Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 30, 1874, Page 3

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70 ‘u-m‘u o B eod s e », = F®m ~o zmom=T. TATT.OR, 13th St., bet. Farnbam and Harney. Al Kinds of TAILORING, CLEANING s0d REPALVING done st reasons sie rates TREITSCHEE & CO., GROCERS And General Provision Dealers, 8. W. Cor. Jackson and 13th Bta., Eepasu for stock of Grocerles, Prot Wines, Liquors and_ Cigars aud sel “heaper than s other bouse in Omsha. 373 3w RATH & HANSEN, ‘Wholesale Dealers inZLeaf, Tobaceo, Manufacturers of CIGAR»-«, Tobacco, Pipes, &c., &c. 163 FARNYAM ST., Bet. 10th &11th, Omaha, Neb- oottt P.N.GLYNN WHOLESALE AND EETATL DEALER IN Wines, Liquors. Segars, TOBAC O AND PIPES. - Culifornin Wines and Brandien &8 R TAT o vt o P — Practical Watchmaker, 171 Ptrll'-.&‘ko-rr 11th 8t OMABA WEI VIGTQB_E. COFFMANM.D, Physician % Surgeon, 241 Farnham Street, Over Ish’s Drug store. erpti0dly SILKST SILE, CASHMERE, AND ALPACA SUITS . For asle and made to order. P. M. FALLON, 263 Dodge, bet. 14th and 15th streets. OMAHA, NEBRASKA. NERYOUS & DEBILITATED OF BOTH SEXES. 50 OHARGE POR ADVIOE AND OoK- SUL?ATION. R J. B. DYOTT, graduate of efferson Medical College, Philadel- phia, author of several valusble works, 2an be consulted on il disy eases of the Sexusl and Orinary or- gans, (which he has msde an es- pecial study,) either in male or fe- male, no mstter from what cause originating, or how long standing A practice of 30 years cnables him to treut diseases with success. Cures guaranteed. Chages reasonable. Those at a distance can forward let- ters describing symptoms and en- closing stamp to prepay postage. #@-Send for the Guide to Health. Price 10c. J. B. DYOT11, M. D. Physicion und Surgeon, 104 Duane street, N. X City Meat Market. — EaL¥Y BROS. Kee tnilylonThand 4 LARGE SUPPLY OF B = 3B O, P o R K MUTTON, ®ULTRY, —axp— meGE ABLES GANE The Sloax £ty aua racue Sallrosd, Ia Cosnertion with the SI0UX CITY & ST. PAUL RAILROAD, Is 02 miles the shortest route from Omaka and Council Blafis to St. Paul, Hizeapolls, Stillwater, Anoks, Duluth, Bismarck, aad all poiats in Minnesots. Tratn leaves Omaha dally, (excep Saturday) at 6 o.clock p. m., and Councll Biuflsat 8:05 p° ., from Chicago & North-Westers Depot. Fare as LOW ind Time as QUICK as by any other Line. PUCLMAN PALACE SLEEPING CARS ON ALL NIGHT TRATNG. Bo sure your ticket reads’ VIA Sioux City, hus avolding circuitous routes and miduigai traaf. ers. can be rarchase at the offcesof the Oumaha Chicago & North icago ‘and Councl] Flu: el Pass. & Tisket Agt- LT v O Pty Mina. o't Pas. 30 Tickot Agh, 5. G & P Sloux City, lows. GEO. W. GBATTON, Agent. 163 Parukam Street, Omaba, Neb. Fuly 2, 1 PASSENGERS Going Easi or South from Omaha inteon U. P.8, B., hould take th ‘LINCOLN ROUTE" via The ATCHISCN & NEBRASKA RAILROAD' And secure tor tpemserves the choive of Slx Populsr B:.tes from Atehison to Chicago and St. Louls, All making Relisble anections sad being Zynipped with Palace Dav aad Sleeping Cars. B e et Wt st 0_.!8‘ Louis by securing Tickets ATOHISON and the ATCHISON & NEBRASKA BAILROAD. Direct and Rsliable Connections are also made ‘vith the 4. T. 4 8.F. B R for the @reat Arka.sas Valley & Colorade, umuln.-.-:.-z mhpfi'h 'LINCOLN & ANH!SON LI LR Arghusen, Kansss | this life? Call | & swindler, a villain, ora fool, if you 'now BILL WAS MISTAKEN. (From the Overland Moxthly.) (Concluded.) «Bill, my boy, did it ever occur to you that it i3 a terrible charge on a sensative person to cry out ‘cra- zy® after him, as he passes through im & rogue, a thief, must; for on these charges he can settle in his own way when he hears them : but this charge that one’s mind is affected is something which rests in the estimation of the public, and is practically true or not true, as the public see fit to receive it. The soundness of one’s mind is like the price of greenbacks—a matter of opinion, no odds how well se- cured, that rises and falls with the public pulse. There is no surveyed boundary between