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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (July 30, 1881)
THE OMAHA DAILY JBEF : SATURDAY JULY 30 , 1881. MANHATTAN ISLAND , The Battle of tlio Bulls and Mrs' With Millions at - " " " Stake , ' Sprays from the Seaside Day- j 'light Fireworks , Electric -i ' Illuminations , and Comet Solos. Grant in Hl Pnvnrty nt the Cot- tngo by the Son- ! From an Occa tonM Corrc potnlent. Jfnv VOIIK , July 27 , 1881. Uow tlmt JJoscoo Conkling lias lost Ilio scnnlorinl battle , find the Oarficld subscription has taken lo going up only in trivial sums daily , Gotham is obliged to rely upon internal and homo-made sensations. These have .Lccn rather plentiful and tolerably ex vt citing. AVe liavo had 0110 murder , a temporary collapse in the ] market , a Hinder arrested for begging in the titrects , an imported scandal from St. Jxjuis. and soycrnl other attractive lit tle episodes with which to beguile tlio time. Added to this , it has been al most hot enough to melt the rivets out of a steam boiler ; whereat Coney Island has rejoiced , yea unlo the point of exceeding gladness. ] Jut there has been iiothmifnt our easido rnsort this year to compare with the most ordinary trallic of the past Iw o Hcaaona. Lost night , for instance , nnyono who happened lo drop in at Brighton JJeach must have thought that old times had come again. The place was jammed. Cause , fireworks and Levy. But the other hotels all along the beach \\uro utterly descried. At the Manhattan I don't believe there were were a hundred people in all , and when there is desertion and dreariness at this place the others are likely to know what the same Icrms menu in their fullest sense. The lire works dis played at Coney Island are probably the most elaborate ever ECOH in this coun try. They are to those who have Leon surfeited with the other tawdry attractions of the place about all there is left to bo intercsled in. At Man hattan Beach Ihoy have a now kind of Japanese article of this description which is full of noyolty. The day time displays are simply marvelous. But at night Brighton is the most re markable in Ibis respect. The sight is beautiful viewed from a dislanco. I witnessed 'it last evening from the now iron pier , half a inilo away. Thcro were colored lights that shot up two or three hundred feet inlo the airand tloatcd about at that height for four or live minutes before going out and dropping into the sea ; huge bombs which sprang upward and burst with loud reports , shootitu' in nil directions over spaces of fifty or Boventy'-fivo feet ; rockets tlmt curved outward over the waves and made showers of sparks , which blazed into fresh flames when they touched the water ; fiery serpents which chased each other spasmodically through the jxir thirty or forty foot over thu heads of the crowd , and j rcat heaps of red and green fire , which lighted up the rolling surf and the beach for a quar ter of a milo in ovcrydirection. Under the brilliant illumination thus pro duced , the huge breakers sweeping shoreward had a curiously weird and spectral appearance , and the throng -which lined the beach looked like strange , fantastic beings intently watching some mystic ceremony of the Orient. Added to all this , the meas ured dash of the wives upon the sands , the dull whistle of the steamers plying up nnd down before the Island , and the faint strains of the music borne upon a gonllo land breeze , which scracely stirred the banners on the pier , com bined to render the hour and the situ ation ploasaiitor and moro picturcsquo than any I had over known at Coney Island. But prosontly'tho iirowoiks ceased , the melody died away , and in ten minutes the place was in a scram ble. People do not go to Coney Is