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1831, REMNANTS OF THE OLD YEAR. After a mo:t (xtragrdinary trade in Dress Goods, caused by the wonderfully low prices at which we were ablo to offer them late in the season, We have now an unusually large stock of REMNANTS. These Goods are now laid out and are marked down less than cost, makipg the most SPLENDID BARGAIN ever offered in Omaha, and the Goods are in such quantity that there is really a splendid selection. Remember the first choice is worth something, BLANKHETS. Our new Cedar Blanket Binns are now full of every discription of Blankets, many of them hought recently at very low figures, and the other stock marked down to match them. Making the cheapest and best assort- ed lot ever offered here. Also a light comforts Alsc just arrived as good value if not better than the best. TAEBLE LINENS. Now that the rush of the Holiday trade is over, we desire to call specis] attention to the Greatest Bargai we have ever offered, being a most beautiful line of SATIN YINISHED DOUBLE DAMASK, TABLE CLOTHS AND NAPKINS TO MATCH, These Goods are the samples of a large Belfast Linen Manufactory, which we purchased on such terms that we can offer them at 33 per cent less than regular goods, There is nothing whatever the matter with these goods except that some are slightly soiled at the folds, which of course, comes off with the first washing, Thisisa s[plendid chanceto obtain most beautiful and e ==l 1 Copy 1 , I adva, . Smone o e (postpald) o = 00 400 %0 ~TIMZ TABLES AILS, o Py Fr wEoanonn Eow -E:g m. tates lows lesvo but onoen. 308, m. open from 15 to 1 p. m. Bundays. THOMAS F. HALL. Postmaster. Arrival And Departure of Trains UNION pAcIFIC. rich Table Cloths at the price of ordinary goods. ATTORRETS-A1-LA1 = R PR g swanies y—— | 'HE DAILY BEE. TrOREY 55 BT ot Cricicn ke e TTORNEY AT LAW—Office {» Sanscom's T, i Ganre B e 3 uw%- Bata L. PEABODY, AwyER ot ta FOTARY romuo. sorsorions wabe T O'BRIEK & BARTLETT, D B BEANTON, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Daily Rxproes. W. J. Connell, Attorney-at-Law, c > - HACvaickshank A Cruickshank & Oo. & Co. e e ruer 16t wad | guaHN PUBLISHING GO., PROPRIETORS. ook 15 1., oM, AT S SR e A C. TROUP, L T DEXTER L, K. W- CHADWICK, A TIORT AT LAY—0 1o Taraham Fos Ofice. OMATA, NESRABER " ¥ 2% Patents Prooures, B Attorrsys-at-Law, OFFICE Vnion Block,Fitteenth ané Farahamy ARBACH BLOCK, COR. DOUC. & I6TH ST8. owana, xEw Ocr: Pt ooms, p e, iy Banasoms aov Drcx o N comer Fitotn - Ueis B Rawiok REDICK & KEDICK, Attorneys-at-Law Attention will be given to all vulte commarations o svehy “Nescivons, Wil s e iied St " e, Farmiam B 1 R EDWARD ¥, SINERAL, TIORNEY A7 LaW—Rowo ¢ Oreghtcn Blork, 1ot ot Honcias e, o0dh 3 A o WL Wionans. Howr ’ RICHARDS & HUNT Attorneys-at-Law, Ormon—216 South Fouricenth Street OMAHA & NORTHERN NEBRASKA TAIL- Rso, WAY COMPANY. LAW. 348 Parr> - Sireet | Ex ok 1500 m. | Mixed. . Daily Except Sundays. B.& M. R R in NEBRASKA. ARRITR, SANTA CLAUS FOUND. Greatest Liscovery of the Age. /ongertui discororiesin the world have been made Among other things where Santa Olaus stayed Children oft ask if ‘he makee BRIDGE DIVISION U. P. R. R. Leave Omaha, dally:—8 a. m., Oa.m, 10 a m, Nam.ipm,2p. m,3pm,6p m,6p =, Treaty b % Tast vear an excunion miled cear 40 1ho Pole 4 Sudienty Aroppodinto whatsemedkesbele Fhers wondor of vonders i o, it et o e than e oo, i he e 1 & lous were oakd, Rl ot S i e e row ke were ey it 40 wander 1n doub ; 225 p. w., p.m., Foar iripe on Sabday, leavii Oriaha st and 11 a.m,2a0d6p. m; Council Bluffs ot 9:35, TESE' ., 2536 and 635 . m. pree——y Lo Qmaha:_s . 