Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 12, 1874, Page 3

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“he Most Wosderful Medical vi- covery of the Age—Every ln‘ his own Phys’clan, i Frazier’s Great Remedy The people of the United States have been hombuzeed with all Kinds of Patent Medicines, {2 tmost shameful iaauer. The writer of the fyllowing is one of the victims, and wishes 1o resent & very pliin cass, P Bedesing that by cleansing the Wond was the only true way of banishing disease, and being a great_sufferer from weak lungs 2nd a serofulous affcction, and after trying wmany | Kinds of Patent Sindicines nod the most | cnt Puysicians, 1 commenced doctoring | Tmyself, and at last d scover.d a Blood Searcher, or'Toot Bitters, which not only gave me iu- Taediate rele-, but aiter & few weeks edected W radical cure. The cough Jelt me, my luogs became strong and souud. mv a;petrie good, and the scrofulous disease had dissppeared Feeling confident that my Discovery possessed wouderiat heaiing virtes, Tgave it 1o others ihiered. and (ound it eflcted the wost miracu- | In thousands of cases, not lone | <umption, Asthing, Catarch, | veuk, Lange, but sl diseasel | m humors 1o the b'ood. eman ey rlends and others bear-ng about these Tiitters becoming very great, I commenced put- t'ng them up for sale, calling -hem FRAZIER'S ROOT BITTERS, i wax at first backward in presenting either mywell or medicine 1o the Blic—not being & Patent Mediciae Mao, but am getting bravely over that. I Lave sold thousands of botties <1 my Koot Bitters, and fui my desire and determination to place the saume within the reach of evers suflering man, Woman and child on tue face of the civilized globe. The grand principle that operates in these oot Bitters it the power they possess in cleaos- ing the turgid blood and bunishing the vile | humors from the system. Koot Bitte's are strictly a Medicinal Preparation, compounded Trom Toots combined with herbs and pla s, wmany of which were used in the good cid days i ‘our forefathers, when people were cured by | Some simple Toot or herb, and whea Calowel { . “othier poisans of the wminersl Kiuglom were unkuown. They open sll the matural of the budy, cast out discase, take away il sickness | s0d baild up the sysiem with pure blood, | Tiew ¢ they miust reach all diseases by purifi 110n and nourishment. | N porson can take Toot Biters and remain | duwell. Yictory upon victory they hive Ao ver dincane wad death in il stations £0d conditions iu life. They are constavtly ef- fucting cures of the utmost imporiance. ~For Conewinption, Astima, Scrfula, Scrofulous E- Fuptions, Catarrh, Weak Lungs, Lost Vitatite | i Broke Consiitutions, U Biltors are uive sal ¥ admitied 10 be th wonderlul Medical Discovery known o the worid. bt pectoral beliug prop-rties pene- every portion of the hunan trame, soath- e e LAnger aivenstiouing the Stomach, | Kineys and Liver, closusing the blood from 'y Lind of bomor. No other wedicine will v’ “Curonic - Bheauativm, Neurslgia, = fo Aegie pmk Dyspepeia, Fever aud ‘3gus, Costiveness, Piles, ety Diseases, Kidaey biscise, and Livet Complatat, 5o quickly as this Koot Bitters. All such discases dre caused from a bad stomach 253'a poissnous coudition of the blood. For eakly: nervous young mod, suflering from loss | o Saeaory, 1053 ‘of enorgy, wic., causad fro st carly Life,und 10 dellcats feuales,the: Strengtheuing Koot Bitters are especlally re- Sommended. - One bottle will do ‘twward g Syphilis, > [ Sore Eyes, Timars, (3 . Dropsy, Erysipelss, a {ions, pimples on the face, aud Corrupios | Y Hibod than all other remedies {u oxist G. W. FRAZIER, | LEVELAND, OHIO] d Benton Myers & Canfield, 127 Wai- & Fuller, Chicago ; John D. Parl 1, and other first--law rug ‘IAM.'; IMPO RTANT 0147, TRAVECERS who solicit e “Cakib, CATALO SUE, THAD MPLE 0% OTHER oPECIME . visit thelr castomers and solicii purchases made DIRECT FROM SUOCK, and who travel in any section, by Rail or Boat, selling any lysy of goods, aré ested 10 senl their BUSINESS and rul- | FATE ADDRESS, as below, ststing cla goods taey sl wud by whoni emplased Jose who are at presant. puder no enageinent. i Taat o 1 GKEAT IMEOLEANCE INDIVIDUALLY to sa esien of this class, or men suliciing trade in i therefore 5 < is hodies muay puect the 7@ of ALL Commercial Travel Ta and Salosmen in 1hi v and Juat they wili AT ONCE give it tioir aten- | Tion. Those who cowp s with above request | ill bs C 'NFIDENT.ALLY treated and duly | advised of object in view. Please address, (by | tter vnly), = " co-opE: | Rowell & Ca,, 41 Park Row, | Gro. P. o Nkw Youk Ciry. | BAUVMER, Practical Watchmaker, | EaOar, 11th 8t 171 Faropwm o 8. OMAHA APPLETON'S | American CYCL OPEDIA New Revised Edition. Entirely rewritten by the ablest writers on every subject. Printed from new type, andillustrated with Several Thousan Engravings aad Maps. st ~am Ty work originally published under the title of Tix NEW AMERICAN CYCLOPAEDIA Was Cowpleted in 1853, since which time the wide Sirexiation which 1t has attained in all parts of the United Staies, and the signal developments ‘hich have taken place