E. ROSEWATSRt SDITOB THANKSGIVING 1JAY. X rBOCLAMATlOS . the resident of the United States of in thdr hirtory sines the TJuHed States -became a nation ha this bv the neat body of our population to the m Trill ° rerpetua'c it t the thank * of a happy , For all tnese i Suited people th one voice * * d f Tent homage to the giver of all good. I furthermore commend that on Thund , the 20th of November next , the peop.e meet at their respective places ojwonship to make the acknowledgment.of His boun ties and His protection , nnd to offer to Him prayer for their continuance. In wtnei hereof I have herenntxi set roy hand and cauBed the * > al of the United at the city of Mates to be affixed. Done Washington this thittv first day of Octo ber , in the year of our J-ord one Jhouaand eight hundred and eighty , and of the inde- , , -ndence of the United States the one hundred and fifth. [ SeaLJ B. B. HAYi-b. liv the President : " \Vn. "K. EvAHTa. Secretary of State. GABFIELD'S POLICY. Speculations are life as to what 1'reaident Garfield'a policy will be , and there are many who really re spect him who have grave apprehen sions that he will have no policy of his own to oppose against the wishes of any powerful factional element that might attempt to decide his course , li'seems ' hardly worthwhile to attempt to arouse these timid and nollcitons forehoders. Thcso who krwvr General Garfield bear , know th&t there ii no vein of moral cowtrd- ice in his nature , that he has the cour age of blkjconyictons ( ! , even when those convictions place htm in antago nism with the leaders of his party. These who have'stood by his sdo ! and witnessed the growth end develop ment of the manyfacultfes now so con spicuous in Gen. Garfield , bear willinc testimony to hii nobility and inde pendent cfrcharader. They have neon him 6rasj > : grkftk anbjects , mold ing lariu % yttemsj uuder which the industries 67 life whole nation may he built up or/pjdleS / Sown nnd directing the expend Uifrof " hundreds of millions of public m6n"ey"wHh a discretion and foresight to which all deferred , and with all treading thq devious paths of temptation and opportunity with un- eoiled feet. During his last years in the house the great principles which linvo divided political parties were constantly rofl'uerdiscussion nnd it was General Garfield that congress and the country looked for' ihb clearest , the most can did and tfrs.mo T effective discussion of thoseC-prfac'iplGJ. "When the republican encountered with nn- publican partyencountered , broken frontjand undaunted courage , the desperate assaults of the demo cratic majority nponlegislationwhich embodies the irnits of the war for the Union. General Garfield was the leader to whoso counsel everyone de ferred and at the sound of whoso voice all othern grew still. These who watched hia career throughout that period were deeply impressed by his versatility , hit breadth of view and depth of insight , by his never failing candor , his independence and his own creative and rugged personally. The most convincing assurance that General Garfield will frame hia own policy and follow independently his own convictions IB found in the man ner in which he has acquitted himself in every position in which a lifo of ex ceptional activity has placed iim. Always and everywhere men have leaned upon him as upon one whose strong will and infinite resource and unlimited capacity entitled him to bear the brunt. Whether we look at him as the executive officer of a strap ping educational ' institution in his own native state , ortbe volunteer office in the war of the rebellion , or the representative of the people in the lower house of congress , or find him always ready and willing to take upon his broad shoulders the responsibili ties from which ordinary men in- atinctively shrink. To assort that such a man has not the moral courage to act upon his own convictions , of which ho believes to bo proper and rig&t , is driveling non > senoe. That General Garfield will gather around him wise and disinter- csteol advisers , and that ho trill give careful heed to their counsel is a matter of courte , but that he will not Lava a policy of bin own , or that he is bound by any entangling agreement or alliances with party leaders is too ubiurd for consideration. THB old literary bureau establish ment during the palmy days of "U.VM. Hitchcock , has bsen reorga nized. It was first opened ot "Washington in the senate committee r jom of the committee on territories , nnd Inter transplanted into the senate committee of the hapeod com- tnittoo of the senate , presided over by Paddock. As chairman of the committee on territories , Hitchcock appointed Curtis , the Washington cor- reipondont of the Inter-Ocean , Oraplie ( Hid other papers as clerk of that com * jnittoc. Curtis flooded the country frith glowing descriptions of the emi nent services of .tho Nebraska states men , thro"ufh" ; homrhe drew five dollars lars a ; a "foiJjf"d" Sam > B ireaiury .ThesfiJlofters were repro duced with -appcopriato comments by tha Omaha litpnllican and all the imall fry in ebrakaf 5ho .unceze A hea the editor of ths Republican Ukcs