Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 26, 1874, Page 3

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CYCLOPAEDIA et Tyex work origiaally pablisbed under the title e etian which 1t hasatiained ia all paris of dence, Herature, and art, have induced APPLETON’S New Revised Edition. Justrated with Several Thos kagra of Tus MW ANERICAX CYCLOPAEDIA was the Usni ed Sustes, and the sigoal developments Saifors and pubiisicrs 1o sobmit il 0 0 exact American rewrities the sblest writers on e 9 Pmfl from pew viogs and Maps. dition entitled, THE AMERICAN CYCLOPAS- e ‘Wihin the st toa years tho progressof dis- very in every depariment of knowiedgs bas Ty i ST e iak 'of relereuce an imperative ant, cement of_political afiirs has kept Tod morement oL P e v it o the industrial and useful arts and the refinement of e rcut wars anl copsequent Tevolu- vgiving maclonsl changes o e o meeat. The civi) war of ourong e ran st iis height when the last ‘old work appeared, has happily ‘ended, sud & new conrse of commercial it e et moee farge acceasions o’ owe .:l'“l s rica. T — N‘;hm | zevolutions of the last m result of o e broughtiato ‘am Wi men, whase Tashen ars i every oac's Thouth, andof whose lives every oie in cuFious o ace the particulars. Grest battics have oen fought and important sieges main-sined, of which the details ace s yet preserved or {4 the newspapors or * pabii Hons of therdey, bu. which ought aow 1o take ¥ place i permanc-t nd suthentic histor o preparing the proseat edition for the t hias accordiug)v baen the aia of the editors 1o ring down the information 1o the istest pos- ible dates, and to furnish an sccurate accouat of the mos Teceut discoveries in science, of literature, and of e PENNSYLVANIA MENNONITES | Where And How They Live. | | We leave Reading, then, the | technical extremity of the parent | road, and begin to travel due west |,through the gently-rolling farm- ‘country of Berks and Lebanon coun- ties. Iot'h not romantie, like the valley of Schuylkill; nevertheless, a | long continuous eminence called South Mountain, bears up below us, | and keeps in sight like a rampart as | we trace it from the car windows, se] Conestoga Creek | and its and from the re- | gion of Ephrata and Lanecaster. The towns lying on either side our phth are half or wholly German in name, sometimes perpetuating | fondly the home-sickness of those | who called them after well-beloved | spots in the Fatherland. Heidel- | i berg, Womelsdorf, Wohlebertown, | lie around us, and fartheroffin these same counties are Naftzingerville, Rehrersburg, Strausstown, and | Milbach, which last doubtless was originally Mublbach. The people who come into the cars from the | small stations are as strange-look- | iug as if from the antipodes. Two | or three women enter, gently-laugh- fag and talking amiong. themselves | in unknowable langrage, but for Il their gaiety looking asif they have great need of protection from the wiles of a corrupt world. They are dressed in narrow suits of black and ‘deep - tunnel-like bonnets, home-made — bonnets black as | Erebus, with an enormrous cape fall- ing over the shoulers, slats oi card- o | board séwn Into the stuff so as to “orizi. stereatype plates have same #u‘ml Comipass as its predeces- e e e 118 such 1aprovements o its_com- i A e e e, s bave b in the text. T‘{‘u:lhflfllll of aral Ristory, and depict the e tures of senery LAl 1 é{ i ‘imtendad for jnstruction rather lishment, no pains have been pamre thelc aitetic cxisliencs eecation is e ads wele. u b chara-tor “: ‘wosk is .14 10 Subscribers. ly,r"hll Qelivery of each volume. T owill ‘com- in sigteen lurge octavo