branch of ence, literature, 254 art, have induced the editors and publishers to submitit to an exact Shd thorough revision, 2ud 1o issue 3 new ‘dition entitled, THE AMKBICAX CYCLOPAN- PX§iuin the last ten sears tue progress of dis- covery in every depariment of koowledge has taade s new work of Telerence au - imperative want. “The movement o L= NEB pollical afis has Kept e discoverlos of acience, and. their ik pplication to the industrial and useiul P e convenience and refinement of oiy e, "Gpeat wars and consequem revota- | 0. nave oocired, luvolving national changes Sl momest The ol warol suratn D ey ¥ hich wavat it hoight when ey i the o1 work appussad, has happily | o ed, aud & new" tonree of ommerclal o ndusilal ey s e omenced fares accosions 16 our puographical know- Bave b ate by the Indelutigable ex- plofers of Alrica. ot potitical revolutions of the last B Bt ot e e the perst A e brought Luto public view a multitude e, whose Datios are in every one's OS¢ of whose lives every one s urious £’k e purtculare. Grest butiis have B it it imporiant sicges mainsained, e eiihe detadl gre s yet preserved only B e ewapapers or' The tramsient publica- B hetity, b which ought how 1o take Sheie lace in perma0ect and agthentic history | getting that | reading. | with dual {HOW DIAMONDS SAVED US. | A Business Episode. At the time I am writing about we were a strong firm. [ say were, because six years ago we wound up the concern, and a banking-house of not quite fifty years existence (a remarkably long business life for the | United States), was closed in the most honorable way. The partners 1n the house were two. The elder and head of the firm had a sound mexcantile education,was eminently conservative, and was « thorough master of his business. The other partner had brilliant talents, but was prone to be over-imaginative, and rather held to the idea that ro- mance, or the inventitive faculty, when called into play in business, was a necessity. The junior had a separate room, arranged rather like a cabinet of curiosities than a bank- er's office. You would see neat bronzes there, bits of majolica, pieces of armor, and a few good pic- tures. Twenty-five years ago such things in a business office were thought rather out of place. A dis- tant relative of the senior partner of the nouse, I had the entire confi- dence of both members of the firm, as I had been from theageof twelve in the house, and was twenty when the occurrences I am about to tell happened. I was very warmly at- tached to both the gentlemen, but was rather more fond of our junior. who made me his companion. One summers evening, long after business hours, a private letter book requiring indexing, I shut myselt up in the junior’s othce and com- menced work, It was rather late at night when the younger member of the firm entered. “Seeing a htin the office,”’ he said, *as I was coming fror the ferry, and for- you were at here, I came in; " and he stretched himself on a lounge and lit a cigar, then took a book and commenced In a half hour my work was finished; and thinking he was asleep, I put away the hooks, clos- ing the door of the safe with a ¢rash, in order to wake him. “Through?” he said, asked, Keep up your F you? “Yes, though whether Tever will beable to_correspond in that lan- guage as far as to render myself use- and then { ful for the French and Belgian bus- iness, I don’t know.” “ Ever read Beaumarchais?" he inquired. “Yes, but only his ulay not familiar with his li « What a magnificent dual exist- ence!”’ “How s0?" T inquired. “ He was merchent and Carried on the heaviest mer operations, and wrote the cleverest of comedies Made out a list of in- voices and a phrase of comedy all in the same breath, and perhaps with the samepen. There was Ros- coe, too, merchant and historian, and Rogers, poet and banker, Lamb, I am | elerk and essayist—!" “May be 5o, I replied_interrupt- ing him; “but I do not think ord ary men can do two things at once —there may be exeeptions.” He laughed, #nd said, “That is good common sense. Hut there are men xlstences. Now I hav been reading this life of Beaumar- chai's, and have been deeply inter- ested in the exertions he made in | behalf of our people when he sent | —hen 1. | arms during the period of our Revo- | His signature few had ever seen, | Buver Creck, lutionary struggle.”” «Which good action ruined him,” I said; and Iclosed the safe, and was about going to the door, when he bade me stay. Drawing a chair close to the table, after a short pause he said tome: “Now listen. six months I have had an idea in my head—a sec to another which has absorbed my mind for years. God knows wheth- er I have this duality or not, but I must testit. Now this is what T am driving at. Fifteen years ago I went toSouth America. ~You know my wife is a brazillian,” sighed and paused. There was a rumor that he did not_live happily with his wife. “While in South America T made the deepest re- searches into the history of the aboriginal races. I went far be- hind the times of the old Aymares Manco Capac and Oello Huaco are to me asthings of to-day. Modern research has settled that the