7 1 m 00 B3 Gouoli Biute 6318 e m,, 0. m., 130 e mbBp. m, 190 p. m, T80 p. W Dally except Sunday. Farriers were work: To Bunce's they sald they were sending them e Kingle, the Glove Aaker, oid them at cace, All our ‘wo are sending to Bance, Banta showed them suspenders To Nervous Sufferers—The Great Earopean Remedy—-Dr. J. B Simlfson‘n Specific edicine, 'Ilhlnhmm-:dm:l‘l from Belt Abuge, s Mental Amxiety, Loss of Memory, Paina in the Rack or Side. and diseases HAMBURC AMERIC N Weekly Line oi Steamships Leaviag New York Evers Toursday at 2p.m. For Bngland,"France and Germany, For Passage ’ppl}' to C. B. RICHARD & C0,, Passenge: Agents, Broadway, NewYork fal ccem. Pamphicia Toull Write for them and get fall $1.00 per package, or six pack- . “Addroe if sedet o " ama 05 i Sty B o St maba by C. . Goodman, all drosgisie everywhere. sepis-dawly = | attempted to THE SLAVE DAYS. TRIAL OF OWEN LOVEJOY YOR BARBOR- ING RUNAWAY SLAVES. Hon. Tawac Arnold's Address before the Iiiimois Stito Bar Association. I bave spoken of Mr. Butterfield; the firm name of But:erfield & Col lins, partners, was in_those sarly da alwags assnciated. Mr. Collins was & 00d lawyer, a man of perseverance, luck, and resolution, and ax combat- ive as an English bulldog. He was au early, snd most violent and oxireme abolitionist; a contemporary with Dr. Charles V. 'Dyer, the Lovejoys, Ich- abod Conkling, Exstman, Freer, Farns- wortk, and other pioneer abolition- ists of northern Illinois. I wish T could reproduce a full report of the ¢ase of The People va. Owen Lovejoy. At the May term, 1842, of the Bu- reau county circult court, Richard M. Young presiding, Normsn H. Purple, prosecuting attorney, pro tem., the grand jury retarned a “crue bill” against Owen Lovejsy (then lately a preacher of the gospel), tor that ‘‘a certsls, negro girl, named Agnes,. then ad there being a fugltive slave, he, the waid Lovejoy, knowing her to be | ¥° such, did harbor, feed, secrete and clothe,” contrary to the statute, stc.; 20d the grand jurors did farther pre sent ‘“that the asfd Lovejoy, a certain fugitive slave called Nance, did har- bor, feed and aid,” contrary to the satuto, otc. At the October torm, 1842, the Hon. John Dean Caton, a justico of the supreme cotrt, presiding, the caze came \wp for trial on a plea of mot gailty. ~ Judge Parple and B. F. TFridley, state's attorney, for the people, and James H, Collins and Lovejoy In porson, for the de- fense. The rrial lasted nearly & week, and Lovejoy and Collins fought the case with & Vigor and boldness almost withouta parallal. The provscition was urged by the eneiies of Lovejoy with an siergy and_vindictiveness with which Parplo and Fridley could bave little eympathy. When the 180 was cal led for trial a strong pro- elavery man, one of those by whom the indictmont had bBesi procuced, ssid to ths slates’ a‘torney: “Fridley, wo want sou to be sure and coavicy tais preacher, and send hiw to prison,” {“Prian! Lovejoy to prison’” re. vlied Fridley, “yovr prosecution will be a damned right wote likely to send him to congtesr Fridioy was ridht—Liiejoy was yery roon after eigcted to the state legislatico, And then to congress, whera, aa you ail kuow, he was soon heard from by the whole rountry. The prosecution was &biy conducted, and Mesera. Collins and Lovejoy not only availed themselvos of every tech- nical groud of defense, but de- nouoced, vehewantly, the laws under which the indictment was drawn, s anconstitational ana void, justifyio: every act charged as erimidal. A fall report of the tzlal would have consid- erabls historic interest. The counsel engaged were equal to the