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APPLETON’S American CYCLOPAZEDIA New_Revised Edition. Eatirely rewritten by the sblest writers on ey et Priated from, e with Several Thousaad agravings snd Maps. ez we ok originall of T NEw AME lered i e which it s ttained 12 all parts of | i Suates, and hx;, S deveiopcats o ave taken place in every brand b - have ’(mm the e hic ience, literatu Gilforaad s 4 thorot .l‘;unm o lied, Ty ANEMICAN CYCLOPAR PWithin the Lt ten years the progressaf 4 vers in every departineut of :,fi’. e e oears oa” iepaive - movemen itical 2ffairs has kept r.w"...‘."ma moverln ot Twence and their ay e tndust uselul S e st G reat wars 30d consequent Tevolu- e Mave oceurs1, invoiving National changes e eiar maoment. The civil war of ourown e vt it height when the last Solame ol the ol work sppeared, bas happily been end hew. conrse of commercial i indusirial pretes Sovia e, ot potitical revolations of the last f the lapse of ;Auren decaie with the natural result Yime, have brought into public view a multitude of uéw men, whose Bames are in every ove’s Touth, and of whose lives every one is curious 10 kuow the particulars. Great beca fought and importan s a: tant sicges_maintaived, s yet preserved ouly the trammient. pablice o dows the nko s Ao hum-h an accurate account veries in scien on in literature, and of in the practical’ arts, as act and record ol 'and historial event. frin begun after lung and care- i with the most ample t'on 10 & successtul al stereotype plates have e s been, prinied 0a pae el new type with th sawe plan ;“:r pos nd ) ex- < well as the various pro- e aechanics snd manafactores. Al though _intended for iust cubeliighment, no puius in b nll Sl raare of the Cyclopadie sad worihy of its hig) et ts woid 1o Sabscribers only, payable ook s S el BT leted_in sixteen cctano volumes, each Fontaining about 500 paged fully illustra ed with Several thousand Waol Engraviugs, and with Eamerous colored Litbograpnic Mags. PRICE AND STYLE OF BINDING. In extra Cioth, Tn fFlf Russia, extra gil, i il Morvees, atiase, bt edged, e 1o il wassis, por Vol Tharce voluws now reals. tums, until cowpletion, Wil be iss o moaths v Specimen pages of the ANERIC x(‘\r patory, showias Ly o e seat ratie, ou applicatiuy CLASS CAXVASSING AGEN1S PIRST A3vase D. Applflton& Co., 519 & 551 llroadwny, New York. will i KEARNEY'S FLUID-EXTEACT BRIGHT’S DISEASE, And a positive cara for Gout, Gravel, Strictures, Disbetes, Dyspepsia Ner« vous Debility, Dropsy, n-reteoation or Tncontinence of Urine, Trri- O o, Tadaation oe Ulceration of the BLADDER AND KIDNEYS, SPERMATORRHEA, oo o Whites, Diseasesof the Prostrate e one in the biabder. Coicul us, GRAVEL OR BRICK :DUST DF- i 3 And Mucus or Milky Discharges. KEARNEY'S Extract Bucha! Permanently Cares ll, Diseases of the Bladder, Kidneys, and Dropsical Swellings, Existing in Men, Women an1 Children, No Matter What the Age! Prot. stec yne ot of Kearney's Fluid Extract B s worth more then all other Buchus combined. Price one dallar per bottle; or, six bottles for five dollars. Depot 104 Duane St, N. Y. A physician in attendance to auswer corres- | porabence and give advice gratis. P aarsond stawp for pasmphiets, fres. g crane & Brigham Wislesale Agonts, S Franeisco, C —10 THE— NERVOUS & DEBILITATED | OF BOTH SEXES. 