snuff , .fell into line aud.rcpro- t ucod thos&i'eliirs. At a later day J. Sterling Morton , the copsrcenerof Hitchcockja the 'lobby , took , charge t f the borcaUjimd-Mr. Paddock's gar- 6 in sais-nnd hay-eeed room , anddid , zood doal'of'bushwhacking on Saun- c ers , infnfjafaei 'with puffs for Pad- o : ck , thrjcyMjn lhe.Chicago Ernes. Of c urze tfcese- epistles were promptly r published by the defunct papWof tae son of Theron , and rehashed by t a Lincoln Journal and kindred spirits. And now the old bureau is at it again. The U pu6Ii'can with becom. ing gravity reprinta the Omaha corr - epondence of the New York Time * and other patent productions with eulo gies of Hitchcock and Paddock as from ai entirely disinterested quarter. When it is borne in mind that the 0.-n : ha correspondent of the New Tbik Timtt is no other person than I. W. Miner , former local editor and now traveling correspondent of the Omaha .Republican , the cheeklness of the bureau managers it strikingly il lustrated. Here is a letter written in the Scpvblican office , almost under the dictation of Hitchcock , mailed to the New York Timu as disinterested correspondence , and then republiehed with a grand flourish of trumpets in the office ivhero it originated. That office and the bureau connected with it is not only a puffing machine , but a libel mill. An ex-postal clerk , who is a rotorlous wife beater and , utterly without character , hangs round the 7epuZ ? icau office as correspondent of the St. Louis Globz-Democrat. The night Jollowing the November election this veracious reporter telegraphed to the Glolt-Dcmocrat that Rosewater was entirely wiped out in Douglas county by the votes of her respectable citizens , and that the entire Union Pacific legislative ticket was elected by overwhelming majorities , Why the Globe-Democrai and the New York Ttntesehouldfilltheircolumnswithsuch letters and correspondence pastes our comprehension. We presume however they do not know they arc beingmade use of as part of the literary bureau , which wants to force defunct politi cians and old hacks into the-most res ponsible places within the gift of our state. CRIMINAL MISMANAGEMENT OP TUB UNION PACIFIC. This paper has refrained until now from commenting upon the crimina mismanagement of the Union Pacific railway. Our strictures have been entirely directed againit the interfer eucoof the managers with politics conventions and legislatures in thi state , and' the flagrant abuses by extortionate tortionato tolls and discrimination against the producers of this state The gross negligence and recklestnes in the active management of the roat calls fsr public denunciation and pro test. Wo have said criminal man agement and wo mean it iu its litera sense. For months the trains on tha rosd have been run in the most reck leas manner. " The passonge trains of the road have been running wi'd ' , government mail have been delayed , freight and pass cnger trains have collided , cattle hav been slaughtered and emigrants hav been massacred. Within two month not more than half a dozen passonge trains have reached Omaha on time The delays have not been caused b , the elements , little snow has fallen in the mountains , no bridges or-tun nols have ben destroyed by overflow ing streams , nor have we exporier.cec any wind storms that would in any way trammel the regular running o trains. The only explanation given by the managers is that the passenge trains have been delayed by cattl trains. What excuse is ther for that ? Roids doing five times the business of tha Union Pacifi are running with clock work regular ity , and the Union Pacific did no have as many accidents and mishaps in the first ten years of its existence as it has had in the last three months Every time an accident happens the reports are suppressed by the agents and operators , eo that few people in this country really know what terrl bio wrecks occur on that road , am how many lives have been lost throng ] negligence , recklessness and ignor ance. With a grand highway equipped as magnificiontly as is th Union Pacific , &uch gross mismanage ment is utterly inexcusable. We do not believe Mr. Jay Gould or any o the ownois of the road , if they know what was going on hero would tolerate orate it fora moment. It is to thoi interest that the reputation of thi central route to the Pacific bo kep np and certainly it 1 not to their interest that trains shoult b3 wrecked. The case calls for a thor ough investigation and a radici oh&nge in the management of the road , and that without delay. I such collisions as happened to th emigrant train last week , at Carbon hid happened in Massachusetts , th officials of the read would be indict ed for manslaughter , and some o them might bo swung off a gibbett Of course our strictures will bo de nounccd by the road as coming from an enemy of the Union Pacific , and therefore unworthy of consideration As a matter of fact , this paper ha kept back the disclosure of this gros mismanagement as long as it couli possibly do so without stultification It is our interest and desire that the Union Pacific road should be well man aged. We are interested in