I’ha- us, almost, chronologically, as Na- poleon was. Every day the work started in Egypt by Denon and | Lepsius shows us that we are only | South Ameri- | at the threshold. ca is the place to discover man’s earliest truces and to find his primitive works. This may not interest you much, but the sec- ond part of my idea will, T trust. It the corollary of the first. It was ness to study the political on of the country—a rathel Intricate and tangled work. Two South American States are on the eve of a contest”” (4e mentioned the name of the two republics, which, from measures of ' precaution, 1 withhold), “and the government of the smaller power, which is not only in the right, but the stronger and the richer, huve called on me to purchase arms and ammunition for them. I can make hundreds of ness, What is wanted is that I should send a consignment of mili- tary equipments. The money of the State Is now on its way here, or I | shall have authority to draw on Lon- | don for it. If I can accomplish what they want, I find the means out of the profit to go to South America_and_open my glorious reparit ¢ the present edition o ihe press, ¢ b antond iy oen the aita of tho editors i Uritg down the information 10 the istest pos- Jhle datos, 31 to furnish an accurate account of the mos. raccut discoveries in science, of y fresh prodaction in literature, and of he Bewest 15 vention §7 the practical’ arts, as el aa 10 give 8 succinct and original record of The progress of political snd bistarial event. "Tiie work has been begun alter lorg apd carc- work. It is Beaumarchais in the | nineteenth century, but with higher work in | For the last | ndary one, it Is true | Here he | rahos of the Bible were as near to | thousands of dollars out of the busi- | — before, and which I would seek af- | ter, asto ime what San Francisco was to Tioy.” I could not stop | him. He developed his nlans. With | & frankness which astonished me | be gave me details or his private fortune, which was ample. The | money he had ia the firm was to be untouched. I was to attend to the South American business. Endowed at twenty years of age with no end ofenergy, but having a circumspeet- ness even beyond my years, I com- batted the South A merican scheme. At last it was daybreak before the matter was settled; a reluctant con- sent was given on my part. At the business I went tooth and nail. My principal occupied himself with the general plan of the business, but all the details of purchases ana ship- | ments devolved on me. My sum- mer vacation was passed in attend- ing to it. | were made, and my heart was in my mouth until reimbursements came. We cleared some $60,000 in a six months, in gold, on the first shipment. “We shall stop now,” T said. “Here is money enough made for afirst venture, and you have means row for explorationsin Peru. “Nonsense, my dear boy,” was the | reply, “it will take a quarter of a million before I can even begin. This time our people want artillery | trains. At it again. Chances are | more than ever in our favor. We { are to be paid heavily this time,and | in addition I have had a concession made me of some hundreds of square | miles in Peru, exactly where my | researches are’ to commence”” T | pleaded and pleaded in vain, but | was bound to the wheel. A lighter | position—one occupying me but -i few hours—was given me in the office, and all the rest of my time was devoted to the arms business. | T had managed, so far, to be very circumspect_in’ my purchases, but could not be always on my guard. | | | | | | Two or three shipments | | | | | OFFICE OMAHA DAILY BEE,) August 11, 1874 | The quiet usual to the season still prevails at the banks, but neither | in a greater or less degree, than in | | other years. The increase of depos- | its being in excess of tae demand | for loans, which is certainly satis- | factory to the bankers, in view of | | theneed of ready money for moving | the crops, which as has been antici- | | pated, are very large. The rates of | | discount remains unaltered, there | being but slight variation for inde- | | pendant borrowers. | Monev and Commerce. | | | Daily Review. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK Land Greats (selling). 8 Land Warrants, (160 acres | buying).. 17 Land Warrants (160 selling) .. Agricultural College (1€0 acres buying). Do.—Selliog... o Exchange on New York, 1 per ct. In our general market we note | some changes. ) Groceries, steady, with no change except in dried froit | Provisions, slightly advancing. Bacon, 124 Hams, 15} and 163. Dry goods are firm. In hardware we note a decline in nails of 10c. per keg. Also a fall in tin-plate; and in sheet-iron of one quarter cent on first quality. Cop- per sheathing 14 and 16 ounces, we quote at 37 cents. acres crip, 185.00 | 176.00 185.00 | of one | All large banking houses’ have & peculiar set of men, who frequent | them—old men often, who some- | times comes for news, or who make | occasional purchases. Often_these | persons may have been acquaintan- | cesof many years' standing, who | had been on Intimate terms of | { friendship with the fathers of the present firms, and