50 OBEARGE FOR ADVICE AND CON- SULTATION. DR J- B. DYOTT, graduate of Jefferson Medical Colley phis, author of several valuable works, can be consulted on all dis+ eases of the Sexual and Urinary or- gans, (which he has made an es- pecial study,) either in male or fe- male, no matter from what cause nating, or how long standing. A practice of 30 years enables him to treat diseases with suceess. Cures | Charges reasonable. guaranteed. Those at a distance can forward let- | ters describing symptoms and en- closing stamp to prepay postage. #aSend for the Guide to Health. Price 10c. J. B. DYOI11, M. D. “Physicion and Surgeon, 104 Duane atreet, N. Y. OBSTACLES to MARRIAGE. ¢ batthes have | [ THE MASSACRE IN CHINA. The Recent Dreadful Slaughter of Chinese Christians--Ten Thousand Vietims | Sacrificed. | - The French periodical. Missions | Catholiques, gives the first suthen- | tic and detailed narrative of the re- cent massacre of Roman Catholic native converts in China. The ac- count as transluted for the Bondou | Tablet, relates that the massacre broke out on the 25th of ¥ebruary, | When the “literates” as the persecu- ting party is called, opened the cam- | paign by beheading two men in the service of Pere Doare, and a Chris- tion, whom they then_threw into river. the three viliages of Trun-Lam, Nio-Vinue and Bau-Tach, and mas. them. Those who escaped to the woods were hunted down with following day, The river was cov- | ered over h bodies floating down | £ Thoon. the sidoof Lareg. At that time the murderers were massacre- | ing the Christians of the parish of Holven, and were burning their vil- lages. Those who took refuge in the cliffs of the neighborhood, were | bunted down and burned ali%e. The Grand Mandarian of Justice was at | the market of Sa-Nam with 800 sol- diers, but remained an inactive spectator of the massacre of the Christians of Nam-Du anly a few of whom were nhle ) * literate vhn ‘were lhe heads of lhc milit, appointed to massacre the Chris- | tians, say that the work of extermi- | nation carried out the eyes of the Mandarmns, | was concerted between the court and the literates, and was done in reprisal for recent events. The mandarins have just received orders | from the Court not to employ any other means save those of persua- sion to stop the murderers in their career. One of the chiefs who had Just eaused two Christians to be mur- perade before the Governor of the citadel, by whom he was dismissed with honor. On his return twenty | women and ehildren fell under the | sword of this man and his follow- | ers. He had just come from offer. ing sacrifico to the Goddess of Pros- titution, to whom & famous temple that stands near the road is dedi- | | cated. In several localities they take an | | entire famly—father, mother and | children — bound together with | bamboos, and then fling the bundle | of living humanity into the waves. First, however, they take care to | cut off the man’s head. 'he mul- | ulud;o{l:eid bodh;;:‘\)ui fastened together ) W cight to i t:fieblwk ulfihv prineipal river, but | to the great surprise of everybody | does notsend forth any bad smell. | There are, then, five parishes con- taining nearly 10,000 Christians, | which have to be blotted out of the n — namely, Lang-Thank- en, Nam-Duong, Hoy-Yen and Doreg-Thank. Many of the vie- | tims died in the midstof the flame A \thgo of more than 400 Chris- | tians was attacked by the literates, and soon became a prey to the flames. Among these 400 Chris. tians there wer 130, more or who succeeded In saving the sel” s by taking refuge in a large village near by. The remainder— about 300 —were nearly all massa- cred. Two small vil s of Christians, situated two hours’ walk from the h T then was, were the pagans. ‘h house, numbe ristians and forbade th under threat of most severe punish- | ment, to go out of doors. A few of | the Christian women attempted to go to the market, to keep them- selves from starving. They never returned. Some pagan women that went with them say that the Christ- ian