Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 25, 1880, Page 3

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THE DAILY BEE OMAHA PUBLISHING CO., PROPRIETORS. CHARLES POWELL, "USTICE OF THE PEACE—Corner 5tk and J T e S T Block, 15th 8t., OMAHA, NEB. D. L. THOMAS, Wuuw—u—-—qn TIORNEY AT LAW~Offics tn Hamsoom's George xS v g { et 8 R P2, FE; g H L) mEOHARAn SEOARQAAn WHEHE waw el ) ] ¥ [ 3 ? v L] open i, T to1 p . Sundare P TBOMAS 7. ALL. Postiaster. Arrival And Departure of Trains - OMAEA, NEB. W. J. Connell, Attorney-at-Law. O ffce:_Pront rooms, up stair, i Hansoom's mow briak bullding, K. W, corner Fifieents n-n—m", = . Repiox. Omas R Bamiox. Attorneys-at-Law, [~y |t wala stteation will be given fo all wutte | KANBAS CITY,ST. JOE & COUNCIL ELUFFA. Fracios tn al kbe o the Butte wut the Onives Biates. e Farmbais Bt opporie WARD W. ATIORNEL AT LAW_Boom ¢ Orvighton S.F TTORNEY AT LAW—%8 W, T, Brouanss. o3 Hour RICHARDS & HUNT, Attorneys-at-Law. Orrica—215 Bouth Fourteenth Street. =, Toave Councll Blufts;—8:25 a, m., 935 a. 1050 T w1 p. iy 35 . 335p. m, 535 p. m., 835 p. m, tripe’ ‘leaving Omaba at 9 and 11 am,2amdbp. m; Blofts st 925, 1i:25's. m., and 2:26's0d 635 p. m. ‘Passanons rum. m,7 e m,E0 . m, 1 e 450 ., T35 m., W, v Biutte-? 61 a.m,, e m, 150 p. w 1140 a, m.5:35p. m., 700 p. m., Daily exoopt Bunday. OMAAA & REPUBLICAN VALLEYR. . DR. BOSANKO'S BILE REMEDY, INTERNAL, EXTE e -?0 NOT.?ELAY BBl the drain on the system prodmes Permanent disability, but bay 1, TRY IT** CURED PRICE, mfir{— ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR IT, He 'shomd send his to his e o S e S by o™ e L ia Gk v, H STy This oS LT g stitation, located at Denver, Colorade, your ‘the Educs d ‘Hatter Weat, 00 A5 1 and Commarca oot o he | o v Commpion ser of th W, Donras ®E. A. 8. PENDERY, CONSULTING PHYSICIAN BA> PERMANENTLY LOCATED HIS MED- 10AL OFFICE, . - OMAHA, en of i king 877 20 bt 204 st pract- MERCANTILE vgaINING Young Men and Ladiag, G. W. FOSTER, President, D. W. CADY, Secretary. The most extensive, thoroagh and complete ‘ostitation of the kind fo the world. Thonmads ot accountants and Busioess men, fn the prin- ‘cipal cities and towns o the United States, owe ‘thelr uccess to our course of trainine. The Right Kind of Education for Young Men and Ladies, Fine, new brick block. st junction of three ®troet car lines. Elegantly fitted and farnisbed ‘epartments for the application of and carrying out of our novel and systematic methods of BUSINESS TRAINING. A new and hitberto unknown remedy for all diseases of the Kidneys, Bisdder, and Urinary It wilt tavel; Diabetes, Gravel, Droj FRRnEm e e rine, Oatarch of the Bladder, high m FROM JAPAN. OBSERVATIONS OF A ST. LOUISAN IN THE MIEADO'S BEALMS. Bt. Louls Repubijcan. Secretary Morgan, of the Mer- chants’ exchange, has received the following letter from a gentleman well known among St. Louis busincss men, Mr. J. W. Bell, formerly sec- retary of the Excelsior Manufactur- ing company: Osaxa, Japan, Oct. 7, 1880, Frizxp Moo, s claimed that this was a busy ciry in the tenth century or 800 hundred years before 8t. Louis wasseitled. It has now morethan twice the population and business, with miles and miles of crowded busy streets, thirteen canals and rivers, and over 900 bridges. Yet 1 doubt if they are twenty persons in 8t. Louis who ever heard of its exis- tence. Not the least of its items of trade is cotton, and while riding throngh the cotton fields to-day, it occurred to my mind that you might never have seen Japan cotton in the bolls. o I selected a few of the best I could find as I passed along 0d enclose them to you in a basket which goes by next mail. Icame some eighty miles yesterdsy and to- day, through tea-gardens snd cotton- fields, and _noticed that_the cotton