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) P4 LIy AP A Y, BT 7 RS TR VR S R TN TTN A v A DD I'HE OMAHA DAIlLY BEE: THORSDAY. APRIL 6 188 ADDRESS OF R. 8. MOLONY, OF INEBRASKA, Before the Committee on Commerce of the House of Representatives of the United States, Mr. Chairman aud Gentlemenjof_the Committec I appear before you as one of the nine delegates appointed by the St Joseph convention, November 20th, 1881, which convention represented four states and two territories, viz Miseouri, Towa, Kansas and Nebraska and Dakota and Montana territories, said nine delegates to represent said states and territories, before the com- mittees of commerce of the congress of the United States. Said conven- tion memoralized congress for the creation of a Missouri river commis- sion to consist of seven members, three government engineers and four citizens, one from Towa, one from Kansas and one from Nebraska, and for an appropriation, which, in the judgment of said commission, shall be adequate to be expended by them under the supervision of congress, for the general improvement of the navi- gation of the Missouri river., The basi upon which said convention stands in makihg this application to the con- gress of the United States, is a report to congress through the chief of en- ineers of the 1. S. Army, by Charles . SButer, major of engineers, who has been for two or three years past in charge by government appointment of the survey and improvements of the Missouri River. Said report can be found in Doc. No. 92, house of ntatives, forty-sixth congress, paid by the producers of the Missouri valley for transportation by rail of their products in 1880 in excess to what they would have paid by water transportatiot, had the Missouri and Mississippi rivers been wellimproved, equals fully the estimate made by the Mississippi river commission and that of Major Suter, for the improvement of the Mississippi and Missouri rivers combined. Itis safe to say thata fixed and permanent channel of twelve feet deep at low water onthe Missouri river from the mouth to Sioux City, and on the lower Mississijpi, with width sufficient for the purposes of their commerce would save at least one half of the freight now pain to the railroads by the producers for the transportation of their surplus pro- duce to home and foreign merkets The division of the Missouri river is in the geographical center, east and west, of the United States, 500 miles from Duluth, 740 from Chicago and 680 miles from St. Louis by rail, while the other grand divisions before reterred to are one half of the dis- tance in reaching by railroads the debt and largely reducing its prin- cipal, we had a balance in the treas. ury, drawing no interest, of £250,000,- 000, or about that, which amount will be increased by the 30th of June next to about £350,000,000, the govern- ment bonds readily taken at three per cent. 8o we, the people, think if our draft for £100,000,000 should 1e honored by congress from time to time there would be no danger of its bursting Uncle Sam. In the langauge of another, “Was there ever such an opportunity for statesmanship ever before granted to the legislators of any people? Shall such opportunitios be improved, or shall we, as hereto- fore, allow certain great private and selfish interests to thrust themselves right across, ard so block the great highway of national developments(” THE B. & M. EXTENSION. The Work on the Grade 18 Nearly Completed. Arapaiioe Vioneer, From a surveyor who has been ‘‘at the front” a reporter gained a few ad. markets above named, thus showing the great necessity vo the Missouri di- vision of the improvement of its great river. In fact, gentlemen of the com- mittee, the people of the Missouri, Mississippi and Ohis valleys, as well, regard tfie permanent improvement of their great rivers by the general gov- ernment a necessity. We have no doubt of their national expediency and constitutionalty. The necessity for them is 8o urgently felt by our To) third session, da Feb, 2, 1881. Major Suter by methods and plans, detailed in said report (which was so clearly and satisfactorily explained to this committee terday by Mr. Allen, representative of Kansas Cit{,) assures congress that a channel for the Missouri River can be located and its location permnnentlf hxed, for low and high water as well, of not less than 12 feet deep of water, of sufficient width for all wants of com- merce from its mouth to Sioux City, TIa., 800 miles with greater ease and ngidity and with less cost than any other river in the country, and says the Major, the value of the improve- ments herein outlined can hardly be overestimated. The,sriver, by.