women were captured and be- headed Two men from one of these same villages hazarded a flight during the night. They crossed the river by ming, and came to mn«furmm-u “Alas! 2 2 e 2 £ I g 2 g g E & ? “this information is “I could do noth- ing but vw(r for them, being unahle lh rived, to do anything to succor them. Two or three days afterward I learned that all the men in that village had had their heads cut off; but the women and children were spared. And, as their houses were inter- mingled with thoso of the pagans, it was forbidden to burn them down.” A Great Hammer. The London Telegraph says of the visit of the Czar and his suite’to Woolwich: “The party made their longest halt in the factory where the Nas- | myth hammer, the largest in the | ed with top steam—is g to the forty tons dead falling weight of the hammer, the fifty-one tons added by a full pressure of steam above, a blow equivelent to weight of ninety-one | | tons can be given by Il with as much control as a child may exerel his toy mallet. The Imper occupied a specially-e form to witness the w | trunnion coil of a 38-ton gun. “zarowitch last ilar process coil of a 35-ton gu The massive door of the furnace was raised and in cted plat- ling of the The r witnessed a th the trunnion o fire terrible from the fierceness of | its golden glow stood the white-hot coil—a cylinder weighing twenty- e tons and a half. This trun- nion coil consists of two thicknesses of Lar iron, coiled upon the other, and the work of the steam hammer | was to weld them into a homogene- ous cylindrical mass. The powerful | crane was set in | | the beautifully adjusted machinery by which the fiery mass was seized by giant tongs, swung glowing and | bissing out of the fire, and placed on the hammer. Blasts of hot air ‘ rushed across toward the spectators, but the vast size of the building | rendered eye protectorsunnecessary. | The coil, it is needless to was welded _effectually—the vei floor, although its foundations are on | arock, vibrating with the tremen- | dous blows. The force wielded by but adozen men at the lever of the crane was astounding, yet the ham- mer was subject to a steam power | more formidable than itself. In or- { der to see the next process the vis tors passed hurriedly through the heavy turnery and sighting-room, where they might have seen thick slabs of metal peeled off the partly built guns, as apples are peeled by a | | dessert knife, The party, without | bestowing more that a glance at the great gunson the lathes went into the open air to witness | the shrinking on the breach cofl | of & 35-ton gun. Lving side by | side, smiling in their new pol- | | ish, 1ay a_remarkable collection of guns ready cannon was the famous 38-ton gun, e largest yet completed, The interesting family of four; of twen- ty -five tons there were twonty and twenty-eight of elghteen tons. The same day they burned | sacred the inhabitants that were in | hounds, brought back and killed the | under | dered on the highroad, went on_the | The | .| And while we seek t live ourse ves, ihotion, uml the | | swarthy smiths spring sprung to | e, Philadel- | for use. The m| %onlvhh Infants, 35-tons, were an | e, | Omaha, Neb. | After these frightful engines of de- | | ftruction no one troubled himself | wmuch with the smaller cannon, | whose name was legion. | Mostly Mormon. | An apostate, Captain Cadman, is a man who asserts that he has | seen the error of his ways, and has | | aceordingly renounced the Mormon | faith, Sometimes you will find | him sineere, sometimes not. Among | ['the v is of course | supposed to be at once discarded, | and so when I rode up to my | friend Simmon’s door, I anticipated | the welcome of a quiet little Gentile | | Christian h(lln I_.el‘.