important legal and constitutional questions die- cussed. Judge Purple, for logical ability and wide cultaro; fob clear, concise stylo, tondensing the strong points of his cis into the fewest Words, had r.rely an eaval. Fridley, for quaint humor, for drollery and apt illustration, expressed in familiar, plain, colloquial, “sometimes vulgar language, but with a clear, strong common sense, was a vary effactive prosecutor. ~ Collint was indefatiga- ble, dogmatic, never giving up, and if the court declded ono point againt him, he was ready with another, and if that was overraled, still others. Lovejoy always suggested to me A ROUNDHEAD OF THE DAYS OF CROM~ WELL, He was thoroughly In earnost, almost, if not quite, fanatic in his politics. Hir courage was unflinching, and he would have died for his] principles. He had 4 blunt, masculize elcquenco carely cqualsd, and on the slavery auestion, us a stump-speaker, it would be diffieult to name his superior Col- lins and Lovejoy, after a week’s con- flict, won their cause. Lovejoy him- telf mede a masterly argument, and Mr. Coltins’ closing speech extended through two daj They extorted a verdiot from a hostile jury. It Is very doubtful, however, if they could have succeeded with all their efforts, but for the accidental disclosure by the alleged owner, on his cross-exami- nation, of a fact unknown to the do- fense. He said he was taking the ve girl Nance from Kentucky to Missouri through Illinois. He was ignorant that by voluntarily bringing his eupposed chattel from a slave to » frea state, she became free. Measrs. Collins and Lovejoy saw the impor- tance of this fwot—indeed, the turn- ing-point in the case. Lovejoy quoted with great eflect the lines of Cowper, now so familiar: “Slaws can breathe in England, it thee Receive our air, that moment thev are_fren— They fouch our country sad their shackles falr” “And,” eaid be, “if this i the glory of Eogland, it is not equally tue of Ilinofs, hor soil consecrated to freedom by the ordinance of 1787,and her own constitution?” in his summing up, and eloquent opinion eld in the Somersctt case, an opimion which Cowper so beautifully paraphrased in_his poem. Judge Caion’s ckarge, which will b found in The Western Citizen of Oct, 6, 1843, was very fair. He laid down_the law distinctly, that ‘“if a man voluntarily brings his elave into s free state, the slave becomes free.” In February, 1859, at tho capitol in Washington, speaking of the acts s | which led to this trial, there is one of the boldest and most effective bursts of eloquence from Lovejoy to be found in_all the literature of anti- slavery discuesion. He had heen taunted and reproached on the floor of congress, and stigmatized as one who, in aiding slaves to escape, had violated the laws and constitation of the United States He had been de- nounced ae & ened by the slaveholders, and they imidate and silence him. ~They little knew the man. and his reply silenced them, and extorted the admucation of both friend and foe. * | He closed one of the most radical and impassioned snti-slavery spoeches ever made in congress, by unflinching- ly declaring:* *I do asist fugitive slaves. Proclaim iz, then, upon the house-tops; write it on every leaf that trembles in the forest; make it blaze from the ean st high noon, and shine forth in the milder radiance of every star that bedecks the firmament of Goi; let Jt echo through all the arches of heaven, and reverberate and bellow along all the deep gorges of hell, where slave-catchers will be very likely to heartt. Owen Lovejoy lives at Princeton, 1iL, threo-quarters of a mile east of the village; snd