the growth of Omaha and Nebraska more than any cno newspaper In the state , ba cause the prosperity of the BEE goo hand in hand with the growth o Omaha and the development of the trjins-Mitsouri country. It is to onr intarcst that travel and traffic shoulc go over this line rather than over the southern or northern lines , and there fore it is to our interest that trains should bo run with safety and dia patch. Wo don't pretend to lodge this mismanagement with any one man , nor do we know \ \ horn to blame The recent accidents and delays have occurred on nearly every division o the road. The entire press west o the Missouri , and the agents of the Associated Press appear to bo muz dad by subsidles-and fear. This is probably why iha BEE is compelled to raise its voice alone against this crim- InaVttato of affairs. IT'S enough to make a horso' ' laugh to hear the editor of the "Washington hypocritically protest against - bull dozing and fraud in New York , which Ve Hectares , lost thlrtynfive tieciora votes to the democracy and defeatec Hancock. Let Mr. Hutchlns tarn his eyes couth and count up the 95 elec toral votes lost to Garfield through > &llot-boz stuffing , Yfzcoiflm and nero - ; ro ditfranchiiement. THE export of grain from the United Slates for 1880 will amount to 125- 00,000 bushels. THE Herald gives Stilson Hntchins he floor. Mr. Hutchins can "lie" as well on the floor as anywhere else. It's its business. OCCIDENTAL , JOTTINGS. Utah. Improvements are being made on he Ontario mine at Park Uity. Free milling ore has bean struck in he Lizzie tunnel in Bed Pine canyon. The JeannettB lode in Thanes can * von has made assays of $247 per ton- ; n silver. A disastrous fire occurred * t Bing- lam last week , almost destroying the town. Loss § 50,000. An old lady who recently died at Ogden had 193 grand children , 407 great grand children and 23 great- great grand children , all members of the church of Latter Day Saints. Work h being pushed on the Jor dan mine at Highland. Immense bodies of ore averaging § 25 per ton are in sight. Active preparations for shipping and reducing the ore at the GO-atatnp mill ir.ir West Jordan , are in progress. T is mill is the largest in Utah and v li the soft ores of the Jordan mine ' . \ immense quantity per day can bj willed at a cheap rate. The strike in the Buckeye mine near Silver Eeef is showing better and bigger as developments advance. The ore proves to bs free milling chloride , and the indications are that the bonanza is of vast extent. The new shaft will develop this body at a depth of about 300 feet and greatly facilitate the economical working of the aamo. Tha Horn Silver Mine , eo far from suffering from any appreciable diminu tion by reason of the enormous quan tities of ore daily extracted from it , becomes bigger and bigger all the time. One train and two smelters are unable to get away with its product , and other trains will be pul on when the smelters above referred to is completed. Ogden's council have signed a con tract for the electric light at the rate of § 3000 a year. One light auspendee from the court house is to illuminate the whole city. After the plant is made and the light in operation , the city will be allowed nxty days to watch and test its efficiency before be ing bound by the terms of the con tract , and if it does not fulfill the agreement the city will not ba bound to take it. Nevada Bodie is talking of a vigilance com mitteo. Work on all tha Comstock lodes ii vary light. „ The Indians engaged in a deer drive near Truokeo returned on Thursday last. The number of deer killed was about 150. It is stated that an average of § 41 per man was paid by Col Fair in his cmtest fo < r the election of a legisla ture favorable to his claims as sena tor. Some very important discoveries o silver ore have been made about twelve miles ea t of Bodie , or six miles east of the Spring distric mines. The ledges are large , strong and well defined , and the ore runs tc silver. The quartz is less agatizec than that of the Sprng district let's ' so than on the east slope of Bodie bluff. Some San Francisco minin , men of experience , who have become interested in the new district , are highly pleased with 'he prospect. California. Rsal estate at San Francisco is now at its lowest ebb. ) grape-crush era are beginning on the second crop. S heel reform is agitating the oiti Z2na at San Francisco. Large numbers of deer have been killed in the hills nbovo George town , El Dorado , during the past two weeks. A threat dam across the Yuba river at Marysvlllo is completed and the river has been returned to its former channel. San Jose is taking steps toward the improvement of the channel of the Guadalupe river to prevent overflow in times of high water. The decline of the Nevada mines is turning attention to mining in Oali fornia and to the development of the quartz and placer mines in the olc mining counties. The Nevada ( Oal. ) Transcript , o the IGth inst. , says that 2,000 pound of rook recently taken from the Ford McDonald & Mullen mine at Gras Valley , at a depth of 110 feet , is es ttmated to be worth from § 25,000 to $30,000. Some