plants grows to a very uniform beight of about twenty-four inches and has 10 or 14 pods each helding two to four balls, mostly three. Those en- closed, I think, are full average size 1 also enclose all sample of ginned cotton and a few seeds, both taken from under s ginning machioe, which, likeall Japanese implaments, is very rade. A Japsn ginning ma- chine operates precisely like a clothes wringer, has two rollers, three-fourths diameter, eight inches long between the journals, esch roller has V-shaped grooves, 1-10th of an_inch or less cut wite. One roller is turned by a crank, the other is loose, in fact, the operation and construction are pre- | claely like a clothes wringer of very rude and inexpensive kind, and all weed. The gianing seems to be done at farm houses by women and girls. A day's work s thirty- three pounds or one fourth of a ploul. I also noticed many of the machines at work in the houses of people in small towns and hamlets along the road. Cotton is packed and transported in piculs, one hundrod and thirty-three pounds. They are about four feet long, twenty-eight to thirty inches in diameter, covered with & kind of matting made of straw, not unlike what is used on floors of American_houses, but of a chesper quality. I also enclose a sample of & berry from which wax is wade into candles used for light in all country houses. The samplea of rice you will recognize. There are two kinds. The Light colored is the greatest staple of Japan, like corn to America, only more 80, 88 it is Dot possible to get out of sight of & rice field in Japan, nor tofinda Jap who does not eat rice morning, noon and night. In fact, there are millions who have little else than rice and tes, and I'do not sup- pose that one Jap in a hundred ever eats meat. To give you an idea how scarce meat is, and how different the Japs live from us, will simply give my own experience during the six weeks I have been in this country. Ileft Yokohama on the 23i of August to visit towns snd cities | other than the open _ports, and whers | port is required. Through the indness of Min ster Bingbam I ob- tained a general permit which enabled me to go where I pleased. I have traveled abont six hundred miles in “iginrikshas” (a large sized bsby car- risge drawn by a cooli+); have eaten one or more meals in forty-four Jap- anese hotels; in only six could I get meats, bread, butter, milk and pep- per (where either one is, all are to bs bad). or a table to eat off with chaire to it on and spoons, knives and forks to use. At none of the other 38 ho- tels were there sny of these conven- iences; I sat on the fluor to eat, lmd on the floor to sleep; I had my own knife, fork and spoon; also soap, which 18 rarely to be had in aJapsnese hotel. Japanese_houses have no windows or glass. In placo of it they use soreens covered with paper, like sam ple herewith. Not ono house in a thousand is printed. The streets aro very narrow, none over 25 feet wide, and maoy 12 to 15, and some no over 10. There sre no sidewalks The people are exceedingly polite and kind and gentle, but very ignoran:; not over 7 per cent can read. 8o far as I-can judge they sre honest and trathful, but Japan is the most licen- tious_place I have ever seen or heard of. Virtue and modesty seem to be unknown things; men, women and <hildren bathe together, both private- 1y xd publicly. Another thing seems strange. There sre meither horses, pigs, sheep nor oattle on Jwpanese farms; nor is there & horse o ba xeen in towns or cities, outside of the cpen sesports. Men and women do all the hauling and transporting of passengers and the merchandise. A few stallions and bulls sre used as pack animals in the mountainous districts, I have seen only one mare and one milch cow, outside of those kept for foreigners