he sids every fugitive that comes to his door and asks it. Thou invisible demon of slavery, dost thou think to cross my humble threshold, and forbid me to give bread to the hungry and shelter to the houseless? I bid you defisnce in the name of God!"” 1 heard Lovejoy declare, that after the death of his brother, he '.mh:x; the graveyard st Alton, and _kneel upon the sod which cevered the re- mains of that brother, he there, before God, sworeeternal war and vengeance upon slavery. He kept his oath. He . | was a man of powerful physique, in teuse feeling, and great magnetism as a speaker, and he now went forth like Poter the Hermit, with A HEART OF FIRE, and a tongue of lightning, preaching his crusade inst el In the log achocl houses, in the meeting house, and places of worship, and in the open air, he preached and lec- tored against slavery with a vehem- ence and passionate energy which oar- ried the people with him. The mat- | tyrdom of his brother was a sufisient excuse for his violence, and the name of Lovejoy, the martyr, like the name of Rob Roy or Douglas in Sootch his. tory, became a name to ‘‘conjure” with: and he ssed, the frait of which was apparent in the great anti-elavery triumph of 1860, “Some Men of bih. dramatio power may be obtained from a sermon, reached at Frinceton in Janusey, {512, on tho death of his brothey, After describing his murder by a crnel mob, because he would not aiitrender the freedom of the press, he declared, solemnly that, for himself, “come life or death, I will devote the residue of my life to the anti-slavery " ‘The alave-holders and theit sympathizers,” maid he, *have mar- dered my brother, andif snother vic- 4 is neaded, T am ready.” His aged and *idowed mother was prestot in the church. Pausing and |turning to her, he maid: “Mother, e given one son; your elder, to liberty, ars yoi wiling to give an: otheri” And the heroic mother re- plied: “Yes, my son—yon cannot die in a better cause!” Ho lived to see slavery die, amid the flames of wat which itself had kindled, When 1 heard him speak of his brother's martyedom, I recalled the words applied by an English poet to the reformer Wickliffe, illustrating how much Wickliffe's persecution had aidod to spread his principles. Wic- Kliffe's body, you will refember, was burned, and his ashes thrown into the Avon, aud the poet-prophet sags of the incident: he Avon o tiia Severn runs, Thie Severn to the sea, And Wickliffe's dust shall spread abroad, Wide as the waters bo.” the banks of tho Mississipt, his lonely grava ¢n t55 biufis of Alton, were fong the inflacnces, and not the least, which have caused that mighty river zadall its vast tributaries on the east aud on the west, to flow “anvexed to tha soa.” No longer “‘vexed” with slavery, the 1 flows on exultingly from tho ice to.the Jand of ‘ho sun, and sil the way tirough soil which the blood of Lovejoy helped to maka free. A mona- ment to the Lovejoys on the summit of Pilot Knob, or_some other rocky crag on the banks of that river, should toll and commemorate theit story. KAMOUS MEN OF MUSCLE. HOW ATHLELES WERE HONORED IN THE ERAVE DAYS OF OLD. Brentano's Monthly.. Among the Greeks the successful athlete was crowned with laurels, and loaded dowa with wealth and honors. When Egenetas, in the nicety-second Olympinc, entered Agligentam, his native home, he was attefided by an escort of threo bundred chariots, esch drawn by two white horsés, and fol lowed by the populace cheering and waving banners, Milo six times won the palm at both the Olympic and Pythian games. He is 8aid to have run a mile with a four- year old (x uvon his shoulders, and