vulnmn:a abogt m,;:rmu, illustrs ed wi evers! hbamod W vings, s0d wi Sumaroas coioged Lithographic Maps. PRICE AND STYLE OF BINDING. th, por vol “Plhros v now veady. Succeeding Lo o) i plagon, ] i be isoded vics 1a 190 wonths. - Specimen pages of the AMERICAX O¥CLO- R Shaeios (b, lusirations. el L R peson, " CANVASSING A FIRST CLass CAXVA Address the D. Appletonéc Co., ~ KEARNEYS FLUID-EXTEACT =R © Tesestpitomn vamely &F . . ™ BRIGHT’S DISEASE, And a positive cure for Gout, Gravel, Strictures, Diabetes, Dyspepsia Ner« vous Debility, Dropsy, Sl 5% SRoncretenlion or Tacontindaceol Urine, lrrle ‘ation, Inflawation or Ulceration of BLADDER AND KIDNEYS, SPERMATORRHEA, @ Whites, Diseases of the Prostrate A a G iabier, Coleul aa, DUST ;DE- GRAVEL o‘l:fl“"l’r‘f " Amd Mucus or Milky Discharges. §'S > * N KEARNEY'S Extract Bucha! Parmanently Curcs all, Diseases of the Bladder, Kidneys, and Dropsical Swellings. Rxisting in Men, Women and Childrea, No Matter What the Age* Prot. Stesle says: “One bottle of Kearney's worth more than all A | m‘d‘l’ jper bottle; or, six bottles for Depot 104 Duane St,N. Y. AR g s e e T o p for vlmg:luu‘ troe. o Crane & Wholesale Agents, Sam st R - . Bwr —~10 TRE— " NERVOUS & DEBILITATED OF BOTH SEXES. 30 OEARGE FOR ADVIOE AND OON- ~ =" BULTATION. 4. B. DYOTT, graduate of efferson Medical College, Philadel- phia, author of several valuable works, can be consulted on all dis. eases of the Sexual and Urinary or- gans, (which he has msade an es- { .. pecial stiy,) either in male or fe- male, no metter from what cause originating, or how long standing. A practice of 30 years enables him. o treat diseases with success. Cures guaranteed. Charges reasonable. ‘Those at a distance can forward let- . ters du.-r_iblng symptoms and en- * “ elosing stamp to propay postage. @+Send for the Gaide to Health. Price 10c. J. B. DY0111, M. D. OBSTACLES to MARRIAGE. HAPPY RELEIF FOR Y¢ MEX tfrom e eltcta of #rrors and b tn eariy Diors ts to | form the cylinder, and the erown ¢ | gathered neatly to & button in the centre. This kind of bonnet shades the rosy, laughing face. One of them carries & boy, a chubby, apple- | cheeked, blond-headed Teuton, in whose pretty lips the outlandish Pennsylvania Dutch is greatly soft- | ened, and whose suit of clothes has & general look of having been | made by Japhet's wife in the | ark. To protect the child and its mother sits a_simple, square-bodled man of forty, with the red, innocent face of & boy, & mop of touzled yel- than | low hair, apple-wood buttons, and home-made clothes; he is more German than a Berliner, for he and his have been away from German progress for centuries; aticking like stoclgs whera they were planted. The goods of this family are carried | in sacks resembling meal:bags. | Other passengers of the same gen- eral appearance enter—one an oid man whose gray locks tumble over | hisshoulders, whose long beard wags like a goat’s, and whose principal wnun: i l:l“ dl;;lrminz Army overgoat, sg personages { WM&h}mdub or brown, with | very wide brims curling up evenly {all around, and seeming to have been turned In lathes ar run into moulds like car-wheels. These are the mild Pennsylvania Germans, | They are about as aggressive as rabbits; yet, as rabbits will always find some frog or other to be afraid of, 80 these families of the Palatinate ~apprehension, when - they ::ty- hundred and fifty years y 0 wary . ~the and ‘:’lrllke “We hawe of late,? wrote _James Logan, secretary of thepl: vinee, in 1717, “a_great number. Palatines in upon us without ay endatjon or natjee, whieh gives 3.. eountry some un- easiness.” They never made much trouble} however, i