crops , country politics , and on any sub ject whatever of general Interest to the people ple of our State. Any Information connect ed with the election , and relating to floods , acdJenta. etc. , will be gladly received All inch conununlf Uons , however , must be brief a possible ; and Ciey must. In all cases be writUn up n one lido of the < beet only. rouncu. Alt AltNOIscEUurrs of candidates for office whether mada bj self cr friends , and whether as nol "cesor coo. iunlcatlons to he Editor , re ( until nominations are made ) Imply personal , and will I * charged as d rertieemrou All communications shooU be addressed tt K. BO3EWATER , Editor WJil Publliher r 271. SOT1CK. On and after October twenty-first , 1872 , the dty circulation of the DAILY BKK Is assumed by Mr. Edwin Davis , to whouc order all sub scriptions not paid at the office will be payable , nd by whom ail receipts for subscriptions will countersigned. E. KOSEWATER. PnhHsntr THE next constitution of Nebras ka should provide strong safeguards against the abuse of the paruonlng power. GENERAL BANKS is determined to try his popularity once more as a Liberal - Democratic-what-is-it-can- didate for Congress. If he is beaten this time he will become a political dead duck , whose resurrection will require the interposition ol a mira cle. THE bottom appears to have en tirely fallen out of the Bourbons anc Orleanists In France , In the recent French elections the struggle for supremacy was almost entirely eon lined between the Republicans and Bonapartists. The out-come shows these parties to be very evenly hal anced. ACCORRDI O to the New York Tribune , "the reoort of the commis sion appointed to examine the Union Pacific Railroad is very favorable It states that the company hasspen on construction and equipment $2,200,000 more than the $1,380,000 which Secretary Cox's ' committee of eminent citizens regarded as a needed expenditure. " QEX. LOXOSTREET , who by the way , is Just now one of the besi hated men In the South , made speech recently in which he made the following declarations touching his position : "I suppose I am pretty cordially hated by a certain prescrip tive class of Southerners , but thej cannot be helped. Men can't all think alike , and the trouble with the Southern people always Jias been that they wont tolerate any difference of opinion. If God Al mighty had Intended all men to think just alike , He might as well have made but one man. I have decided and acted as I thought duty required , and other men are at lib erty to do the same. My opinion Is that the only true solution for Southern troubles is for the people to accept cordially and in good faith all the results of the war , including the reconstruction measures , the acts of Congress , negro suffrage , &p. and live up to them like men. I they would do this , and encourage Northern immigratioj , and trea fill men fairly , whites and blacks the troubles would soon be over , ant in less than flvp years the South would bo in the enjoyment of great er prosperity than ever b0tore. " HOME EUUS. Nebraska baa iiZtl her election and therefore our oomnICnts purely political topics cannot bfl ! ! construed into mere campaign bun- comb. It is now and always has been our aim to treat political Issues with that Independence and impar tiality which becomes a fearless and unbiased journal. One of the principal issues upon which the Democracy expect to ob tain control of the National Gov ernment Js what their organs fa cetiously designate as "HomeRule. " Now , home rule in Jreland means the right of the people to loca ) self- government , while home rule as In terpreted by Democrats means the right of one race to oppress and subJugate - Jugate the other. The ex-rebel merchants of Shreveport - port have just furnished the country a practical definition of home rule. Emboldened by the recent Bourbon victories in the Northwest , they have deliberately entered Into a com pact by which their negro employes should be forced to choose between starvation and voting the White league ticket. In other words , they have issued an order that ev ery colored laborer or mechanic who