Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 2, 1881, Page 7

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/ { s NY THE OMA THE DAILY at and Bonnet Bleachers. Ladics get yout Straw, Chip and Felt Hats done up at northeast corner Seventeenth and Capitol OMAHA PUBLIBHING CO., PROPRIETORS. | Aveuto. WM. DOVE, bropriceor. = — —————————— 9i8 Farnham, bet. 0th and 10th Streets. Hotels. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTIO CANFIELD HOUSE, Ge>, Canfleld,0th & Farnham €)1 year, In adva 3 WRST OR HOUTIIWRETS, & M. in Neb., Through Express, 8:35 a. m. coln Froight.—7:00 p. m. m. B & M. T oss, 12:16 &RV, tof Linco & R. V. for Oscec P. freight No. b, troight N freight No. 7, 6:10 p. m.--emigrant, P freivht No. 11" :26 v. m. ARRIVING—FROM RAST AXD SOUTHL. 7:25 p. m. 5P m,—6:45 p. m. 25 p? . ARRIVING PROM TITE WRST AND SOUTAWRST, trom Lincoln—12:12 p, m. mixed, ar. 4:35 p. m, NORTIL, Nebraska Division of the St. Paul & Sioux City Road. No. 2 leaves Omhha 8 n. m. No. 4 leaves Omaha 1:50 p. m. 1 arrives at Omaha ut 4:30 p. m No. 3 arrives at Omaha at 10:45 a. m, DUMMY TRAINS BETWKEN OMAHA AND COUNCIL BLUFFS, 00, 9:00 and 11:00 & m.; p. m, and 5:25 p. m. Opening and Closing of Malls. RovTE. OPRX. cLosn. A a. m. p. 3 Chicago & N, W 11.00 Chicago, R. 1. & Pacifie.11:00 Chleazo, B. & Q. +.11:00 Wabash . Omaha & R. B. & M. in Neb. Local mails for S| day, viz : 4:80. A'Lincoln Mail is also openod at 10:30 a. m. Office open Sundays from 12 m. to 1 p. in. THOS. F. HALL P.M OIVi AELA. Business Directory. P. L. Cary, 913 Farnham St IN'S HOTEL, F. Slaven, 10th Strcet. Southern Hotel Gus. I amel, 9th & Leavenworth. ron Fencing. ornice Works, Agenta for the co &c., have on hand all kinds cos, Crostings, Fineals, Railings, 1810 Dodge stree. o apld Intelligence Office. MRS, LIZZIE DENT 217 16th Street. vewellers. JOHN BAUMER 1814 Farnham Stroet. Junk, Lumber, Lime and Cement. FOSTER & GRAY corner 6th and Douglas Sta. Lamps and Glassware, J. BONNER 1909 Douglas St. Good Variety. Merchant Tailors. Q. A. LINDQUEST, Ono of our most popular Merchant Tailors is ro- coiving the latest designs for Spring and Summer Goods for gentlemen's wear. = Stylish, durable, and vrices low as ever 215 13th bet. Doug. & F“"h Millinery. MRS. C. A, RINGER, Wholesale and Retail, Fan. §y; Goods in gront variety, Zophyes, Card Boands, Hosiery, Gloves, Corsets, &c. _Cheapest House in the Wost. Purchasers save 80 por cent. Order by Mail. 116 Fifteenth Street. : Physiclans an4 Surgeons. W. 8. GIBBS, M. D, oom No. 4, Creighton Block, 15th Streot. A. 8. LEISENRING, M. D. Masonic Block. C. L. MART, M. D., Eye and Ear, opp. postoffice DR. L. B. GRADDY, Oculist and Aurist, S. W 15th and’ Farnham Sta. Photographers. GEO. HEYN, PROP., Grand Central Gallery, 212 Sixteenth Streot, near Masonic Hall, First-ciass Work and Prompt- ness guaranteen. Plumbing, Gas and Steam Fitting. P. W. TARPY & CO., 216 12th 8t., bet. Farnham and Douglas. Work promptly attended to, D. FITZPATRICK, 1409 Douglas Street. Painting and Paper Hanging. HENRY A. KOSTERS, 1412 Dodge Strect. Planing Mill. A. MOYER, manufacturer of ssh, doors, blinds, moldings, newels, alusters, hand rails, furnishing scroll sawing, &, cor. Dodie and 9th strects, Pawnbrokers. J. ROSENFELD, 822 10th St., bet. Far. & Har. Retrigerators, Canfield's Patent. C. F. GOODMAN 11th St. bet, Farn. & Harney. 8how Case Manufactory., 0. J. WILDE, Manufacturer and Dealer” 1n all kinds of Show Cases, Upright Cases, & *., 1317 Cass St. Art Emporium, J. U. ROSE'S Art Emporium, 1516 Dodge Strect, Btecl Fogravings, Oil Paintings, Chiomos, Fancy Franes. Framing o Specialty. Low Priccs, J. BONNER 1300 Douglas Strect. Good Styles, Abstract and Real Estate. JOHN L. McCAGUE, opposite Post Office, W. R. BARTLETT 517 South 13th Street. Architects. DUFRENE & MENDELSSOHN, ARCHITECTS, Toom 14, Creighton Block. A. T. LARGE Jr., Room 2, Creighton Block. Boots and Shoes. JAMES DiVINE & CO,, Fine Boots and Shoos. A assorment of home work on hund, corner 12th and Harney. THOS. ERICKSON, 8 E. cor. 16th and Douglas, JOHN FORTUNATUS, 605 10th strect, manutactures to order good work at fair prices, ~Repairing done. Bed Springs. 