use near the open ports, where horses are also used to a limited extent. The Japanese present govern: is_somewhat progressive, but it will - | take many years to change the habits and customs of the people, who seem to do everything just contrary to ‘wagon, resper or mower, or any other implement ltke au Amer- can farmer. His outfi consists of two hoes, differing in tha way the handle is fitted to the blade, a large Wooden spade and a little hook witha blade 10 inches long, with which he cats all his crops. The entire lot could be bought f.r 810 or lsss. For the state of the market you are re- ferred to the daily papers, which I send you and which may bs of inter- est to some of those who frequent your reading-room. _ Very traly, your friend, Jaups W. BELL. — AN IDAHO HOTEL. FOURTEEN 80ULS 'SEEK REST IN TWO BEDS. Salt Lake Tribune. Those who take chances in new countries under hardships that would be unendurable at times, only for the vein of ludicrousness that runs through the pioneer's experlence. The camping out and the packing up, the first lessons of harnessing a mule, or the vain endeavor to throw the diamond hitch, are matters that may add a wrinkle of care at the time, only to be laughed away in after years. At the time ot the Salmon River stampede in 1878-9, the hotel accommodations at Oballis were not what they should have been. The only hotel in the place wasa small seven-log, dirtroof house of three rooms—one used ss & dining- room, another for sleeping apart- ‘ment and the kitchen was 1 the third room, a kind of slab shed. A Tri- bune correspondent passing through the country at that time had cocasion to sleep in this hotel, and his_exper- ience the first night was not disagree- able although exce:dingly novel. The sleeping apartment was ten by fourteen feet, and had in it tworough pine bunks. ~Our correspondent had his wife along, sud by some judicions blarney was fortunate enough to se- cure one of the bunks. The stage from the railrosd arrived late in the evening, bringing Dr. N. 0. Boatman and wife, Alex. Toponce and wife, and Z. L. King, wifo and daugbter, of Zureks, Nev. To get nine full grown persons into two beds was not to be thought of; but all wanted a bed sfter a long stage ride, and our landlord was at his wita’ ends. Toponcs offered to play a game of seven-up with Boatman for the only bed vacant; butto this King objected. King agreed to give the two beds to the ladies, and the men could roost somewhere. This plan was objected to by Boatman, and, to tall the truth didn't meet with much favor anyway. It wes getting late and something had to be done. Theland- lord came in and said he didn’t know where in the mischief his wife and four children were tosleep. That mede fourteen souls for two beds. ‘Toponce strack off to the stage stable and got all the grain sacks, saddle blankets, and lap robes around the place, Stake-downs were made in that little room, and when every one got ready, standing olose to the couch they wero to rest their weary bones in, the light was put out and all dis- rub-d and ciawled into the blankets. What an interesting night that was. Four of the men were the boss snorers of Idaho or Indee-any-ho, and to crown sl the rain fell in torrents dur- ing the nght and came_through the dirt roof, bringing with it diluted mud aud miscry the whole night loug, Then the doctor forgot where he hud put his flask, and got out to look 1or it and passed his hand over one of the 1 dies’ faces. She screamed and woke every ono up, and it tuok the doctor till dayligat expluving to his better half how the “blamed thing” bap- pened, But when dayli<ht cawe, fill- g the little room with !ts bright, soul-inspiring light, asad pictare pre- a-nted itself. Mud took the piace of the blaom of yanch on the