would dare to vote the Republican ticketjBhouldjbe dismissed by his em ployers. And this cruelmockerythis deliberate suppression of honest political conviction Is the boasted home rule of which Bourbon organs prate with such boundless enthusi asm. Supposing the merchants or manufacturers of Omaha , Chicago or New York should organize a com bination to direct and control the votesof their employes in favor of or against any party , by threatening them with a loss of employment and Its disastrous consequences ? Would not such a combination be followed by universal indignation and a spontaneous revolt of the in dustrial classes ? Would not home rule thus defined become the most odious terra io every "liverty-lov- ing Ameilcan citizen possessed of manhood and self-respect. A DOUBLE JOKE. In the campaign t\vo years ago llosewater printed some tickets and delivered them to the Republican Central Committee , but they were found to be worthless because the name of Lorenzo Crounse , for Con gress , was left out , either purposely or blunderingly , and the Republican oifice Was called upon to print those which were finally used. In this campaign Hon. Lorenzo Crounse was assessed $150 by the Republican Central Committee to go towards paying the legitimate ex penses of a campaign , and he left a check with friend Rosewater , one of the committee , payable to the or der of Joel T. Grittln , another com- mitteeman. The two latter arrang ed that Rosewater should retain $50 as back pay for those worthless tick ets , and etcetra , and pay the $100 over to the Douglas County Repub lican Committee. We never got our pay for the tickets which were used , and Rosewater - water got his pay from Judge Urounse for those which were not used because Judge Crounse'a name was left out This explains why some people are anxious to be com- mltteeinen , and why we did not our honest dues. We cannot play the grab game. Republican. For downright , deliberate and ha bitual lying , commend us to the rock-rooted fossil that has by some inscrutable Providence been clothed with the power to mismanage the mQtumotb collapsed. Never in our journalistic experjenpp have we heard of a more striking instance of huoian hoggishness than was dis played by this breeder of rival jgews- papers In connection with the mat ter which he has taken such pahis to misrepresent. The facts in the pase are substan tially as follows : Two years ago the Republican $ tate Central Com- mitte awarded the contract of ticket printing to three newspapers , viz : Republican and BEE of Omaha , and the .M ebraska City Press. Eacl i pa per was to furnish the tickets for one Judicial district , thus : The Press was directed to print those of the first Judicial district , the Republican those of the second , and the BEB those of the third judicial district It appears there was some misun derstanding touching the new act of Congress governing the election of Congressmen , and tbe , first In stalment of tickets printed at the BEE ofUpe were printed without the name of Lorenzo Grounse , on the iupposltlon that a separate ballot and separate ballot boxes were to be used for the Congressional ballots When the mistake was discovered } t was promptly rectified. The mfsprinted tickets were de stroyed befqro a single ticket had gene out of the offlcef Meantime , an ofllcoug { fntermedler , who acts as private secretary to Senator Hitchcock , but had no authority whatever In this matter , requested Balcombo to print the tickets for which the BEE had a contract. Upon learning this fact and before the tickets order ed by this impudent Intermeddler - dler had been printedwe made a personal appeal to Balcombe not to interfere with our contract True to his hoggish nature , this gifted pat ronage-grabber , Instead of gomply- Ing with our request , determined to swindle us out of our legitimate contract. Thus it happened that two setts of tickets were printed for the third judicial dlstrjpt. Those forwarded by tjjp Republican wera , however , not put Into use , simply because the greedy manager had omitted the proper legislative and county offi. cers while the tickets furnished