sanity and insan- ity. How do you know that you are of sound mind ?” “How do I kno?"” “Yes." “Well, I know—because I've got good horse-sense, anyway. I eat swhen I'm hungry, drink when I'm dry, rest when tir i, work hard when Iean't do any better, sleep when I'm sleepy, and take myseld and out of the wet—that's what I call sound-minded.” «Yes, so far as it goes. But how about your ambition, wherein you imagine yourself wealthy from find- ing a great mine, rolling in your carriage; enjoying the fine things of life, and the flatteries of the fair,the foolish, and the false? Do you never dream, with your eyes wide open, L-ist,” as they call it?” I believe every man is to have Lis streak of luck.” “Then, William, you are a dreamer—we are all dreamers; and dreaws are made of ‘perilous stuff.’ When a man dreams (n a full wak- ing state, his ‘horse-sense’ slips away from him into a cloud, and he is partly out of hismind. He may, from this state, go all the way out, or he may return to_his ‘horse- senso.) The floating cloud-land be- tween sanity and insanity admits of no pernmanént boundary.” “Then, how's a fellow to know he's got sound sense?” asked Bill, with @ tired-of-the-discussion ex- pression, as we rode across the gray ey E "“Fle can’t know. Tt is the publio —the voz populi—which puts the value on the soundness of sense. That is why all new doctrines are first resisted, then ridiculed, then examined, then stolen. In Utah, it is sensible to see angels and hear voices from heaven. In Boston, Mass., it 1s sensible to worship your own intellect. In Nevadaand Cali- fornia it is the height of good sense to worship the power of money. It is wisdom in China to bow before one’s father's ghost; in Japan, be- fore Buddha ; in India, before Brah- ma; in Rome, before the Pope; in Mecea, befora & black stone. So you see that any sense above ‘horse- sense’ is a risky and uncertain prop- erty In the world’s market. Like a ball of quicksilver, it has weight, coloy, power, and great brilliancy ; bat it is liabie to roll away from you, at any moment, In & thousand glit- tering pieces.” Bill made no answer in the pause I left opep for him, so I added: *That man, baok yonder at the mine, is & drenmer, Bill; and what- ever his dream, sad or happy, it weighs ypon him, and makes hima stranger in all the real world—in the ‘horse-sense' congregation I mean.” “Well,” xaid Bill, throwing away his studying-cap, “d—n him! let him dream it out. Tl not trouble him again soon.” The conversations between Wil- liam Wilson and myself, as we rode, day after day, across broken moun- tains and gray streamless valleys, were to us twain interesting enough, but need not, therefore, be of inter- est to other people. And yer, though 1 do say it myself, we made some pretty sharp remarks on a great va- riety of subjects, into which William at times threw his unbookish mind with startling effect. Upon one oc- casion he ‘‘got off,” as he called it, his opinion of “talk.” “gome fellows,” he said, “‘areal- ways putting up that ‘talk hchenp but I say that talk Is precious at twenty to the pan. Blab is cheap; but the first thing in my mother’s old bibleistalk: ‘Goisaldlet there be;’ and them words started off into the darkness aud slumgullion of nowhm utting up stuff for heavy 5‘ leaves, and flowers, and hulllz!l generally.” “Why, FVillia, you're 5 poet 1” “Not much! I dispise poetry. But good sound talk oot thie workd a-going, and keeps her a-humming on the pin. I'd Lke to know what would be the use if people couldn’t talk—or didn’t talk! 1'd as soon be a bymp on a log as not to be abie to :?: ‘When a fellow says to me, 0, it's all talk ' T say, ‘You bet our life it fs? Newspapers and ks is talk, Law and gospel is talk. Money is talk, done up m ‘lens’ and ‘twenties ;' take the talk out of it, and its nothing,” Thus, one way or another, we whiled away the journey, back to town; where I left William, and proceeded about my business, far away from the high altitudes and dry valleys of Nevada, Some months later I returned, to find the town in one of those min- ing fevers which invariaoly follow the disoovery of rich silver ores. Picking up the lively little daily newspaver from the olerk’s counter at the hotel where I stopped, and glancing over it, my eyes fell upon the following : “RICH STRIKE IN THE SILVER CHAMBER !