\‘ ll:i::lg‘" I:IT{ surprise, then, at behol a fe(?bec.»hne' 1 was first introduced | to Mrs. §. No. 1, and then to Mrs, S. No. 3, the intermediate lady hav- | ing been lost to the family a year or two since. Then there were & num- ber of boys and girls approaching the innumerable. Mr. S., who | takes count of them occasionally, said the last censusgave eleven boys | and twelve girls. “Good gracious! Simons!” I exclaimed, 1 thought you had been an apostate for sixteen years. Whose little four year old is this?’ “Why he’s mine, of course,” he replied, “and that's his mother,” pointing toa comely, smiling young { woman who stood leaning affec- tionately on the shoulder of lhe elder Mrs.S. “Yousee how it was,” | continued the head of the family ; | “when I apostatized I had three | wives What was I going to do? | Were we going 1o turn_two of ‘el [ adrift_on_ the cold charity of the | world? Could we do that my dear?” | The elder Mrs. 5., who was thus ap- pealed to, said, ‘‘Certainly not,” and | the younger Mrs. 8. just had the merriest twinkle in her eye, and | they all laughed, and I laughed, | too. Wi ell, as Mr. Simmons was contented, and the two Mrs. S. were contented, and the twenty- | three children ‘were contented, I did not think their little family ar- | rangement was any business of | mine. Simmons did not say so, but his circumstances and surroundings | clearly evinced that, so far from considering polygamy as the dam- | ning spot in his former religion, he | considered it the only piece of whole cloth worth saving.— Exchange. | A Baffled Barber. A traveling friend of the Observer was at Rochester the other day, and | | he dropped into a barber-shop near | the Osburn House to get shaved. | After he had been deprived of the useless hairs upon his face, and a portion of his skin, by a garrulous | and clumsy knight of the razor, the tonsorial artist tossed the ends of | his hair lightly, and the following dialogue ensued = “Have a cut?” Vietim—No, it | | was cut last week, and I'm ina | hurry. Artist, (looking at the | elock)—You have plenty of time before the train goes East.” Vie- tim—“I'm not going East—"Oh, then you are in no hurry.” «Had | your * dinner?” Victim (rather grufily)—“Yes!” Barber (still toy. ing with our friends waving locks) —“Which_way are you going?’ ctim—Well—if I everget out of b shop!” Barbor—“How far?” Victim-—“Buffalo!” Barber-—Oh, ho! Buffalo, eh? You ean’t get your hair cut decently in Buftalo. There | isonly one good barber there and he's © drunk half the time | Shall I cut it? The train don’t | Teave for half an hour!” Vietim | (thoroughly enraged)— Look here, | you wooden-headed numskull, and | listen. T dow’t want my hair’ eut! | | | T don’t want n shampoo! T don’t want fonie! T don’t wantbay rum! | T don’t want any more oi your tongue, information or impudence ! I do want you to finish this job, and if you don’t close your infernal lath- let me out of this_chair vour thick head off with one of your dull nutmeg-grating ra- tand that sanpe eompre- bserver, | the astonished hended.