Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 8, 1882, Page 2

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'A’l‘ERDAY. APRIL 8 1882 I'HE OMAEA DAl 1Y BEEL: A ——————————T— AN INDUSTRIAL OENTRE. TThree Connetticut Manufacturing \Towns-—Views of a Representa- tive Working New England Community. orrespondent of the N. ¥. Post. Meripes, Ct.,—Great industrial centrbs like Birmimgham or Manches- ter in England are rare in this country outside of the great cities, yet hore within aradius of twelve miles are three vigorous young towns, which, it they have not already attained that position, are fast approaching it. I refer to Waterbury, twelve miles west in the heart of Naugatuck Valley, the centre of the brass interest of the country; New Britain, nine miles north, the Sheffield of Americs n_mI Meriden, the seat of the silver-plating intereat and of a score of important industries beside. 8 This city is certainly an industrial marvel, without a peer in rapid devel- opment, and its rapid changes and picturesque sittuation present no end of kaleidoscopic pictures to the tour- ist wise enough to devote a fow days to the careful study of them, The town lies in the deep valley of the Quinnipiack, eighteen miles above New Haven, and the same distance south of Hartford, East and west are high ranges of sandstone hills, capped by great, black, jagged masses of voleanic rock, forced up through the sandstone crust to the height of hundreds of feet which have been the wonder .ng study of geologists for generations” Great brick factories, each an industrial villiage in itself, fill the narrow valley, and the hillsides are dotted with charming villas and pratstg white cottages that form the of 20,000 people. The streets climb the hills or cut their surfaces into squares, and from the cottages that line them appears every morning, a fow minutes before seven, a throng of six or seven thousand operatives, neatly clad, generally with cheerful, contented faces, that pours like a flood through the city, and is swal- lowed up quickly enough by the grim-looking factories. At seven the oity’l day begins, and after that hour noisy trip hammers strike the cruie metal into shave, huge shears clip off iron bars as easily as a lady's scissors anips off a ribbon, molten metal pours hissing into clay moulds, looms clang, glass blowers ply their ancient crafv, and men who have reached the heights of industrial art cut delicate tracery on glass, and engrave chaste patterns nmf beautiful g::ignl on _the table- ware of the millions. All this and more one may see in a leisurely tour of the workshop. At noon the fac- tories stop for an hour, at six the day's work is done, and the throngs are in the streets again homeward bound, leaving the grime and dust of the day’s toil behind with their work-a- day habiliments. telligence and cultivation are much higher here than in most factor; towns, owing to the fact that skilled labor is chiefly employed in its facto- ries, The city has its clubs and ‘‘so- cieties” ef all sorts, literary, dramatic and musical, its social sets and cir- oles, The seat of the State Reform School is here. I notice all the ad- juncts of the citv—an opera-house, gu, wwed streets, water-works capa- le of throwing a stream from the hy- drant over any of the church spires and fed from a beautiful pond far up in the mountains, police, common council, mayor, and until recently a municipal ring, The grand list of the city this year amounts to nine mil. lions of dollars, assessments being laid on the basis of one-third of the real value. It claims a population of twenty thousand, double that report- «d in the census of 1870. One hun- dred and ninety-two buildings were erected last year ata cost of half a million, and for the present year sixty- two premits have been granted—one for a hotel to cost one hundred thou- sand dollars. This prosperity is largely the work of the last twenty years, It has achieved in the absence of all those natural advantages which are supposed to make citien; mines, navigable waters, a tributary country, are wanting, There is not even a mill-stream here capable of turnishing water power, Much of this phenomenal growth is due to the business enterprise of the citizens, but Iam inclined to attri- bute the town’s prosperity largely to the patent laws. It is a city of inven- tors, Mechanical genius is attracted hither as the artistic is to Paris or the literary to university towns, at workshops have been built up and are sustain bithe scores and hundreds of patents they control. Every other man one meets has taken out a pat- ent, or is about to do #0, or is working at ‘“‘an idea.,” Some inventors have taken out eight or ten. Several have become well-to-do by a fortunate in- ventive inspiration. A friend took meo tosee an inventor who had been at work nearly seven years on an im- proved water motor, his expenses mean- time being paid by a local company which had been organized to manufac- ture the invention as soon as it should be perfected. Another gentlemen whom