the pacific com- munity. They simply took to fer- tilizing the English language with their own, intheend that ‘wonderful patois which now distin- region. These are the whe stilt vote for Gen. on, and who, belleving that Governor Ritner ly wields the sceptre of the State, sing com- plimentarily: Der Joseph Ritner is der mon, A5 unser Staat rigeron kon! They are the natural enemies of progress; even coal, the theme of all our present panegyric, the bene- ficent and indispensible, they look at with some distrust, as if it were » gift from the powers below, The ‘warmth to which this primitive race gives its truest weleome is the natural heat of the sun, the halo of gently stealing mildness that comes In spring, when the Penusyl- | vania peasant-girl may pause at her | | ploughing in the mild weather, and listen toa few tender words from her blue-coated farmer-lad, A country Sappho of her race, Miss | Rachel Bann, of York county, | makes this naive little confession, re- | sembling at once a yawn and a | smile: ‘Well. anyhow. wann's Frueyoh'r kummut, Bin ich gepleased firstorate! - ! Some of these communities are | ! very ascetic. When the brethren established - themselves at Ephrata, in 1730, they first lived as solitaries; they then put up their wooden mo- nasteries, shingled to the ground, | The sisters occupied one large con- vent, the brothers another. Here are to be still seen the apparatus of | mortification—the narrow cells with size of & coffin-lid, the bhalls so stra‘ghtened that two persons can- not pas< -~ The large ur-schriften’, of texts in pen- manship, in which pictorial art vies with - ingenious. chirogmpby to ex- plain the path to heaven. Presently the Snitz_ Creek winds down from the iron hills, and makes aturn close to where the railroad | stretches along. This is the site of Lebanon. As we approach Leba- non through the thriving farms, many a Mennon st his bearded chin Leans o'er the gate of the- dooryard, and -several of them are bending their unkempt heads over the German newspapers | in the Lebanon hotel. sit around the table d’hote in their the ,-m::wnxm = ished , with wmore pol seats, of the charaeteristic fare longing to the region. The old Ger- man atyle of serving dinner is to set a vast number of viands in little | saucers contemporaneously before | the eater. Fourteen platiers were { infront of us at once when we last dined at Lebanon, and the same number before each sitter at the long table. The plate of crimson beef formed the central luminary, around which & dozen: vegetables snd side-dishes performed their | orbit; among them, it is unneces- | sary 'to say, the Pennsylvanian smeer-case and kol-slah and apple- | butter—[From “Vignettes from the | Schuylkill Valley,” illustrated, in Lippincott's Magazine for July. Jumping the Gap. (From Taylor's Fast Life on the Modern High- way) . Tom Potts, a iwell-know: locomo- tive engineer in England and the States, is the self-acoredited hero of the following wonderful story of successful daring. I will narrate it a3 nearly as I can in his own words, T have heard him tell it often : “Well, gentlemen, I say yow'll thipk it’s a lie, but I can’t help that; have asked me to tell it; and all can qy,‘:ah:! m'dn.m in my place ve seen “1 hyn:lb«n driving the ‘Witch" for about seven months, and a sweet thing she was. I never was half as :: of la.mdm; I was of her. was the kind aman only gets once ina. W s a plank for a bed, the doors just the | Saals are al- | most completely papered with the | be- § | She made her steam quick, was | easy on fuel, started off lively, and went like a deer. Her eylinders were 16-inch, her stroke 22; and