by the BEE were correct in every par ticular. When the claims of the respective printers were brought before the committee , it was discovered that Balcombe had gobbled several hun dred dollars for printing the celebra- pd Ffirnas-Lett c'rculars , without authority from tb.3 committee , for which he had succeeded in drawing pay under misrepresentation. Furr thermore , his bogus ticket bill for the third judicial district , was pro nounced a fraud while the bill of ihe BEE was approved. And now pomes the sequel of what Balcombe is pleased to term a double Joke. Balcombe's flank movement on the committee fund forced the com mittee to Issue a due bill to the BEE which was held for over two years , and trfially redeemed by Mr. Grif fin without jutorest. There are still some $30 due the Bjjp from the old committee , and we shall consider ourselves extremely lucky if we over recover it. In conclusion , we would advise the mammoth missmanager to send his bill to Adams Yost & Co. They ordered the job , and they ought to pay for it. If they do , tne double joke will be complete. eyes of America , aye , even the eyes of the whole piyjlized world are just now rivited upon a single spot on the great American conti nent ; a spot that will henceforth become indissolubly linked in the world's progress. There near the limpid banks of the Ohio , in the city of x < ousvile ! ] are gathered the men of transcend ent genius who have determined to remove the National Capital from is unsightly and corruption breed- njr location on the Potomac , to the jure , grasshopper breeding atmos- > here of the great plains. Nebras- * we are pleased to note , Is fitly represented by Moses Sydenham , ia if who may be recognized even a at this distance , head and shoulders 1t t above the other giants who have 1t akeu upon themselves that hercu- t ean task. JSloses has lived in the a wilderness , if not forty years , at c east long enougn to know that Cenr toria , Nebraska , is just the place o where the nation's solons of the future will distill their wisdom. G \ 3 IF , as is alleged by the Omaha 1 1E Herald , Warden Woodhurst con- E nived at the escape of the pardoned * convict Webber , notwithstanding copies of pending Indictments , and orders for his surrender to the Dodge county authorities had been left In * his hands , the conduct of the Wars dea vraa highly reprehensible. " I NEBRASKA SKETCHES. . ( Correspondencrof the BEE. ) PAWNE&CITY , NEB. Octoberl3/74. , Pawnee City , with its quiet settled air , and its substantial stone houses and pavements , bring to the mind the old New England towns , which it resembles in many respects ; for although it has a population of near ly one thousand , there is not a sa loon in the place , while on the other hand the churches and schools are the pride of the town. _ The surrounding country is very much like all the rest of southeast ern Nebraska , gentle , undulating prairie , diversified with well-wood ed valleysthrough which flow rapid streams. The soil is of the richest descrip tion , and although the grasshoppers and drouth have destroyed nearly all the farm products , excepting wheat and fruit , yet the farmers are by no means discouraged , for in past years vegetation has flourished here with an almost tropical luxuri ance. In the old settled counties no one thinks of leaving. It is only the new comers in the border coun ties who are growing faint-hearted over the warm reception the grass hoppers have given them , but with the generous assistance which their kind-hearted neighbors of the river counties are now extending to them all will be cared for thjs winter who will need it , and next year they maycet as fine a crop as ever glad dened the heart of the honest , hard working farmer. Some of the best cultivated farms in Nebraska are in Pawnee county , of which Pawnee City is the county seat and business center. Nearly all brashes of trade are represen ted hero , and the following business houses are worthy of special notice. Air. Q. AJ. . Moss has tv large stone building on the northwest corner of Washington street and Broadway. He keeps In stock dry goods , groceries , boots and shoes and everything else which is gene rally needed. J. B. Ervin , north of public square , has an immense stock of all kinds of goods and does a proportionate tionate business , D. & J. Hazels , 65 Broadway , also keep a general store and have a large and increasing trade. Mr. James Parish does a thriving business in the grocery line. Mr. Wm. Jacobs also sells a large amount of groceries , besides attend ing to his duties as postmaster. G. L. JS'lchols , M. D. , keeps a first- class drug store and also practices his profession , The hardware business is repre sented by the firm of E. and J. Deur. They also keep on hand an extensive assortment of stoves and tinware. All the latest "agonies" are fur nished the ladies by Miss Lizzie B. Stewart , at her neat' , well-stocked millinery and fancy goods empori um. um.Mr. . Howard Ellis showed us some very good specimens of photog raphy , and we can say that as n countenance counterfeiter he is good.Mr. Mr. J. L. Turner is a watchmaker and jeweler , and enjoys the reputa tion of being a first-class workman. His stock of goods is well assorted and includes everything imaginable in the way of fashionable orna ments , clocks , watches , &c. Mrs. Plummer keeps a very neat little store , which is well stocked with groceries , confectionery , &c. Tart & Wills have the best stock of sqddles , harness , &c. , to be found In the country. Their work is good , and speaks for Itself. Mr. C. H. Curtis , opposite the post office , has the only bakery and restaurant In town , and will have a cozy little oyster parlor fixed up for lovers of bivalves. Mr. Jacob Weber has a first-class cigar manufactory , and is turning out largp quantities of the fragrant weed'in that shape which smokers like best. We have on several occasions had our chin scraped by Wm. A. Miller , the tonsorial artist of Pawnee City. He dues it skilfully and scientifi cally.Mr. Mr. Jacob Fulton has a fine as- Eortmen of furniture , and does busi ness in accordance with the rule of quick sales and small profits. Mason & Qoodale have two large well-fitted up shops , where they carry on the blacksmithinjr and wagon-makingj business. We no ticed a long legged mule in the shop which 'some sanguinary individual had brought there 'to be sho'd , We waited around that shop for an hour in hopes of getting a first-class sen sational Item. We have often read ol the graceful ease with which mules were wont to demolish fool hardy blacksmiths , and as this one looked particularly vicious , we WOited impatiently for the coming derio'ueraent , butg ( | ] mujewas shod and , alas for us , the man who done it never got a scratch. We have lost confidence in mules. The ani mal looks ambitious. Had be one spark of the true American spirit , he would never allowed the time to pass Idly by when a reporter , pencil in band , was stand ing'by ready to make him the immortal hero of a newspaper article. Mr. J. D. Ualligher keeps a good blacksmith shop and turns oil a large quantity of work. Mr. John Porter has a boot and shoe manufactory on the west side of the Public Square , and he knows how to build a leather corucrib. Mr. J. F. Kinney takes the front rank Iu bis profession ( the law ) and It is said that ho thoroughly under stands the whole ten points. Mr. J. B. Grico " k Js also a rising young lawyer. ' Dr. P. is a physician and surgeon of long experience and acknowl edged ability , but unfortunately for him the climate is too healthy , and it is only occasionally that some lu natic dreams he is sick. Pawnee City has a neat well edi ted paper ( thp Republican ) which receives that appreciation and pat ronage \vlnch is only bestowed on live , spirited journals. Mr. A. E. Haaslcr , the editor , has our thanks for courteous favors. A kind word for our worthy land lord is particularly his due , for a more whole-souled , obliging gentle man than Mr. Abbott is seldom found ; and , gentle reaaer , if yon should ever stray away off down to Pawnee City remember this , that the Farmers' Home la a house where you will find a bounteous table , spacious rooms , luxurious beds and all the comforts of a well