I met had disposed of two pat- ents at a comfortable fizure, was man- ufacturing under two others, had a fifth passing through a patent office, and also acted as an agent for the pro- curement of patenta for his neighbors. The inventors are chiefly of small ar- ticles in hardware and silver plate, or for household use, and when secured by patent are sold or leased on a roy- alty to the manufacturers, who enjoy: a monopoly of the article until the patent expires, and are built up by it. Bome of them would seem to have roached the limit of expansion. One company carries & thousand men on its pay-roll, and covers eight acres with its buildings. ' Another follows closely, with its five huge workshops and 600 laborers; and there are nine -other firms carrying from 200 to 400 amen on their pay-rolls, To show the remarkable varioty of Articles manu- factul 1 give the following list from logue of one firm: mestic ware, plated and Britannia ware, #pectacles, tobacco boxes, door hang- «©rs and rollers, butts, hinges and fas- !r:!:i::' plates, hamxcekr:, latches, ma 08, Vises,spoans, A coffee and spice mills, bootjucks, fau- 8, skimmer, lanterns, can- , gear drills, shade rollers s S——— Bargent s Bouvenir, % adwmirers of ex-Sena- p S T i a (uet at the Pac hotel, Ban Francisco, on the eve of =5 his departure for Betlin to assume the duties of United States Minister there. As a momento of the ocea- sion Mr, Sargent was presented with a beautiful plage of gold and silver with the menu of the feast engraved in the center. The plate 18 heavy solid silver,about eight inches long and mx wide. On the initial side the leteer ‘‘S,” in- closes, in the circles formed by the lower and upper halves of the letter, two landseapes. The upper one is the Golden Gate at sunset, n steamer and bark with all sail set being intro- duced in the foreground, and Fort Point showing on the left and Point Jonita on the right. In the iower circle is a picturesque view of the Rhine. The ground work of the side of the plate isof yellow gold, satin inished; the “8.” red gold, relieved , and_the landscapes of en- graved silver, The inseription on the initial side of the plate is az follows: Banquet to Aaron A. Sargent, Minis- ter of the United States to Germany, by the Citizens of San I'rancisco, Pal- ace Hotel, Thursday, March 30, 1882, The reverse side of the plate is an ususually artistic bit of engraving and motal working. The entire side re- presents a view of the Bridle Veil Falls in the Yosemite Valley, framed on the sides by tv1 towering sequoia, from whose highest branches, across the top of the picture, forming that ortion of the frame, rests a broken imb, Suspended from the centre of this limb are flags of the United States and Germany, draped to the right and left, caught up on thebranches of the sequoia, and, finally, twining their gracefulfoldsjaroundfthe mighty trees’ trunks, The conception and execu- tion of this design are faultless. The groundwork is silver, satin finish, the massive rockwork, over which the water falls in misty torrents, is of yellow gold, the texture effect being produced with what is called Scotch stoning, The falls themselves are of delicately engraved silver. In the foregroun a placid stretch of river, the water effect being produced with the graver, and dashes of gold. The details of vegetation and the region are inred gold, engraved. The red in the flags is of red gold, the black and white of engraved and satin fin- ished silver. The plate was held in a handsome embossed centre piece of morocco on one side inscribed in gilt letters, ‘‘Aaron A. Sargent.” On the side of the case was a silk menu of the banquet. GENERAL HARNEY. A Western Becout's 8tory. Boston Truo Flag. When we heard about the massacre he sent out scouts to find out who the murderers were, and when they re- ported to him that they were Mor- mons, off he went with his entire command for Salt Lake City, swear- ing every rod of the way that he Y | would hang the murderers if he had to hang every Mormon in Utah. He intended to give Brigham Young twenty-four hours to surrender up the murderers, and unless this was done Later Day Saints would be . mighty scarce around tliere, Beforo he reached Salt Lake Oity a mesgenger overtook us with orders from the war department for Haj to return to camp; that the civil thorities would attend to the massa- ore business. Then you ought to have heard the old man swear. He damned the government enough to sinkit. I never met a man who could swearmore violently than Har- ney. He thought the matter over for a little while, and then declared that he had started for Salt Lake City and he would go there if he was court- martialed and shot forit. And he went, too, and if the war department ever heard of it, no action was *aken. Wo camped a short distaace ouwide the city, and stayed a fow days to give the animals a rest; and they needed it sadly, for we had traveled fast, The morning that we started back to Yuma a young girl about seventeen or eighteen years old came out to camp and