|—Wires, ropes, spangles, flecks, and cakes of silver! Chlo- ride ores, by tons and tons, all through the mine, with rich sulphu- Tets at the water-level. “Nothing except an ownership In the property, could give us niore satisfaction than we now enjoy in chronicling the grand success which has crowned with a gorgeous silver crown the long and tedious labors of the genial Brotiers Rocksaw, «By invitation of Mr. George Rocksaw we stepped into his buggy on Saturday last, and after a pleas- climb up the side of Pranghorn mountain, we were permitted to de- scend into the mine. 1n thedescent of the main shaft, and for a hundred feet along the main drift, there is nothing worth mentioning; but at the end of this hundred feet there opens a scene more gorgeous than e dream of the Count de Monte risto. All along the drift, over- head, under foot, and upon the hanging wall, for a_distance of 400 feet, the precious wealth of nature tters In_the ‘amp-light gloating. o'er.’ Below this drift, on the lower level, distance in perpendicular depth of fifty feet, and i the moun- tain over 100 feet, there is evena richer picture. The mine is not des- seribable, excep:'by exclamations. It 1s magnificen! «The mine is patented under the broad seal of Uncle Sam, to George Rocksaw and Andrew Rocksaw, thelr heirs and asslgus, to bave and to hold forever.” So Bill was mistaken, after all, bbonnhnnunomdthomohn of being a great fellow—a ‘big-up- | ant drive of two days, and a stiff Salting Pork and Hams. e packers now use the common barrel-salt made at Syracuse or in Michigan, though they pack with | solar salt from the same places. In the ealting of meat, “to have it keep sweet all sumper,” the first | | consideration is to get goodsalt. At | least, do not get the common fine salt for that purpose, unless you in- tend to make bacon, where it will | answer a very good purpose. If the dealers will not keep solar salt, or- der it direct from Chicago, or some | other point where it is kept on sale. The packers of Chicago use a half- bushel, by measure, to a barrel of 196 pounds; and, in the spring, this pork is repacked, and more salt add- ed. Water js poured on to make brine, as plenty of salt is put on for that purpose. ~You cannot make fat pork too salt ;—that is, the pork will only absorb & certain quantity of salt, and the remainder is left undis- solvea in the cask. Thus we see the packers use about 20 pounds of salt to the 100 pounds of pork; but this is of solar, Turk’s I:lnnd or Ken- tucky alum, or other coarse salt, but never the fine salt that is sold the farmer in our country markets. As a rule, the coarsest salt is considered the best. In the curing of ham.s, a brine is made of coarse salt to the point of saturation,—that is, all the salt *hat the water will dissolve, say 8 pounds to the 100 pounds of hams; add to this 4 ounces of saltpeterand 1 quart of good sirup (not the corn-starch sirup). The hams are put in this for sixty days, and should be taken out and repacked twice at least, or, better, once a week, or, if the cask is headed up, rolled on the floor once aday. This latter is practiced by the packers, when packed in barrels or tierces. This is the way in which Chicago sugar-cured hams are pre- pared. After smoking, they are put into sacks, in order to exclude the fly-maggot. My letter of last week gave a full account of this insect as connected with this subject. For the curing of beef L use the same for- mation ; but, after three or four days, the beef is taken out of the brine, the brine scalded and skim- wed, and returned, and.