— [ tica ‘The vising of the mas-es From northern lake to southern sea. The spirit of ol seventy-six From out our heroes' gra- es patriots’ blood, The motta which our ¢ | ough obsolete long since, ‘cent for tribute, But widllons for defense Paty tiesand party Liws Arebut asropes o sanl. The rights of mn 1o b | TS govern Freeou's land. Thea shall our Flag more prowdy float i wstions yor WAorS nv[lnnm unborn Sall gadly grect he embiewn of the fre | 1n trade we'n As wtan should to deal, deal with mm, Welsclas cheap asanybuoly can, | And ifal v or " wmember B 3 On Upper Dougl s strect. o ToMANA CITY |STOVE STORE. | E.F. COORK, | 637 14th Bt, between Donglas and Dodge | Manufacturer_of Tin, Copper and=Sheet Iron | Ware, ud dealer in Cooking and Heating stoves Stamped, Jjapanued znd French Ware on band. Tin Booling Gatiers wnd Spoutingand JouWork done and warranted. febitt | THE OMAHA WEEKLY BEE ][ ACKNOWLEDGED BY EVERYBODY T0 e BFST PAPER | Published in Nebraska, It Contains More Reading Matter | and Less Advertisements than | any Newspaper Published in the West. { | Embracing a choice sclection © | newsand miscellaneous matter with live Editorials on all important top- ies; complete and reliable telegraph- icand local market reports to theday of issue, and a variety of State, East- ern and Western correspondence that | together make up a newspaper sel- | dom equalled and never surpassed. | Every article going into the col- umns of the BEE is carefully seru tinized, and everything that can of- | fend the most scrupulons, rejected, [ | RepublicanzPolitics | But Independent in principle the policy of the BEE is, and always has been, to expose and denounce abus- esand corruption in the body poli- tic without fear or favor. | Subscription Pricet /$1.50 Per Annum, IN ADVANCE. E ROSEWATER, . EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR, 138 Farnham Street, | Gooseberries, 3 00 per bu.; Cherries, Money and Commerce. Daily Review. OFFICE OMAHA DAILY BEE, } | June 20, 1874. There is no material change in the situation of monetary matters, and little doing to-day,owing to the | unfavorable weather, but the week has been satisfactory to both mer- | park chants and bankers. While Chica- | 8o and St. Louis are making faces | Dry sa | at, and calling each other dead so | (res far as business is concerned, Omaha is quietly enjoying the best season | of real commercial prosperity in its history. . THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK quotes: Land Grants. Land Warrani Agricultural (160 acres State, County and City War- rants. Gold—buying, 1103; selling, 1t | There is nothing new worthy of | notice in the city or country trade. Prices are unchanged and to-day | closes a very successful week. Com- } petition with Omaha far the trade | of Nebraska and the west becomes | weaker and less decided every day. OMAHA MARKETS. Caretully Corrected Daily DRY GOODS. J. J. BROWN & BRO., Cor. 14th and | Douglas Streets. PRINTS. Allen: Awerican. Amoskesg, ac .. Biddeford... Amosken Beaver O m§ Haymakers. |2 ova, B ,,-4 Otis, € 1553 JEANS. 16 l ] YANKEE NOTIONS KURTZ MOHR & €0., 231 Farnham Street. | |2 | SPOOL COT1UN. -8 =@z 0 -3 00t 00 14 Efusz & $is £es gessy £88s8 € ves usb EEEEE FPRING SKIRTS, - GEe Linen printed. 7 rufted. GENERAL COMMISSION. J. C. KOSENFELD gives us tne following quotations this day : Butter, dull, 13 in tubs; Eggs in demand at 12je per doz; Live Chickens at 300 per doz.; Strawber- vies in demand at 30c per box ; 30c per box; Oranges, 900, and Lemens, 14 00 per box. | HARDWARE. | J0mN T. ¥DGAR. Dodes thtmble sreims Stor half patent nlu, discouat 10 por ccnts AILLS. aoancenaauess GRELRETLESERS |yt Mpre 2pr 3% 30 pr, P35 Bpre 13 P 20 do sypre . 3 “opre AGRICULTURAL TMPLEMENTS, scrrae. | H Holt's Ha.vest King.per doz, net. s u-n :: % do red... 9 % SFADES AND siioV Rowlnd'’s No2 black shovels, D Ii. 1200 do. ‘Oa:‘ d do 13 00 do do k spades do 12 0 do polist do 13 0 4o “spring polnt” L H shovels” 13 %0 AX Lippencott's Western Crown. 1300 do. do do beveled. 13 50 o, SOFFEE MILLS. Parke’s No box.. do do35 Union 1 e - % do Pritai 130 A% PILES, | Hargrave, Smith & Co.,.......discount 30 File Co... W o (MERS. Haydole's, A E No 1, 1%, 2. Manmond'sA £ Nod 0 do do . 