pieces of a few pound weight are of a value of § 300 ant § 500. They say that more of a like character will be taken out at the nex stripping of the ledge. The beautiful Naioqui waterfalls are in Santa Barbara , not more than three-fourths of a mile from the county road leading from the Santa Ynez Mission to Gaviota. The ap prosch is from a northerly direction through a beautiful canyon , studdec with shrubs and forest trees , under which is a delightful maize of bould cr.j , brambles , poison oak vines am ferns. The falls are said to be 30 ( feet high. A Boston company has undertaken n gigantio mining operation on the North Fork and Feather river. I involves among other things the cut tint ; of a tunnel over two miles long of sufficient capacity to carry the wate of that river and discharge them inte the west branch. By this means , ant with the aid of sufficient dams am flumes- they will drain thirteen miles of the bed of the North Fork , where all the prospecting since 1850 has shown that it is immensely rich. It is in the estimates of the company that If their plan of drainage succeeds , the ] will open n mine that contains nearli § 80,000,000 of placer gold , and quarir ledges in the tunnel aa rich as any tha have over been worked in the state. - \ Arizona. Globe is to have a circulating li brary. Mineral creek is said to ba the com ing copper country. Business and mining outlooks In Arizona are unusually prosperous. The Golden Eiglo stamp mill on Mineral creek has started up and crushes 35 tons of ere a cay. A farmer on tha Lower Ssan Pedro , Arizona , claims to have raised 40,000 pounds of barley from six acres of irrigated land. It ii rumored that the government , at an early date , intends abandoning Fort Grant and Camp Bowie , and will , liy out a reservation six miles square .at > WiIcox Officers are now t Wil- cpx making the necessary observa- fioca , ' . * -M Tf . , ' * " "V " , r Laramie has been suffering from a coal oil famine. An immense amount of miners'sup plies for the North park is waiting at 1 Liramie for good teaming -weather. The pay streak in the "Southern ode" at Oammini City is three feet n tridth and arerages ? 2T per ton. The Chinese ofUintahave got their new joss house completed , all ready to eceive their new wooden image. A good winter road has been found rom Laramie river into the North mrk. It is six miles shorter than the old. ! The Elmira mine at Jelm mountain IRS been sold to Iowa parties for 14000. The ore arerages eighty ounces to the ton. Abrakeman named Lelandewho nmbatween Rawllns and GrsenJEliver , was killed Monday night. He was standing on top of the train and was struck by a truss bridge near Black 3uttes , knocking him off. A fatal railroad accident occurred ast week at Oarbon station. The emigrant train parted in the middle and the rear section was ran into by a 'reight train , killing one passenger outright and fearfully mangling sev eral others. Montana. Lewis and Olarke county cast 2,070 votes in the late ejection. TheI Colorado smelter , at Butte , is reducing twelve tons of ore daily. Wealth in a perfect stream is pour ing into the Musjelahell and Judith country. Fifteen new locomotives will soon arrive from the east for the narrow- gauge. The military telegraph line between Helena and Bozeman was completed last week. Madison county hss a population of 3910 , with an assessed valuation of. § 2,000,000.T Fully 200 teams are engaged in hauling between the terminus of the Utah Northern and Butte. During the past week 207,800 pounds of bullion have been shipped from the Hecla smelters. Buffalo are very numerous on the MujBelsholl. The lower part of the valley has been black with herds all the season. Fire is reported in the Bear Paw mountains. A number of men are there fighting it , In order to preserve the timber. The government is about putting np a saw-mill in Pattee canyon for the purpose of cutting lumber to bo used at the fort. Some vary high grade ore is being extracted from the Ophir. The shaft is down only about 35 feet , but already a bonanza has been struck. At the government sale at Fort Logan last week , wood only brought sixty cents per cord , hay four dollars per ton , and corn seventeen cents per bushel. Further development of the Bon anza Chief chow even richer proipecU than before. At the depth of sixty feet the body of paying era is fifty- six feet wide , and there is no telling to what vast proportions it may in- grease further down. The last brick , cast a few days ago , was valued at § 3,622.47. Colorado. Denver is to have a building for its board of trade. , _ Leadvillo's one product for October equaled that of September. Denver is to be sued for damages re sulting for the Chinese riot. One-sixth of the Monster lode at Dumont has been sold for § 5000. A rich vein of hiah grade Ore has been struck on the Everett tunnel. Several new concentration work are to bo erected throughout the state. Eight thousand dollars worth of dance kails were burned at Alamosa. The Cyclops lode , on Sliver moun tain , during three months h netted its owners $5300. The fire in the Chrysolite mine at Leadville is still burning and threat ens adjacent properties. The Dutchman lode in Gilpin coun ty Las struck ore at a depth of 37 feet which asays § 67 per ton. Three thousand six hundred and fourteen lodea have been located in- Gunnison county since January 1st : The Williams mine in Lake district has a mon'Hv nnMif of over 600 tons per montl. , Lit.