who are allowed ench, do | the privileges of the offices. Among | Allens.. | these friends wasan old man who | | dealt particularly in notes. He was | | a Frenchman, who spoke English | fluently and elegantly, with scarce | | an accent. Pick him up in the street, and you would not think he | | was worth five dollars. One suit of | | clothes sufficed him all the year | round. For ten years I had known | him to wear the same bandanna | handkerchief round his neck. | 1 4 new bandanna marked | | a decade in his life, He was highly | | educated, and, though filthy in per- | | son, had, strange to say, distingue | | manneis. His passion was money- making. With a flare, as the | French have it, a keen sense of im- | | pending trouble, he was eves ready | to improve the situation to his profit. I could not call him a vulture, nor | | one would suck your blood or pick | yourbones(commereially) with a rel- | | ish. Balzac's Gobseck was not exact- | | 1y Iike him, fo. this old Frenchman was charitable ta & certaln degree, giving away every year a fixed sum to benevolent mstitutious. Bt a | note once purchased by him, ithad to | be paid to the minute.” His word was his bond, If he purchased a note for | thousandsof dollars-and he took a few | risks, only buying gilt-edged paper he never gave his check for it. | | He would draw the bill himself from his bank, and pay in maney for the | notes. His curiosity, his acquaint- | ance with everything in the city | was wonderful. No man failed, or ever was on the eve of jt, but_this | strange character knew it. With | an intuitive perception akin to the marvelous, he would, with a single | | sniff of his long thin nose, smell out | a genuine, bone fide note, issued in legitimate way, from a kite. Oc- casionally he would stray into our private office. He had a taste for art, andone day when I was alone, thumbing aSpanish dictionary for & | word T wanted, he entered and | picked up a fragment of a South | American idol, which was in use as a paper weight. | (Th ke continued.) THIE COMIN = e i SERUGGLE, | The voters of our nation, 45 ne'er was known before Are rising from Pacifics strand To Atlantie's rocky Why is th's mighty change What csp the meaning be ‘The rising of the masses Erow northern lake to southern’sea. The spirit of old seventy-six From out our herocs' graves * Forbids a mation drenched in patriots’ blood, |, Should sink to that of slaves ; The motto which our coins once bore, | hough obsolete long since, | Remain as ever tru vae cent for | Butmillions for defense. | Pasty ties and party laws. Ave but as ropes of sand. The . igiits of w10 be u man | Should govern Freedom's land. | Then shall our Fiag more proudly float | pOerindasweilasses ™" ° | And nations vet unborn shall gladly great | "Tueemblew of the free, L0 | in trade we'll try to deal, | Asman should deal wiih man, And whle we seek (o live ourseives, We'll sell as cheap as auy body can, And ifabat you need, Or friezd you chance to mee, Rewember Buuce, the Hattor, On Upper Dougls Street. i ettt | w o c. 5. xammacu | GKEBE & KARBACH, [ 15th ot tetween Furatiam ana srney OMAHA, NEB. —MANUFACTURER 0¥ — | Spring”and Farm Wagons, BUGGIES AND CARRIAGES. ‘ Dealers in and manufacturers of | AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS! | PPARTICULAR A TTENTION PAID TO HORSE SHOEING, and nobler aims. I shall make re- | searches in the Peruvian plains, | and will exbume a wealth of artistic | | splendor. The pyramids will be | dwarfed when compared with the 02" Repairing of wagons and blacksmithing promptiy doneat reasonable orices mydawy ENOCH HENNEY, magnificent monuments 1 must bring to light.” I know notiing,” I replied,some- what confused, “about these things. I should think that the absence of violent physical phenomenon in Fgypt has kept their monuments ntact, while in South Ameriea the earthquakes have long ago ground e lostasey labor, abd with Lhe s ample | Hescuroes for ‘earryihg 1 on to & successful | e the origiaal stereotype plates have | oo nsed, bt every page has been prinied on e Horming, n fact & new” Cyelopmdia, Be b, Juraing Infac s e opetl, or, out WAth 8 {ar greater pecuniary €xpend. o "and wiLi sich improvements [a is” com. Pposliiop as have bees. yuggested by longer ex. ce and enlarged kuew ledge. Fie Jllustsations which aze jntroduced for o i 1 e e g0 e e & e feel picio 4 Patines Sor & and lsl\' 10 the explana- ey embrace all branches of boldt seems to think so. died all the cosmical theories.” course I could not dispute abou{ what Humboldt had said, but made a casual and perhaps silly re- silver that might be discovered. thing I care about dust,” | riechanics snd wanutacture, AL | landa in Peru that have never heen ieare cu' ou ks evormous, . nd It isbelieved | tny will be extinet, as they have irable " ke b 1y, payable e vers of ach volisse; 1t wi) 't pom. | hundred thousand years ago South PRICE ALD STYLE OF BINDING. st Jurk.y Moraceo, ll':.laiu—. putique, glit Furce volums now resdy. Syepeed 2 e pietion ol be ‘Leieg et | covery of some early deity, & bead, akDiA, sbowiag ype, illustrations. ete., will AN} Addgow the Publishers, ail vestiges of man’s handiwork to “Quite true, as far 8s your knowi- edge goes. But there are broad o shaken. Earthquakes foljoy rhyth- een spared 10 | y y e P ecelionce; ibe cost of | mic rules, Some day Vesuvius and Uoelr wx e e T paiia,and worihy | been once before. The fires of the o biar : Cordilleras are but of yesterday. One The wor« is soid 1o Sybscribess o n %ixt-en large octavo volumes, each | m-x.