- the beef re- packed. In the summer, an addi- tional quantity of salt isadded at the time of repacking. Corn and Hogs. From carefully conducted experi- ments by different persons, it has been ascertained that one bushel of corn will makea little over 103 1bs. of pork, gross. Taking this result asa basis, the following deductions are made, which all our farmers would do Well to lay by for a conve- nient reference: When corn sells for 12} cents per bushel, pork costs 1j cents per und. o ‘When coru costs seventeen cents per bushel, pork costs two cents per pound. ‘Whea corn costs twenty-five cents per bll;shel, pork costs three cents per und, ‘When corn costs thirty-three cents per bushel, pork costs four cents per pound. ‘When ccrn costs fifty cents per bushel, pork costs five cents per und. The following statements show what the farmer realizes on his corn | when sold in_the shape of pork: When pork sells for three cents per_pound, it brings 25 cents per bushel in corn. When o pork sells for four cents per pound, it brings 32cents per bushel in corn. ‘When pors sells for five cents per pound, it brings 45 cents per bushei 1 corn. An Extensive Bee Hive. «How doth the little busy bee 2" inquires Dr. Rowe. It doth very much indeed at Los Angeles, where there exists at this moment the largest hive in the world. 1t 15 a fissure of a rock, the opening of which is three hundred feet wide, and the depth of which is one hun- dred and sixty feet. Innumecrable swarms of bees have made this cav- ern their home, and have accumu- lated enormous quantities of honey; it is calculated that there must be many thousands of tons of it. The inhabitants of the country have more than once tried, although the approach to the fissure is difficult, to driveaway the bees and take posses- sion of their treasure, but they ha: always been repulsed with loss. Wecannot but think that the tame surrender of so magnificent a prize as waxand honey contalned in a hive one hundred and sixty feet deep, shows a lamentable want of enterprise in the population of Los Angeles, and we are disposed to suggest that they should callin fr- eign aid. VAN PORN’S MACHINE SEOF. Al kinds of light and heavy MACHINERY MADE & REPAIRED. B Al Wok Fuarantee’. @4 6 HARNEY STREET. OMAHA. H. C. WALKEZ, —MANUFACIUKEY AND DEALER IN— BOOTS & SHOES 1018th 8t. Between Farcham and Douglas . F. A. PETERS, Saddle and Harness Maker, AND CARRIAGE TRIMMER, No. 274 Farnham st. bet, 15th & 16th LI. orders and repairing promptly atiended A d mustaction guirraateed, for hides.. apaoly 100,000 ACRES! RICH FARMING LAND IN NEBRASKA! REAL ESTATE AGENTS. Hor S e vt n ot O BOGGS & HII.I. 284 Dodge street. ANotary Public,al ways in office, apsey Mrs. D. A. MO¥FETT, Fashionable Dressmaking 564 Fourteenth St., !h : OMAHA. NEB. Established 1858. AT, -xnazisow- 538 & 540 Fourteenth Street, Omana, Nebrasks. Carriages L U. P. R. R. MEAT MARKET, 16th street bet Californta and Webster. e X KEEF ON HAND THE BESE AND e s nnn-rmusuw ot raten. 'l..unnxhv .yl t—h—. Monev and Commerce. i | Dailv Review. OFFICE OMAMA DALY BER, ‘October 29, 1874. } Monetary matters continue quiet and firm. Business at the banks is mode- | rately active. Some money coming | in from the country, but not in large amounts. Deposits have been heav- jer, with but little checking. Rates of discount and exchange remain unaltered, at yesterday's quotations, with demand very light. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK Land Greats (ellng)......... $825.00 Land Warrants, (160 acres 176,00 buying)... ¥ Land Warrants (160 acres i 185.00 per ct. In the commercial market we have no changes to note. Business in all general lines is good, bat not very brisk. Wholesale houses re- port a moderate trade. Retail business has been dull. Owing to cold weather very little has been doing outside of clothing establishments and coal offices. The demand in the provision mar- Ket has been very light all day. OMAHA MARKETS. Caretuuy vorrected Daly DRY GOODS. 2. 3. BROWN & BRO., Cor. 14th and Douglas street. PRINTS. Amosken Biddeford.. KURTZ MOHR & 0., 231 Farnham Street. SPOUL QULTUN. ..1 pered -3 Bhea . 