land or leave it deliberately. So far us I have been able to observe , they all try to travel on ' the same boat. "When you BOO 25,000 , , mon nnd wo men , with no apparent end of chil dren , all trying lo board a vessel that can possibly accommodate ten per cent of the number , the spectacle becomes exciting but not pleasant , particularly if you are in tlio middle of the crush. I was somewhat surprised when I finally succeeded in getting two , or three foot of space to myself at the Batlory to-night , , to find that I had not been squeezed into the ahape of a pressed cigar. Such pushing and hauling and jamming as there is between Now York and Conov { Island I don't believe is to bo found anywhere in the world. There are boats enough and trains enough to carry all the people who want to go and come or there would bo if tlio people didn't all move at the same time. The Iron Steamboat Company has the "call. " It gets the highest prices , transports its passengers the most speedily , and gives ils patrons the greatest number of luxuries of all the lines. But , take it all in nil , Coney Island is bound to dissappoint anybody , who wants or expects real comfort. When there is a crowd the tPVtf i ? unpleasantly small , and when j thottj-isn't it absolutely dreary. Last tiigmrdt was pleasant so lom > as one could hang around the edges , but when ho became surrounded it was just tu troublesome as though there had boon cue hundred thousand people ple 0:1 hand. LONO UIUXVII , Long Branch has rory many now features , especially in cottages. Four or five years ago thu moat expensive house at Long Branch probably cost no moro than $15,000 to $20,000. Tlio house of Commodore Garrison , which ho is now occupying for the first month , is believed to have cost S70.000 without the ground , vhich is held in that quarter at from ? 5QOO to § 10,000 an ucro. I don't admire the house. It has sonuj twenty gables exposed - posed to view from the land bide , and they are piled ouu upon another as if in succession of triangles constituted fho jino of beauty , QUO enormous -chimney ngainst 4J Oj > ide of the house , i inude of brick" , juns up. cmo hundred or more feet , as if it was a buttress , and it nearly o'ortops the cupola tower at that end. In this great house the old coniinodoro , who is about seventy "yours " old. hvts with his young wife , formerly Miss ' Kaiidnll. Her father is the Commodore's junior in years. Ho is n quiet old gentleman of St. Louis , who boards at the West End Hotel with his wifo. Although the Commodore was n pretty sick man when lie married , many think ho will yet Burvii-6 his 'wifo ' , She 1ms not been in the best health since that event. They are very fond of each other , and go out riding every day. Ho still goes to the city to lee * after business , though it is generally be lieved that ho is worth not less limn § 10,000,000. Indeed , thoonly persons 1 see who are not slaves to something nro those who have small accumula tions. There is not a single man hereof of largo wealth who docs not have to run up town every morning by the early train nnd coinu down Into. Hero is Kussoll Sage , whoso capital stalled Jay Gould on his second great career of investment and speculation. The most interesting of the now cottnges built hero is tlmt of Moses Taylor , the celebrated shipping mer chant mid conl deliverer , of whom it is said that for thirty or forty years ho never went further than Sandy Hook nnny from business. Ho has built one of the low lint-roofed houses , with open sides and of n blush color , which gives n pleasing impression , His soii'in-lnw has built next to him. Taylor's Cdllago probably cost § 1)5,000. ) Last Saturday I took n drive with Thomas Murphy and the Young brothers , to Murphy's