7. F. LARRIMER Manufacturer, 1517 Douglas st. Books, News and Stationery. J. L. FRUEHAUF 1015 Farnham Strect. Butter and Eggs. DER, the oldest B. and E. blished 1875 Omaha, CENTRAL, RESTAURANT, MRS, A. RYAN, r 16thand Dodge. Best Board for the Money. Batistaction Guarantoed. T, (outhwc.!t cornel Meals at all Hours. Board by the Day, Week or Month. Good Terms for Cash. Furnished Rooms Supplicd. Carriages and oad Wagons. WM, SNYDER, No. 131h 14th and Harney Streets] Civil Engineers and 8urveyors, ANDREW ROSEWATER, Creighton Block, Surveys, Grado and Sewornge Systems & ¥ Commission Merchants. JOHN G. WIL LIS, 1414 Dodge Strect. D B BEEMER. For details sce large advertise- ment in Daily and Weekly. and Tobacco. manufacturers of Cigars, Dealers I Tonaccos, 1305 Douglas. manufacturer 514 10th street, Cornice Works, ornice Works, Manufacturers Iron Iron and Slate Roofling. Orders i cuted i the best nices, Window Caps, ctc., o put up in any part of the T. SINHOLD, 416 Thirteenth street. Grockery, J. BONNER 1800 Douguas stroct. Good line. Clothing and Furnishing Goods. GEO. H. PETERSON, Also Hats, Caps, Boots, , Notions and Cutlery, §04 8, 10th street, Clothing Bought. ©. SHAW will pay highest Cash prico for second hand clothing, - Corner 10th and Farnham, De tists, inms' Plock, Cor. 15th & Dodge. UL, W Drugs, Paints and Qils, KUHI & €O, Pharmacists, Fine ® v Goods, Cor. 15th and Douglss utrects. y.J, WHITEHOU# . FIE # * amle & Retail, 10th st. D, 2022 N ¢th Side Cuming Screet, Druggist, 100 and Howard Strects. Dry Good Notions, Etc. JOHN H. F. L L1MANN & CO., York Dry Goods Siore, 1810 and 1812 Farn- a1 stroet Enewold also boots and shoes, 7th & Pacific. Furaiture. Now and decond Hand Furniture Highest cash price t. Fine gools, & OMAHA FENCE €O, ES &C0., 1213 Harney 8t.,, Iuprove- Tron' and Wood Fences, Office rs of Pine and Walnut. Florist. ghue, rhnu, cut flowers, seeds, boqucts cor. A RO or, Toth and Dougtas stresta: ete. N. W. Foundry, JOHN WEARNE & SONS, cor. 14th & Jackson ste \ Flour and Feed. JGHAHA CITY MILLS, Sth aud Farnbam Sts., Welshaus Bros., woprietors. R — Grocers. 2. STEVENS, 21st between Cuming and Lzard. 7. A. McSHANE, Corn. 23d and Cuming Streots. P ——— Hatters. W. L. PARROTTE & €0., 1308 Dougles Btrost, Wholsale Excinsively, R et Hardwate, Iron and 8teel. DOLAN & LANGWORTHY, Whalesale, 110 sad 15th steoet. A HOLMES corner 164h and C.llfornis. Harness, Saddien, &c B. WEIST 20 156h B6., bed Farn & [lamey FRANK L. GERHAKD, proprictor Omaha Show Case manufactory, 818 South 10th strect, between Leavenworth and Marcy. Al goods warranted first-class. 8toves ana linware. A. BURMESTER, Dealer in Stoves and Tinwaro, and Manufacturer of Tin Roofs and all kinds'of Building Work, 0Odd Fellows' Block, J. BONNER, 1309 Douglas St. Seeds. J. EVANS, Wholesale and Retail Seed Drills and Cultivators, Odd Fellows' Hall. Good and Cheap. 8hoo Siores. Phillip Lang, 1320 Farnham st., bet. 13th & 14th. Becond Hand Store. PERKINS & LEAR, 1416 Douglas St., New and Second Hand Furniture, House Furnishing Goods, bought and sold on narrow marvins. Saloons. HENRY KAUFMANN, In the new brick block on Douglas Stroct, has Just opencd a most elegant Bees Hall, Hot Lunch from 10 to 12 every day. FLANNERY, On Farnham, next to the B, & M. headquarters, has re-opened & neat and complete_establishinent which, barring FIRE.and Mother Shipton's Proph- ecy, will be openod for the boys with Hot Lunch on and after present date. “ Calodonia " J. FALCO! 