afterwards killed the animal with ono blow of tho Est; and ato the entire carcaes in one day. So groat was the musco’ar power that he would hind acord around his neck and break it by the ewelting pressure of the veics. An ordinary meal for Milo was twonty pounds of meat, as much broad, and fiftoen pints of wine. Polydamus of Thessalia was of col- t and prodigious strength, and, it is said, alone and without weapons, killed an_enormous enraged . Ono day, it is recorded, he eeized a bull by its hind feet, and the hoot in the grasp of the athlete, The Roman Emperor Maximinus was upward of eight feet in height, and, like Milo of Crotona, could squeeze to powder the hardest stone with his fingers, and break the leg of a horse by s kick. His wife's bracelet served him as a ring and his_every day repast was sixty pounds of meat and ar. amphora of wine. While a prisoner in Germany, Rich- ard 1. accepted an invitation to a box ing match with tho son of his jail Ho_received the first blow, w made him stagger, but recovering, with a blow of his fist ho killed his autagonist on the spot, Topham, an Englishman, born in 1710, was' possestca of antonishing strength. His armpita, hollow in the cato of ordinary men, were with him fall of muscles and tendons. o would take a bar of iron, with its two ends held in its hands, place the mid- dle of the bsr behind his neck, and bend the extremities by main’ force uotil they met together, and bend back the iron_straight again. One night, seeing the watchman asleep in his box, he carrisd_the man aud his shell to a great distance, and put them on the wall of a churchyard. Owing to_domeatio troubler, he com- mitted suicide in the prime of life, The famous Scanderberg, king of Albania, who was born in 1414, was a man of great stature, and his feats of sword exerciso have never been equaled. On one ocoasion, with his scimster, ho strack his antaroniat such a blow that its force cloaved him to tho waist. He Is said to have cloven two men who were clad in armor from head to foot. On ono oc- casion the brother and nephew of o certain Ballaban, who had been con- victed of crueltics to the Albanians, were brought to him bound together. Transported with rage, ho cut them in two with one stroke of his wespon. Maurice, count of Saxony, the hero of Fontenoy, inherited the physicsl vigor of his father, and was espoially noted for the surprising muscular pov- er or *‘grip” of hia hands. On one oc- casion, needing a corkecrew, ho twist- ed s large iron nail around in the re- quired shaps with his fingers, and | opened halt adozen bottles of with it. Another time, stopping at a black- amith shop to have his horse shod, he picked upa number of horse shoes, and with hin_hands snapped them in tw0, as readily as if made of glass, much to the disgust of the smith. Tt history is to be believed, Pha- tillae, of Crotona, could juwp 'a dis- tance of b6 feet. The exercise was practiced at the Olymplc gamos, and formed part of the courso of the Pen- thalon. Swtt, an Eoglish authority on gamer and amusementa, speaks of a orkshire jampor named Ireland, whose powers were marvellous, He was six feet high, and at the sge of 18 leaped, without the aid of a spring- board, over nine horses ranged sids by side. He cleared a cord extended fourteen fect from the ground with one bound, crushed with his foot a bladder suspended at a helght of teen foet, and on another occasion lightly cleated a large wagon sovered with an awniog. Col. Ironside, who lived In India early in this centary, relates that he met in his travels an old white-haired man who, with one lesr, sprang over the back of an