farm of floven hundred ncrcs , which ia but n little more than n mile back from Iho beach , nnd which he has just put into n cor poration in conjunction with some land between him nnd the beach. They lot the six hun dred or seven hundred ncres at § 1,000 nn ncre , nnd expect to sell it for § 2,000,000 in building lots. They may do it , but not in my time. As wo were driving along , Gonor.il Gar- Hold's cnso canio up , nnd Mr. Young said , wlmt struck mo us rather strom ; for such n thorough Grant man as ho is ; "Garficld's ' popularity is almost phenomenal. It looks as if ho were going to bo the chief favorite - ito in the country for the next ten years. " I naked Mr. Young if General Grant was well situated f" "Yes , " said ho. "I think Grant's income can not bo far from § 50,000 a year. Ho has nil nctivo interest in n Now York business house , which has been very successful. He gets , perhaps , § 25,000 n year from the rail road company , Jiml Iho two funds raised by Jones nnd the Drexols for him nmoiint to § 330,000. It is not true tlmt ho has sold his St. Louis farm. " Mr Young said : "I have never taken much stock in that Grant phalanx , except Grant himself. 1 think ho is n broad-minded , liberal limn sometimes going pretty far for 'his ' friends. Ho may have indulged that good quality too fnr towards Conkling. " A gentleman who knows General Grants daughter , Mrs. Snrtoris , in England , Hays that her marriage , though criticised in this country , has turned out n tirst-mto match. Her husband has n respectable income ot probably 2,000 n year , nnd with n homo many years in his family ho lives upon his income easily nnd has plenty of time for pleasure , for hunt ing , fishing and boating. Nellie Sar- loris 1ms three living children , nnd likes England nnd her mode of life. The redeeming thing in all these mar- rrajjcs , oven where money wns the basis of the match , is the mutual youth of the contracting parties. They can grow to lit each other , es pecially if they nro fruitful of chil dren ; but it is very hard for people mismatched in years to ndnpt them selves to each other fully any moro limn n pair of shoes of two sizes can over mnko ngroenblo locomotion on the wearer. UUTTINU IIAILUOAII KATKS. The railway wnr is still booming , nnd the voice of the rate-cutter is heard in the land. There was nn at tempt the other day to natch up the diflloulties between the dill'oront com panies , but it failed through the neg lect of Mr. Yandorbilt's representa tive to meet the agents of the other roads when they cnmo together for the purpose of settling upon some definite - finite course of operations. The re- mnining representatives were extremely - ly indis'imnt about it , nnd for n few hours nftor the Now York Central cor poration's man failed to put in nn appearance poaranco they cut things right nni loft. Ho subsequently sent an npology however , saying ho had not buen np prised of the conference until too Into to reach the place of meeting. In this connection it may bo as well to stale that jt wns not until \Ycdncsdny o Ibis week that Lake Shore , which Jim aulibrcd keenly on the mnrko through the war , reached a llguro which induced Mr. Vandorhilt lo bu\ heavily , just ns I told you ho would The explanation of his passenger agon did not come until after this little oc curronco. At present the railway king is loaded down to the gunwales with stocks depressed by this procipi tons Hurry. Consequently his notion or ralhor the action of the passengei agent of his road , in regarded by the shrewd operators as a bid for peace contingent upon which is the rebound ing of stocks to their former level , The Erie and Pennsylvania people however , have not yet made np thoi minds that they are through with tin