679 16th Street. Undertakers. CHAS, RIEWE, 101 Farnham bet. 10th & 11td. P. PE R, 803} Tenth strect, between Farn- ham and Harney. Does good and cheap work. 89 Uent Stores. HENRY POHLMAN, tovs, mnotions, pictures jowelry, &c., 613 14th bet. Farnham and Douglas P ham Gondn NOTICE. J. M. Stanton (full name unknown) Har- riet Henn and Mary Shillock, non-resident defendants will take notice’ that_Milton Hengdrix, . of the county of Douglas las, in the State of Nebraska, did on the , 1881, file his petition in 7th day of B the Distriet Court of the State of Nebras- ka' within and for the said county of Do lag, against the said J, M, Stanton. Har: riet Henn and Mary impleaded and forth f issuedby the treasurer of said county, he has an abs lute_title to the southeast quarter of t northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section nine, (9) township fif 3 range thirteen (13) e, in said Dougla t{ that f”" and each of said defendants claim to have some interest in said land, and pr ig that he iy Do adjudiced t0 have an’indefeasible title to said pr 3 but that if his title should be ]nrh‘ alid, he may be decreed to have a lien on said lapd, that it may be sold to satisfy the 4 that you and each of you be ¢ om setting up or assertin it or claim thereto. And the saic nton, Harriet Henn and Mary are hereby notified that they are required to appear and answer said peti- Hi0n on 0% batare the st day of August, 1881, MILTON HENDRIX, By Crarkson & Huxt, his attorneys, Dated Omaha, June 23 1881, wildtd PROPOSALS For City Scavenger, Proposals will be recelved by the undersigned until Saturday, the 0th day of July, 1851, at 12 o'cloe doing the duties of tity staven d forthe rem filth of whate mpanied by th for the fail Enye rkind ornatu names of to' the undersigned not above specified, City Council reserves the right to reject any aod all bids, Bids to e openedat the regular meeting of the council, July 12th, 1381, J.J. L. C. JEWETT, Iy1-diw City Clerk RESOLUTION ORDERING SIDE- WALKS Be it Resolved by the City Counefl of the City of of Oniaha, That a sidewalk be, within fifteen days from this date, constructed and laid to the temporary grade in said city, in tront of and adjoining the following described premises, viz: Lot 6 north side of Douglas street, in block 110, 6 feet wide. Lot 7 nortl 110, 6 tect wide. Lot 8 north side of Douglas street, in block 110, 6 fect wide, Such sidewalk to be constructed of two inch pise plank, and to be in width, as above speci ied, and tiie respective owner or owners of the above described premisce are hereby required to construct the same. side of Douglas strect; in block June 25, 1881, J.J. L.C, ;“n;p . BYRON REED & CO. Real Estate Agency IN NEBRASKA THE COMET FORTY YEARS AGO, BY OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES, et! he is on his way, nging as he flies; zzing planets shrink before The specter of the skies. Ah! well may regal orbs burn blue, And satellites turn pale, Ten million cubic miles of head, Ten billion leagues of tail! The o On, on by whistling spheres of light He flashes and he flames; He turns not to the left nor right, He asks them not their names, One spurn from his demoniac heel "be bottled up And sold for “Lyrian dye.” And what would happen to the land, And how would look the sea, If in the bearded devil's path, Our earth should ehance to be? Full hot and high the sea would boil, Fullred the forests Methought T saw and In a dyspeptic dream! ard it all T saw the tutor rake his tube The comet's cours 3 1 heard n screamn—the gathered rays Had stewed the tutor's eye; T saw n fort—the soldiers all Were armed with goggles green; Pop cracked the guns?Whiz flew the balls! bang went the magazine; T saw a poet dip a seroll Each moment in a tub, I read upon the warping back, ““The Dream of Be He could n Becanso b T saw the sealding pite 'he erackling sweat; 18 of smoke 1i tes spouts, Burst through the rumbling mines: T asked the fireman why they made Such noise about the town: They answered not, but all the while The treaks went up and down, run down pi T saw a ronsting pullet sit Upon a baking egi; ipple scorch his hand ine geese upon the wing ard the frozen pole, ery mother osling fell Crisped to a crackling coal. 1 saw the.ox that browsed the grass Writhe in the blistering r The herbage in his shrinking jaws Was all a fiery blaze 1 saw huee fishes, boiled to rags Bob through the bubbling brine; And thoughts of supper crossed wy soul— I had been rash at mine, Strange sights! strange sounds! dream! Its memory haunts me still, The steaming sea, the crimson clare, That wreathed each wooded hill; Stranger! if thro ths reeling brain Such midnight visions sweep, Spare, spare, 0, spare thine evening