‘ wbout 500 pages fully 1llustraied with severst housand Wood Engraviogs and with Bumarus pulored Lithographic Maps. o e g rivebey et o Aert : ol - popm 10 full mussia, per vol ... wntil completion, wi lasied opee in Vo i in . pages of the AwERICAN CYCLO- st TaLis, OB Spy)ication. FIRST CLASS CANYASSING AGENiS D. Apspleton & Co., 549 & 651 Broadway, suB ¢ men i laced | New York. America had no earthquakes. Hum- Thave st | ark about the wealth of gold or “Pyshi" he cried, “that’s the least A single dis- rander, more majestic in form than i‘emnnn, would be worth more_to me than the golden sun of the In- cas, which wasa planosherg of pure | for lan metal some ten thousand feet in eir- cumference, and which, when the the line, a million of its ' edge on X peak of the Andes, so that jt almost eclipsed God'’s luminary. But the Jucas were to the ages that went | Justice of the Peace |, Ofge over tho State Bask, corner <f Far | bam 20d 120k stroets. 400,000 ACRES! —OF THE FINEST— ! Elkhorn Valley Lands! FOR SALE BY . M. OLARK, Wisner, Neb FINEST in the STATE! | Andtwill be sold at from $2.50 to $5.00 PER ACRE! For Cash or on Long Time. 2&~LAND EXPLORING 1 [CK- ETS for sale at Q. & N. W. De. pot, Dearing coupons which will Llll:(;n at full cost in payment d. | PER DAY. Agents waut- «d.” 1l clases of work- |85 to $9 All other linesare firm at last quotations, OMAHA MARKETS. Caretully Corrected Daily DRY GOODS. J. J. BROWN & BRO., Uor. 14th and Douglas Streets. PRINTS. Awmerican Amoskea . Bristol .. Garners Hamilton Merrimac Peabods Richmond Simpson’s BLEACHED SHIRTINGS. ee PESRS Bout G Cabot 4 nsdate... LTS Péterboro. Suflolk L BLEACHECSHEETINGS. Pepperell 5-4 . do 941 Ao 10 Farmers and Great Western.......... BROWN Albion, A Bedtord, 1 Grantville, E 1. Germanis, B B, Langley 5. Ls American. Amoskeag Bates Lancaste moskesg, & - | ddeford 5| Aumgskeng Haymaker, Cua, B B | ous, € C: i Biddeford.. | Hoasier. YANKEE NOTIO KURTZ MOHR & 0G., 231 Farnham | Street. SEOUL Cur T i) i | King Willisw. Domestic. e §2 25@6 50 $10 50 15 00 30 (0 I e | Brown drill | pree g dnck | Blue aril ** duck Whice momad i ] 514 £88 gregs Linen printed “ rufled €88 Balmoral Yarn, all colors, p Germantown Wool, Saxony Yarns, per box... GENERAL COMMISSION. J. C. HOSENFELD gives us following quotations his day Butter, active, 20 cts. in tubs; Eggs firm, at 12c per dozen; Live | Chickens, 200@2 50 per doz.; Goose- | berries, 2 50 per bu.;.Cherries, | 480 per bu; Lemens,13 00 per | box. ana Raspberries,20c per quart; blackberries, 20¢; currants 20c. HARDWARLE. JOHN T, EDGAR. TRON. | | | | Common tar. Tiorse shoe b. Norway nail rod. STEEL. Cast plow.. Germon American casn, Jesa:p's Englith do Burdea’s horse shoes, per keg do mule do’ ' do . 83 | Northwestern horse nails...... 2 %) Dundee thimblc skeias, discount 45 per cent, Stor ba!f patent axles, discount 10 per cent. | NAILS 10d to 60d per keg.......... 8 P oot d 4d 2 10d finis'ng do 8 do - do do [P N BOLTS. Carriage and tire.. scount Narrow wrought, fast joint...discount Cast, loose pin reversible..... do WRENCHE: discount spre Wpre AGRICULTURAL TM LEMENTS, SPADES AND suCvyLs. Rowland’s No2 black shovels, D 1 do do polished do do doblack tpades do lo pofishied o d3 do's “spring point”’ L H shovels. AXES. Lippencott’s Western Crown. = do do do b velea COFFEE MILLS Farke's No 3, iroz tox. do dold3 do do dogs Union iy BEEER B 88k €8 pEsss ssasg Hargrave, Smith & Co. American’ ile Co. HAMMERS. Jerdolen A B0 1 re-discount do ing people of either sex, young or old, make lmn‘-uu. 3t work for us in their mo- ‘ments or 4[] tha time than at an; else. Ald;.-'-;i'llsu:aua..ml-hw mond’s A ENod... mmond's A ENo, do dod.. Eagineers do % | 0% | First quant | Now. 0106 889 MATCHETS. Morris' shingling, No 1 .. do do do20 do do do3. diw dol o dox LEATHER. do. Matamoras do - Best Oak ~ do Baltimore Oak Sole .. Srench Kiys. do Calf, Domestiz Kips. do Caif Hewlock Upper, per f001 0 4o ' do Grin do do Linings, per dozen, Toppings, do - Moroces (Boot Leg] (Oil Dressed) do (Simon) do (Glove Kid,). Welt Leather, per side, Boot Webbing, per Lol Oek Haruxss Leather, do do do do do do Oak Live do Hemlook Harness Leatiier, o do do Bemlgek Line do Fair Bridle, per side, ... Team Collars, per do: Stage do - do Scotch do o Concord do do Coliar Leather (Black) per foot do (Russet) ¢ Der 008, erem do. do Powell & Co., Soap monufacturers, | Cerolina | Sapc Publico, 6 1-2@6 3-4; Savon Republ.c, de,, Chemical Olive, STOCK. Benjamin B. Jones, Decorative holsterer and dealer in fine art goods, 270 Farnham Street, furnishes following qutations: FRAME MOULDINGS. 