[devices and expe- dients, detailed at length in said re. port, which Mr, Allen has made so plain to you, is made the agent for creaiing its new banks and securing its new channel, the cost not exceed- ing 810,000 per mile, or §8,000,000 for 800 miles. I am betore you, gentlemen, for the purpose of showing you that the claims of the Missourd division of the grand Miuiuif)pi valley and ita terri- tories are not less than those of the upper Mississippi. The Ohio and the lower Mississippi divisions all have merited much, very much, more con- sideration than they have received from the general government, but the Missouri valley, the most interesting and important of them all, has been |im£liy ignored, The commission asked for the Missouri river is essen- tially the same as the commission in existence on_the Mississippi river since 1870. It has worked well on that river, Its call for money has been heard and its use of money appropriated, approved of by con- gress, all of which we approbate most cordially and asked for them much more of the same thing for the na- tion's welfare. In all this congress afirms the expediency, nationallty and constitutionality of the appropri- tions. Now, I proceed, if the committee lease, to show you that the Missouri ivision has claims for aid in muney forthe improvement of its greatriver, from the national government at least ual to the divisions of the upper ississippi, the Ohio or the lower Mississippi. The Missouri River Val- ley, embracing the States of Missouri, Towa, Kansas and Nebraska, and the territories of ,Dakota and Montana, say the “St. Charles delegation,” in their ““plea for the Missouri River,” is the most interesting and im ortant, the least known and best ngumd of the four grand divisions of the Mis- sissippi Valley. ‘‘To the popular nd, it was twenty years ago, and to some extent it is still, (after you have traveled fifty miles west of the Mis- souri river) a vast treeless region of little rain-fall, Here was the (ireat American Desert, Here the sage brush domimated the vegetable king- dom, and yet, notwithstanding all the evidence, to the contrary, a large por- tion of the people of the United States still regard it as “‘a region of drought and scanty herbage, the home of buf. falo and gnuhuprr and the natural abiding place o the Sioux Indian and the U, 8. army."” ut for the facts, which are official; The Missouri river division has b 000 square miles; the upper Missis- i pi has 162,000 square miles; the Ohio_division 214,000 square miles, The Missouri river division is three times as large as the upper Mississippi, over twice as large as Ohio division, and nearly equal to the Ohio and lower Mississippi divisions combined, The corn crop of the Missouri divi- sion in 1880 was 586,000,000 bushels, or more than one-third of that of the whole United States. It was 82 per cent of the corn crop of the five upper ississippi river states, It was more than double that of all the Atlantio states, their corn crop being 253,000, 000 bushels. Kansas and Nebraska, including Dakota, during the filui gur ending June 30th, 1880, sold ,000,000 acres of P“b“" lands, or more than one-half of the pub- lic lands sold for that year in the United States, This indi- cated a marvelous growth and settle- ment of that fertile 'section, and is predicted by one who is well qualified to judge that in five years t‘la four states' of the Miesouri division will produce more grain than all of the upper Mississippi river states, Mis- souri, Towa, nsas and Nebraska produced, in cereals of all kinds in 1880, 780,000,000 bushels. Dakota and Montana during the year ending June 30th, 1880, contributed to the gold and silyer coinsge of