meal, And sweet shall be thy sleep! O fearful A QUEER CRAFT., Launch of the Huge Ram and Tor- podo Boat, the Polyphemus. London Daily News. A strange and novel addition to the British navy is is to be made to-day. The launch of the Polyphemus at Chatham will bring to its final test, so far as it can be done in quiet waters and in times of peaco, one of the most curious experiments yet tried in naval armaments. The vessel to be launch- ed and named to-day was devised and begun while the late Mr. Ward Hunt was at the admiralty. Tt design- ed by Sir George Sartorius, and was intended, to use Mr. Hunt’s words, not to supersede all the other kinds of fighting ships; but only as a useful adjunct in case of war. "The Polyphe- mus is not a man-of-war in any of the old acceptations of the term. Instead of carrying weapons, she is herself a weapon. In place of firing cannon shot above water she will fire torpedoes un- der water. The vessel is in fact a huge ram and torpedo boat combined, and will depend for her utility as an adjunct in caseof war on her strength, her swiftness, and her power to attack the vessels of the enemy below the water line and under their armor. The appearance of the ship, if a ship it can be called, promises to be unlike anything now ~afloat. Perhaps the nearest parallel may be found in the gar-shaped steam yatchs, which so long lay useless in Southampton water. The Polyphemus will lie in the sea as a cylinder, with a flattened top,on which there will be a coni- cal deck surmounted by the hurricane deck, 'T'he ends of the cylinder will be under water,and allthat will be usuall, seen will be the round deck, which has been compared to a floating peg- top, with its pilot tower, signal post, and funnels, The deck is only four and a half feet above the water-line, and the whole of the exposed surfaco of the vessel, and the unexposed to a depth of six feet and a half below the water-line, are to be protected with compound stecl-faced armor plates. The vessel is 240 feet long and 40 feet broad, and is to be propelled by high-pressure engines of 5,600 horso . This great propelling power ed to give the vessel a speed seventeen kuots hour, Her speed is, in fact, the chief element in her strength as a weapon of offen As the bow constitutes a ram twely feet long, and as the ram is so deeply submerged as to strike the vessel below the depth to which the armor-plating is usually continued, it is obvious that the high speed attained isa great element in the success of the attack, The largest and strongest iron-clad now afloat would | succumb at onee, could it | attacked by the ram and tor, the Polyphemus, The submarine at- tack was the purpose for which the Polyphemus was originally designed She is special sels immensely larger and hoeavier than herself. The hull is intended to bear the shock of the collision by which her destructive work is to be per- formed, It is of steel throughout. It is divided by a longitudinal bulkhead and many trayerse bulkheads into two series of small water-tight compart- ments, The bottom is double, and is split up into a large number of cells, or very small water-tight divisions. Her floating capacity is therefore as great as any under-water vessel can possibly be, while the danger of sink- ing from one or two holes in the hull is reduced to a minimum, There are three ports under water for the discharge of whitehead torpe- does, one of which is directly in front, under the ram, while the other two are at the sides and amidships, The vessel will, therefure, bhave four chances of attack. She may send out a torpedo on either side as she ad- vances, she may strike the enemy sgainst which she is advancing a HA DAILY BEE: severe blow with her r.un, and as she rotires, after the blow, she may follow it up, if necessary, by sending a tor pedo against the point which the ram has just struck. At the same time she may launch surface torpedoes from the armored pilot tower, as is done by the ordinary torpedo boats. The fighting of the Polyphemus, if she should ever get into a naval engage ment, will therefore be done at close quarters, IRISH AGITATION