238e 28238 X33 Al Dickens' best. v i Wit Wika Wi et B 2 weust el ot o F ERERE £ Balmoral Yarn, all colors, Germantgzn n Wool, cony_Yarns, Mixed Yarns White .. GENERAL COMMISSION. J. C. RoSENFELD gives us the following quotations this day: Sweet Potatoes 2 cents per pound Potatoes, 100 per bushel; Rautter, prime MButter 20@25¢; Butter, cooking 10@15¢; Egay S0c 88532 88 8888 LI 75, i’:r doz; 1%13’3 I:Me‘:\ns 2 mons, r bex. Cnn%:errlu $12 00 per areal OYSTERS W. B. & Co.—Select, 65 cts per can; Standard 55 cts per can; Medi- um 45 cts per can. BARDWARK. JOHN T EDGAR. BRRSEEE 22 discount 45 per cent, unt 10 per ent. Northwestern horse pails...... Dundee thimble skelt Stor hal{patent axles, 3ifne o in flnll‘n( & - o0 casing 8o 81 do- do anusncaananan BECBRBUSSR2EE # o Narrow wrought - discus Cast, loose pia "vmm“ = BE ¥8 3 3 & % gn [TEN ) L 's Ha.vest King,per dos, net... weld Blea BE BEEES 8838 88 883888 8383 Murrave, St & On,.— 48 _J—-x b s GROCERIES. CLARK & FRENCH COR. FARNHAM AND 11D 6T PUNDT, MEYER & RAAPKE, 212 FARN- HVM ST.,—WHOLESALE DEALERS- MORGAN & GALLAGHER, 205 karn- bam St. WHITNEY, BAUSERMAN Douglas St. J. 4. BROWN & BRo., Cor. 14th and Douglas Streets. SUGAES. & Co., 247 LEATHER. Rest Buffalo Sol do do Matamorss do Best Gak do ‘ Baltimore Oak 5 Srench Kiy b f, Teading brands N C choice do - Rio cholce pr D, do prime do Ao good do 06 Java. SYRUPS. Comtuon pr atio er, pe Boot Webbing, per bol Oak Harpsss Lrasher, do do Sehofers . Mis<ouri Vriley do Patent Dash Powell & Co., Soap monufacturers. Sapc Publico, 6 1-2@6 3-4; Savon Republ.c, dc., Chemical Olive, 6 to 61-2; Palm, 5@5 144 ; German Mot- led, 6 1436 1-2. ART GOODS AND UPHOLSTERER'S STOCK. Benjamin B. Jones, Decorative Up- holsterer and dealer in fine art goods, 270 Farnham Street, fumnishes the following quotstions: 5 FRAME MOULDINGS. 0Oil walnut meutaings, one nch, ¥ per foot, 5¢; 2inch 10c; 3 inch 15¢; polished walnut, 1 inch 7; 2 inch | 3 poundcan tyerisoya 15¢; 8 inch 2lc. Berlin gilt, 1 inch | g0 do de <o 6@15¢; 2 inch 12@30¢; 3 inch 18@ |2 do 45c; imitstion rosewood and gilt, 1 iuch 5@10c; 2 inch 10@20¢; 8 inch 15@30c. ‘WINDOW SHADES. Plain bands, 6 feet, all colors, per pair, 1 50; ornamental bands, 2 00@ 4 00; each sdditional foot, 75¢ per pair. Black goods, do - do do do Bright do. o Virginis Natural leal. Southern Apples, per Larsel, 52 T2 85 45 75 3 Corn, Tropay per cas. do " Winslow do_Yarmouth du Strawberries, P Pineapples,’ do IMPERTAL BAKING POWDER. und cans per d0z. do do do d REPPS. Union ind sll wool terry, per yard 1 60@3 0; Imperial, plain and stri- 508 00. ped, 2 DAMASKS. Union per yard, 1 50; all wool, 2 00s3 0. 88888 £ Oolon-s,per pount. oung Hyson, per poun } Guapowder, " do _do FLOU! 4 B8 MATTRASSES. Husk, 4-4x6-2, 4 005 00; straw, 3 00a4 00; Excelsior, 3 50ad 50. LUMBER. RETAIL LIST Sublect to change of market witnout WM. M. FOSTER, On U.P. B R. crack bet. ¥ arnham ar. - GEO A. HOAGLANL. Jolats, studding and siis, 20 1, and un- oper ST S il i i o 2838 Gun'ties, beavy wel light' do- .. Alspice Cluamon bark COLUMBIA RIVER SALMON. Family in kits bbls. it cleare, \y (donlzxdn s clear, 1, 154 1, 1002 nch 2d do do 31 do @ o Eamily, in kit . 1, Mo Eamily, Adm.. PR 3¢ boxesy CIGARS. A. E. SIMPSON, Manufacturer, 15th Street. narrow, clear i 5&#&.::53&&&«::2:!::; B do Lavelear celling do 53: - ELETTLE g & £283233838288828 plekets i 106 Square do. 06" Batten per tneal Rouzh do do do Ianwes SEEENE I¥ 188858222388 22823823382228382828 Liberal discount on carload lots. WINDOWS, (Glazed.) 35 per contoft Chicago list. DOORS, (Wedged.) 