the country #$8,000,000. The Missouri division now contains a population of 5,000, 000, Out of it can be carved ten states as large as Illinois and as rich in agricultural, and far richer in min eral wealth, and from the rapidity of its settlement under the stimulus of sn improved Missouri river this division of the Mississippi valley will have a population of 10,000,000 under the census of 1890, The sum people, that upon that question there will be no divisions among the people. Upon tariffs, finance and most all other questions parties will form among us, but upon the question of an improved transportation of the ex- penss of the general government from the Yellowstone, St. Paul and Pitts- burg to the Gulf of Mexico, our dele- tions in congress will be as one man n favor of it. Who are the people, calling for the improvement of these rivers! They inhabited, cultivated and are developing ‘‘the vast bread producing area of the world,” This territory reaching from the Allegheny mountai n the east to the Rocky mountains on the west, and from the Dominion on the north to the Gulf of Mexico on the south, drained by the Missouri and Mississippi rivers and their countless tributaries, upon whose rolling floods to the sea, it has been decreed by a power higher than man, shall forever ride free its inter- nal commerce. This vast area con- taining 20,000,000 people or more, inhabiting twenty or more states, paid of the internal revenue of the nation in 1880, 70 per cent. 1ts inter- nal commerce is one-half of the inter- nal commerce of the United States; twelve times as great as the foreign commerce of the United States, and equal to the foreign commerce of the civilized world. [’i‘he vastvalley of the Mississippi and Missouri rivers and their navigable tributaries, has now nearly half of the senators and repre- sentatives in the congress ot the United States, and in the very near future, we shall have a majority of the people of the United States. We can make and unmake presidents and con- gress and our urgent needs and calls, for the improvement of its rivers, should not, and cannot long be ig- nored. The west and the south have in these great water highways an ab- sorbing and common interest, and we are sure very soon, to come together, and act as one men drawn by mutual interest, (if for no stronger motive,) to solve this question, supremely in- teresting to us and tothem, in favor of cheap water transportation to the sea. These rivers will be a bond of union between west and south, created by the Almighty, and destined to make us one people forever, commercially, socially and fraternally, and the giving tho producers of our glorious union everywhere an assurance of its endless perpetuity. While I represent hore the Misrouri valley, especially. 1, nor the people whom I have the honor, in part to represent here have our interests hemmed in by state or di- vision lines, but the upper Mississippi, the Ohio and the lower Mississippi divisions, have our liveliest interests and support, Further we are also for the Hennepin canal, and the Illinois and Michigan canal nowfjuniting Lake Michigan and the head waters of the Tllinois river, all of which should at the earliest day practicable be made and enlarged at tY\e expense of the people of the United States, so that vessels drawing six feet of water can pass and repass from our northern lakes to the Gulf of Mexico and return, thus opening up a cheap water high: way, forever free to the producers and people of the Missonri and Mississippi rivers, and their navigabletributaries, by lakes or gulf at their election. But say sectionalism, selfishness and monopolies of every hue and shade, you will bankrupt the national treasu- ry! T think there is no cause of alarmn on that score. Our Atlantio seaboard in the past fifty years have reccived trom the national treasury many times more than the millions we of the west are now asking for the improvement of our rivers, a large amount of your At. lantic appropriations have been, of more than doubtful propriety. Still we have borne it if we have not al- ways consented. Also for our conti- nental railroads, running from the Missouri river to the Pacific