her | drivers seven feet six, and she was | Daily Review. h{‘,{' »6 kind to handleasa : | “To see her run off with a'heavy load, light and gay, was enough to | shame the ‘Juno,’ ‘Venus' and | OFricE OMAHA DAILY Bre, ‘Helen,’ and other18-inch machines. | June 25, 1874. “She never wanted up. “Venus''was always ,dfi;"}f, and | Changes do not occur in our gt of the m% bext:‘t:r,:aln‘ii and | money market with sufficient fre- ere’s an; g I don’t like it's | quency to make a detailed state- an engine thatall the time wantsto | ;¢ of the business or condition of the market either necessary or In- | be titivated. She was always ready | and willing for work. Why, | you! she was only washed out for | teresting. Matters remain about as et BT s S | usual, but with the present plethora “She was the tidest thing I ever | Of money it is something of a query, | seen—seemed as though dirt | “what can be done with the $300,000 psRa Bt ok o g 1o teq | 24ditional currency sllotted to the ell, wl am goin, el N " | eame off years ago, befure Toioft s | State of Nebraska. old country, and it was one of the THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK best railfoads—ngle track, then, | diotes: Land Grants (selling)......... $810.00 though it's got three now, and four in some ts. Land Warrants, (160 acres bu 176.00 spo “Well, the ‘Witch’ and I were put on the mail, one of the fastest il trains; and they went like sixty in | Land selling) .. Agricultural College Seri them days. (1€0 acres buying). Do.—Selling... ) ng)... - Warrants (160 acres .. 180.00 . 176.00 180.00 02 “The engineer was fined a shill- ing for every minute he lost. He dare not go slow for fog, unléss he wanted to luse bis day’s pay. He | Exchange on New York.... has to kee{egoing right along, and | see things before he got in sight of | Trade continues active in all lines. ‘em. . o geere iiuning morth one] ATC “;’o‘_’d o, pariicaler’ ehemar i darkish wintry day, and were | Pricesto-day. making our best streaks. lh%l;:d reckon we were going about fifty | it et | UMAHA MARKETS. “ was saying to myself, ‘she’s going her prettiest,’ when we sud- denly shot ahead, as if we had been. fired out of a cannon. “I knew what that meant. We had broke loose, we hadn’t a car behind us. The coupling had broken between the tender and the first coach. “How e flew, to be sure! I whistled the guard to break up the | train, How we boanded P! “T eould make out no objectsalong- | faster "o must h-m = ‘r“nnd 5 Ve got as fast as l?hnn ‘hout. L& Ik It was a straight piece of track for some miles. 1 did not shut off steam directly we brake, for I didn’t waat thetrain ta run into us, which waight happen if they did not hear me whistle down h;nxu. lugky £ kept_her going; for just as I had had about enough of such flylng, -aZman started out a:nz 800 yards before holding a red “There was nothiny 80 I knew that somet! wrang with the track. “You might as well have trled to stop a whirlwind as the ‘Witch’ in ;'l:lnt distance, Her speed was fright. “There wasn't much time to think, and, as we could not stop, the faster we went the better; so I gave her what more steam there was. She seemed to have some ‘go’ in reserve, for we shot past the red fiag fike a flash. “T saw men standing horror- ruck. «Rill? I said, ‘quick! Get on the coke'and see what's ahead.” | “He looked, and went deadly | fi""{"" and fell back ina “Ry N’:‘ time I could see plain énough what was wrong. There was a fl in the track ‘wherea hridge gone down. “You can’t imagine my feelings ‘Just then. - Going to dmi—«u.. swift and terrible—at about two miles 8 minute—getting mearer ! I thought of my wife .and