25 per cent off Ci tcngo list. LINDS. EEERCTE MILLS FLOUR. | Wholesale: depot 548 14th Street. Half barrel sacks s Chicago, Rock and and Pacific R. R. THE GRAND CENTRAL ROUTE FROM OMAHA TO CHICAGO AND THE EAST, Via Des Moines, Lavenport and Rock lslaad. Al Pameoger Trsinsaresquipped i Waniorotu: FATENT Ak BEALSS an Miler's Patent Safety Piatioria and Coupler: 2 Fast Express Trains Leave Daily, onnecting as follows: AT, DES NOINES with the Des Moines Valley , for Oskalooss, Otiamw u 2od B Lowte, S Kal AT GRINNELL with the Gentral Rallroad of yJowa, for al pofa north o St Paal, WEST LISELTY 'vithhe Burington, faplds & Snesoa, Raiiroady fof Burlington, Cedar Dubaque & 8t. Paal, AL WILTON JUNCHION wih the Bouth-Western " vranch, for Muscatine, Washiogion and all points south. AT DAVESPORT with the Davenport & St. Paul Railroul for points north AT ROCK ISLAND with the Western Union Railroad for Freeprt, Ber sit, Kactne, Mil- raukes nd ail points in northern Liinois AT ROCK ISLAND with the Rocklord, Rock ftand waa St Louls Rudlroad for St Louts and points o ATREERISTAND with the Peoria & Hock Iaiand Haiitoad for Peorla and points east. AT BUREAY JUNG, with bravelt for Hen- 1 Peoris. A‘A‘Y‘.A sALI.ii"l(ll.l:- mmn. ‘Central Rall- nta ozt B apd s AT GHICRES Witk el Trae Eav, Nortn e s Easi, North and TROUGH TICKETS to all Eastern citles, s line, can be procured, and sy infor- obtained, concerning points, at the ticket offlor of the company, 128 Farnham St Omaiy, i lao 3 the priniipal ioket offices aloug the line ot Bagzaze Checked Throngh to all Principal Eastern Potnts. A. M. SMITH, H. RIDDLI el Prae Agt, Geatay hifago. J. H. LACEY, 8.8. STE' Ticket Agent, b4 ‘:hl i Bl 30 per cent off Lst. White lime per bbl. Lonisviile cement per b} Flister paris per bl Plastering bair per Tarred folt.. OILS, PAINTS, GLANS, &e. N. L. D. SOLOMON. ROBERT C. STEELL. Coal OIL... 18 ool White Lead, St Lnuh,'!rlk't! Pure ‘Fancy Brand. Window Glass' 50 c discount TIN, SHEET-1KUN. WIRE, &C. MILTON ROGERS, COR. 14th & FARNHAM. TN PLATE. 1021416, tuir quanty. o e e S 1% "G ENRREERT AR NEES: 223SSETLBL2TREIBES. gen Gen'd Sieet 4 t0 5 nches per v Ry "Minnerssoldes (exira retined Sioux Citv & Pacific R. R The Shortest aud only Direct Route from COUNCIL BLUFFS St. Paul, Minneapolis, And all Pomts in NORTHERN IOWA & MINNESOTA. PULLMAN PaLACE SLEEPING CARS On all night trains 7ia this route. CONNECTIONS. 1 At U. P. Tramer wita Un Railroad for Omaha 2. 'At Council Blus, 1 Blufls By pEN do _do 2. Juniats, No. 24.. do ' do 26 do do 27. Rusla gertect 71 do i-mu il bnmgtl. aid one cunl. o i “Leas than full bundles add one cent, GALVANIZED. & sedRRLR Pacific Tithanms city, 8 s Clty, St ints south. 3 At Mirsouri Valley with the Chicago and Northwestern railway {01 Chicago sod ‘poinf &AL Bloux clty with Sioux City ands Central s ot Louthern Faul, Hhinoie pilrads. Bteasners for D lwnnmm th ‘stages for all na ooty the B AL e with Omsha and Northwestern for Omiahs and Southern Nebrasks. o, At Fromont, ¥ with the Union Pacic aiiroad lor -l el vkt e 7. At Wisner with stsges for Norfolk and all poiais in Sorthern Xotakr = 5 ;‘"“ in Chiczgo and North- westerh Battvey ofes: ®&Be sul) your tickets read via S.C. ¥ P. 2ELEAUNG § Nos. 0to6 889 1011 i STEELE & JOMNSON 638-540 14Th ST. | | B end earations | Chicago and the East! AND THE | Omnlv Direcot Route | TeWnterloo, Fort Dods: | €rosse, Prairie Du_Chien. St Paul, Dul Jane-ville, Ki 1t Belag the Shortestand Fist Comoleted Line Between OMAHAandCHICAGO, ustant improvoments Save taken place in the way of Heducing Grade, and piselog iron with s, adding 16 its rolliag stock new DAY and SLEEPING CARS Equipped with the “Westinghouse Alr Braxe” sfiller Platiorm,” establishing comturta- Houses, offering all the comfr(s of traveling ! can_produce. Frou - to A9 Fast Express way daily over the various lines of this road, thus securing to, the traveler selecting this route sure and certain connections in auy di- rection he way wish to #o. Princival Conneetions. 