ocean, we the people of the United States, have given probably not far from £100,000,000 in money and §200,000,- 000 in land, for their construction, and not one expression of alarm came from the recipients of these colossal appropriations, lest, thereby, the national treasury would become blnkrurt, #0 I think these gentlemen may safely dismiss their fears now that the ple, producers and con- sumers alike, are calling for the mon- a{ from the treasury needed to com- plete those vast continental water ighways which will give the cheap transportation, which will ever con- cecrated and free to the people and which has become a national necessity for the regulation of railroads. All of our demands for the improvement of these rivers and the making and enlarging of theso canals are and will be according to the estimates of gov ernment ¢ s and will not exceed probubly 100,000,000, the value of which to the people of the country can not be overstated, if counted by billions. But look at the condition of the Uwmited Statcs Treasury on the 30th of Beptember, 1881, After pay- ing all the ordinary exponses of the government for the last fiscal year, pensions, interest on the public ditional items one day this week re- garding the extensive railroad build- ing going on west of here, The grad- ing is completed and rails laid to 144 mfiu west of Culbertson, or about 60 miles west of the state line. From here to Denver the grade is almost, if not quite, ready for the rails, with the exception of several half-mile grades, which wll be completed in the course of a month, and the *‘big cut,” which has yet some sixteen feet of ground to be taken out before the general grade contemplated is fin- ished, although trains will be run over this work before it is entirely com- leted. Many of the sub-contractors ve compltur{ their work and quit. Our informant estimates that the rails will be latd through to Denver in eight weeks. The highest grade over the road, going either way, is but forty feet to the mile. have commenced work on a goos pot building at Arkon, which it is supposed will be the first Colorado di- virion station, and they have already laid out depot grounds and built some half doren switches and side-tracks, A Vexed Clergyman. Even the patience of Job would become exhausted were he a preacher and endeav- oring to interest his audience while they were keeping up an incressant cuufihin;{ making it impossible for him to be heard, Yet, how very easy can all this be avoided by simply using Dr. King’s New Discove- 1y for Consumption, Coughs and Colds. ial Bottles given away at Schroter & Becht's drug store, The Queen’s H Chambers’ Journal, The clerk of the kitchen has a sala- ry of £700 a yearand his board, and to aid him in his work he has four clerks who keep all the accounts, check weights and measuroes, and is- sue orders to the tradespeople: he has also a messonger and a ‘‘necessary woman.” Besides these officials of her majesty's kitchen, there is the “‘chef,” with a salary of £700 a year; and four master cooks at about £350 rer annum each—who have the privi- ege of taking four apprentices at premiums of from £150 to £200 each --two yeomen of the kitchen, two as- sistant cooks, two roasting cooks, four scourers, thres kitchen-maids, a store-keeper, two ‘‘green office” men, and two steam apparatus men, And in the confectionery department there are a first and a second yeoman, with saluries of £300 and £250, respective- ly; an apprentice, three female as: ants and an errand man; and, in ad- dition to these, there are also a pas. try cook and two female assistants, a baker ond his assistant and three coffee-room women, The ewer de- partment, which has charge of all the linen, consists of a yeoman and two female assistants only, The gentle- man of the wine and beer cellareor, properly speaking, her majesty’s chiel butler—has a salary of £500 a year. He has to select and purchase Wwines for the royal establishment, to super- intend the decanting, and send them up to the table. Next to him are the principal table deckers, with £200 a year each; the second table decker, with £150; the third, with £00, andan assistant, with £52—their duties