- ; J a-nelting ma terial. Leadvillo la growing moral. The authorities arrested a saloonkeeper the other day for employing female waiters. A number of persons in Central have been treated to paper bullets , in the shape of letters , threatening them with death if they did not do as re quested by the Molly Magulres. The freighters union between Canon .and Silver Cliff demand one dollar a hundred for freightj whichj The Prospect says , amounts to forty dollars a load , and threaten the lives of any -who take freight at a less amount. At the Wabash minesSheep moun tain , near Kokomo , it is said that a system of deposits has been discov- erep that reach through all the claims of the Wabash combination and the adjoining property. A strike has been made in the Gold Hill mine , di rectly adjoining the Wabash. Dakota. Jamestown -will have a new bakery. Fargo has organized a dramatic as sociation. A cigar factory will soon be started in Casaelton. Canton now claims to have a thou sand permanent residents. De Smet has been decided upon as the county seat of Kingsbury county. Last Thursday 21,000 bushels of wheat were taken in at the Fargo ele vators. Vermillion hss a dancing club that will give weekly hops during the win * ter. ter.A A Methodist congregation has bsen organized at Tower City and steps arc being taken to build a church. A new Baptist church will be built at Fargo this fall. One thousand dollars lars has already been subscribed. Dell Rapids could-find work for a -great many carpenters than can now be procured for love or money. The crado on the Maple River line is now finished from Huron to Ord- way , eighty-seven miles north of Huron. McLean & McNider , prominent merchants of Bismarck , raised twelva thousand bushels of No. 1 whsat on their farm four miles from that city this season. A company was organized in Fargo last week called the Fargo Manufac turing company , for the purpose of manufacturing the Judkin's self-sack ing fanning milL The Catholic church of Fargo has purchased the Methodist church building for § 300 , designing to use it as a school house eventually , but will nse it as a church this winter , having postponed building their church until next year , in consequence of the pre sent scarcity of building materials and workmen. Howe's Champions. Lincoln Globe. The Omaha Republican and The Brownville Advertiser ard just now engaged In the somewhat arduous duty of floating Church Howe upon the top iave of popularity. The im pelling power behind all this differs. The Republican is owned , body , soul and breeches , by the Union Pacific railroad , and Church Howe Is the pliant tool of that gigantic mo nopoly , and very naturally demands of the bosses that The Republi can should puff him on 'every oc casion. The Advertiser is impelled b > a small handful of "sugar , " system atically administered by the virtuous Howe , and all is lovely as a wedding dinner. In recent editions both papers have been trying to make both themselves and others believe that Howe was the mo t honorable and popular man alive , and that at the re cent election he was overwhelmingly endorsed "by the people of his county and the attention of The Globe and "Howe other papers denominated Crushers , " invited to the terrible truths (1) ( ) . The Globe has not paid mnth at tention to Church Howe recently be yond an occasional admonition to the people and especially to the members of the legislature elect , that he was an unicrupulous politician who would blackmail Christ for a few paltry dollars lars and who has no principle beyond his adherence to his bcsaes. The fact of hia election by the voters of a country which gives a republican majority of 720 votes out of 3,000 , it something wonderful when we come to examine it carefully , especially when we consider that he only ran between five or six hundred votes be hind Garfield ; and still more wonder ful when we remember that Garfield bad no railroad fundsto dis tribute in Numaha and that what votes were polled for him were given for love. By a reference to the fil jfJhe Republican and to partial Jtefjfhe Advertiser of two and four years ago we find that those worthysheets were bothHowecrushers | then ; that ho was frequently alluded to as a blackmailer , a bribe-taker and sn unprincipled * politician generally , but a wondrous change has come over the spirit of their dreams recently and the editor of The Globe who has not changed his convictions is the only original Howe crusher in these parts and he has no idea of being anything else. else.If The Advertiser or The Republi can desire a few of the choicest ex tracts on the character of Howe as ho was in 1876 and 1878 , and will mani fest it , The Globe will take great pleasure in setting it up. Eh ? From Clyde , 0. , Mr. G. J. Bolg writes : Having by personal observa tion assured