order ed home ; and then when you are ar ready to settle your bill you will be astonished at the absolutely trifling amount which you are to nay. Pawnee City is eight miles south of Table Bock , and is connected with it by a stage line , owned by Mr. Sullivan , who also has the best er livery stable in town. To Messrs. Sullivan and C. C. Boberts our " thanks are due for many kind fa vors. vors.Mr. . James H. Bray Is a grain dealer and general speculator , and as an energetic business man has few equals. Mr. Bray made a con [ tract , a year or two ago. to deliver several thousand bushels ot wheat if in a glveu length of time ( which has not yet expired. ) The price to be paid for the wheat was one dollar per bushel. Mr. Bray is now filling his contract ( Market price of wheat sixty cents per bushel. ) The man who gets the wheat wants a part ner : , and is willing to give a half In terest , or even more , in the profits to be .derived from that wheat. Mr.D. C. Stratton keeps a large stock of groceries , queensware , &c. , and is doing an extensive business. Mr. Stratton has been shipping every winter , large quantities of game to the Omaha market , but he has found that it costs him just about as much to get the goods to Omaha as to Chicago. The A. & N. R. R. dis criminate against Omaha , and in favor of St Joseph , and makes no direct connection with Omaha roads , and right here \v e will say a few words in regard to that propos ed branch of the Trunk railroad. Some of the advantages to be deriv ed from it were mentioned in our Humboldt letter , but the printer who set up the type had probably been up late with his girl the night before , and consequently got the ar ticle rather mixed up. That Hum boldt letter had , by' actual count , just twenty-seven typographical errors. Now , the writer of this can make mistakes enough without any assistance. The great trouble , how ever , was that the propose \ railroad was made to run from Kansas City via Huraboldt to Brownvllle or .Ne braska City. Now , what will people ple think of a proposition to build a road in the shape of a rainbow ? We will insist ou having . - ejthe.an apol ogy frorn , that typo , or an increase in salary. A rallflad running from Pawnee City ( not Kansas City ) to Brown- ville , Nebraska City , or PJatts- mouth is what Qfnaba needs. Take glance at the map , and you will see the proposed line will rim through a country which Js too far from the trunk roitk to patronize it , and consequently it wiil in future , as in the past , tra-lo with * St. Joe , with which U has direct connection. Pawnee City 1 $ just eighty miles from St , Joe , and when this feeder Is built it will be not more than eighty miles to Omaha by rail Somebody told ino the distance thai a man had to travel at present to reach Omaha by rail , but J forget what it was exactly somewhere near three hundred or three thou sand-miles. This country is thick ly settled , and It * trade is immense and steadily Increasing. South eastern Nebraska Is the wealthiest portion of the State , and Omaha will be lacking in enterprise If she lets other towns , with Inferior advan tages , monopolize the patronage o ; this part of the country. Thlrty-ejght mjlps of railroad wil connect Pawnee City wjth Brown- ville and th e trunk road , and no over sixty would be required 1. Plattsmouth were fixed upon for the junction. Ample assistance will be given by towns and counties along the route ; General Rernlck , of Paw nee City , offers to build one mile o the road , and make a present of it t ( any company that will build the rest. Omaha isjustly proud of h.er railroads , but if she woujfl beagre'a ctty she m.u t extend her arms t > tll. farther , and gather in commerce from every avallablesQuroe , The election passed off very quiet ly , and there was so little interes manifested that even the judges anc clerks of election had no Idea the next morning what majorities were given for anybody , and so we aver aged the thing and called It In our dispatch one hundred majority for the Republican party. The flower fadcth and the grass wlthereth , but the glory of the Re publican party