SCENES. Undor the Hammer--Amusing and Piotureque Foatures of the Sales--Ono Day's Work in Tipperary. Correspondence of the New York Times. Dux June 14, —From being one of the same, commonplace transactions of every day life, an auction in Tre- land has come nowadays to be an event of great local excitement—set, as it is, in a scene unique in all its wild, sensational surroundings. An auction at which a squadron of caval- ry, a regiment of infantry, a posse of volice, and several thousands of the general publie, with bands and ban- ners, assist, is something out of the familiar ‘‘going, going, gone” trans. action. I propose to sketch from the original one one of these very remar- kable scenes. The auctioneer puts up and knocks down to the highest l»i({ der groen fields and tilled land with growing crops, the tenants having re- fused to pay any rent unless they get a certain reduction, which the land lord refuses to give. When matters come to this stage, it is the law of the Land League that the tenant shall, on principle, allow his farm to go under the hammer of the auctioneer sooner than yield to the landlord, and the result is that when an auction comes off under these cir- cumstances the sale is one of wild ex- citement. The typical auction scenc from which I shall sketch cameoff one day this week in the town of Thurles, County Tipperary. To the end that these auctions shall not fall through for lack of bidding, the landlords’ or- ganization, called ‘“The Property De- fense Association,” the headquarters of which is in Dublin, dispatches some of its members to bid for farms and cattle, and so to force the hand of the tenants or their friends, who in some instances’ buy in the farms. In other instances, however, the associa- tion men Lave been declared the pur- chasers. Of course this is the great exciting element in the business. The scene in this Tipperary auction opens in the court-house of Thurles. Caval- ry and infantry and police are massed near the building; there are process- ions of farmers, mounted and on foot, with bands playing and banners way- ing, and troop in from the outlying districts. The court-house is packed with a vast gathering of the peasant- ry of all conditions. ~ 'The excitement is intense, but through all there runs a rich vein of fun and humor. The Sherifl of the county--a dapper little man, who tries to appear at his ease, but fails—stands on an elevated bench with a riding whip in his hand, designed for duty as the official ‘“ham- mer.” He is constrained to act as his own auctioneer, for none of the regu- lar auctioneers of the district would undertake the job for any money, Near the sheriff ars police officers and magistrates, and with a view to con- tingencies, constabulary men, with loaded rifles and sword bayonets on them, are posted in various parts of the building. For the rest, the place swarms with peasantry, men, women, and children, who groan, shout, threaten, crack jokes, laugh, and talk fiercely and comic 11 through the wild scene. The sheriff assuming the role of auctioneer, take: off his hat, and. in an excess of com- placency, opens business by address- ing the surging crowd before him as ‘‘Ladies and gentlemen.” This brings down the house in an uproarious round of laughter, and there is a brisk popping of jokes on all sides at the expense of the sheriff, who is 80 amazingly good tempered that he laughs at all the fun poked at himself. Hesays, smiling all over, that it is now his duty to put up for public competi tion the interest of one “Phil” Ken- nedy in his farm, on which £33 are now due the landlord for rent. The terms are cash down and no auctioneer's fees. What shall he say for this desirable farm? Somebody on the floor of the court authorizes him to say one shil- ling, whereat there is much laughter. The sheriff adds to the fun by courte- ously thanking the gentleman for the offer. Anything to makea beginning. The representative of the Property Defense Association, who is standing near a party of armed policemen for obvious reasons, bids £5, whereat there is fierce groaning and a wild chorus of threats