sheok of besuty and biushes tried to steal out through the wreck, ““How in thun- der are we going to get out of herel” some one asked. “Why, get-up snd walk out.” Yes, hang 1t all my clothes are at ’tother end of the room, Youdon's -aut me to make an exhibition of myself, do youl” The ladies commenced to titter and things began to look sericus. Toponce suggested that some one g : after a lot of feed bage and make the ladies put them on while the boyd made their toilets; but there was not one bold enough to second that proposition. It was getting late in the day, now and men, rude, heavily wiskeres, bronzed men, poked their heads ont and asked if we were playing freeze out. Well, we managed togst out; but it was a night's experience long to be remem- bered by four families at least. And when we assenbled at breakfast and the landlord yelled to the cook: “Two cups ot coffee for two,” we laughed till the tears chased the mud of our faces, and they whose mingled snore, made the night hideous, were loudes.: in their merriment. EIGHTY MILES AN HOUB- AN ENGINE To MAKE THIS REMARKABLE SPEED TO BE BUILT AT THE BALDWIX | arisi WORKS. Ocl. E. A. L. Roberts, of Titus- ville, made a_contract with the Bald- win Locomotive works on Taesday, to build a passer.ger engine which will ba able to run eighty mules an hour and maintain_this rate of mil iveis to weigh thirty-elght tons, and without stopping. ocomo- same pattern known s the brosd. tread, which will enable the engi o to run on roads of either 4 feet 8} inches or four fect 10 inchos gauge.- The most fmportant teature of the loco- motive will be the introduction of the Roberts patent oylinder and pis- ton, which has proved capsble of say- ing at least 20 per cent in steam pres. sure. The exhaust partssre in a con- tinuous circle around the eylinder, in addition to the ususl parta at the ends, and the stesm escapes without the wuste of force necessary to expel it, a1 in the cylinders of the old atyle. The tender will 80 con- structed aa to carry a foot of water under the coal, as well as the usual amount on the sides. There will be water chamber on the locomotive so aranged that compressed air from the air pump can be admitted in the top of the chamber upon the water, by which means a stream may be forced upon any hct bearing connect- el with the engine or tender. This is expected to overcome the trouble of hot boxes. The nozzles through which the stream is to pass and cre- ate a draft will be eight inches in diameter—about three times the usual size—and the boiler will be the largest thst can be put upon the standard gaage trucks. It wil the strongest locomotive ever built, snd perfect in every detail. Colonel Roberts, the inventor, ia a millionaire, and he said to a representative of The Record that ho built a similar locomotive a few years ago which drew the fast mail train over a portion of the Lake Shore railway, bat it was not a success, ow- ing to its poor constraction. The fm- provements it sugzested will be taken advantage of in building the new e gine. It is stated that Colanel Rob- erta, who has visited Europe several times, and studied the rail tems of thst country, is building new engine for use on the Europesn continent, A WO For the speedy cure of Consumj ton and all disoases that lead to ft, such ns stubborn coughs, neglected Colds, Bronchitis, Hay Fever, Asth- ma, pain In th side snd chest, dry hacking cough, tickling in the throst, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, and all cbronio or lingering discases of the throat and lungs, Dr. King's New Dis- covery has noequaland has established for itself s world-wide reputation. Many leading physicians recommend and use it in their practioe. The form- uls from which it is prepared is high- Iy rocommended