myself , it is my duty to make the following known to the pub lic : For threa years , my wife suffered with most terrible pains in the email of the back ; BO intolerable indeed , that for whole nights eho could not find rent. I consulted the best physical placed her un der their treatment , and spent a great deal of money ; but all of no avAit. She could not be relieved. With each qhange of the weather she would \io unible to move , znd therefore un qualified to attend to her daily dntlei , I had read of the wonderful cures made by St. Jacobs Oil , and concluding to try it bought a bottle , the use of which teen stopped all the pain , and to-day my wife is well and strong and fully able to dis charge her household duties. The sum of fifty cents has cured her of pain , which she would not take back for a thousand dollars. Veracious Bobbins. Central City Item. The Nebraska people want Garfield lo appoint ox-Sanator Hitchcock sec retary of the interior , and the presi dent might go further and fare worse. The interior d < ? p\rtment business re lates almost exclusively to the west , nnd a western man should be at its head. [ Inter-Ocean. The Inter Ocean had i. correspond ent in this state preceding the nom ination of Gen. Garfield for the presi dency , and he wrote to his paper that the people of Nebraska were almost solid for Grant , and that immense enthusKym prevailed whenever and wherever tUe name of Grant was men. tioned. But , lotTrhfn lUfTstato Con vention assembled , it wai found that "the people , " through their chosen delegates , were opposed to Grant and in favor df Elaine ; Is it laying tot ) much to suggest that Tha Inter-Ocean is as much mistaken in its opinions K- garding "the people" of Nebraska now , as it was then ? "The Nebraska people" do nut want Garfield to ap point Hitchcock secretary of the in terior. _ _ _ _ _ _ "MADE NEW AGAIN. " ST. CATHSRINES , Ont. R. V. PIERCE , M. D. : I have uied your favorite prescription , Golden Medical Discovery and Pleasant Pur gative Pellets , for the last three months , and find myaelf ( what shall I fsay ) "mado now again , " are the only words that express it. I was re duced to a skeleton , could not walk across the room without faintingcould keep nothing in ehape of food on my stomach. I and my friends bad given up all hope , my immediate death seemed certain. I can never be too thankful to those who recommended your medicine , for I now live to the surprise of everybody , and am able to do my own work. I desire to make this statement in order that those suf fering may not despair until they have given your remedies a trial. Tours respectfully , MRS. WM. D. RYCKM AW. Thousands lure beta cured of dumb ague , b'llious disorders , jaundice , dypepsia and all di OE03 ot the liver , blood and itomicb , when all other remedies have failed , by using Ffof. QUilmette'g French Kidney Pad , which la a flulek and permanent cure for those disorders. Atk your druggist ( or the pre-it remedy , and ttka BO other , and if he does not keep ic fend tLEO In a letter to the French Pad Co , and reeelva 'one by mall post-paid. 5'JPBSOIl hlfl W5 .JBADB MABK li A -iiW ; fl .THEGREAT iitl EEmumEMEDi IFOR RHEUMATISM , Neuralgia , Sciatica , Lumbago , Backache , Soreness of the Chest , Gout , Quinsy , Sore Throat , Swellings ings and Sprains , Burns and # Sca/ds , Genera/ Bodily * 9 Pains , * , Tooth , Ear and Headache , Frosted Feet a/7 < / Ears , and all other Pains and Aches. Ko Preparation on earth equals ST. JicoM On , as a safe , jure , glmple and cheap External Bemedy. ' A trial entails bet tb cnrnparaUnly trifling outlay of 50 Cents , and rery one euffer- Ing with pain can bare cheap and podtire proof of its claims. jt i Directions in Eleren languages. V < BOLD BYALLDBTTQgiaTaiHDJPEALESB HI UEDIOIHE. A. VOGELER & CO. , ' SHEELY BROS. PACKING CO. , PORK AND BEEF PACKERS Wholesale and Retail in FEESII MEATS& PROVISIONS , GAMEPOULTRY , FISH , ETC. CITY AND COUNTY ORDERS SOLICITED. OFFICE CITY MARKET 1415 Douglas St. Packing House , Opposite Omaha Stock Yards , U. P. B. R. McMAHON , Successors to Jas. K. Ish , DRUGGISTS AND PERFUMERS. Dealers in Fine Imported Extracts , Toilet Waters , Colognes , Soaps , Toilet Powders , &o , A full line of Ecrsics.1 Instrument ! , Pocket dues , Trnsa-a aud SnpporUn. Atwolutclj Pun Drugs and Chemical * used In Dispensing. Prescription * filled at any hour of ths night. Jas. li. Isli. Lawrence Mc fahon. MORE POPULAR THAN EVER. The Genuine SINGER NEW FAMILY SEWING MACHINE. The popular demand for the GENUINE SINGER in 1379 exceeded that of any previous year during the Quarter of a Century in which this "Old - Reliable" Machine ban teen before the public. In 1878 we sold 356,422 Machines. In 1879 we sold 431,167 Machines. Excess over any previous year 74,735 Machines. Our sales last year were at the rate of over 1400 Seeing Machines a Day 1 For eyery business d y In the y ar , The "Old Sellable" That Every REAL Singer is the Strongest , Singer Sewing Machine the Simplest , the Most chine has this Trade Mark cast into 'the Durable Sewing Ma- Iron Stand and embedded cKine ever yet ConFer bedded in the Arm of structed , the