enormous elephant flanked by six camels of the largest eed. A curious French work, published In Paris in 1745, entitled, “The Tracts Toward the History of Won- ders Performed st Fairs,” mentioned an Englishman who, at the fair of St German, 1724, leaped over forty people without fouching one of them. Prot. Gullmette, the inventor of the French Kidney Pad bearing his most noted medical men of this day in Tts cures of kidney dlseases are moss mar vetoy nd aresaid to be permagent. scattered broadcast | F, The death of Elijah P. Lovejoy, on | ™ animal escaped only by leaving the | & a3 one of the { celebrated Germn *pring. 1t is always fresh France. | and al NEBRASKA LEGISLATUKE. | £5 Yearsbeforethe Public. o= THE CENUINE DR.C.McLANE'S T“‘)r: “District—Willism Daily. VER 34 District—C. H. Van Wyck, H. [ * ; e . Cady. 3 i 4th District—0. K. Teft. Sth District—G. W. Doaxg, Jxo, 0. HowE, 6th District—J. 0. Meyors. 7th District—S. B. Taglor. ict—J. F Butti istrict—John Zuhrung, 10th District—Isaac Powers, 11th District—B. K. Smith. 12th District—J. W. Perkins. 13th Distriot—W. R. Morse. 14th Distrist—M. K. Turner. 15th District—A. J. Evans. 16th District—E. C. White. 17th Dist . Gere, C. W. Price, 18th District—J. R. Eryio, i 19th District—E. B. Harrington. | t 20th Pistriet—H. M. Weeks, 2st District—Tos. Grama. 22d District—Martin Barnes, 23d District—J. B. Dinsmore. 24th Distriot—C. . Coon. 2fth District—Sidney Baker. 2th District—Henry Snyder. HOUSE OF REPRELENTATIVES, First District—Richardson, P, §. Heacock, J. R. Dowty, John' Kloep- fel, Chas. Cole, rep. Second—Pawnee, J. L. Linr, A, H, Jackaon, rep. hird—tiage, Elijah Filley, H, H, Stiver, re, 3 . Fourth—Johiisén, 4. §. Tew, A, 4; Gérman, rep. Fifth—Nemaha, Church Howe, T. L. Schick, M. B. Rsymen, rop. Sixth—Oroe, Nelse Overton, F. T. Rausom, J. 0. Moore, J. M. Par- s tep: Seventi—Lancaster, N. C. Abbott, C. 0. Whedon, N. T. McClan, R. B, Graham, rep. Eighth—Saunders, . H. Shedd, Benjsmin Johnson, J. E. Scott, rep. Ninth—Cass, R. B. Windham, Jas. Hall, H. D, Root, rep. Tenth—Sarpy, Amos_Cates, dem. Elevénth —Dotglas, W. . Broatch, H. Boliu, J. H. Kyner, P. M. Mul- Bartlett, 8. K. Jackson, - Paxton, J, A. McShane, The Senate. \ The official list of tors in the atare of Nebraska is as follows: Distrist—R. A. Wherry, W.W. d with ACUE A No better cath paratory {c a simple pu BEWARE 0 The genu . Each b withthe FILL. tures of FLEMING BROS he marl h ittshurgh, P: W TO ¢ GONSUM‘PTIUN, COUGHS, Colds, Asthma, Croup, All diseases of k . N'S LUNG BALSAM. Isthe Best and Most Agreeable Preparation in the World For Constipation, Rilio Tead "Forpia Indisposition, and Disorders aris! Twelfth—Dodge, Wi Fried, J. R. Oantlin, rep. Thirtoenth--Warhing!on, H. Sprick, J. B. Baily, top. Tourteonth— Burt, J. C. Lavghin, Fep. Fifteenth—Cuming, A. Peterson, n%,:’l'. M Tréuse, dem. ixteenth—Dakota, Jos Holman, em. Seventeenth—A. S. Palmer, rep. Eighteenth—Jefferson, C. P. Slo- cumb, rep. Nincteenth—Thayer, JE. M. Cor- rell, rep. Twenttath--Nuckolls, .J. M. Uook, Price 25 cts. SorDRY ALLF F. Goo“'mn, Whole Beforo Purchasing Ax Fonx of <o-Catlad rep. Twenty-firat—Webster, HLS. Kaley, ro) p. Twenty-second — Adams, C. R, Jones, rop. Twenty-third—Cl rep.d Twenty fourth — Fillmore, N. Babeock, rep. Twenty-fith—Saline, W. H. Kemp- ton, H. McDougal, rep.; S. J. Her. man, dem. Twenty-sixth—Seward, H. P. King, vep,; Honsy Bic, fusn, Twenty -seventn — York, Wilaon, 8, V. Moors, rep. G Twenty-eighth — Hamilton, John Helmes, rep. Fred. A, Twenty-ninth — Hall; MERGANT"‘? TRAININC Sears, rep. & Thirtioth—Buffalo, . C. Ayer, rep. A Thirty-frst—Lincclo, 4. 