endureth forever. RANGER. HONEY FOE THE LADIES. Buff and gray boots made of lin en are all the rage with the Paris ladies. The San Francisco Hoodlum says , "Ob , chaw me hair ! " when he meets a girl on the street with i frizzled. A Terre Haute , Indiana , glr makes nine feet at a standingjump She is to jump for a wager at the next State Fair. Why did she turn her back on you , young man ? Innocent child She wishad to make an exhibition of her new overskirt When you see a lady coming ou of a shoe store with "picked nines' ' you needn't suppose she has gone Into the base-ball business. The daughter of General Sherman will begin her career as a housekeep er wjth the outfit-of i'twgnty-tjirep dozen of fajlver spoons , ! ' A young lady of Sedewlck coun ty , Kansas , advertises that she wil give $200 for a young man who wil love her in a kind and gentle man ner. ner.A A Muscatine lady ! is out with a challenge of $50 to fide , In a saddie or bareback , against any of the young ladles who rode against her at the recent fair there. A society paper asserts that American ladles are getting In the habit of sleeping iu their corsets to keep their liguies good. 'those American ladies will goon sleep in the valley. An editorial notice of a woman's grocery store" reads as follows : ' 'Her tomatoes are as red as her own cheeks ; her indigo is as blue as her own eyes , and her pepper Is as hot as her own temper. " Upon the marriage of one of her companions , a littleglrjf about elev en years of age. of the same school , said to her pa : "Why , don't you think Amelia ismarried , and gone through fractions yet' ' ! It remained for a Navy-yard man to develop originality In a love af fair. He didn't ask her for a lock of hair , or purloin a photograph ; he slipped in at the back gate one night and stole from the clothes-line and carried home , pressing It to his aching bosom , her her well , it was an undergarment. A telegraphers' newspaper.speak- ing of the employment of women as operators , says that their power is already felt In the higher style of conversation betwpen male opera tors over the wires. Low jests and vulgarity have grown less frequent , and an Intimation that there is a female operator on the circuit puts a quietus on the most virulent of blas phemers. All the girls , says Jenny June , now wear their hair combed back plain and tied m a Chinese pig-tali , old-fashioned queue , at the buck , riiis is a revolution so complete , af ter the puffs , and braids , and chig nons , and waterfalls , that it detracts much from their appearance en masse , and makes all women ap pear suddenly to have grown small and plainer. A hateful paragraphist says : T "Whenever a person sitting along- sye of a woman in the street-car 5ets up to leave , in nine cases out of > ten the woman will immediately * try to spread herself so as to cover the vacant seat as well as her own. n the present scant skirt fashion the effort to do this from mere force habit is more funny than effect- lye. " ia BANKING U. S. DEPOSITORY , OF OMAHA , CORNER FARNHAM AND 13TH STS. THE OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHMENT IN OMAHA. SUCCESSORS TO KOUNTZE BROS. Establhhel in ISoJ. Organized as a National Bank , August 20,18G3. Capital aM Profits Oyer $300,000 $ , , DIRECTORS : E. CBKIOHTON , Pres. I A. KOUNTZ , 2d V. Pres llEEMAN KOUNTZ , I II.V. . YATKS , Vice President. | Cashier. A. J. POPPLKTOK , Att'y. This Bank receives deposits without regard to amounts. Issue * time certificates bearing interest. Draws drafts on San Francisco and principal cities in the United States , also London , Dublin , Edinburgh and principal cities of the continent ol Europe. Sells pissage TickcU for Emigrants by Inman "ne. octlSdtl EZRA MILLARD. ' J. K. President. | Cashier. NATIONAL BANK Cor. Douglas and Thirteenth Streets. OMAHA , - H KElflASKA. " ' " " " " ' Surplus and ProflU . . . . . . ! 