fun. Consequently the reduction , ii western fares remains where it was al most a wnok ago. It sjiould bo re niombtued tlmt all the roads are mak jug money on their passenger trulli oven now. Mr. Gould will clear t v ( dollars for every ono made by Mi YandorbiJt on this deal. If there is solitary thing which Mr , Gould like to do bolter than another H is to tak advantage of somebody else's care fully.maturcd plans. Ho cai calculate in n mimito on the to and bottom prices to bo brought abou by a given movement , and ho know- better than the schemer himself jus when to buy and sell. If any bed thinks tlioVall street king was " ( eft on this deal ho is welcome to the do lusion. Mr. Gould will clear a vas amount on the leturn of these stock to their normal place in the quota tions. James U. Keene , I learn upo good authority , is a big loser in th speculation. They { ell mo Mr. Van derbilt 1ms been buying great block of Northwestern and Union Tacit' with n view to building a new roa from Ogden to San Francisco an thus seeming a new line to the Pacific. This is untrue , however , so far fts the lurposo is conccrnedi Mr , Vnnder- ) ilt is rapidly becoming ft speculator , ml that is what lin is fingering the narkot for at present. Prom a posi- ion of the most pronounced conser- alism , Vandcrbilt ia rapidly shifting o that of ft rather iccklcss stock op erator. Ho is feeling the pulse of his orluno , so to speak , and I shouldn't > o surprised if ho found it feverish jeforo long. TUB I'KOI'OSKI ) III'.OAPWAY TUNNEL. The scheme to tunnel .Broadway rom Park place to Fourteenth street s being actively forwarded. A com- nission is now hearing nrfttmonts for and against the project. The ground jcneath Kroadway is clay and sand , nnd the contractor , Joseph Patterson , of lliiltimoro , has undertaken to pay all damage nnd lo restore the street to ts original condition whenever the crvico is broken. Ho contends that ho sidewalks , curbstones , pavement nd foundations of buildings will note > o disturbed by Iho digging of the mine ] , and that buildings will not bo arred near so much by underground s by surface trains. The gas-pipes nd water-pipes would bo slung upon lie roof of the tunnel as the work irogi ossGtl , nnd the sewers would bo orn up nnd rebuilt on one side. The bstructions lo Hrondwny would bo or one-half of ils width in sections of no hundred feet at a time. There arc vo stations in Iho plans , vyhich also liow that on the western side of the City Hnll park the roadway would un under the sidewalk and under the dgo of the park , partly to avoid the leach Pneumatic Transit tunnel. ' 'rom Iho park it would swing under 10 middle of liroadwny. Thoexcava- ons would bo worked from shafts unk in the side streets. The tunnel vould bo twenty-live feet high , and vhilo it was constructing n wooden restlo-work would hold up the Ucl- ( inn pavement above. The tunnel ould bo enclosed in brick walls , nnd ivided between the two tracks by n ) rick wall. Tt would advance ton feet day , mid reach Fourteenth slrcet in wonly monllis. J. C. 13. SALT LAKE CITY , A Sad "Pioneor Day" in the Mormon Mecca , Bapid Railroading in the Valley of Dosorfc. n Which Ohock and Check mate are Called by Rival Corporations. llnford'ri BmlKot of Noivs and Notes. pedal corresponJcnco of The Rcc. SALT LAKH CITY , July 20 , 1881. 'esterday was n sorry attempt at n oliday. It has been 'customary ' in Jtah to celebrate July 21th as Pioneer ) ay , it being the date that Brigham Toung and Iho first company of Mor- nous nrrivod in Salt Lake Valley , in 847. This year the twenty-fourth ailing on Sunday , Monday was hosen instead. But owing to the lows of President Garfield's relapse ind other causes , no general clFort vas made lo celebralo the day. 