ring through the ed bidder of the on the latest The Prop- bid by another shilling. exty Defense man then puts the figure up to £20. “Is there any advance on £207" asked the sherift, raising the end of his whip, hammer fashion There is no more bidding but there is a great deal of railery from the crowd, and tho sheriff, with the end of his whip, knocks down the farm to the bidder of £20, All kinds of jokes now come up from the erowd, and there is a point to most of them, Thus, one voic wants to know who's going to manage that farm for the purchaser, and the voice hopes the gentleman will givea *house warming” when he comes to take pos- seasion. sheriff’ pockets the pro id puts up in sue cession several farms more, The ne result of the i /'8 auctioneering is that the tenants' interests in fine farms ave bought by the representatives of the Property Defense Association,and that in two instances the tenants buy in their interests by paying the amounts of rent due by them, What the gentleman who bought the inter- ests in the five farms wlll do with his purchase remains to be scen. As matters stand just now in Ireland, he is somewhat in the position of the man who won a white elephant at a bazaar. This auction was elosed by an open-air demonstration, the parish priest in the chair, at which the proceedings of the day were spoken of as ‘‘a splendid triumph of a popular cause, E——— FLIES & MOSQUITOES, A 16¢ box of “Rough on Rats” will keep 8 house froe from flies, mosq! toes, rats and mice, the entire season Druggists sell it. ®) ATURDAY JULY 2, 1881. Renl Romance. sincinnati Commercial, On Thursday last an old lady tot tered on board of the Mary Howard and was assisted up stairs and given a A seat. She was about sixty-five years of age and partially Hor story s a strange one and worth ropeating. At the age of fourteen she ran away and married a man named Hunter, who, 40 years ago, was 26 years her senior, twith- standing this disparity their life was a happy one. {unter, a man of political power wd influence, was appointed Ameri- can minister to the court of Russw, by Andrew Jackson, who was then president. Mrs. Hunter went with her husband to St. Petersburg, where sho remained enjoying great social distinetion during the six years he filled the offico. They then returned 1 the United States, taking up their residence in the south on their large plantation. By her husband’s death she came into possession of this prop- erty and remained its owner until the | breaking out of the rebellion, when sho lost it by listening to the advice From the {of aswindling neighbor. This man camo to her with the story that the rebel government was about to confiscate her lands | because she had expressed union sen- timents, and it was an evil she could avoid only by vesting all her right and titlo in the property to him. At the right time, and when the affair had | quicted down, he, by another trans- fer, would restore her to her own. She acted on his suggestions, unfortu- nately, as he afterwards wont into the | revel service and was killed in one of the battles. Left destituto and un- ablo to regain the plantation, and laving no relatives of her own, she was compelled to subsist on charity, a I ¢ affection preventing her from gaining her own hvelihood. With her advancing yearscame increased in- firmitiesandalmostutter despondency, until one day came to her the thought that if she could make her way to Washington, a statement of facts to the proper authorities might result in a pension or provision of some sort that would make easy her declining days. Buoyed up by this hope, and provided with aid by Freemasons, she came North, but arrived here desti- tute, as her pocket-book, containing her railroad ticket and eleven dollars, was stolen on the train between Louis- ville and Cincinnati. She arrived early yesterday morn- ing, and since then has been wander- ing about the streets, As a last resort, while walking along the levee, she de- termined to ask on some of the boats for shelter and passage as far as Pitts- burg. Capt. Miller and the officers of the Mary Howard at once gave the old