10 50 do. 10 0 do. do do2.... 13 50 o o do3 T M Morris' n Nol shisgling, No — o e v uch e do L — 900 do L ——— 75 do {TF Sn———— J Y | Republic, do., Chemical Olive, 6 to | 6@15¢; 2 inch 12@30c; 3 inch 15@ | Lovcloar oo iling | Seuai) s Bar (h:m LEATHER. | GROCERIES. }’,';3,‘;:\7” N | STEELE & JOHN:ON 538-340 14t st. o CLARK & FRI H COR. FARNHAM AND 1115 ST, PUNDT, MEYER & BAAPK | Onk wie'¥ do call 3. 3. BROW Doug Other brands ai linings. sool 0GJava. SOAPS Powell & Co., Soap monufacturers. | (... Sapo Publico, 6 1-2@6 3-4; Savon | u 61-2; Palm, 5@5 14 ; German Mot- | led, 6 1-4a6 1-2. : ART GOODS AND UPHOLSTERER'S Benjamin B. Jones, Decorative Up- holsterer and dealer in fine art goods, 270 Farnham Street, furnishes the following quotations: FRAME MOULDINGS. 0Oil walnut mouldings, one inch, l per foot, 5¢; 2inch 10¢; 3 inch 15¢; | polished walnut, 1 inch 7¢; 2 inch 15¢; 3 inch 2le. Berlin gilt, 1 inch | ¥ Schofers ..... 45¢; imitation rosewood and gilt, 1 iuch 5@10¢; 2 inch 10@2! nch 15@30c. ‘WINDOW SHADES. Plain bands, 6 feet, all colors, per pair, 1 50; ornamental bands, 2 00@ 4 00; cach sdditional foot, 75¢ per REPPS. Union nd all wool terry, per yard | 2 150@3 0 Tmperia, plain and atr- [ | ped, 2 50a8 o > do pe DAHAsm | 150; all wool, | Corn, Trophs, p.r cas Risteet e yflh], do Winslow do 210050, o Yarmouth do MATTRASSES. [ S . uuq Husk, 4-4x6-2, 4 00a5 00; straw, | Fioesepiss do i% 3 00a¢ 00; Lxculuor. 3 50a4 50. , Oolongs pes poUL. e o \uuu"m-,w m'_;n_. n_x ; LUMBER. | Soow Firke, (Wells & Mioaiss} God Dust... XXXX lowa Gt & i RETAIL LIST. | - 3 . T Eubiect to change of market without sotice. (.nnutfi l|Iu‘\1 -.x&nl — :Ml‘ WM. M. FOSTER, e & O U.P. I R. track bet. Farnham and Doug- . E 4 GEO A. HOAGLAND. Jots's, studding and er Over 301 1, each additional it add'l Fencing No 1 do. do n.me.r.n 1-. |‘-T.m 2 juch, & ariig: Yours old Ia i3 m do - 24 & LIOUN MILLS Fig i | Hait varrel | 1. SCHOONMAKER & SON Toss o Tus I’URV.. £ L ' coLoxn WCi PITTSBURG. Batablishod ' Batten per el i Eoush o G0 do Liberal discount on carload lots WINDOWS, (Glazed.) | PIT 55 per contoff Chicago . DOOKS, (Wedged ) BLINDS. | 30 per centoff list. Wite lime per 1. Lonisville cot Flastering boani . OILS, PAINTS, GLASS, &c. N. L. D. SOLOMON. Putty, Colors D | PURE V.RDIT“ R The strongest ROBERT(. ‘TEELL. Turpentine Headlight O} manufact White Lead, St. m P:my in mmum Enameld bt e, 750 Flat Glass, 50 9 ¢ discount TIN, SHEET-IRUN. WIRE, &C. \LEAD P MILTON ROGERS, COR. 14th & \ e { The following Premium TIN PLATE. | i D|x0" s American Graphic 16214 1€, tair quaity. or Gold Mcdal of Progress, ¥ | 1873, EAD PENCILS t Premium Cincinnatil Inlos. 100 blate DX, tric Fair, 1573, 1% bisie bk SR 8 20 | First Premium Prookiyn (ucu Too c'ff.x. ol % | trial Exposition, 187 For Samp ! Jos. Dixon Crucible Co., sor information 10320 cuke (for guiicr Large pig Orestes Cleeval:\ndy Pres’ m7 2m JERSEY CT uSloux City & Pacific R. R The Shortest and only Direct Route from % COUNCIL BLUFFS t. Paul, Minneapolis, And all NORTHERN IOWA & MINNESOTA. PULLMAN PALACE SLEFP g do i) it 24105 inchs et sheet- 1 Tinnerssolder (cxr reined 5 py BRI § T2as than Ful vics, 530 0% ceni. A" American immita’n Russia, all Nos, merican (mmitat's Rusia, il No On al might trains via this GALVANIZED. | CONNECTIONS. . Transfer. with Union Pacis COPPER. BRIGHT WIRE. 9’ 10 u my% Vo 0106 889 101 1 1M | wetern Hiliear oorn BB- sure your Lcksis real via S " 15 % R % x‘“'.!