'ho leading banks , olliccs nnd firms losod , and the people straggled oil' o the Lake , or to the adjacent picas- ire gardens , whilst the streets were iuller and more deserted than on an rdinary Sabbath , which , as a rule , is cry .quiet in this city. Perhaps the ) resent high rate of mortality had ilsp something to do with the unusual juiotnoss. The agony of susponco to those ntcroslod in Ulah railroad matters s measurably over , as the mystery as o what company was doing 'much of , ho grading within the borders of the : erntory , is solved. The Denver it Ilio Gr.tndo Wesloni railroad com- > any has lately boon incorporated un lor our local statutes. Its programme 's to build 2,370 miles of. road , main line and branches , with in the territorial limits , at an estimated cost of § 1GOOC per milo , or § 37,727,000 for Iho whole. This will carry the branches of this road inlo almost every cornel of the Great Basin , south of Ogden , and to the city of St. George in the south. But in their system is not included Iho trunk lines under the control of Jay Gould , nor the brand : lines built or in process of building , known ns Iho Utah & Nevada , tlfo UtahSoulhoni | , the Wnsalch it Jordai Valley , Iho Binglmm Canon it Camr Floyd , Iho Salt Lake it Western , the Pleasant Valley , the Saupoto 0. , tfc. Should Iho present craze foi railroad building continue much longer , Utah will bo covuroi with as thick a network of roads as it to bo found in the neighborhood o : our largest metropolitan centers. Bui there is a great fear 'hat the thing is being overdone nnd a crash must fol low Our biannual election takes place 01 : the first Monday in August. Contra ry to tlio usual custom the non-Mor- moni citizens huvo nominated , in very many pat IB of the territory gontlomoi to bo voted for as members of Iho legislature , assembly , etc. The dele gate to congress is not elected this year , The Mormon conventions have renominated the saino parlies , ns i general thing , that were members of the last assembly. I note , however , two prominent exceptions. Messrs. Orsoi Pratl and Alborl Carringlon , of Ihii county , who are members of Iho , quo rum of the twelve apostles , have no been ronominalcd. The Iwo tickets for this district tire as follows : I'ho non-Mormon ticket ( the libora party ) Councolors ; J , B. llosbor ough , II. W. Laronco , G. A. Lowe F , H. Anorbach. Uoprosontalives J. G , Sutherland , J , Cutminglon , J M. > ViUiiunson , < T , Brunton , Ilectu Haight , L , P. Udholin. Tito Mormon ticket. ( The People' parly-For ) legislative councillors Joseph P. Smith , Daniel II. Wells John T. Ca'ino , Peter Barton. Fo representatives John Henry Smith Hasen Stout , James Sharp , Olios. Ponroso , Samuel Francis , Of course , nobody expects but tha the Moimon ticket will get the 11103 votes. HLUFOKP. PEPPERMINT DROPS , Cayenne tietipcr will drive awixv AnU nd mice. The | * pper must bo thrown In heir eyes. Ilnllimorc Is feclitiR pretty well tlita stun ner. Thcro ia talk of jdisbandlnK ( the only a o ball club , 1'liero l.i dentil in tlio cup of iced , tea , vhon Hip thermometer It at 110 degress In lie dining room. " , . " ' Tlio New Orleans I'icayiifife fciy * jfatcnt medicines keep down mortality by pro. cntinjf consultation" of doctor" . Llttlo Tolmny tov pistol Lib ! boom- ! ' octor lock.jaw under tlio willows ist6l ! carefully laid aside for Hie next. American her i's will ncxcr in also as inch money abroad M Atnrricnn donkeys n\c spent tlicrc [ IJoslou Commercial iiillutln. llrccldtirlilgo county , Kentucky , lias n iido rtllh eight Uvjc. Won't homebody 'lease ' lint liiin In the cell with ( iiiitcau ? llrooklyn llntcrpri'e. Tlio only Ohio in.iii who died suddenly nut week was a tliap who was trjinglo ecupy two neat * in a