0, Wats, | Young Men and Ladies. , J. H. Case, THE COLORADO BUSINESS GGLLEGE 1t ated at Denver, Colorado, alcanter of the et S Albert om. : Thirty-second—Harlan, Geo. C. Reed, rop. Thirty-third—Howard and Greeley, J.4F. Frederick, rep. Thirty fourth Merrick, C. Hostot- G. W. FOSTER, Pz D. W. CADY, & ter, rep. asttation of Thirty-§fth—Polk,John H. Mickcy, rep. l’;‘hiny-.!xth-—limlcr, T. Jensen, Thirty-seventh — Colfax, A. W. Walling, rep. Thirty-cighth— Platte, hmat, dem. Thirty - ninth — Madison, C, C, Wyatt, rep. Fortieth—Cedar, Wm. Potter, rep. Eorty-first—Burt and Dodge, J. A. Sill, vep. Forty-second—Stanton, Wayne and Plerce, C. L. Lamb, rep. Forty-third—Knox and Holt, and unorganizad territory, W. H. McClare, rep. Forly fourth—Antelope, W. W, Patnoy, rep. Forty-tifth—Boone, Valley, Sher- man, and unorganized territory, G. W. Brown, rep. Forcy-sixth—Dawson and Frontier, A. S. Baldwin, rep. Forty-seventh—Franklin and Kear- ney, H. C. Wells, rep. Forty-cight—Furnas, Phelps, and Gosper, R. W. Montgomery, rep. Forty-ninth — Cheyenne, Keith, Dundy, Chase, Hitcheock, Red Wils low, and unorganized_territory, con- teat between R. B. Daily, rep.; and D. Carrigan, dem. Fiftieth—Cass aud Saunders, J. B, McKinnon, rep. Fifty-first—Platte, Colfax and But. ler, J. C. Roberts, rep. Fity second — Filmore and Clay, W. D. Gray, rep. The Right Kind of Edueation for Youog Men and Ladies. Geo. C. Pine, new brick block troet carlinea Elogantly fitted and fs apartmenta or the application of and out of our novel and systematic metho at Junction of BUSINESS TRAINING. 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ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR IT, md when you can notobtain it of bim, v 7ill send it, prepaid, on receipt of price r. Bosanko's Trentise on Plles sent fre. mapplication. Address NE DR, BOSANKO MEDICINE CO. P1OTA.O. Stop that Cough. It you are suffering with a Cough Cold, Asthma, Bronchitis, Hay Fever, Consumption, loss of voice, tickling of the throat, or any affection of the Throat or Lungs, use Dr, King's New Discovery for Consumption. This is the great remedy thaj is causing s much excitement by ifs wonderfal cures, curing thousands of hopeless cases. Over a million bottles of Dr. King’s New Discovery have been used within the last year, and have given Wfleci satisfaction in every instance. ‘e can unhesitatingly say that this is really the only sure cure for throat and lung affections, and can cheerfal- Iy recommend it to all. Call and get a trial bottle free of cost, or a regular size for 81.00, J. K. Ish,Omaha. (3) Goknown remady for all Bladder, snd Urinary o the Biadder, ne, Pain jat ‘Weakness, and all Femala Come cortain ot 150 can ot by mall free WORTH REMEMBERING. That TaxkAxt's SEurzan APERIENT reprege ach bott e thirty or forty glasses of Spar Seltser Water, contalaing al the virtuss of apon recelpt of the prics, §5.0. DAY I NEY PAD CO., PROP'RS, Foledo, O. i og the alwazs ready, and ths commenas tsalf to for its effcacy. portability and cheapness, ALL DRUGGISTS HAVE IT. s, A How MES 5. 158, Ageat tor Nebeasta, CO EAST Chicago & Northwestern RAILWAY. 