1 VALLEY JUNCTION, for hlh « harles City, lsurllm(um.nd St hllh. CLINTON o Dubugve, Duntits, Prab dulhhn La ¢ rosse, and all pu-l:l:u on lhe AT out of Chicazo. Through tickets o 4ll exsiern lties wia this R.R. B Baguage checked through to all principal Eastern NETT, MARVIN HUGHITT, inge'r Ag t. Gen. Sup't. Y, G G. EDDY, "Ticket Ax't, Omaha. Gen'l Agh Ooaber meh18v1 Omana & St. Louis Short Line. 1874! The Kansas City, St. Joe and Council Bluffs R. R Isthe only dire line to sST. LOUIS ASD THE EAST, FROM OMAHA AND THE WEST NO CHANGE s cars between Omaha and St. Lou's ana bitore between OMAHA ana NeW YORK. This th Only .ine running s PULLMAN SLEEPING OAR EAST FRUM OMAHA, ON ARRIVAL OF THE UNION PACIFIC EXPRESS TRAIN, assengers taking other routes na: Almgrocunte Caasier st oo Biver Stotion: PASSENGER TRAINS DAILY ! REACHING ALL 8BASTSBH AND WESTERN OITIES ‘With Less Changes and in advance of other lines. This Entire Line is equipped with Pullman’s Palace Sleeping Cars, Palace Day Coaches and Chair Cars, Miller’s Safety Platform and Coupler and the Celebrated Westinghouse Air Brake. 8 See that your tickes read via Kansas Clty, 8 . ; Josm & Councnt rod, Via Omaha and St. Louis. icketa for smie at or, Teuth and Farnham ts, and U. P. Depot, Omaha. GEO. L. 3RADBURY, JO8. TEHON, Pass. Agt. Agent. . F. BAENARD, Gen'l Supt St Joseoh. VanparLi A ROUTE E A S T. A. WES, ss. Agt., 8t. Joseoh. 3 TRAIN S DAILY'! LEAVE ST. LOUIS WITH Pullman Palace Cars THROUGH WITHOUT OCHANGE —ro— Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Columbus, Pittsburg, Philadelphia, Baltimore Washington, NEW YORK Arrival of Trains from the West. ONLY ONE CHANGE TO Cleveland Buffalo & Boston ’I‘ICK Armorsatesuine S oty and a1 the rn-u Rar’l - ipal way Of CHAS. um RUSS) t, W-t’n Pus. A'SL TOHN E. smms CHAS. r.mum, 2 Bthern Pus. « Supt., Gen' o » 2 “ivmiiraronss © P ALk Txitec msiastos Confactioners’ Tool Works, Confectioners’Tools e oul Tce Cream Freezer &ec. Nos. 1301 & 1303 No Eighth St. PHILADELPHIA, PA. Proprietors: ESTABLISHED 1864 GEo. M. MiLLs, ATiExP.Pan; }Cu"ufiln SENT xa. ) U upoc appication. Ratlway, F. C. HILLS Gen. Ticket GEO. W. G u 5 16 Nos. 15,16 1 Per buadle15 p r ceat * coun 1 1 L. BURNETT, Sup't. ‘fu‘nl “ 1 :am wrANCIS Frazier’s Root Bitters, the Great Blood and Humor Remedy. |From the Cleeland Sunday Morring Voice] That Frasier’t Root Bitters possess an ef greatly superior to any other preparati “earching the biood with % hich we ar tel, we can testify from sctual observation know many ins unces where 2 o the great value of i Root Bitters. sre also persons well-known s citizens of standing avd integrity, in whose and their tesnmory may be taken s corciu sive evidence of tie estimation in which M. Ja hekd, particularly st home: ined that positian that requires no recommen.at-on, haviug stood the test of trial here We can say with saf ty, and ith entire contden ¢, 13 us- elsewhro, by all who way any kind of weakness or humor in the bluc 25 the most seurching, ireogt)enlag n | heai” ing rem-dy of which we have any knowledg Over 1,000 Testimonials. remedy. Kewd ad boon inced. SUFFEREDOVER THIRTEEN YEARS WITH LIVFR COMPLAIST AXD 0YSP cURKD By THREE BOTTLES OF KOOT BITTERS MR FRrazikR—Lvar Sir: Tdoem it anacto | gratitude to you, and & duty toward those 1 re suflering frota liver coup aiut and dyspey- sia, to make the foliowing statewment T have been an_invalid for over thirten years. ' My complaint wava disease of the liver | o dyspepia.” Ay skinwie . 0%, the v i my eye 0 I'was sk nd hesvy, with headache atd B0 foed of any kind, | was ufficted as ¥ Womsn could be. 1 Leok bettle a't v { patent medicines, end pald over seven undred d liars -+ the Lt paysicians without any benefit. I suflersd more than I can tel you Syleter, ut could et no el tw0 months ago | statements tmplicit confidence way be placed. | be aficud with | A fow of the man; parties cured by the great | (A LOW RESERVOIR S WE HAVE TWELY b . Quick and Easv. Chein a.nd CiI o Ira Ty are mad nhheb\al.lleflll Tyt et ey resute but ar. of you Rout Birters from Lo.ts Siithnigit. drug 135 Waodiard A, this clty- T used this {0 tle up, and sin-e 'then hive vesd seurly two moreand they are the ouly e ; they have curd me completely, and to- day Tam 3's8 any person can be. o'y oo iy nalne 70 0ur Jiseovery and be cured, fof ter Than 0 ELLEN CRAWSHAW, No. 20 Orunge st, Cleveland Obio. HAS DONE ME MORE GOOD THAN ALL THER MEDICINE | HAVE TAKEX FOR TRN YRAne- . ot M Faazis — of Bitters vou sent me by Laken th whole of 1 3] 