Machine. THE SINGER WiJFACTURING GO. Principal Office : 34 Union Square , New York. 1,500 Subordinate Offices , in the United States and Canada , and 3,000 Offices intheOld World and South America. eeplG-d& vtf HOTELS. THE ORIGINAL. Oor. Randolph St. & 5th Avo. , qHIOAGO ILL. KlItiES REDUCED TO $2.00 AND 82.50 PER DAY . Located In the business centre , convenient to places of amusement. Elegantly fumlebed , containing all modem implements , panen er elevator , &c J. U. CUMMINOS , iTopristor. oclCtf Cor. MARKET ST. & BROADWAY Council ItlufTs , Io > va < On line o street Railway , Omnlbm'o nd from all trains. RATES Parlor floor ta.OOpor d y ; second floor. Suw-p * "lT l * WW floor , C-.OO. The bcstfttrniibedand most eomiiodloua bonaa InthSritr. QEO.T. PHELPS Prop METROPOLITAN OMAHA , NEB. IRA WILSON PROPRIETOR. The MetropollUn U centrally located , and first c'ass ' In eve y respect , having recently been entirely renovalii. The public wi.l Una It a comfortable and homelike house. marStf. FRONTIER HOTEL , Laramie , Wyoming , The miner's resort , good accommodations , arge sample room , chareea reasonable. Bpsclai attention given to traveling men. 11-tf II. C HILLIVKD Proprietor. INTER-OCEAN HOTEL , Cheyenne , Wyoming. Flrlt-cIiBS , Fine argo Sample Rooms , one block from depot. Trains atop from 20 minutes to 2 hours for dinner. Free Bus to and from Depot. Hates S2.00.S2.50 and $3.00 , according to roomfa'ngle meal 75 cents. A. U. BALCOM , Proprietor. W BORDKN. Cnlef Clerk. mlO-t UPTON HOUSE , Scliuyler , Neb. Flist-clasa House , Good Veals , Good Beds Airy Rooms , and kind and udommoditlng treatment. Twigood sample rooms. Spooa attention paid to commercial travelers. S. MILLER , Prop , , alS-tf Schuyler , Neb , na-iFi-3 = e-gg. xv fg VINEGAR WORKS ! EENSTKREBS , Manager. Manufacturer of aU kinds of Jeru St. Set. Ith and 10th. OMAHA , NEB Z3 , THE MERCHANT TAILOK , Is prepared to make Pants , 5uits and overcoats to order. Prices , fit and workmanship guaranteed to init , One Door W nt of nnildcahank's. 101y EAST INDIA BITTERS ! ILER & GO. , " * SOLE" MANUFACTURERS ftfAITA. , Xfb. HAMBURG AMERir H PACKET CQ.'S Weekly Line 01 Steamships LearinK New York Every Thursday at J p. m. For England , France and Germanyv For Passage apply to C. B. RICHARD & CO , , Passenger Agents , CHARLES RIEWE , UNDERTAKER ! Mttallo Cases , Coffins , Casket * , Shrouds , etc. Farn m Etrw . ICth and llth , Omaha , Neb. dt BflHKIHC HOUSES. THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED. BANKING HOUSE IN NEBRASKA. CALDWELLHAMILTONCO Bosinora transacted same M that o an Inoor panted Bank. Accounts kept In Currency or fold subject to right chock without notice. Certificates oJ deposit laiued payaMo In three sir and twelve months , tearing Interest , or on demand without Interest. Advances made to cuatoaers on approved e curiti" it market rtUs of laterost Buy and sell gold. Mils of exchange Govern ment , State , Counry > "l City Bonds. Draw Sight Drafts on EnzUutf Ireland , Sect- land , and all partg of Europe. Sell European Pasaaze Tick4 * . COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. U , S. DEPOSITOET , FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF CATAHA. Cor. 18th ana Farnbam Streets , OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHMENT IN OMAHA. 4 ( SUCCESSORS TO KOUNTZE BROS. , ) UTASLnnro ra I860. Organized aa a National Bank , Aajnat SO , 1B63. Capital and Profits Over$300,000 Specially authorized by the Secretary or Treasury to receive Babscrlptlon to tha U.S.4 PER CENT. FUNDED LOAH. OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS HIBIUH KCCHTZB , President. ACQUJTUS KOO57SB. Tlce President. H. W. YArxa. Cashier. A. J. PoFPLVToa , Attorney. Joan A. CR-IBBTOII. F H. Dim , AsiH CashliT. This bank rtcelYea deposit without regsrd to amount * Issues tuna ctrtlflcates bearing Interest. Draws drat U on San Prandsco and principal dtle * ot the United Etatd. alsj London , Dublin , Edinburgh and the principal dtlsi of the conti nent of Europe. Sells passage tickets for Emigrants la tha In- man ne. mayldtl IEAL ESTATE BXOKEI Geo. P. Bern is1 REAL ESTATE AGENCY. 16th < b Douglas 8tt.t Omaha , Neb. Thli agency docf ITRIOTLT a brokerage bcfi * ness. Does notspecnlate , and therefore any bargains - gains on Its books ate Insured to IU patron * , In stead of being gobbled up by the agent BOGGS & HILL. REAL .ESTATE BROKERS No IJjOS Famham Street OMAHA - NEBRASKA. Office North Bide opp. Grand Central Hotel. Nebraska Land Agency , DAVIS & SNYDER , 1505 Farnham St. Omaha , Nebr. 100,000 AOBJC3 carefully selected land In Kartera Nebraska for sale. Great Bargains In Improved farms , and Omaha dtyproperty. 