be- ing to superintend the laying out of the Queen’s table before dinner is served, The plate pantry is under the care of three yeomen—with sala- ries of §160, $160, and §120, respect- ively, besides lodging money and board—a groom and six assistants, These offices are of great trust and are not overpaid, seeing that at a rough guess the gold and silver plate at Windsor Castle alone is probably worth about £3,000,000, and includes some yery precious specimens of art workmanship. The getting in of her mnjeuty‘l coal must be an important and arduous task, as no fewer than thirteen persons are employed all the year rouud on this duty alone. ehold. A Favorite Cough Remedy For Colds, Sore Whroat, Asthma, Catarrh, and other diseases of the bronchial tubes, no more useful article can be found than the well known “‘Brown’s Bronchial Troches.” aprd-eodwlw FAST TIME| In uolnnl"Tl take the Chicago & Northwest- Tralns leave Omaha 8:40 p. w. and 7:40 &, m, For tull information call on H, P, DUEY, Ticket Agent, 14th and Farobam Sts. J. BELL, U, P, Hailway Depot, or at JAMES T, CLARK, Gener. Ageny, Omaba, Jalim&e tf W. J. CONNELL, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, Orrics—Front Rooms (up staire) (n Hanscow ‘huu.nu. N. W, corner Fitecath ud tronts, IMPERISHABLE PERFUME Turray & Lanman’s FLORIDA WATER, Rest for TOILET, BATH ind HANDKERCHIEF, CELEBRATED oSTETTEn’s The company | also used BITTERS For a quarter of & century or more Hostetter's Stomach + itters has been the reigniag specific for Indigestion,dyspepsis, fever and agne, loss of ny-m"n.m na liver complaint and other disnr lers,"and has been most emphatically indorsed by medical men a8 health aed strength restor ative, It counteracts a tendency to premature .‘smy,' and sustains and comforts the aged and infirm. For sale by all druggists and dealers generally, al to ml TRUTH ATTESTED. BomeImportantBStatements of Wel l-mvroo ‘Wholly Tn order that the public may fully realize the genuineness of the statements, 48 well as the power and value of the article of which they speak, wo publish horewith the fac-simile signs. Sares'o pacties whose incerity in beyond ques tion, The Truth of theso tostimonials Is abso- Tute, nor can the facts they announce be Ig- nored Omana, Nxn., May 24, 1861, &Co.: Dran Sin:—I have froquently used Warner's Safe Kidney aud Liver Cure .or local affections attendant upon severe rheumatic attacks, and have always derived benefit theretrom, 1 have Safo Nervino with satisfactory re. these medicines worthy of confidenon /2. et @ Q. S Deputy Treasurer OMABA, N3 ‘,m]{y 24, 1581 H. B WARNER & Co., Rochester, N. Y.: GuxTs:i—1 have wee «your Safe Kidney and Liver Curo this spring aa a iverinvigorator, and 1find it the best romedy I ever tried. I have used 4 bottics, and it has made me feel better than ever I did before in the spring. U, P. R. shops, OMANA, NxB,, May 24, 1881, H, H. WARNRR & Co.: Btra:—For more than 1o years I have suffered much inconvenience fron: combined kidney and liver diseases, and have been unablo to work, my urlnuy orgins also being affected. I trieda great many medicines and doctors, but I grew worso and worte day by day. I was told I had Bright's Discase, and I wished myselt dead if 1 could not have spoedy relief, I took your Safe Kidney and Liver Cure, knowing nothing else was over known to cure tha d and I have not been disappointed, The medicine has cured me, and Iam perfec'ly well to-day, entirely through your Safe Kidney and Liver Cure 1 wish gou all succ s In pubiishing this valusble remedy through the world CHH, U. P.R. R. Shops. Thousands of equally strong endorsements many of them In cases where hope was abandoned bave 2J been voluntarily given, showing the romarkable power of Warnerts fafo Kidney and Livor Cure, nall diseases of the Kidneys, liver or urinary or- gaus. If any one who reads this has any phys. ical trouble remcmber the great remedy. PILES! PILESI PILESI A 8lire Cure Found at Lastl N 2 e Mt o, iy A TR Ulcerated Plles has been discovered by Dr. Wil- liam, (an Indian remody,) called Dr. Wiillam's Indian Ointment. A single box has cured the worst chronic cases of 26 or 80y cary standing, No one need suffer