by all medical jour- nals, The olergy and the pross have complimented it in the most glowing terms. Go to your druggist and get a trial bottlo froe of cost, ar a regular size for $1.00. For sale a(6) J. K. ISH. Omaba. Female woakness, caisnd by der nged Kidneys, : positi-oly cured by the use of French Kidney #add. Al 45 Yearsbeforethe Publie. THE CENUINE DR.C.McLANE'S LIVER PILLS are not recommended as a remedy “for all the ills that flesh is heir to,” but in affections of the Liver, and in all Bilious Complaints, Dyspepsia, and Sick Head- ache, or diseases of that character, they stand without a rival. ACUE AND FEVER. No better cathartic can be used pre paratory to, or after faking quinine. As a simple purgative they are unequai BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. The genuine are never sugar-coat Each box has a red-wax seal on the lid, PILL. Each wrapper bears the signa- tures of C. McLaxe and FLrxixe Bros Insist ¥i thy nnina o d.gx"chfifi’fi'i‘m‘?fl BHLER pre vared b~ FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, Pa., the market being full of imitations of d.l%nxma MeLane, spelled differently, but same pronunciation. HW T0 CURE CONSUMPTION, COUCHS, Colds, Asthma, Croup, All iseases of the Throat, Lungs,and Pulmonary Organs. USE ACCORDING TO DIRECTIONS ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM. UNLIKE PILLS AND THE USUAL PURGATIVES, IS PLEAS- ANT T0 TAKE, And will prove atoncathe most hatmiess” SYSTEM RENOVATOR - bern brocht to CONSTIPATION, BILIOUS- WEADACHE, PILEY, and, ai ditorders % from an obstructed state of the s 1t fo incomparabiy. the best_curative extant. Aro mitadoos; o, 0B geting the arice called for. TROPIC-FRUIT LAXATIVE is put up in ‘brensed tin boxes only. Price 60 cents. Ask samd‘rhl:fln for Descriptive Pamphiet, or ad- Feee the propristor, = J, E. HETHERINGTON, Now York o Ban Francisco. Befors Purchasing Axt Fonu of So-Called ELEGTRIC BELT, with the impression, MCLANE'S LIVER | 8z GO EAST ~VIA THE- Chicago & Northwestern RAXL VWA Y. 2,380 MILES OF ROAD! It is the SHORT, SURE and Sale Boute Setwesn COUNCIL BLUFF8 CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE ‘and all points EAST and NORTH. IT OFFERS THE TRAVELING PUBLIO GREATER FACILITIES AND MORE ADVANTAGES THAN ANY always Cures and never disap= OFHE! points. The world's great Pain- Reliover for Man and Beast. Cheap, quick and reliable, THE WEST. It s the ONLY ROAD between OOUNOIL BLUFFS and OHIOAGO Tpon which 1s ran PULLMAN HOTEL OCARS! In addition to thesesnd to all classes of MEALS at fis PITCHER"S CASTORIA is not Narce:ic. Children grow fat upon, Mothers like, and Physicians recommend travelers, It gives FIRST- TING STATIONS st 50 conts WRAIE .. CASTORIA. ltregulatesthe | ifyou wih the Bat Traveling Accommods- Bowels, cures Wind Colic, |icesyon will bay sour ticket by this Boute allays Feverishness, and de. | %Ak WILLTAKENoxE Eoytorue e uinasaour ot re Tage Fres of Chargs WEI DE MEYER’S CA- TARRH Caure, a Constitational Autidote for this terrible mala= OMAFA TIOKET OFFICES 124 Farnbam 8., Gor. 14th, and at Uniow. Pacit t. DENVER OFFICE—In Colorrdo Central and Union Pacific Ticket Office. SAN FRANCISCO OFFICE—4 New Montgom. eryStrest. dy, by Absorption. The most | For information, fon ete,, not ob- Important sino = | talmable at Home Ticket Ofice, adiress an ain‘-“:im. Otlee wim e S f o Gompazy, o = WARVIN RUCHITT, . STENNITY, Gen'l 3 Gen’l Pass. Agent, SafSie0, nl" JANES T. Gen'l Ax’t Gmaba & Councll Blufts. THROUCH TO CHICACO Without Change of Carsl THR CHICAGO BURLINGTON & QIIIHGY RAILROAD. THOSE TERRIBLE HEADACHES GENER- ATED by obstructed secretions, and to which Iadies aro especially sublect, can slways be re- llaved, and their recurrence prevented, by the With Smooth azd Perfoct Track, Elegant