0il walnut mouldings, one i per foot, 5¢; 2inch 10¢; 3 inch §700 500 900 750 85 6 to | 61-2; Palm, 5@51+4; German Mot- | led, 6 1-4a6 1-2. ART GOODS AND UPHOLSTERE] Up- the nch, 15¢; polished walnut, 1 inch 7¢; 2 inch 45¢; imitation rosewood and gill iuch 5@10¢; 2 inch 10@20¢; 3 i 15@30c. WINDOW SHADES. Plain bands, 6 feet, all colors pair, 1 50; ornamental bands, 4 00; each sdditional foot, pair. [ REPPS. Union nd all wool terry, per yard 1 50@3 »0; Imperial, plain and ped, 2 50a8 00. DAMASKS. Union per yard, 150; all wool, 2 00a3 €0, MATTRASSES. Husk, 4-4x6-2, 4 00a5 00; st 3 00a4 00; Excelsior, 3 50ad 50. LUMBER. RETATL LIST Subjoet to change of market witnout 3 WM. M. FOSTER, { 0 U.P. R. R. track bet. ¥ arnhag GEO A. HOAGLANI. Joists, studding and sills, 20 1, der 15t common board do do k hoards, 10 and do ' do do do do 1st clear, 1, 334, 1 4 a0d 2 iuch 24 do ' do ' do 34 do do do Flooring, clear.... do 1st commor do 24 do do 34 do do marrow, clear Istelear ceiliug ¥ inch 21 do do Ist do do 24 do do Ist clear sidin 1st common 24 “do B Bickets i ob Batten per neal § Roush o o o Liberal discount on carl WINDOWS, (Glaral.) 3 per contoft Chieago list. DOOKS, (Wedged) 25 pex ceat o Gl exgo list. BLINDS. 30 per cent off ist. per Ll Lonisville cement per b uster paris per hul... Flastering { 15¢; 8 inch 21c. Berlin gilt, 1 inch | 6@15¢; 2 inch 12@30c; 8 inch 1@ 55 nch per 0@ per stri- | raw, OILS, PAINTS, GLASS, &e. N. I. D. SOLOMON. ROBERT (. STEELL. Coal OIL. $ 19 Lara ou, Linseed O, riw. 105 4 “ e brd. 110 Turpentine. [ Headlight Oil.... 2 winter | . v § Louls, Srtictly Pure .. § White Lead, St. L Enameld Glass, colors, sq. It Window Glase 50 ¢ discount 15 5501 09 | % ny TIN, SHEET-IRON. WIRE, &C. MILTON ROGERS, COR. 14th & FARNHAM. TN PLATE. 10514 1C, Jair quality..... 10x14 Le; best quality. x4 1X do - do 1320 IC 1.0 plate IC 100 plate D 100 plate DX 100 plau Roofing [C charcoal do KootingIX do do 10x14 IC coke do 20x25 IC charcoal 10ofin; 20x:8 1C charcosl oofing ... edx14 IX charcoal 10x20 coke (for wutiers) (est quality) do dy XX Showt tin 25 to 35 in. do do ' do : do do do in0M casks. Sheet 24 to 35 inches per sheet. Tinners solder (extra refined dodo No. 1 o do roofin, Lid metal ... SHEET IRON. 5, Numbers 16 t0 24 do do Rusia gerfe: ¢ ot “A” Americar. immjtat'n Russia, all N Less :han full bundles add one cent. GALVANIZEL, ot TEper cent. COPPER. Braziers 6 to 9 cflla 1!0 lg 2B o 121, 100 1B Shearhing, 14 aud 15 Planished, 14 and 16 5z.... Nos. 7, 8 and 9, Puanishy e Copper ot BRIGHT WIRE. B u 1% oun Q2 00 | 2 00 230 23 00 R'S | ) | Black goods, West | GROCERIES. ETEELE & JORNSON 538-540 14TH ST. | CLARK & FRENCH COR. FARNHAM AND 1111 sT. PUNDT, MEYER & RAAPKE, 212 FARN~ HVM ST.,—WHOLESALE DEALERS- MORGAN & GALLAGHER, 205 Farn- ham St. | CHICAGO & NORTHWES'N RAILWAY. OM A A —To— Chicago and the East! AND THE Omnilv Direct Route TeWaterloo, Fort Dodge,Dubuque,La Crosse, Prairic Du_Chien. Winona, St Paul, Duluth, Janesviile, sha, Green iay, Rucine, Stevem’ Polnt, Watertown, Oshiesh, Fon Du Lue, Bndison and Milwaukee. WHITNEY, BAUSERMAN & Co., 247 Douglas St. BROWN & BRO., Cor. Douglas Stree s 14th and SUGARS. 1034310’ 44007 | It Being the Shortestand Fiust Comoleted Line e % Between OMAHAandCHICAGO, 1 nis have taken place in Grade, and placiog Iron ding 10 its rolliag stock Constant 1up ! the way of reducin with Steel Lails, sew and Elegant DAY and SLEEPING CARS Equipped with the W cstiughouse Alr Braxe” and *iller Flatiorm,” establishing comtorta- Luc and comme dious Enting Houses, offering all the comfrts of traveling the age can_produce. Fron. » to 40 Fast Express Traius ruu each way daily over the various lines of this road, Securing to the traveler selecting this route sure and certain connections 1u any di- rectioa he may wish 10 §0. Principal Conneetlons. AT MISSOURI VALLEY JUNCTION, for Sioux C ty, Yankton and poiats resched’ via 'and Pacific railroad. ND JUNCTION for Fort Dodge, Ottawa and Keokuk. AT MAKSHALL for St. Paul,” Mioneapolis, Duluth, and northwestern poins. AT UEDAR RAFIDS for Waterloo, Cedar Falls, Charles City, Burlington und St Louis. 10N for Dubugne, Dunleith, Prai- , La Crosse, and all points on the Chic go, Clinton and_Dubuque, wnd Chicago, Dubuque and Miovesota railroads. T FULTON for Freeport, Racine Millwau- il poinis in Wisconsi T CIICAGO with 2 Tailway lines leading out of Ch Through tickets to all eastern cities via this be procurcd, and any informati n ob- heerning Houtes, Kates, etc., at_the . 218 Fargham Street, Omaha, pal ticket ofices ilong the Common pr gallon M Wesk & Co Schofers ... Missouri Vrlley. Kirk’s Savou...... Wesk & Co...o... fer's " German s standard do - ster 8 60463 N Lorri Ldo - do ESibt do Natural jeaf, Virgin DRIED FRUITS, California peach s per pound do State o, New currants. do prun, do German eherr o raisins, pe o secdies’ ¥ and 1% at the pri fine of the U. . R. R . ‘B Baggae checked through to all principal E1T, MARVIN HUGHITT, 'l Passinge'r Ag'L n. Sup't. J.H_LACEY, 3. G. EDDY, Ticket Ag't, Omalia, Gen'l Ag't Ouiaba. mch18vl »| Omaha & St. Louis Short Line 187 4! sius, per pound New ia ba do dairy C3NNED GOODS. 