fivo minutes atter applying this wonderful soothing medicine, Lotions, instru- ments and electuaries do more harm than good, William’s Ointment absorbs the tumors, allays the inteuse Itching, (particulaaly at night after gotting warm {n bed,) acts 8 a poultice, gives in- stant and painless rellef, and is preparcd only for lHlul‘ itching of tho private parts, and for noth ug elso, Read what the Hon. J. M, Coffinberry of Cleve- and says about Dr. Willlam's Indian Pile Oint- ment: I have used scores of Piles curcs, and it affords mo p easure tosay thatIhave never found anything which gave such immediate and perma nent relief as Dr. Willlam's (ndian Ointment. For sale by all druggists or mallod on recelpt - price, 1,00, HENRY & CO., Prop’rs., CLEVRLAND, OnI0, For sale by 0. F Goodman, Ookindand b NERVOUS DEBILITY, Onrg Guaranteed. Dr. E. Ofi'ul'l orve lml‘gnln ‘reatment— A specific for Hysteria, Dizziness, Convulsions, Nervous Headache, Mental Depression, Loss of Memory,Spermatorrhaa, Impotenzy, Involuntary Emlssions, Premature Old Age, sed by over- exertion, self-abvse, or over-indulgence,” which leads to iisery, decay and death. ~One box will cure recent cases. Ea h box contains one month’s treatment, One dollar a box, or six Lozes for five dollare; sent by mail propaid on receipt of &flu Wae guarantee six boxes to cure any case, ith each order recelved by us for six boxos, no- companied with five dollars, will send the pur. chaser our written guarantee to return the wmoney if the treatment does not effect a cure, C, BI Goodman, Druggist, Sole, Wholesale and Betail ‘Agont, Omaba, Neb. Ordors by mal at regular price, d&wly THE KENDALL PLAITING MAGHINE! DRESS-MAKERS' OOMPANION, It plaits trom 1-16 of & n inch to widthin the coarsest felts or finest silks 1t does all kinde and styles of j laiting in use, No Iady that does her own n-»mlklnr can afford to do without one—as nice plaitl n[r is never out of fashion, if secn it sells iteelf, For Machines, Circulars or Agent’s terms address CONGAR & €0, 118 Adams St._Chicavo TIL, 1880, SHORT LINE. 1880, KANSAS CITY, 3t.Joe & Conncil Bluffs FAXLIROA XD Direct Lin:a “t':gT. LOUI8 AND THE EAST From Omaha and the West, o change of cars betwern Omaba aud by, wouls, and bub one between OMAHA and NEW_YORK, 3 = B Daily Passenger Trains Raaciuse 1l EABTERN AND WESTERM ITIES with LES# C X CE of ALT ks a) your uickod A C. DAWES, Gen, Pass. snd Tk, ] wo desire to send free v mail to every one, £27'Tho Speciflc Modicine I sold by all druggists | 8t 81 per packa o will Buidock yon suffer from Dyspepsia, use BURDOCA 'LOOD BITTERS, I you are afflicted with Biliousness, use BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS 1t you are prostrated with sick Headache, take BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS 1t your Bowels are disordered, rogulate them with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. 1t your Blood fs mpure, purity it with HENRY LEHMANN, JOBBER OF TR W dn L BB, £ AND WINDOW SHADES EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED. 08 FARNAM ST. - - OMAHA. J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN LU NMMIEBIEER. Lath, Shingles, Pickets, pukpock pioov nrrrens. | §ASH, - DOORS, BLINDS, MOLDINGS, LIME, CEMENT 1t you have Indigestion, you will find an antidote in BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 1t you are troubled with Spring Complaints, adicate them with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTE! It your Liveris torpid, restore it to healthy action .|Near Union Pacific Depot, - - PLASTHR, BTO. MSTATE AGEN1 FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANYY OMAHA.NEB with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS It your Liver is affected, you will find a sure re- storative in BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 1t you have any species of Humot or Pimple, fail not to take BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 11 you have any symptoms of Ulcers o Berofulous Sores, » curative remedy will be found in BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, For Imparting strength and vitality to the sys- tem, nothing can equal BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. For Nervous and General Debility, tone up the system with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. Price, 81.00 per fottle; Trial Bottles 10 Cts J S CAULFIBELD ~——=WHOLESALE— BOOK SELLER AND STATIONER ~AND DEALER N~ Wall Paper and Window Shades. 