‘mr your tickels real C — L BUR: Foe.1536 17 13 19 20 | F.C HILLS, Gen. Ticket GEO. W. GE. Per Luadie 15 per cent discoun omr. ow e mESIE T I UNTIL YOU HAVE CAREFULLY EXAMINED | OUR NEW WHOLESALE DEALERS IN AIL KINDS OF Leaf Tobacecos MANUFACTURERS OF AND Tobacces, Ete. that we MR. JOHUN RATH ir NAM OCEAN STEAMERS. . WELVE GOOD REASONS J. J. BROWN & BRO.. WHOLESALE GROCERS, Q'u;ck e, Chean a.nd Clean. They areche pes Agents for the Oriental Powder Co. STEELE & JOHNSON, WHOLESALE @ROCERS, —~SIMPSON'S BLOCK - 538 and 540 Fourteenth Strest, BET. DOUGLAS AND DODGE l oM AI—I.A. is perfect, have always 4 good draft, Thfy are lmleonle bestmaterial < 1 T B vy Tiove pusranien to “SOLD BY— Bre¥sior Man’fe ST.ZLOUIS, MO., MORGAN & GALLAGER. SUCCESSORS TO CREIGHTON AND MORGAN— i{ WHOLESALE GROCERS, No. 205 Farnham Street, OMA A, Sugar-Coated, Concentrated, Root and Herbal Juice, Anti- Bilious Granules. THE “LITTLE GIANT” CATHARTIC. or Multum in Parvo Physic. The novelty of modern Mediets, Puarmaccuncal Scicnce Chemieal and No use’ of any loo, WHITNEY, BAUSERMAN & CO. | WHOLESALE GROCERS :: s maost valuabie roc 'y swallowe richy g fastidious e epreseite, in & . No, 247 Douglas Strest, = JOMAETA, - - NEB @ m;._‘:,r':'.':w. L mehiy n effect, but such {8 ot AGENTS i!lk Tl lll'l‘\)\T POWDER (0. | CLARKX & FRENCH, WHOLESALE GROCERS ! AND DEALERS IN Is, Dried Fruits, Green Fruits in Season. VEES SOLICITED AND PROMPTLY FILLED, 14 herehy offered by tho pro- ta, 10 auy chemist who, in them any Calomel of olher forms of mercury of any other mineral » Canned Coot jel IMPSON AND Wi BR IN ¢ EGARS FTEENTI—I (=012 SIGETON DLOCK. » wee of my Pur- ety of discases, " Y Fwich 0 say that imal eco f | Short | Clm-ngo, Rock l~l.m(l | | aml Pacific R. R. They arc nold by all enterprisk Draggisteat 25 conte n hottder T ® Do not allow auy drm GRAN D CENTRAL ROUTE - 0\lAlX\ TO (IIILAGO ‘ AND THE EAST, M at 10 Induce y say i 1o use as PYLES OK - SALERATUS! —AND— BAKING SODA'! EST IN Us®a Sold by Pundt, Meyer & Raapkeand Whitzey, ‘Banserman & Co, ar B nbuque. & St. 10N JUNCEION. with thy oranch, ~for Mus ;lmn,‘ 1l port & St. ern U A car EasT | ARRIVAL c NG M OMANA, O - CASTI.E BROS,, IMPORTERS OF TEAS & a Varnham St cipal ket offices PANSENC TIRAINS DAILY ! | a Checkad Throngh fo all \ it Frincipal Kastern Po.ntn. s T —AND— EASTERY AND WESTERN CITIES | A surH, I Pas'r Agt With Less € e | 213 and 215 FRONT STREET | San Franci = California. | menoim | PLATTE VALLEY ThisEatire L s cquipped Pull aan’s Palace Sleeping Cars, Palace Day ‘oachies and ChairCars, | PASSENGERS fety Platform and Coupler | ted Westinghouse Miller's an | Going East or South from Omaha | sancee s | REAL ESTATE! “LINCOLN ROUTE”| Samuel C. Smith, Local Ageat’for the " ATCHISON & NEBRASKA\U- P.R.R. LANDS, RAILROAD' colum.bus, Neb, e _ | Government i.ands Located! U. P. Lands Sold! Improved Farms and Town Lots for & Comnen Via ’!,u vha and St. Louis. for sal Farnham g b | And secure for themselves the choice of Sis Popular Boutes from Atflum 1 to Chieago and Al making Reliable C Unitoa sratos Louis, “onnections aud Leing Confectioners’ Tool Works, Equipped with Palaco Dy aad Sleepicg Cars. Thszs, Mills & Bro., fe ! meen s b wiel Wol = Manutacturers o Counfectioners’Tools M Monids, Ice Coen g Nos. 1301 & 1503 North Eighth St. PEILADELPHIA, PA. I1SON and the ATCHISON & SEBRASKA RAILROAD. ect and Reliable Connections are also made with the A. T. & 5. F. . B. for the at Arkansas Valley & Colorado, | ning South to poiats in the End Lo ON LONG TIME!! B5~All (Communications’ Cheer- fully Answered 2 30y ) Estseusmen 155 = = | Proedum % | LINCOL & ATCHISON lulxnl |4mx; pplication. CHAS. € 5317 W. F. WHITE ; — | et Ar~hison, Kansas = Uh.ax'iéE Pofafiez, - WHOLESALE BUTOHBB ND CATTLE BROKER, AKECITY, - - UTAH "ADVERTISE l ca DAILY BEERE . 'JOOMNVIS D ‘SYH0M STAUVH i b | | P re—.