2,380 MILES OF ROAD! 1¢ s the SHORT, SURE and Safe Rocte Setwssn COUNCIL BLUFFS CHICAGO,MILWAUKEE aad all pointa EAST sad RORTH. OFFERS THE TRAVELING PUBLIC GREATER PACILITIES AND MORE ADVANTAGES THAN ANY OTHER ROAD IN THE WEST. 1t4a the ONLY ROAD between OOUNOIL BLUFFS and OHIOAGO Upon which 1y rea PULLMAN HOTEL CARS! 12 addition £ theseaod to please al clasees ot travelers, it givem FIRST.LASS MEALS at Its EATING STATIONS at 60 centa oach. — STEEL RA“{I E Fil L b Y NT FIRST CLASS It you wish the Best Travellng Accommod- tlons sou WiTt by voar tcket by this Route STAND WILL TARE N 3 Al Tickst Agents can via this foad and @ TRACK 18 COAGHES vou Throush Tickets k usia Rage marge iy Gen'l At Omaba & Connet) Bint THROUCH 70 CHICASD Without Change of Cars! THB CHICAGO | BUBLINCTAH & QUIHBV RATLROAD. engor Coaches, and PULLMAN SLEEPEE_I DINING CARS ackno 4 wee PASSENGERS BEST ROUTE TO CHICACS, oints Fast, North thwest. GOING BAST est fn miad that this Ia the Passengers by giis FOUR DIFFEREN D ave chalcs of ‘T ROUTES, L aiace Perlect Fro. , Omaha, Nebraska. W. HITCHCOC Gonl. West'n Pasw. Agt, St. Joe., Mo, D. 3.0, PRILLIPPT, Generat Agent, Omaha, H P. DUEL, ‘Ticket Agent. Omaha. SHORT LINE 1880. K. ©., ST. JOE&C.B. R.R., I8 the oaly Direct Line to 8T. LOVEIS AND THE EAST From OMAHA and the WEET, o change of cars between Omaba and B, Louts and but one betwsen Omaha and New York. SIX DAILY PASSENGER TRAINS RaAcuTNG AL tern & Western Cities With less charges and Iz advancs of other Iinee. This Pullman fept-at ‘Couplor_and the celebrated sstinghouse Alr-Brako. OUR TICKET READSW Clty, 8. Joseph luffs k. Tickets for sale at il conpon stations In the W est. J. F.BARNARD, Gen'l Supt., @en’ Jotash, Mo nt, Omabs. Gea'rl Agent, Omah. St. Paul & Sioux City RAILROADS. The Old Relinble Siows City Route ! 100 MILES ORTEST ROUTE! From COUNCIL BLUFFSto ST. PAUL, MINNEAPOLIS DULUTH, or BISMARCK, 11053, m , making F®-TEN HOURS 1t Apvasc or Ror aor Agent, Connelt 1 iahed surfaco over the axle, doine a Iarge amount of frigtion. Tty in greseins your wagon thatyou wol | Ofany other axle grease mader snd inen van Your xagon twice aa long. It newers equally 3 woll for 301 Gearing, Threaning 1Machines, Buegies, hc.,3n for wigons—Send “for Pockel Cyclopediaaf Thirgs Wortn Knowing. Malled tree 1o any adirees MICA MAKUFACTURING CO., 31 MICHIGAN AVENUE, CHICAGO. CHARLES RIEWE, UNDERTAKER! Motallc Casse, Coffcs, Caskets, Shrouds, ete. Farn m stren £th 8 110D, Oraaha, Neh, «graphic.orders prompty aktended to. THE CREAT APPETIZER-- For COUGHS, COLDS, BRONCHITIS, ASTHMA, CONSUMY. TION, and all Digeases of the THROAT and LUNGS. Put up in Quart Size Bottles, giving More for any article in the market. EIVED by unprincipied Rye in piace of our T INE naving » GOVER The most a=ceptable preparat n A the money than SOCRAE 5V D€ (HIB COUNTRY, <) s WA, TaAT T DN TRV, SR PSS a e e 7 Atchisow AL B ™ g INCIP, FAT THNOUGH LINK ath AL PR on, wha el A M.5. v T E A AL WARINGTON HEIGETS, with F. e | o rmarmcRana® iy Arewiso rum Rty p and* i3 maeuificentiy o1 3 il ~3= o and ity a At Aieiron: Tich A erent | Ak % Moo aidCon. be. D. B0 bninens | AR e AT Swon; with K i ik tida liace | “AUKANNAS CTTY, wieh ail Hoes for the i a0 Southwont. nat » majortey of the | T diffe For infe. A. KIMBALL, ‘Gowl Superiatendent. #ie < Proves beyond any reasonable question that the « CHICAGO ' & ' NORTH-WESTERN : RY 1s by all odds the best road for you to take when tras 7 Chicago and all of the Principal Points in the West, North and Northwest. ™. - Carefully e p._The Prineipal Cities of the West and Nort on this road. us make eloss counections with the trains Junction point s@rAsk Your Dealer For It B et THE CHICACO & NORTH- HOTEL DINING CARS."._ via this road, be sure the: anager, Chicago. w W. i. STENNETT, Ge v Railway, ity N. W. Rulws CHAS. SHIVERIGK. FURNITURE, BEDDING, FEATHERS WINDOW SHADES. And Everything Dp»f’t;]:;\:;]r'xfi ’I'?ad :’he Furniture and A COMPLETE ASSu« ik "7 OF NEW COODS AT THE LOWESS °‘RICES. OEX. . &3, SEIVORICOKX 1208 and 1210 Farnham Street, ap 34 mia th b NERRASEK.S VINECAR WORKS ! ERNST KREBS, Manager. . Bet. 9th ard 1: ONAH 4,88