lady a comfortable meal, and among themselves raised sufficient money to buy a railroad ticket, and last night, with her ticket and a little pocket money, she was on her way to Wash- ington. Satisfactory, rs. Wallace, Buffalo, N. Y., writes: ave used BURDOCK BLooh BITTERs for nervous and bilious headaches, and have recommended them to my friends;1 believe them superior to any other medicine 1 have used, and can recommend them to anyone requiring o cure for biliousness,” Price 81,00, trial size 10 cents. M; “Lh Worthy ot Praise. As a rule we do not recommend pa- tent medicines, but when we know of one that really is a public benefactor, and does positively cure, than wo con- sider it our duty to impart that infor- mation to all. Electric bitters are truly a most valuable medicine, and will” surely curo Biliousness, Fover and Ague, Stomach, Liver and Lidney complaints, even where all other rom- edies fail. We know whereof we c, and can freel commend to all.—[Ex. Sold at conts a bottle Ish & McMahon, (4) wwxxm Creat German : REMEDY I‘!l T aron il gy {14 BREUAATISH, i R NeuraLaIA, M SCIATICA, 'm LUMBAGO, I ||“ BACKACHE, iFinll' GOUuT, iyl soRENESS A CHEST, sy SORE THROAT i f)f QUINSY, g | SWELLINGS lflmlhmhlfll' SPRAINS, i FROSTED FEET EARS, |l BULIVES i i SCALDS, 1i|! ||}.|i' ll mlu!lb i GENERAL RSyl o i ‘hfl'h, i 5"!' TOOTH, EAR . y I AND R HEADACHE, LV 1 | g All olhien Painy A trial ‘sutails’ but ¢ 2 'Cants, aud overy oue suflering with paii cau have chieap aud positive proof of its cluits, DIRECTIONS IN ELEVEN LANGU S0 BY ALL DRUGOISTS AND DEALERS IN MMEDICINE, A. VOGELER & CO. Haltimore, Md., U. 5, 4 PAPER WAREHOUSE. GRAHAM PAPER 00, 217 and 219 North Main 8t., 8t. Louts, ~~WHOLRAALN DHALERS [N— WIH’I'IN(;} a, ¥ws | PAPERS { Wik ENVELOPES, CARD BOARD AND Printers Stock. flpflhwud Paper Btock, Scrap Papor Block Warchous 1939 b0 1237, North sxloet . Collins, Colorado. Omaha, Cheyenne, A. POLACK, Spring and Summer CLOTHING!! LATE AND NOBBY STYLES FOR MEN, BOYS AND GHILDREN. Hats, Caps, Trunks, Valises. CLOTEHING MADFE TO ORDER IN THE LATEST STYLES. Prices te Suit all! 1322 FARNHAM STREET, NE. Satisfaction Guaranteed. R_FOURTEENTH. Max Meyer & Co. ONAIZIA. Guns,Ammunition,Sporting Goods FISHING TACKLE, BASH BALLS, and a FULL LINE OF NOTIONS AND FANCY GOODS. SEND FOR FPRICE-LIST. MAX MEYER & CO., Omaha, Ne THE GREAT WESTERN CLOTHING HOUSE. M. HELLMAN & CO, Spring Suits ! All Styles ! IMMENSE STOCK ATEH_OJ._ESALE AND RETAIL. The Largest Clothing House West of Chicago. A Department for Children’s Clothing. ‘We have now an assortment of Clothing of all kinds, Gent's Furnishing Goods in great variety,and a heavy stock of Trunks, ‘Valises, Hats, Caps, &c. These goods are fresh, purchased from the manufacturers, and will be sold at prices lower than ever before made. 1 We Sell for Cash and Have but One Price. A large TAILORING FORCE is employed by us, and we make SUITS TO ORDER on very short notica. CALI. AND SEE US. 130l and |§93 Farnham St.,cor. I3th TO THE LADIES OF OMAHA ! We take the liberty to call your attention to the fact that we have just secured the EXCLUSIVE MANUFACTURE AND SALE OF THE ONLY First - Class Summer Stove S IN EXISTENCE. Some of its many advantages are that under no ¢ nditions will it PRODUCE SMOKE, DIRT OB ODOR, Tho furniture from any other stove can bo used on them, including any sized WASH BOILER "The work required of any wood or coal cook: stove, ean be done on themy, being per- fect in each dopartment, Cooking, Baking, Washing & Ironing They can be used out in the wind as well as in doors, They can only be appreeiated AFTER A FAIR TRIAL. In purchasing a summer stove, you will have cause for regret—if you don't inspect and give these stoves a fair and lmpartial trial, For Bale Only by DAN SULLIVAN & SON'S, 1410 Farnham St., Omaha, Neb. A. B. HUBERMANN, RELIABBY.E JEWELERI Cor. Douglas and 13th Streets. jo 1-cod-1m GIVES GREAT BARGAINS IN LADIES' AND CENTS' AMERICAN GOLD AND SILVER WATCHES. ALL KINDS OF Jewelry, Silverware and Diamonds ‘We Guarantee the Best Goods "o the Loast Money, a2l-stt

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