1304 Farnham 8t. Omaha Neb. FOSTER, MILBURN, & Co., Props. BUFFALO, N. Y. . C. MORG.ATN, e WHOLESALE GROCER, The Great English Remedy = (Never fails to cure » [Nervous Debility, 1218 Farnham St.. Omaha, Neb. | Exhaustion, Emis- sions, Seminal 'Weak- ST MAN- [OOD, and all the tem, the Inevitable rc. ™ 'sult of these evil fiom tices, which are so destruetive to mind and body and make lifo miserable, often leading to insani- ty and death. It strengthens the Nerves, Brain, (m»mur’é Blood, Muscles, Digestive and Repro- ductive Organs, It restores t7 all the organic functicns their former vigor and vitality, ma- *ing life cheerful and enjoyable. I’ligu,&&l hottle, or four times the quantity §10. Sent by express, secure from observation, to any address, on recelptof_price. No,C. O, D. sent, except on receipt of §1 as a guarantec. Letters ra. questing answers must inclose stamp. Dr. Mintie's Dandelion Pills the market. Sold by all druggists, Price DA, MiNTiK's KiDNRY REMEDY, NEPRETICU, Cures sl kind of Kidney and bladder complainto, govorrlea, glect and lcucorrhea. For eale vy all laugg.sts: §1a bottle, ENGLISH MEDICAL INSTITUTE, 718 Ofive St., St. Louis, Mo, For Sale in Omaha by C. F. GOODMAN. # you are yoen di llnfl|n oxr’ llolldfln : Bingle, ol 0 lealth or languish dis Tave been preven! bys thmeiy e of iatney . disease) Bt womach, o0 d; liver oF nerves Soldbyar efuts, Bud Lor Circulir. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE. The Most Successful Remedy cver discov: ered, as it I8 cortain in its effects and does not blister. READ PROOF BELOW. Also excellent for huinan flesh. FROM A PROMINENT PHYSICIAN, Wasbiugtonville, Ohio, June 17, 1881, Dr. B.J, KRXDALL, & Co.: Gents—Reading your ad vertisement in Turf, Field and Form, of your Kendall’s Spavin a d having o valusble and s,cedy horae which hadbeen lame from £pavin for eighteen months, I sent 10 you for n bottle by express, which i six weeks remoyed all lameness and enlargement and o largs splint <t and cheapent repepsia an bittous | @) TVAL B H M. & M. PEAVY THE . GLOTHIERS! 18309 Farnham Street. = = = NWNEB. WM. ROGERS Manufacturing Company, ~———MAKERS OF THE Finest Sitver Plat Spoons and Forks, {/The only and| original firm of is giving for In- Rogers Bros. | stance ~ single All ow Spoons, Forks plated Spoon a and Knives plated triple thickness with the greatest plate uly on of care, Each lot being hung the sectio & on a scale while where expo d being plated, to to wear, thereby insure a full de- making a single posit of silver on SR e them, wear as long as We would call a triple plated atten- i from another horse, und both horses are to-day especial astound ag colte, Tho on bottlo waa worth to espeet! . Sond for, Uluateatad clroalar giving positive oy 0 it roof, Price§l. All Druggists have it or can — — - Fob itfor you. Dr. B, J. Kendall & Co', Pro- | kaé Rival. 2 Tiooed prietors, Enosborgh Falls, V. S?LP BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Gy To Nervous Sufterers THE OREAT EUR_DP!AN REMEDY, Dr, J, B, Bimpson's Specific DEEIDXCIINIE. 1t 18 & posttive cure for Spermatoirhes, Semina Weoks mpotancy, and sll diseases resulting All Orders In the West should be Addressed to OUR AGENOCY, A. B. HUBERMANN, Wholesale dJewe'er, OMAHA, - A NEB I di trom Belf.:Abuse, s ‘Montal Anxlety, Loss) Memory, Paiua In the Back o and d Pamphlote sent tree to all, Write for them and get tult o, Specite, 91,00 i six pack. c, $1.00 per o, oF six pack. 00, Add) Srders Feas all rdors 40 B, BIMSON MEDICINE 0@, Specia.l Attention Is Once More Called to the Fact thay M. EELILIMANS CO. iper: | Rank foremost in tne West In Assortment and Prices of Nos. 104 and 106 Main 8t. Buftalo, N. ¥, Sol4 in Omaha by C. F, Goodman, J. W, Bell, J. K. s, and all drugglsteevery where, H GRAY'S SPECIFIC MEDICINE TRADE MARK _The Great TRADE MARK " Englishrem- edy. 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