0. t. DAVIS. WEBSTER 8NTDSR , Late land ConVrD. F. R. R < p-leb7tf ITKOI BUD. urna Byron Reed < fc Co , , OLD CST ZSTAILISTD REAL ESTATE AGENCY IN NEBRASKA. Keep a complete abitract of title to all Real Zitata In Omaha and Douclaa County , mayltf SIOUX CITY & PACIFIC AND St. Paul & Sionx City RAILROADS. The Old Reliable Sioux City Route I 100 MILES SHORTEST ROUTE I Prom COMOIL BLUPTS to ST. PAUL , MINNEAPOLIS DULUTH , or BISMARCK , And all points In Northern Iowa , Minnesota and Dakota. This Una is equipped with the Im proved Westlnzhouse Automatic Air Brakes and llOIer Platform Coupler and Buffer. And for SPEED , SAFETY AND COMFORT la unsurpassed. Elegant Drawing Room tad Sleeping Carsowned and controlled by tha com pany , run Through Wlthsut Change between Union Pacific Transfer Depot , Council Bluffs , and St. Paul. Trains leave tha Union Pacific Transfer Depot at Council Bluffs , at J:1J : p D. . reaching Sioux City at 10:20 p. m. , and St. Paul at 11:05 a. m. , mmxlng HOURS nr ADVAHCJ ot AST OTHEE Rotrra. Betnrntn ? , leave St. Paul at 330 p. m. , ar- vLijr at Sioux City at 4i5a. m. , and union Pacific Transfer Depot , Council Blafli , at 9fiO a.m. Be lura that your tickets read rta "S. C. fe F. B. B. " f. C. TOLLS , Superintendent. Mtaourl Talley , Iowa. F. Z , BOBI5BOK , JaA Gen1 Faah Ajent. J. H. 0-BBYAN , 1856. We call the attention of Buyers to Our Extensive Stock of AMD GENTS' FURNISHING WHOLESALE AND RETAIL We carry the Largest and BEST SELECTED STOCK OF GOODS IN Which We are Selling at GUARANTEED PRIOF UUfiilfaii 1 LiSaLI 1 IllfJ&a OUR MERCHANT TAILORING Is in charge of Mr. THOMAS TALLOtf , whose reputation has been fairly earned. We also Keep an Immense Stock of HATS , GAPS , TROTS AND VALISES REMEMBER WE ARE THE ONE PRICE STORE ! M. HELLMAN & CO. , mSleodair 1301 & 1303 Farnliani Street. ORGANS. O . S. "WHIG-SIT , "T. , CHICKERING PIANO , And Sole Agent for Hallet Davis & Co , , James & Holmstrom , and J. & C. Fischer's Pianos , also Sole Agent for the Estey , Burdett , and the Fort Wayne Organ Go's. Organs , I deal in Pianos and Org&na exclusively. Have had yeara * experience in the Business , and handle eely the Best. OM 81816th Street , City If all Building Omaha , tfeb. HALSE1T V. FlTCH. Tunor. DOUBLE AND SINGLE ACTING ACTINGUPIPS / Steam Pomps , Engine Trimmings , Mining Machinery , BELTIHC HOSE , BRASS AND IRON FITTINGS , PIPE , STEAM PACKING , AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. HALLADAY WIND-tVliLlS , CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS A. L. 8TEANQ205 Farnnam Strflflt Omaha , Neb HE ! V. BLATrS MILWAUKEE BEER ! la Kegs and Bottles. Special Figures to the Trade. Families Supplied at Reasonable Prices. Office , 239 Douglas Sfafc. . Omaha TO THE LADIES AND GENTLEMEN : FRENCH KIDNEY PAD I A Positive and Permanent Cure Guaranteed , In all cases of Grave ! , Diabetes , Dropsy. Bright'i DtseaM Kidneys , Incontinence and Retention of Urine , InflamatloB the Kidneys , Catarrh of the Bladder , Hfch Colored Orln , Pal * in the Rixk , s'de or Lions , Nervous Weakness , and In fact al disorders of the Bladder and Orfnary Organs , whether contract * ed by private diseases or otheawisfi. This frreat remedy has be a used with success for nearly ten yeara la franco , with the mort wonderful curative effects. It curaby absorption : no nauseoui internal medicines being remlred. We have hundreds of teU- ' monlals of cures by this Pad when all else hod failed- LA DIES , if you ar suthrfnz from Female Weakness , L uoof- rhojo , or dbecsci peculiar to females , or In fact any disease , a yosr drurrfst for Prof. ( Zuilmetto'i French Kidney Pad , and take no other. If he has not got It. f nd J2.00 " " J < " wl receive the Pad by return mall. Address U. a. Blanch , FRENCH PAD CO. , Toledo , Ohio' ' PROF. GUiLMETTE'S FRENCH LIVER PAD Will positively cure Fever and Ajfue , Dumb Ague , Aarue Cake , Billions Fever. Jaundice , Dyspeptla , . ane all diseases of the Liver , Hvomich and Blood. The pad cures by absorption , and Is permanent. Ask j our drujrnst for this pad and take no other If he doesnot keepltsendl JO ti tne ITRBNOB PAD CO. , ( U.S. Branch ) , Toledo , Ohio , and receive it by return mall " " V * CO. , , ABA J10 B * MAKE AT0 MISTAKE ! MICA AYT.F. GEEASE Compeledlugtly of powdered mica and IslnatlM ! is the belt and cheapest lubricator In the world. It lithe best because It docs not gem , bnt form ) a highly pollihed aurfoco oter the axle , doln ? away wllh a larze amount ot friction , U la the cheapest because TOO need me bnt half the qoantltr In greiiiu ? your wazon thatjroa would of any other axle grease made , and then run your aon : twice aslony. It aninrera eqi.llr a * well for Mill Gearlnz , Thresalnj IMachlnst , Bae ! . fcc. , as for waons-S nd { or Pocket Cyclopedia of Things Worm Knowing. Vallod lit * to any ad'lretf. MICA MAXUFACTUftmC CO. , 31 MICHIGAN AVENOE. CHICAGO. Your Dealer For It I A. W. XASOX. IDE 3ST07IST , OrnoclJaoob'a Btoek , eonur Capitol Avs. as * 1 Osuia , Xlb. HARTIGAX & DODGE , Sheet Iron Workers -AND BOILEE MAKEKS' Cor. Uth and Casa s'.mt * . Plra fi CIvc Us n Call. Machine Works , J. Hammond , Prop , & Manager. Tha mort thorough appolnta I and omplsto llichlno Sbopa and foundry in tha itata. Cutlrup of every description raanufaeUd. Enjrtaes , rumpt aad eTtiy class of nuehlncrj made to order. , . . , . pedal attention glren to Well Anjjnrs , Pulleys , Hangers , Shaf tinjr.Bridse Irons , ecr Uuttlnjr , etc Plans for new XachlneryUeachanlcal Drauiht * sgr. Model * , etc. , neatly executed , 66Harno7 St. , Bet-14tb and 15th. r day at home. Kamplea wtal In * . 5Addr BUajoo & Cq