2 pound can My 1 do 2 do Wi do peac do 2 do do tom 8 do_do Corn, Tropny o Winsliw 50 The Kansas City, St. Joe and Council Bluffs R. R r pound per p Is the ouly dire line to Snow Flak Gold X (Wells & sST. LZ.OUTCIS AND THE EAST, FROM Gumiies, Leavy w .o ' light Tips, fous a1 @8 “3 | NO CHANGE . us between Omans and St. soudy | Louls aua b ot botween OMAHA o W YORA. This th Only ~ine running & PULLWMAN SLEEFING CAR EAST FROM OMAHA, ON ARRIVAL OF THE UNION PACIFIC XPRESS TRALN, sers taklog other routes nave a | disagreeable transfer at the Kiver Station. PASSENGER TRAINS DAILY ¢ REACHING ALL EASTLRN AND WESTERN CITIES h Less Changes and in sdvance of other lines. No. 1 Sardii This Entire Line is equipped with Pullman’s Palace Sleeping Cars, Pulace Day Coaches and Chair Cars, Miller's Safety Platform and Coupler and the Celebrated Westinghouse Air Brake. @See that your tickets read via Kansas City, S . Josrph & Couneil Blum Ralrod, Via Omaha and St. Louis. Tickets for salo st cor. Tenth and Faroham s, and U. P. Depot, Omaba. 100 00 100 00 GEO. L. ZRADBURY, CALHOUN MILL: Gen' Agent. DAWES, . Agt., t. Joseoh. A CITicu;;o, Rock Island | o ard Pacific R. R. VAN DALI A S B AS T AND TE ND CENTRAL 0 CHICAGO EAST TE FROM HE ol 1 with the \kEs and LEAVE ST. LOUIS WITH w Leave Paily, | ullman Palace Cars THROUGH WITHOUT CHANGE e Indianapolis, Cincinnati, S Ve v | Chivago, ' Columbus, T LIBERTY ar Rapids & Slini Buriington, Cedar Rap ‘aul, WILTON JUN South-Western ch, Kailroad for Freeport, Be-it, wauke: and ail pointd in noribern Liinols and Wisc AT ROCK 1S, Sstand and point AT ROCK I with the Rocktord, Ruck Louis Bailroad for St.'Louis Philadelphia, Baltimore, ‘Washington, —axp— NEW YORK Arrivil of Traics from the West. THROUG KETS to all Eastern cities, via this | red, and sny infor- matior. ob ing points, at the ticket oflce of the company, 123 Farnham Sty | wisa, and also at al ticket offices | along Bagga: o A, M. SMITH, Gen'l Pass'r’Ag't Chicago. 1L RIDDLE, Gea' Su) ONLY ONE CHANGE TO 3 TRAINS DAILY! Pittsburg, | [ 5.8 STEVEAS, Gea’l Western Ag't Owmata. ut, Oanis Sioux City & Pacific R, R. The Shortest and only Direct Route from :|{COUNCIL BLUFFS St. Paul, Minneapol NORTHERN I0WA & MINNESOTA. ains 7ia this roure. CONNECTI0! P. Transfer with Un for Omaha Council Blafl, with K: nd_Council Blutls Rail points south 3. At Micsouri Valley with th Northwestern raiiway for poiats eay. % At Sioux City with Sioux City ands | , [linois Central and Da“ota Southern | railroads. Steamers for Upper Missouri River, during navigst oz and wich stages for all ats in the Northwest. 5. At Blair v wailroad for Utaahia and Southern Nehrask 6, At F Nebraska, with the Usion Panvic railroad for all pofnte vest and the ific coast. 7. At Wisner w points in North 1. AL U. Railroad Pucific cas City, S for St. Louls Chicago and Chicago and all and Northwestern h stoges for Norfolk and an | u Nebraska, | ickets for sale in Chicago atd North- western Raflway offices. | B2l sure your tickets read via S. C. & P, Rallway, L. BURNETT, Sup't. . Ticket Ag't. GEC, W. GRATTAN, Ageat, Guita, F. C. HILLS, G | | Cleveland, Buffalo & Boston | v 2 Are for Salent the TICKUTS comfanya o 80 oz, o o4 e e way Offices in the West, Po €. E. RUSSEL| Weatn P Agt. Kaxsas iry, CHAS. E. FOLLETT, Gen'l Pass. Ag't, St Lovis. Trxas, JOUX E. SIMPSON, Gen 1 Supt., 220t INDIANAPOLIS Unitea miatems Confacticners’ Tool Works, Thos' Mills & Bro., Manutacturersio Confectioners’Tools | Machire Mouids, Ice Cream Frcezers, &e. Nos. 1301 & 1303 No Eighth St. PEILADELPHIA, PA. Proprieton Thouas Mris, Go. M. MiLLs, ATLERP.Panuze. ) ;fiA.NI- IEMBRT, TATTOR, 13th St., bet. Pargham aud Harney, All kinds of TAILORIN( CLEANIN( BEPAI“ING mu?u'-—)hm: . ESTABLISHED 1854 ATALOGUES SENT upot spplication. KEARNEY'S FLUID-EXTRACT BUCHU The ouly knows remely for | | | 1 | i | BRIGHT’S DISEASE, And s positive cure for | Gout, Gravel, Strictures, Diabetes, Dyspepsia Ner« vous Debility, Dropsy, Nou-retention or Incortinence of Urine, Irvi tation, Indamation or Ulceration of the | BLADDER AND XIDNEYS SPERMATORRHEA, ! Loucoerhoe or Whites, Disesses of the Prostrate | Gland,S one ia the Bladder. Colcul iz, | GRAVEL OR BRICK DUST DE- POSIT, And Mucus or Milky Discharges. KEARNEY'S Extract Bucha! Permanently Curcsall Diseases'of the Bladder, | | Kidneys, and Swellings. Drogsical Existing in Men, Women and Child No Matter What the Age: Prot. Stoelo says: “One bottle of Kearney’s Fluid Extract Buchu is worth more than all other Buchus combived.” Price one dollar per bottle; or, six bottles for five dollars. > Depot 104 Duane St., N. Y. A physician in attevdance to answer correr poiidenice and give advice gratis. ##Send stamo for pamphlets, free. g DON'T BUY! UNTIL YOU HAVE CAREFULLY EXAMINED = LOW[RESERVOIR &, A S WE HAVE 1wELye OUD REASCNS £\ why they wiil do your work. Quick and Easy. P Chean and Clean. They areche pest to buy, They are best 10 uce, They bake evenly and quickly, Tuelr veration 1 perfect, | They have always & good dratt,® hey are made of the bestmaterial They ars casily managud. They are suited to ail lncalities, b (IR ety siove guaraateed to give satistaction SOLD BY— Excelsior Man’fg (o, ST. LOUIY, MO., aNDBY M. ROGERS. Omaha. Nobrasiza Crane & Brigham Wholesde Ajonts, San | Franeisco, Cal. TO THE: NERVOUS & DEBILITATED OF BOTH SEXES. Y0 OHARGE FOR ADVIOE AND CON- SULTATION. DH J. B. DYOTT, graduate of | Jefferson Medical College, Philadel- | | .