p.vncngcr coach vhllo four women were stnmliiig up. It ! ! io mo uisc'iierln ; any more llxer- id comet * . The country li tired of them n\v let Rome rocV-and-ryo man advertise > r cyclone. " nnd It will make tilings Ihely. Profession A ! ratcatchers in ( he big cities nakc more money than any college pays , s tMofensors , but colic jo piofcssors don't n\o to buck into ecwcrs or crawl under itchvns , llhodu Island 1ms 210 niiles of railroad , nt when a deaf man N hoisted elF thu rack by the cow-catcher , he always finds Innclf In an adjoining ulntc. [ Louisville 'oiirier. When a five cent cigar made in Now * ork gets down to Coney Island It is w orth ight cents. When it reaches Long Branch . is a ten-center. When it brings up In 'aiatoga It is a "two for a quarter. " Wonderful indeed arc the workings of lie cooling npnnrntiM now employed nt the Vhito HOUBC in Washington. It is ntntttl n good authority that a cow , which pas- tires under the president's window , now h CH ice cream. Detroit doctor cays people with light \XM and hair are those who IWMI warts. Sow if flomo Ravntit will tell us what color f eyes and hair denotej snoring many mi- appy mnrringrsuill bo prevented. [ 1'liil- delphia Chronicle-Herald. This notice is found posted up in a Vir- inln blnckttmitn "Notis Uo tihop : co- lartncrship heretofore resisting betwixt ne and Mosp Skinner in hereby resolved. ) em what oe do linn will settle wid.mp , nd dein what de firm oxvu will settle wid \losc. " "If yon find a locomotive rushing at you1 ays n Virginia philosopher , "spring in the ir anil cdmo down on tlto cowcatcher. " Phis plan is an excellent one , dn Viri'iiva nilronds. Hut If the man on the track is n iv hurry , ho will not waste lima riding n a cowcatcher.- [ Philadelphia Ncvw. JJr. Weissc has been shooting nt dead Htu'H to find nut where the ball lodged in ho president's case , but Dr. lilisa says lint Hliooting nt dead bodies to find tlio Ifect it would hnvu on live ones is nlmird. \n opinion is that neither of them know nucli about it. II'H Ihq old story. 'Where ignorance is Bllsp , 'tis folly to be Veisse. " Albuquerque , N. M. , hns a greatly re- peeled just ce of the peace. An lluetra- 1011 of his method of dealing justice ia nnnnendtid to justices in other far west owns. Ifosaitltoa Mexicnn , "Yo are hnrged with stealing canned goods ; what mv ye to Bay ! " 'ino Mexican replied , 'Kulen ! ' " " " ' nabe1'"Wcll"saidthejuilge. "I'll hmst the harpoon of justice into ycz and end you up for ninety days , till yez maybe an'sabe. ' Kixt ! ' " f MMM * . ft EDUCATIONAL NOTES/ " ! f til' Moscow has six gymnasiums for 00,000 icople. /\.n endeavor to nbolish the teocliiiifr of Spanish in the &n Prnncisco evening schools hns just fTiued. The language is outid to bo too useful to bnsinefes in that region to bo given up. The famous old English schools , Eton . .nil llnrrow , P.ngby nnd Winchester , are constantly full to overflowing , although their cost constantly Increases. Oxford nnd Cambridge were never so ciowdcd with students ns now. Encouraging reports as to the progress of Miblic education are constantly coining 'mm ' Georgia. Interest in education is npidly increasing from year to year and , ho subject is coming to the front as the intt hocinl interest of the state. The Karl of Carnarvon gays that edu cation in all its branches Is now thrown open to English women. The archbishop of Canterbury says that the attempt made sointS time ago to throw ridicule on what is culled the higher education of women , has failed. The Oennim newspapers state that the iroltct of establishing a German Universi ty in America is actually approaching realization. A bureau for advancing the matter Is to ha < > l ened at Frankfort , and many of the mint distinguished