1 has 104 e more §00d than all the medicines [ have aver taken, | amd T heve aken more o s for ten years thousht Leanld get hew from our druggists, bat they do not yut have them. 1 con'd Bave | i 35 botdke 1 1 could hem. 1 | think you might have it- | ters here. Iwant you to scnd | 5 dollaas, tho price you advertise. . Send qu'c a8 you can, by express, C. 0. D. [t Is the be Tl frend, MES: DANIEL ST, Coors, | ul ) Concord, N.H. P.0. Box 2. | Consumptives Read. : T am tating your > mo a great deal - f cough, and 1 f el ly, BARNEY CAIN, | ¥ ba et iy s ek another rerten. Yours Niog v, cnitann etter Cured © RFACH MY CASE ONTIL 0T BITTERS. +d Sir: The Crt im— been restred from », Is gratiiude (o the «as afflicted over two a Kins them. They ure in bher case. | b ve 10" of the Cleveiand Post Offics tec wricr for eleven years Y o 4t Boucl'Y Fecomumend your Koot Fitters to every person, suffering «ith Salt Rbeum, (Tetter) Chronic Kheumatism, Scrof- uls or iny Kind ot Humor in the Blood, as ons of the Honest Cures. G. W, UPTON. 1f your Druggist or storekeeper dou't have the Bitters, ash him to order them tor you. CATARRH CURED. Mr. FRAzizR—1 wish to inform you, what your medreine has dou for 6. | wusafllict:d Seith - atarrh fn its worst forms rmany years. I tried various medicines recomn ended Physiclazs, which proved Lut a By the wivice of a Ludv who o) this same disease by your Root Bitte procured one haf dosen boctles and trey Aecomolished a perfect cure in my case. Be- lieving that o sands ar- dra.ced out of a Tcheerful'y recomn ‘whoure similarl KEARNEY'S FLUID-EXTRACT BUGHU The only kuown remedy for BRIGHT’S DISEASE, And a positive cure for Gout, Gravel, Strictures, Diabetes, Dyspepsia Ners vous Debility, Dropsy. Non-retention or Incoxtinence of Urine, Lrri- ‘tation, Infswation or Ulceration of the BLADDER AND KIDNEYS SPERMATORRHEA, Loucoerhoe or Whiltes, Diseases of the Prost Gland, 8.0ne in the Bladder, Colcul ue. GRAVEL ‘'OR BRICK DUST; DE- POSIT, And Mocus or Milky Dischargee. EEARNEY Extract Bucha! + Permanently Curesall [ DiseasesTof the Bladder, Kidneys, and, Dropsical Swellings, Existing in Men, Women'and Children, No Matter What the Age! e “Oue bottie of Kearney's Prot. Stecls Fluia Exieact Buchu . worth mors. (B ail other Buchus combined.” Price one dollar per bottle; or, six;bottlas for dive dotlars. 2 e Depot 104 Duane St., N. Y. ysician in attendance to answer correr el na ive sivissgratia’ stamp for pamphlets, (reo. s Crane & Brigham Wiolesale Agents, Sen Francisco, Cal.- a 8we M. Keller, Proprietor of the RISING SUN AND LOS ANGELES V NEYRDS, Depot for the sale of his NATIVE WINES AND BRANDIES M. EELLER & Co, Corner of Baitery aud Washington Sts. Cleveland Obio. | I3io: Concentratea, Root and Herbal Juice, Antle Billous Granules. THE “LITTLD GIANT™ CATE\B’IIC‘ or Multam The noveity of mod. | Pha macentical Scu cinal propertie: st v ertn daa casces, Tats thed 10 we, Searc. 1y darger than o that can v readlly evallowed Py rurnnv.. <t concentratat for 5o s cabonied in any of FaleIn the driz saops From taele wonderfal ca- thactic power. i Eiie eize, pecyic who have n: * bui such fsmot < nal pr o ofher Toraia f mercury o say otber poison. Being entirely vegotable, no pot care s quired w Con ,;‘»mm. o tho Nhoulders, Chent, Diezin of the Stoma ad Sdouth, H1lous ntncike, Eoglom ot Kidu ys tntorhs ug about Ill-hul Biood to -icad Tri neoclubi 41 Who s tiem. 01d by al a1 cents induce yo w0 suy ia fusc on FOR PYLE -QK* JALERATU § —AND— BAKING SODA BEST IN USE Pooay_Meyor & Raapke and Whitney & ‘Bauserinan & Co. s OBSTACLESto MARRI GE HAPPY RELETF FOR YOUNG MEN from tllvldphll. Pa.,—an n...‘- fi reputation for hoa rable tonduct siona! skill. CASTLE BROS., IMPORTERS ,OF TEAS —AND— J Tast Inaia Géods, 213 and 9153 ¥ RO T IPREET San Francisco - California, PLATIE VA REAL ES Ool.u:n.bus, Gavernment Lands Lfld‘ U. P. Lands Sold! Improved Farms and Town Lot for CASH! —on— ON LONG TIN @Al Comuiunications =CAL waty 2

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