child— néarer! An instant more—the gap! #4God have mercy,’ I shrieked. «Well, wouli: you belleve it? that | Just cleared the gap! Mer: Wt was fifteen fect across, and | Domestic ahout sixty feet deep. ! “She jumped that gap like a stag, and, what's more, she struck the rails all right on the other side, and kept right along; just as if she had not noticed the gap! 4Y stirred Hill up, and, with both of ua &t the brake, we_nanaged at | last to stop the “Witch.” i = “She was on a tare that day, but Lnever dreamed she'd jump the gap a fact,” Caretully Corrected *Dally DRY GOODS. J. J. BROWN & BRO., Cor. 14th "and = Douglas Streets. in the way, ing must be st i8 ifesn $ .- é; y 288 §88 Sursy £8388 & vEur B Xus THE COMING STRUGGLE. s EE The voters of our nation, To Atlanf ky sh FPRING SKiRTS. Why ls th's mighty change: Linen prioted. What can the meaning be * “ ruffed.. The rising of the mases ~ From northern laks togouthern sea. The spirit of old seventy-six From out our heroes’ era- e . Forbids & nation drenched in patriots' blood, | J+ C. KOSENFELD gives us tne ‘Should siak 1o that of alaves ; The motto which our coins once bore, | following quotations this day : Bemaie e aver i ot oac cent forteibute, | Butter; dull, 18 in tube; Egge in demand at 12jc per doz.; Live B GENERAL COMMISSION. “But milllons for defense. Party m:fl paflz'l:.l;-'l (;;hlckem at 3 00 per doz.; Strawber- s il es in demand at 30¢ per box; Thew st our Flag more procaly foat | 00scberries, 3 00 per ba.; Cherries, A N LY, e D TR r. Oraages, 008, and | The emblem of the free. Lemens, 14 00 per bax. HARDWARE. Jomx 7. xDoAR. Remenm! ‘On Upper Dougis Street. THE OMAHA WEEKLY BEE|:: | [ ACKNOWLEDGED Y EVERYBODY 0 [ | BFST.PAPER | Published in Nebraska, It Containe More Reading Matter and Less Advertisements than | any Newspaper Published | in the West. Embracing a choice selection of newsand miscellaneous matter with | live Editorials on all important top- | ies; complete and reliable telegraph- | icand local market reports to the day of issue, and a variety of State, East- ernandWestern correspondence that together make up a newspapersel- | dom equalled and never surpassed. | Every article coing Into_the col- umns of the BEE is carefully. seru tinized, and everything that can of. { fend the -most serupulous, rejected. | Republican=Politics But Independent fu Principle the policy of the BEE is, and always has bbeen, tn expose and denounce abus- s and corruption in the body poli- i tic without fear or h-'n’. ! Subscription Price: {$1.50 Per Annum, | IN ADVANCE. | B.. ROSEWATER, | .~ EDITORAND PROPRIETOR, 138 Farnham Street, Omahae, Neb. | Common bar.. Horse shoe bu.. Norway Bail =5 HRREN: . t] :s}uE ssesesessss Sk tallie oL SOSTRSEEBLARS SREFREFRERIE i i Carriage and tire....... i h:um arrow wrough dlacou Eua i e t HINGES, BUrapand T B RE €8 k] 3'5 3] B $& ‘8BS 883 b1l an Blae BE i 2 88888 :‘5 888 B8 nus sees c oy :!!fiflflflfifl!:x e Ry | | Soass €2ABESELH o8 [REZTE 58 [ Powell & Co., Soap monufacturers. Sapp Pablico, 6 1-2@6 3-4; Savon | Geud Republic, dv., Chemical Olive, 6 to 61-2; Palm, 5@51+4; German Mot- led, 6.1-4a6 1-2. ART GOODS ANL UPHOLSTERER'S STOCK. Benjamin B. Jones, Decorative Up- bolsterer and dealer in fine art goods, 270 Farnham Btreet, furnishes the following quotations: FRAME MOULDINGS. Oil walnut meuldings, one inch, per foot, 5¢; 2inch 10c; 3 inch 15¢ polishied walnut, 1 inch 7¢; 2 inch 15¢; 8inch 2lc. Berlin gilt, 1 inch 6@15¢; 2 inch 12@30c; 8 inch 15@ 45¢; imitation rosewood and gilt, 1 iuch 5@10¢; 2°inch N@”c; 3 inch ‘WINDOW SHADES. Plain bands, 6 feet, all colors, per pair, 1 50; ornamental bands, 2 00@ 4 