Pas- songer Coaches, and PULLMAN SLEEPING & DINING CARS uSe0f TARRANY'S EPPRRVESORNT SEurER APRRIINT | It fs acknowledged by Gee Fress, 2ad sl whe ‘tzavel uver it, 10 bo the Best Appotated and PROCURABLE AT ALL DRUG STORES, ‘Best Maniged Rosd In the Country. FEVER AND AGUE., flSTET'i'Ens PASSENGERS GOING HAST Should oear in mind that this 1 the BEST ROUTE TO CHICAGS, And Polnts Eust, North and Northwest. ‘Passengors by this Route have choice of FOUR DIFFERENT ROUTES, And the Advantage of Six Dally Linea of Palsce Blesping Cars trom Chicago to New York Gity Without Change All Exprees Trains on this lineare equipped with the Westinghouse Patant Alr Brakzs and ‘Miller's Patent Safoty Platform and Gouplers, the most. Perfect £ro- tection Againss Accl- PULLMAN PALACE SLEEPING AND D'NING CARS Areranonts Bunington Route. Information eonceraine Routes, Retes, Tme Counections, sic, will by cheorfally given by sppyingat ine offios of the Furi. gton Koute, 513 Fourteentn Strest, Omahs, Nob C.E PERK N3, D 'W. HITCHCOCK. ‘Gon'] Vanaer. Gen. West'n Pase. Ag't. 3.0, PHILLI“FL, 8. Jos., Mo. General Ageat CELERRATED 7 P. DUEL, fops-d1 Ticket Agwnt Omaba. SHORT LINE 1880. K.C., ST. JOE&G. B.R.R,, 1s the only Direct Tine to ST. LOUIS AND THE EAST Meeta the raquirements of the rations! medi Phllo-ophy which at present peval h and liver, and effects » most salutary change n the entiro system whea in 3 morbid condition. For sale by a1l Demagieta and Derlors ganarally. SIOUX CITY & PACIFIC $t. Paul & Stoux City RAILROADS. o change of cars between Omal and but one botwoen Omaba and New York. SIX DAILY PASSENGER TRAINS The 01d_Reliable Sious Gily Route] saoms s 100 MILES SHORTEST ROUTE!|Eastern & Western Cities From COUNCIL BLUFFSt0 | with tess charges andin savance of othee lines. ST. PAUL, MINNHAPOLIS | Tsuitline it cauipoed vith Pultman's DULUTE, or BISMARCK, e Miler And all polntsin Northern Jows, Minnesots and Poved Wonghoaan Antasbs A Bribes sod | MFSEE THAT YOUR. TICKET REA iller Platform Coupler and Buffer. Aad for v SPEED, SAFETY AND COMFORT @ Joesndst Locia. . bwoen | J_ ¥, JARD, A C. DAWES, PR T R TR | O, g R Py Tonching Sioux City ot 1020 . i B Pl | 114 FiRCecin: o St ot atli6s. m, 2= TEN HOURS 1x Apvaxcz or AxY OtaEE Rovrs. R loave St. Pral m, ar vty o Oty 3¢ 5 3 B . ion e Transter Dopot, Council Biufts, st 9:50 ‘m. _Be sure that your tickets resd via 8. 0, §r.RR" F. P. E. BOBIN: las, Unlon Block, Omaba, 308, TEHON, 'A. B. BARNARD, ‘Pass. Agont, Omaha. Gen'rl Agent, Omaha. WROUCHT IRON FENCES. at 8:30 5 m, PASSENCER ACCOMMODATION LINE OMAHA AND FORT OMAHA Connects With Street Cars Gorner _of SAUNDERS sad HAMILTON L) 630, *8:17and 11:193 m 5: LEAVE FO) ‘Wire Fencing and Raliing » Speciality. =’ run,lgsvin: Osba, and the | Their beautr, pormanance and.seonomy o Tevink Fors anly workh — : ol ‘capacity with T mteris o Iete cheap mater £00pm. lonaki Foenler passongers From OMAHA and the WEST. | B s and 88, Loois | 35 KIDNEGEN is highly recommended and unsw or Foul Kidneys, Dropsy, Bright's Disease, Nervous Debility, or any Obstructions arising Bladder Nigsases. Also for_Yellow Fever, Poisoning, in infected malarial sections. d for Weak oss of Emergy, from Kidney «r Blood and Kidney the distil Gentlem NOTICE—Fach bo x ment Stamp. which permiia KID Otbar Persons everywhers, Put up in Quart size Bottles for General and Family Use. 11 not found at youz Druggists or Grocers, we will send a bottie o 2 e st e send 2 bottio prepaid o the nearsst exprees LAWRENCE & MARTIN, Proprietors, Chicago, Ills. Sold by DRUGGISTS, GROCERS and DEALERS everywhers Wholosale agents in Omahs, STEELE, JOHNSON & CO., il suppiy the .rade st manufactur TS ST AL Y 25, 18 SOUNTRY, Wns o ‘?”