30JOOO 00 T7IIUANCIAL AGENTSFOR THE UNITED JD STATES. ANr DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY FOR DISBURSING OFFCERS. THIS BANK DEALS IE Exchange , Government Bonds , Vouchers , Gold Coin , * * , | BULLIONand OOLDJDUST\ \ * * And sells drafts and taakea collections on all parts of Europe. STDraf ts drawn payable In gold or curren cy on the Bank of California. San Francisco. TICKETS FOR SALE TO ALL PAKTS of Europe via the Cunard and National Steamship Lines , and the Hamburg-Amcr'can Packrt 0 i * . The Oldest hstaoiisneu BANKING HOUSE US KMRASK.A. Caldwell , Hamilton & Co , , Business transacted same as that of an Incorporated Rank. Accounts kept In Currency or Gold subject to sight check without no tice. tice.CertlJkates CertlJkates of Deposit Issued pay able on demand , or at fixed date bearing Interest at six percent , per annum , and available In in all parts of the country. Advances "made to customers on approrcd securities at market rates of Interest. Buy and sell Gold , Bills of Ex change , Government , State , County , and City Bonds. "Wo give special attention to nego tiating Railroad and other Corpo rate Loans issued within theStato. Draw Sight Drafts on England , Ireland , Scotland , and all parts of Europe. Sell European Passasre Tickets. COLLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. aulU ALVIN SAUNDERS , ENDS LOWE President Vice Presdent. BEN WOOD , Cashier. S4.VX2TGS BAXTC , N. Vf. Cor. Farnhara aud 13th Sts. , Capital. . . . . „ . . . . . . . . _ . . . . . . . „ . . . . „ . . „ . $ iflO 000 Authorized CapltlJ „ _ 1,000.003 I T\EPOSITS AS SMALL AS ONE DOL-1 \J lar seceived and compound interest allowed - | lowed on the same. | * * t Advantages OVER Certificates of Denosit : THE WHOLK OR ANY PART OF A DE- poalt after remaining in this Beak three months , will draw Interest from d.tc of depos it to payment. The whole or any part o' a de posit can * > e drawn atlanv t m aug2 tf JOBS H. OBJ3EN , " STATE MILLS DEALER IN ( GRAIN , FLOUR AND FEED , AND COMMISSION MEBCHANT. NEW SALOOIT HENRY , the popular Saloon keeper , has re fitted up the basement of old Herald building , cor. 13th and Douglas Sts. , where , in connec tion with hla bar he sets out a Lunch every moraine Ert GRAND LUNCH EVERY SAT- UUDAY. Give him a call. al > Uf EDWARD KUEHL. JIAGISTEK OF HIE 1 > KPA ftTKD. Ho408 10th St. , between Farniam Haraey. Will by the aid o ! guardian spirit ; , obtain tsi any oue * view of tne past , prcseut and fu ture. No fees charted in ca es cf sickness , J. O. SCATTER. Dealer in fttaple and Fancr GROCERIES , ( Flour and Feed. Highest Price paid for Country Produce. JacoVt Block , 687 15th St , bet Dod e & Cap lAvc' octStf. - OMAHA , NEB. YICTOR HOFFMAN , PHYSICIAN and SURGEON , ( OVER ISH'S DRUGSTORE , ) j 'ajcnTi fxxaa. Stroo't , sdtf. rvr A. - = r ° BEES ! BEES | ! BEES ! ! ! rp HE Undenlgned baa sixty ivanns cf na- J _ tiveand Italian be > s for sate , in hives of the American oid Buckeye patents. Strong swarms at nl io e' M dollars ea < h , with Ectuai cost of hive < "ded. Ltht ; swsrius , from four to six doilirs ( ich. Ih ive more bfethan the location will support , jud must sell. Address : HIRAM CRAIG ; Fen Calhoun , Neb seotl J. M. YER&A , Wholesale and Retail Dealer in F A > SALT MEAT8 lams. Sausage Lard , Poultry , Ac. , Ac. , Ac. in H Wo. 179 Farnham St. , Bet. lllli and n j DppO'ite Pioneer Block. oct'tf UNION MARKET B. A. HARRIS , 37 Pifteentli Sreet , bet. DongUa azd DoJge. BEEF , POBK , Llutton and Vsal , .Fish , Poultry , Game , A < 26 17 AHD \ 3 % Furniture Dealers Nos. 187 , 189 and 191 Fainham Street. mar2d MILTON ROGEBS Wholesale Stoves THTWAHE and T22T HERS' STOOK. - SOLK WESTERN AGENCY FOR - STEWART'S COOKING and HEATING STOYES , THE "FE4BLESS , " COOKING STOVES , , CHARTER OAK COOKING- STOVES , ill of Which Will be Sold at Manufacturers' Prices , With Frelffhtja dded. SoaacJ. for- Fort Calhoun Mills. IFEIEID & Manufactured with Great Care from the Best Grain. General Depot , Ccr. 14th. c& Dodge Sts , may 9-ly. ELABI CLARK. W. B. ZIZCZSARDSOIT. PITCH , FELT AND GRAVEL ROOFER , AuilBlauufacturcr ofDry anS Saturated llooflnjr'and Sheathing Felt. ALSO DEALERS IN Roofing , Pitcn , Coal , Tar , Etc. , Etc. OFlNG Inany part of Nebraska . or . adjoining States. Office opposite 'thetGas Works , on mhitreet Address P O. Box 452. O. F. GOODMAN , WHOLESALE DRD66IST. X > eaJer In PAINTS , OILS AND WINDOW GLASS , Omaha. Nebraska. , j . jMti. " "ML. vJ. IJIPORTEK AND JOBBER or FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC WINES and LIQUORS , Tobaccos and Cigars , No. 142 FABNHAM STREET , OMAHA , NEB. Old Kentucky Whiskies a Specially. WB-AGENT FOE THE ELDORADO WINE COMPANY , CALIFOENIA.