00; each sdditional foot, 75¢ per pair. REPPS. Union ind all wool terry, per yard 15093 4 Lmperial, plain and stri- ped, 2 50a8 00. DAMASKS. Union per yard, 1 50; all wool, 2 00a3 00. MATTRASSES. Husk, 4-426-2, 4 00a5 00; straw, $ (0a4 00; Excelsior, 3 50a4' 50. LUMBER. RETALL LIST. £ abject to change of market without 13 WM. M. FOSTER, Cm U.P R K. track bot. Farnham a1 - GEO A. HOAGLANI. Joists, studding and sills, 20 1t, and un- de A" stock boards, 10 and 13 1 “B" do do d suNERsSusEaEUSREREE ¢ § 1enneat 1¥| 8888822888888 EE85888885E8888 35 per cont off Chicago list. DOORS, (Wedged ) 25 per cent oft C1 tcago list, BLINDS. 30 per cent off list. OILS, PAINTS, GLASS, &c. N. I. D. SOLOMON. ROBERT C. STEELL. ara on1, No 1§ 95e1 90 e e Enameld Glass. Flat Glass, 50 ¥ ¢ discount TIN, SHEET-IRON. WIRE, &C. MILTON ROGERS, COR. 1ith & i ol BERNERRENEREENRNIRGE 48y 88ELL2BVIBLBLLEB8LES g P — Bensdiaf Pt 1< E2HSLEL*BHTASEBRLLY GROCERIES. STEELE & JOHNSON 538-540 141H sT. & FRENCH COR. FARNHAM AND | CHICAGO & NORTHWES'N RAILWAY. 117TH sT. | ‘The Popular Route from PUNDT, MEYER & RAAPKE, 212 FARN- | HVM ST.,—WBOLESALE DEALERS- | OM A HE A MORGAN & GALLAGHER, 205 Farn- ham St.. 51 —To— WHITNEY, BAUSERMAN & Co., 247 | Douglas | Chicago and the East! AND THE St J. J. BROWN & BRO., Cor. 14th and Douglas Streets. | Omnlv Dircot Route 3 | OMAHAand CHICAGO, Constant improv: m ofs have taken place i 3545 | the way of reduciug Grade, and placiog Iron &3 | with Steel Kaiis, sddiog to its Foliizg stock ouy | new and Elegant % | DAY and SLEEPING CARS | Equippad with the *Weatiughouse Air Brate” 83ga9 | and “Liller Pixtiorm.” establishing comforta- 913 | bleand : 165017 ; ey the various lines of this 1oad, thus securing to the traveler selecting this | route sure and certain counections in sny gi- x| Tection be way wish o go. ;; | | sioux C.ty, Yankion and poiuta resc 4 | Sioux City and Paci s | AT GRAND JU Principal Conneetions. via t. Paul, Miuneapo is, northwestern points. AR RAPIDS for Waterloo, Cedar 50u55. 7535 165817 California. do a2 b s T T L 3 Omaha & St. Louis Short Line 1874! ¥ sgzg usd Oolon s, per pound.. Young Hyson, per Gunpawder, ~ do EE dq Fl;l‘fl. Saow Flake, (Wells & Niemas) y The Kansas City, St. Joe and Buue ® Council Bluffs R. R Isthe only dire line to it 8ST. LOGIS " i AND THE EAST, FROM 9o | OMAHA AND THE WEST E. SIMPSON, Manufacturer, 15th’ Street. 2 e M. § 1 w do A. H. Upman.. Eeconstrucion. i HO CHANGE Louis anu b it or € between ’ anu NeW YORA. f | [ + urs between Omana and St OMAHA This th Ouly ~ine running a PULLMAN SLEEPING OAR EAST FRUM OMAHA, ON ARRIVAL THE USION PACII EXPRESS TR EEEEEEES! USEEuULLLUSTALELS CEESSEE8388888ES B3 Passengers taking other routes have s disagroeable transfer at the Kiver Station. REACHING ALL 8}:“1:“ AND WESTERN CITIES With Less Changes and in sdvance of other ines. . do N MILLS FLOUR. ‘Wholesale ‘depot 548 14th Street. | ‘Half barrel 53CKS.comm. 29 J. SCHOONMAKER & SON | PITTSBURG. WHITE LEAD COLOR WORXS | PITTSBURG, PA. Bestablished 18885. Manutacturers of Strictly Pure ! White Lead, Red Litharge | | Putty. Colors Dry andin0il. | % TEHON, PURE VERDITER GREEN, The strongest and brightest green PASSENGER TRAINS DAILY! ‘This Eatire Line is equipped with Pullman’s Palace Sleeping Cars, Palace Day Coaches and Chair Cars, Miller's Safety Platform and Couple: and the Celebrated Westinghouse Air Brake. B See that your tickets resd via Kansas Cltg, 8. « Comment 2y oo Ral Via Omaha and St. Louis. Tickets for sale st cor. Tenth and Farnbam streets, and U. P. Depot, Omaba. GEO. L. SRADBURY, Gen'] Agent. AWES, . Agt., . F. BARNARD, Gen' Gen' | h. St. Joseoh. manufacturered. | ‘VanpariA