| OMAHA AND THE WEST | phia, author of several valuable | Ex | works, 2an be consulted on all dis. | eases of the Sexnxl and r gans, (which he has made an es- nary or- | pecial study,) either in male or fe- | male, no matter from what cause originating, or how lorg standing A practice of 30 y to treat diseases with suceess. Cure guaranteed. (hasges | Those at a distance ean forward let- | ters deseribing symptoms and en- closing stamp to prepay postage. | B@FSend for the Guide to He | Price 10¢. | J. B. DYO111, M. D. Physicion and Surgeon, 10 street, N. V duane OBSTACLES to MARRIAGE. HAPPY RELEIF FOR YOU! e effects of Errors and Abuses i | Manhood Restored. impedin | Removed. ~ New mett ol New | and remarkable remedies. Books and Circulars 4 envelopes. Address, HOW- 110N, No. 3 South Ninth St., | an Institution havinga b on far hdnorable conduct i ional kills. cha:les Popper, | WHOLESALE BUTCHER | ND CATTLE BROKER, | SALT LARE aITY, UTAH feb2tt Proprietor of the | RISING SUN aro | LOS ANGELES VINEYRDS, Depot for the sale of his [NATIVE WINES J AND BRANDIES Cornerjof Bavtery and Washington;ts. SAN R NcISco, muTu cAL, PASSENGERS Going East or South from Omaha And Points on U. P.R.B., hould take the “LINCOLN ROUTE” viaths RAILROAD' i ! PR And eacure for themselves the choice of Six Popular R.tes from Atehisoa to Chicago and St. Louis, All making Reliable G anections and being 2,uipped with Palace Day aad Sleeping Cars, | All dilay and inconvenience arriving from Ferries ard transfers can be avoided West of Chicago and St. Louis by securing Tickets via ATCHISON and the ATCHISUN & NEBRASKA BAILROAD, Direct and Reliable Connection: with the A. T. & 5. . B B for ho ! Great Arka.sas Valley & Colorado, And with ail lines runming Soutn ’ ‘Boutaern Xansas and the Indian ! “Aak Tor Tickets via ! Liycow o Territory. F, WHITE @on’l Pass. Ag't. AtehiSon, Hansg rs cnables him reasonable. M. EELLER & Co, | ATCHISON & NEBRASKA | N & ATCHISON | @0 000 Or Sugar-Coaled, Concentrated, Root and Herdal Juice, Antie Bilious Granules. THE “LITTLE GIANT” CATHARTIC. or Multum I\ Parvo Physiec. Tho noveiry of modern M Phacmaceatical Sci taking the larze. rv composed of clicap. whels we ean b e nal | berbs, " of ‘any longe amcods. pil ally Wgrecicats; appiication of chemical o cathiartic and othe: medt- opecties from the most valuahie rocts ane Fato them fnio & minate Gram - a mustard {ly ewaliowed by thovs of fasCidious tastos. et represent, in & 1o catharcic power < pills foobd for s3ie in tho drr-z ahopsFr © wonderfal ca- Uiartic power. 11 prosostior, %0 theie #ize, people WO bave na i1l them B apk 10 $apponn tag < bat duch ot ¥ medicizal priae ~ed being 80 har. 0 others, &3 ta proluco @ ot searching gl Thore | ouzh, i gently sid kindly operating cathari 8500 Reward is herchy offered by the pro- 10 of (heso Pelictay 10 Ay checaint ‘whos 0 analysis, il find b Uhens any Calomel oF other forws of mercury of any other Mierst poieon. Being ent care in wequire Fate witho o occupatio Constipation, in the Shoulders, Tl Chest, Dizzincss, Sour Eructations | of tho Stomach, Ead & ‘aouth, ‘Billous nttaciks, P Fegion’of Kidn-ys, Internal Fovers Bioatcd’ fecling’ about Stom achs Rush of Blood o kicad, High Cols ored Trine, Unsoclahility and Gloomy ~ Forebodinus, * iaks “Dre Picree's Pleasant Purgative Pellote In expiane power of my Fare il Felictsovor o preat a et of diceasety Wwish (0 7ay that ShelE action npon the arimal cconomy is Fland or tiswao cuca Ve impress, A Couting atd be chlittle most conce o | wrtfealar hey opo- o the constitation, dlet, ndice, Headache, Impurc Hlood, Pain ens Of tho trely vegetable.no niversal, not ng the irsanas es Lot impair them: wclosed in glass irtues unliapatred for any in any climate, 5o that they aro gl 1 reilable, which is not the cass 0 drug stores, put up iz L oxes. Recollect that tive or Purgati Poilcts wi all wio use them. They are sold by all e Druggisis at 25 conts a bots llow any drm tnduce yoa in take anything el that Lo may eay ia just as good €3 my Pell ho mafies & larger profit on that whizh ho re 't you druzotst_cannot_supply them, encloso %5 cents aad wecsive most perfect eatisfaction to. ASK FOR PYLES | SALERATUS! BAKING SODA! BEST IN TSR Puam Meyer & Raapkeand Whituey | ‘Baiserman & C¢ | L CASTLE BROS., IMPORTERS ;0F TEAS | ? —AND— | Hast India Coods, | 213 and 2 FRONT STREET San Francisco California, meb6™m PLATTE VALLEY REAL ESTATE! Samuel C. Smith, Local Aget for the U.P.R.R LANDS, Columbus, . Neb, | Gevernment Lands Located | U. P. Lands Sold! Improved Farms and 'Town Lots for CASEI ON LONG TIME!! BaFAll Comnaumieations Cheer- fully Answered _ AL L e OoOMAETA oxITYy STOVE STORE. l | 0 points fa | | Manufacturer of Ti . ‘Ware, and Gebiey - Sheet Tron | Cooking and Heating stoves | stamped. sapanne 301 French Waron aad. Tis Work dane sai Sappiers sn Spoating saq

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