professors of the German univcrxi.ics are on the com mittec. Women toachern in Germany are far from well paid. Salaries begin nt § 200 and never exceed § 150 , When they retire , however , they r ; ceivo pensions. Itetire- mont nttho end of ten years't.erv ice secures ono-fonrtli of the annual xalnry given ; and for every year of Hurvlco odiled to the ten one-eightieth of the pay is given. "No subject is taught in the French prim ary schools that is not deemed absolutely m > ccf > sary for all citizens , and all the subjects - jects which nro to bo studied by a boy at bchool are given to him in bis first year therein. Thi < o nro only sk : Jtcncfing , writing , niitlunetlc , French grammar , French history and general geography. The dilFercnco between the lint and the third ye.ar is simply between nn elementary and a complete way of treating the same subject. The French way of rewarding a successful teacher is to promote him from a provincial school to a 1'arUan one , or to mnko him au inspector. Bradford , Pn. Thomas Fitchan. Bradford , Pa. , writes : "I enclose money for Bi'ltixa Br.ossosi , as I said I would if it cured me. My dyspep- kin linn vanished , with all its symptoms , Many thanks ; I hhalt never be without it in thu house. " 1'iicc 60 cents , trial iKittles 10 cents. J2Mw DYINC BY INCHES. Very otton vvo see a person sullbr- ing fniu Boino form of kidney com plaint nnd ia gradually lb' > S y inches. This no longer need to bo BO , for Kloctrio Bitters will positivelj euro lliighl's dise.xso , or any disease o : Iho kidneys ornriniary organs. Thoj nro especially adapted to Ibis class o : diseases , acting directly on the Stomach and Liver at Iho same time , and will speedily euro where everj other remedy has failed , Sold m fifty cents a bolllo , by Ish & Me Mtihon. (3 ( WISE'S ' Axle Grease NEVER GUMS ! Ued on'Wajpni , luM ! , Iteaixsn , Thresher * ana Mill JlaUiliKry. It It i.vv > U'jmt TO rKK rut ASP TKjmsTKks. u cures Scratches anil al kinds ot sorco on Ilonc * auJ Stock , M well M ou mm. mm.OLARK&WISE.HanufB . , 385 Illinois Street , Chicago. * 3-SE.VD FOB PUIUE3. J 2 VOR [ 71 nn 9 Neuralgia , Sciatica , Lumbago , Qacfacho , Soreness of iho Chest , Goui , Quinsy , Sere Throat , Swell ings and Sprains , Burns and s Scalds , General Bodily Pains , Tooth , Ear and Headache , Frosted Foot and Ears , and all ether Pains and Achos. Kc reparation on earth * qu t ST. .TACOIS On , ce a trtfrmrrr , linj > lf > Mid cheap Kiterakl Hftnf.lj. A trial rntalli but the comparative ! ; titling outl of 110 Cent" , utiJ every or.s tutltr- 1 C with r\la can Late cheap tiJ poiIUr * Wool cf Iti claims , rf' * Elreclloni In Eleven Tj nEii g' " r 60LDBT ALliDBUOQIBTS ANDDEAIEEB IH MEDICINE. A. VOGELER St. CO. , f } on suffer from D > epcpsla , use DUHDOCK BLOOD BITTE11S. ( > ou arc afflicted \\ith Biliousness , use BUUDOCK IJLOOD BITTEnS , ' f jouaro prostratcil with sick Headache , take IlUniJOCKJlLOOU BITTEnS f jour Bow chare disordered , rc ulata them u 1th DUUDOCK BLOOD B1TTEUS. f j our Blood Is impure , purify It with BUIIDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. f ) ulia\c Indigestion , you " 111 find an antidote ' ' n BUIIDOCK BLOOD BITTEUS. X ) f > ou are troubled with SprliiR Complaints , cr- odlcatethcm lth BUBDOCK 1ILOOD BITTEUS. t } our Llvcrls torpid , ' restore It to healthy action > 1th BUIIDOCK BLOOD BITTEUS. r : f/your Liver Is affected , you will nnd a sure re- itorath e In IJUHDOCK BLOOD BITTEUS. If } on have any species of Jlumor or Pimple , fall not to take IIU11DOCK BLOOD BITTEUS. f j on have any sy mptonis of Ulcers or Scrofulous Sores , a curatho remedy will lioffound In BUUDOCK BLOOD BITTEUS. For Imparting strength ami vitality tothosjs- .em , nothing can equal BUIIDOCK BLOOD BITTEUS. 