-Ea Juy2iy ! , of . 111. Omaha Shirt Factory. CHARLES H. PLATZ Manufacturer ol MILLINERY , Ladies' and Genlsr XEPTUJTE , AND or - FIMLFLOWEUS , ffice Ornaments for Ladies , ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED' 216 Douglas St. , Tisclicr's Block , Omaha , Neb. 1 CJO sas sai i > -i g r | j 4S | | w ft | - if | af § § ll § 3M"tt ij oT " 2 * Sim GreatWestern 3 Western f Business College. 3MAHA , NEBRASKA. A , 'BS-Send Stamp for Circulars. G. K. RATHBUN , Principal. 31 SAFES ! L < 2 Celebrated Diebold , Norris & Co.'s ( Lne Dlebold A Klenzlc ) " FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF , lave the best record of all , not One Lost in the two great fires Cnicago , also preserved the contents in every instance at ndependence , Iowa , also at Central City , Col , and at all places have stood the test without failure , 111 Sizes for Sale and Made to Order. Old Safes Taken in Ezcnange. ALSO YAL.E , BANK AND STIALIi LOCKS- ) J. S. GO VERT , General 'Agent , Chicago. & , E , STEVENS , Agent , > 29dtf Ola < Xllxlxrtooxxtlx' St. , MAX MEYER & BROTHER , OMAHA , NEBRASKA > CHEAP FARMS ! FREE HO2&ES On tne Uao of th Union Pacific Railroad A L&d Grant of 12.000.000 Acres of tbo beat FARMING and MINERAL Lands of America 1,000,000 ACKFS IN NEBRASKA IS THE GREAT I'LATTE YAIXE THE GABDEH OF THE WEST KOW FOB BALE These lands are In the central portion of the United States , on the Hat degree of Noith Lat HuJe , the central line ol the great Temperate Zone o ! the American Continent , anil for grain { rowing and Block raising unsurpassed by any in the United States. 07EAFEB IH PRIDE , mnrs farorable terms $ lT , a. and more coaTealsat to market than o be found Ekewhere. FIVE and TEN YEARS' credit given with Interest at SIX PEK CENT COLONISTS and aOTUALSETULEBScaaJmy onTea Tears' Credit. Lanii at th < ax Mice to all OBEDIT PUBCHASBB8. A Deduction TEN PEK CENT. FOE CASH. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR ACTUAL SETTLERS. > nd the Best Locations for Colonies ! Soldiers Entitled to a Homestead A 160 Acres. o i to 3Enroixoinio3- of Send lor new Descriptive Pamphlet , with new maps , pnbHohod In Eiullih. Penman , Sweed and Dan' h. mailed free everywhere. Address 3. jc * X3 - < rV7"X SI ulriM- ! ! land CoramlMlnnrr U. P R. K. Co. Omaha. Neb. A. B. HUBEKMA3STET & CO. , XT * 2rlA. . O T X OA X * 'SSJSitt. ix.f .ot-iiro3c WATCHMAKERS , OF JEWELRY S. E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. WATCHES & CLOCKS JEWELRY AND PIATED-WME. AT WHOLESALE OR RfiTAIU Dealers Can Save TIME and Ordering of Us. ENGBAYI1VG DO FREE OF WOODS WARRANTED TO BE AS REPRESENTED.- ? : * ian31-tf 8 C. ABBOTT ABBOTTS. . C. ABBOTT < fe GO. , Booksellers I i DEALERS IN No. 188 Farnham Street. Oma as , J Pnhliflheru' nts for School Book" " ? imoil In GEO , A. HOAGLAKD , Wholesale Lumber OFFICE AND YARD COR , OF DOUGLAS AND 6THSTS , , U , P , R , R , TBACK , anlltf WM. 3SJ. FOSTEK , Wholesale Lumber , WINDOWS , DOORS , BLINDS , MOULDINGS , Plaster Paris3 Haii % Dry and Tarred Felt. Sole Agents for Bear Creek Lime and Louisville Cement * OFFICE AND YARb : 1 riT A TF A On 17. P. Track , bet Farnham and Dou2la. Sts. / UJVI AH A , pr2tf . I. D. SOLOMON , OILS A1TD WINDOW GLASS , " COAL OIL AND HEAD-LIG-HT OIL OMAHA - NEBRASKA FAIRLIE & MONELL , BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS , Stationers , Engravers and Printers , 2TOTARIAL AITD LO33CE SEALS. Hascnic , Odd Fellows and Kniglils of TJ 1ST I F O IR , fL ODGE PKOPERTIES , JEWELS , BOOKS , BLANKS , ETC. , AT jJS"EASTERNPItIOE3AND EXPRESS.- © * egooxici i stx-oot. avrAosc . . JXTEB. ARTHUR BUCKBEE. f . * " * f " TT T T. " fl. A. TS O "B T T1 TO "CS "CT 4hdi tto J > JSi JM i JSl JCtef " * * " " " ' " * * * AND DEALER IS ulJ _ J CO DCZ Z- ' < C LUO For Yards , Lawns , Cenceteriej j Office and Shop