ROUTE BE A S T. TRAINS DAILY# LEAVE ST. LOUIS WITH GUARANTEE. Wo guarantee our brand of Strictly Pure White Lead to be free from impurities, and will pay $50 in gold for every ounce of suation found in this package. { warisw J. SCHOONMAKER & SON LEAD PENCILS The following Premiums have been awarded for 3 ‘THROUGH WITHOUT CHANGE —t0— Indianapolis, Louisville, Chicago, Columbus, Pittsburg, Philadelphia, Baltimore, ‘Washington, —axp— Dixon's American Graphic OR LEAD PENCILS: Gold Medal of Progress, Viemna, 1878 First Premium Cineinnatt! Indus- trial Fair, 1878. First Premium Brooklya (adus- trial Expusition, 1873. For amples or Information sddress the Jos. Dixon Crucible Co., i | Orestes Cleeveland, Pres't | m72m JERSEY CITY. N J. Sioux City & Pacific R. R. | ‘The Shortest and only Direet 1 Reute from COUNCIL BLUFFS St. Paul, Minneapolis, And all Pointsin - NORTHERN I0WA & MINNESOTA. PULLMAN PALACE SLEEPING CARS On all night trains 7is this route. Agrival of Trains from the West. ONLY ONE CHANGE TO | Cleveland, Buffalo & Boston | way Ofiices in the W | cmas. BaBoocx, RUSSELL, Bthern Pasws. Ag't, West'n Pas. Ag't. Daras Texas. Kaxsasorry, JOHX E. SIMPSON, CHAS. E. FOLLETT, Gew’l Supt., Gew'l Pass. Ag't. | a2 Ixniasarors. St. Lovis. CONNECT1ONS. Unitea mstaztos 1. At U. P. Transfer with Union Pacific | Gmaha | Railroad for | 2 3 ‘with Kansas City, St. ek s S K S Confectioners’ Tool Works, =hnurl Valley with the Chieago and ‘Northwestern. n“'n]’ for Chicago and all points east. £ At Sioux City with Sioux City and St. , Illinois Central and Davots Southern | pper Missouri River, | th ‘stages for all Momtds, Tee Ciea s Froesers. ae., 7. At Wisner with for L ,.: n’i::. Ncr::l:;-dnll [ Nos. 1301 & 1308 Nonhrfl‘hdl St western Rawey oo O | S Be gure your lickets resd via S.C. &4 P, Ratlvay. - L. BURNETT, Sap't. F. C. HILLS, Gen. ‘l‘hl'n‘m\. GEQ. W, GRATTAN, | o0 w7, Ageat, Gmabs. Estasusuen 1864 Gro. M. (QATAI S U sEaT upoc | Gro.M. Miis, AT r.nn-.} aridavim commedious Eating Houses, offering all can ¥ AT MISSQURI VALLEY JUNCTION, for | Pullman Palace Cars { 'NEW YORK R | pal Rail- | Atchlson to Chicago and St. Louls, | | Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific R. R. THE GRAND CENTRAL BOUTE #ROM OMAHA TO CHICAGO AND THE EAST, Via Des Moiges, Pavenport and Bock Island. All Passecger Trains are equipped with the WESTINGHOUSE PATENT Aix BRAES and Milier’s Paieat Saiety Platform and Coupler. e 2 Fast Express Trains Leave Daily, | onnecting as fol AT DES MOINES with the Des Molnes Valley Railroad, lot Oskalooss, Ottumws, Keokuk and St. Lonis. AT GRISNELL with the Ceatral Railroad of o for all polts north 1o 5 Pl AT WEST LIBERTY "with the Buriiagton, Cedar Rapids & Minnesota Ruilroad, for ida, Dubuque & St 5 UNCTION with the DON'T BUTY! § UNTIL YOU HAVE CAREFULLY EXAMINED Washington and all pot AT DAVESPORE with the Daveaport & St. a1 Railroad for po'nts north. AT KOCK 1SLAND with the Western Union | Kailroad for Freeport, Beloit, Kac waukes and &l poiets in nori sad Wisconsia. AT ROCK ISLAND with the Rocktord, Rock istand and St. Louis Railroad for St. Louis and points south. AT RUCK ISLAND wish (he Veoria & Rock Raod for .. i | A'S WE HAVE TWELVE GUUD KEASONS why thev wil .x..am-...x. Quick and Easv = Chea» and Clean. They areche pest to by, They bagg ov.a [ A T AT BUREAU JUNC., wi Ty, Lavere, Chillicothe and Peor | AT LA SALLE with the [llinois Central Rail- Toad for points noré h and south. AT CHICAGO with %Il lines East, North aud THROUGH TICKETS to all Eastern clties, via this line, can be procured, andes: y infor- wation obtained, concerniny . at the ket office of the