?’7- %) 40 ‘9’m- —_— CHICAGO, ROC x oilne, Roc sl 5 B D of fowa), Stuart, Atis. voca: with branohes from Bur-aa unction 10 Paoria: WIlton Junction to Musca- tme, Washioyion, rairded, Kidos. Belkoay le. Priaceion. Trenton, Gallatin. - g, Leaveaworth, Aichison nd Kaneas City: Washinaton t.. Sizoarney, Orkaloosa, and Knox- sillo; Keokux to ks and Srewonri i ora s | o, an tranafors are | Eanan ia'the “Milwauzoe 1s_magnincentry Sot. and it o v pralries St itacis ? lcont DIBtDg Cars {hat sccompany il as riine. " ¥ou Got an sncire sezved in Aay frsi-ciass hoten oy o fact that a majority of the ‘apartm iferent Yoy A¥KANSAS Crry, with ol ines dace | and Southwest. - AN, . JOF Gow'l 3. S0 CHAS. SHIVERICK, FURNITURE, BEDDING, FEATHERS WINDOW SHADES. And Everything Uperta.ining to the Furniture and pholstery Trade. A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF NEW COODS AT THE LOWEST PRICES. OCEHAS SEIVERIOX 1208 and 1210 Farnham Street. ESTRY.- "\G AL g T b neral Surance Agen . 8. HITCHOOCK, M. D, S, | " el g g pEee _wwe: From New York has located in Omaba, and | PHCENIX ASSUnmene o~ quarantees to do first-claw work. |~ don, Cash Amet...... Dental Rooms, ozer A. Cruickshank & Co.'s, Cor. | SESTCHESTER. ¥, 15th and Douglas. s0p0-2m | THE MERCHAN 13, of Newnrk. N_ hiladelpiia,Capital Young men who contempiate » busioem I, what we do._All mechanios sit down | will ‘comply with standard’ gasge, 7 m. run will bomado rom the pos Eiegant (n dosten, Indestructible |=— | 1 ond Douche,___wpdEm | THE HERE and parcata having sons 1o edacate, re partica- towork. A carpenter pulls both saw | The driving wheela will be six feet in | Band, or Appliance represented to cure Nerrouds e e e e e P e e X T | NOKTHWESTEKN ™ NATIONALCap- Jaly oquosted %0 send for our new Clrcala, | UPOB recelp ofthe price, §2.00 and plaine, holding the board or block | diameter. ~The forward tracks and | Chroic and Spoca: Disases, scnd tothe FUL | em, or from driver of backa: Tion- Vases, Lawn, Settos, canopled. sod of R oy ot give tull latormation w o terms, | DAY WEY PAD CO-, PROP'RS, | ith his toes. The cooper holds his | those on the tender will bo made of | SECKACHERUALYANICCO, isMontgomery | PARE. 25 CENTS. INOLUDING STRE _OAR | rusic patiemi; Chairs it svory dosription of waxcracron 1v BT AER i S Tdflm:’. O- | tub or bucket betwoen his foct while | paper, which is ssid will endure | Pampiickand “Tho Eivcirc hoviow 224 y0u R e | D E T WARNOMY Ve s | O J. WILDE, | Miaicar coeini s o @. W. FOSTER, Presi 298 51 your sddrems for our book, | he fits and drives the hoops. A |morestrain and wear than fron or | Filsve s e T o R e SR Nt e O 1817 CASS ¢T., OMAHA, NEB. S ast Cor. of Fifieenth & - nn-'xm. sident, | o T, e wenin, | furmer baa nelthor plow, cunivator, | steet,” Tho. wheels willall bo of the Sy Bt o | B0 SRS B | T Rl o 25 | sk s00d ssortment atwaya cn band W3 g CROWDED CROWDED. | The Boston Cash Dry Goods Store, » New Goods and New Customers arriving daily. Read our Price List, and be convinced that we are the PEOPLES’ STORE. F'OR ONE IDOILIL.ATR YOU CAN EBUX 20 gards of Calico. 2| Spools Clark’s Cotton. 15 yards Cotton Flannel. |2 pairs Ladies’s Cotton Hose. | Good Red Comfort. 12 yards Lonsdale Muslin, CIVE US A CALL EITHER OF THE FOLLOWING AR®ICLES 25 Cakes of Good Soap. 15 yards Heavg 20 Spools (10 Sheeting. yards) Silk. yards Shaker Flannel- | Ib. Stocking Yarn. 0 pairs Gent's 1-2 Hose. BRING PRIGE LIST ALONG. 20 yards Colored Embroidery. 10 ya:ds Fruit I of the Lgom. ine Wool Scarf. | dozen Linen Handkerchiefs. 4 pairs Fleecy Lined Gloves. 20 yards Valenciene's Lace. I0TH AND JONES A - defective, and T e e B ot s o et | aumn, STREETS. 31 MICHIGAN AVENGS ¥&"Ask Your Dealer For It oct20-tg xovembey —Yeaterday attornoon: shodi i e 2 0'clock, the massive’ woode seat.

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