'or Xenons and General Debility , tone up the sjstein with BUUDOCK BLOOD DITTLIIS. 'rice , 91.00 par Bottle ; Trial Dottles 10 Cts. POSTER MILBUM.&Oo Props , . , , , BUTFA10 , N. Y. Sold at wholesale by Ish & MuMahon and C. F. Goodman. Jo 27 cod-mo , MECHANICAL AND MINING EN. GINGERING at the Renstolear Polyteclv Institute , Troy , N. Y. Tbe oldest engineer ing school In America. Next term begins. Sep tember IMli. Tlio Register for 1840 SI contains n list of the graduates for the past M j cars , nil h their portions ; also , courbo of itudy , requirements - ments , expenses , etc. Address DAVID M. GREENE , Ji K-deodaugU Director. SEALED PROPOSALS. For the Constitution of Sidewalks. SK ALP. l > i > rc > i > o nls will bo received by tlioun dcr8lnMiid until August Ut , at 12 o'clock noon , for the construction of sidewalks In front of and adjoining the following described premises to wit : Ixits SO , 27andSOIn block M on west eldoof 17th ttrtct. Local , 4,6,20 ami 21 In block 8 , west side of 17th strict. Lot 1 In block 8 , Sneezer's addition. Lot 1 In block B , Heed's 1st addition. Lots 1 anil 10 III block 7 , Heed's nt addition. I/it 1U and ecuth i of lot 1 , block 0 , Heed's 1st addition. Lots on the ponth sldootCasa In block 303. LoU 1 , 2 , 3 and 4 on south bldo of Cass hillock 7 , feweezeys addition. J. J. L. C. JKWETT , ] y 22-dSt EICUESIOU TICKETS OHIOABO S ± O.OO ROUND TRIP , $19,00 Tia the O.B.0. Kfi. Klrst-closs and good through the jrar. Also New lork , llostou and all Kantcrn poinU , at pro iwrtlouatth low rates. On xalu ONLY at 11011UIK KKOTllKllb1 Itallroad TukU Otliec , dmo-&wlm bOi'U'ntliM..OMialia M. R. RISDON , General Insurance Agent. REPRESENTS : PHOENIX ASSURANCE CO. , of I.on- don , uuli ai cU . .it. . . , ? 5,107.12i WKSIVIIKSTKII.N. Ycu.itttl | 1,000,000 TAB J1K110IIANTS , of Newark , N. J. 1,000,090 ( HltAHDFIItK. rhllailelnhla , lanital , l.OOO1" " KHtKMAN'S KUN1) , California , . bOO NOUTUWKSTEUNNATlONAI..iai > it'l 000.003 UHITISII AMK1UOA ASSL'HANCE Co 1,200,000 NKWAUK KIIU : INS. CO. , OHtcU. . . . . f .00" AMEIUCANCrLNTUAL , anwU 600.000 Southeast Cor , of Fifteenth a J Kurnham St. OilAHANtn. BROWNELL HALL. YOUNG LADIES' SEMINARY I ] OMAHA , NED. Kev R DOHERTY H A Hector i , , , , , , , AsabteJ by n' Mocorj > iCf teacher * In Knjluh , bileucttiuiii Fine Art * . THE NINETEENTH YEAR WILL WXJIN SXIX E * . " 7 , Fur pMtlcuUr * . 1'1 > I ) ' to r rnu HECTOR. i Sil-cod-Sin TIIK BEWEY & STONE , U I T ORCHARD & BEAN , J. B.FRENCH & CO , , CARPETS ! G R O C E R SI M. BELLMAN & CO,0 j Suits ! Al ! Styles i ! IMMENSE STOCK AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. The Largest Clothing House lest of Chicago A Department for Children's Clothing. We have now an'assortment of Clothing of all kinds , Gent's Furnishing Goods in great variety.and a heavy stock of Trunks , . Valises , Hats , Caps , &c. These goods are fresh , purchased from ; he manufacturers , and will be sold at prices lower than ever jefore made. We Sell for Cash and Have but One Price. A large TAILORING FORCE is employed by us , and wem SUITS TO ORDER on very short notice. 1301 and 1303 Farnham St. , cor. 13th x r The Largest Stock and Most Com plete Assortment in The West. ? " ' 1 ( I fe- a fe'I 'I We Keep Everything in the Line of Carpets , Oil cloths , Matting , "Window-shades , Fixtures ' and Lace Curtains. M J { , WE HAVE GOODS TO PLEASE EVERYBODY. 1313 Farnham St. , Omaha. esircrej-xEj : : POWE3 AND HAND Steam Pumps , Engine Trimmings , MINJNQ MACHINEUY , BF.LTINO , HOSE , BRASS AND IRON * FITTINGS , PIPE , STEAM . PACKING , AT WHOLESALE AND HETAIL. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS , CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS , A , L. STRANG , 205 Farnam St. , Omaha ,