companv, 128 Farnham St., | Owaba, and also at the principal cket ofices ‘along the lice of the U. P. R. B. eChecked Throngh to all Principal Eastern Pounts. } A M.SITH, H. RIDDLE, ey are made of Lhe bestmaterial iy, Gen'l Pass's Gen'l Sup't Chicage. —SOLD BY— They v e 3 tion 1 periestr 7" D e iaveaiy 2 % food daratt, < Thay repaiis bat UL e fael, G 1T S ery o price” | Al ey i el g, Thay sre seltel fo ai Ealities (@D vy siove guarantend Lo give Satistactton Bxeelsior ‘Man‘fz Co., ST. LOULS, MO., oy o M. ROGERS Smavha, Nobramice RISING SUN LOS ANGELES VINEYRDS. Depot for the sale of his 'NATIVE WINES AND BRANDIES The noveity of modern Modicts, Chemical | Phacmaceatical Bcicuca. No use'of any lo, taking b large. repulsive and nameods. €xmposed of cheap. crude, and whea we can by & careful appiication of chem: sclence, extract all the cathartio and otber medt: Cinal properties frum the most valuabie roots and | Derbs, aud concentrate them 1nto & minato Gran | uie, Searcely larger a mustard seed, chut-an ve iy swallowed by those of MOt sens.ive st0miachs A fastidions tasiem Exchiitile Purgative Pellet represents, i & Ot concentrate form, 84 mueh caArio powee aa s embondied 13 a0y U Th:danio pil bukd fox saiein the dri ahops. Frany fieir wonde: thartic power. i pronortion $o- thei size, Who Bave not tried them aro apt (0 Fupposs 814 Barsa o¢ rastic 1 efect, but sach 1s Bok th case, 1ho different activ gedicinal prine ciples of which they aro compoecd being 80 har. Eaised aad mod Zed. one 0 the othera 1o M. RELLER & Co, | Caraer of Bat'ery and Washington Sta. cathare ¥ $500 Beward i1 herehy offred by the pro- prictor ‘of (s oo ary chemiad o SAN FRANCISCO, caL, e s g S el a7t Wi . HUDSON 3as. a.eTLER | | aLEx. 5. tRGuAT. 3aTWL ¢. HCDsON. y s u ST. LOUIS TOBACCO WORKS, | {::s"simlls e | wass fresh and reliabl & ¢ al They are sold by all euterprising Druggisteat 25 conts a bottler Do not allow any draggist to induco you to take anything eias that be may say 1a Jusc as good a4 my Peilein because ho makes & larger roit on that whih ho recommends. 1 your ziat caanot supply them, encloss 25 cents | and eceive them oy ratnrn mail from | . V. PLELCE, M. D, Frop'r, | BUFFALO, N. ¥ :‘Leggnl, Hudson & Co., ‘ Manuafarturers of every arsus © |Tine Cut Chewing| - | |ASK FOR PYLES { AND SMOKING | : X ironAccqo 4 ? Our Special Brands: ‘s A I' E_EDA_T u 8! smoxmvar | BAKING SODA! INGLESICE. J\ BULLION. MONTANA. | FINE CUTS: BEAUTY. | EST IN USE | GILT EDGE, Sold by Punit, Meyer & Rasokoand Whitaay, 7 P Benserman & Ce - ASTLE BROS., IMPORTERS OF | Cor. Second & Vine Streets, | —AND— |Bast India Cicods, 213 and 313 FRONT STREET | San Franci California, | mehem | PASSENGERS - | Going East or South from Omaha PLATIE TAhees E And Polnts on U. P.R.RB., should take the | “LINCOLN ROUTE” | All Gur Tobaceos Strictly Waranted. OFFICE AND SALKSROOM | St. Louis Mo. | marmimo REAL ESTATE! Samuel C. Smith, Local Ageat’forthe ATCHISON & NEBRASKA -4 U.P.R.R LANDS, | _—_— {Columbus, - Neb, Lo toemmives we hoiceot iz | Government Lands Located | U. P. Lands Seold! | All makiag Reliable Connections and being | | Equipped with Palsce Day asd Sleping Ours. Improved Farms and Town Lofs for | periensid trmsaicrscan be avaidad. Weat ot CASHEH! ‘mflk,wbym'lmvh o5 ATCHISON and the ATCHISON & | . | WESRASKA matmEOAB. ON LONG TIME!! | P RS T TR R e " | s All Communications? Cheer- Great Arkansas Valley & Colorado, | fully Answered = o e Lndlan Tarrecy : |LINCOL & aTcHISON | | CHAS. C.SMITH, W. F. WHITE |7 GewiSapt. Gea't Pase. Agt. | | st As-hison. Kansas | | ADVERTISE § | 'DAILY BRE' IN THE

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