applied to Brady, the train- master, to help her escape, Her pa- rents were English, who had joined the Mormons not long before, and one of the elders wanted to marry her, Her parents wero trying to force her to this polygamous marriage, and she could only avoid it by running away. She had an uncie ana an aunt in San Francisco, and to them she wanted to 0. Brady wasn't the man to say ‘no” under such ocircumstances, and he stowed her away in the flour wagon by fiiling the barrels around her in such a way that she couldn’t be seen from either end. Woe hadn't got far before a dozen Mormons overtook us, the girl's fath- er being along with them, and they went through that train until they found the girl. After they had got her out she turned to Brady and bade him good-bye, at the same time thanking him for trying to help her. That, of course gave him dead away, and the Mormons arrested him for kidnapping tae girl, and away they all went toward the city. Harney saw that there was something wrong with the train, and back came a messenger to seo what was tho -natter. As soon as Harney was informed ot what had occurred, he ordered the train to halt and stay there until he g:t back, and, swearing worse than fore, away he and all his troops went for the Mormons, They had got a long start on him, however, and reached the ocity first. Do you suppose Harney stopped when he relohl::?iothn city? Not Ep:n of it. Right up the main street he went at a gallop, and whon he jumped from his horse and cried “Halt!” it was right in front of Brigham's office. There was a musket and fixed bayo- net; but as he brought his weapon to a ' charge Harney gave it a kick that turned the guard half round and the next instant he was disarmed. Harney strode into the office with a half-dozen soldiers at his heels, and two minutes [later Brigham was a-straddle of a 'horse, and galloping down the strect in the centre of a troop of cavalry, It was fun to see the Mormons stare as they saw the old man 1n such company, but before they could have time to act they were out of the city. About five wmiles out Harney or- dered a halt, and it wasn't long be- fore a lot of Mormons came riding up as fast as their horses could carry them, When they got up within sound of his voice, Harney ordered them to halt or he would fire on them, and they halted, Then he or- dered Brigham to tell them to go back to the city and bring Brady and the girl back with them; and said he to Brigham: “If they are not here inside ot two hours, I'll fix your carcass full of gov- ernment lead!” ““You don’t dare to,” says Brig- ham. “Why, —— you,” “T'll shoot you myseli!” Long betore the two hours were up Brady and the gitl woere there, and when we got to Yuma, Harney sent a quard with her to San Bernardino on hes way to San Franciscc ways Harney, That's the kind of a man Harney was, v— The Compliment Arrayed in snow.white pants and vest And other raiment fair to v 1 stood hefore my sweetheart Sue — The charmin, ature I love best ‘ “Tell me, and does my costume sait?” I nsked thae apple of my eye, And then the charmer made reply — “Oh, yee, you do look awful cute!” Although T frequenely had heard rt vent her ples 1 did not k The meaning of that fav'rite word. But presently at window side y We stood and watched the passing throng, And soon a donkey passed along With ears like wings extended wide, And gazing at the doleful brate My sweetheart gave a merry cry — qnote her language with a sich— harlie, ain't he awful cute?” —e The Meadow Brook. Beside the meadow brook she stayed, A happy child with laughing eyes; Above her smiled the soft blue skies, Around her there the sunbeams played. The brook went babbling on its way Adown the meadow white with Bowers Of early npring, and through the hours Made merry with her all the day. 1 ‘0 She sat beside the meadow brook, ‘A maiden fair in summer time, Wken the sweet year was in its prime, And in her hands hauds she held a boJk; The ssme blue sky smiled bright above; The brook it sans a tender song Of love to her the whole day long; The book she read was all of love, Beside the meadow brook she stood, A matron in the noon of life, A happy mother and a wife, ‘Who loitered there in pensive mocd, Aronnd her fell the antumn leaves; The mendow brook w.s al 1.0st dry, And in the harvest fields hard by The reapors found the last year's sheaves, Once more beside the hrook she stands— Tho willow’s branches round her there Hang leafless in the winter air— An aged dame with f.lded hands, 0ld memories her thoughts e 1ga; Whose ever link she cannot And, frozen o'er, the brook’s still face Is wrinkled like the face of age. PEPPWRMENT DROPS. The sunflower craze is coming to a bud. It takes o good able-bodied dentist to extract the cube root. ‘What grocer outrage can there be than sanded sugar aud suort weight of the same? A lectnrer is telling ‘‘How we Hear,” It is easily told. Somebody tells a friend of ours, and tells him not to tell;that’s the way we hear. During the past year no less than nine awnkrokers failed in busincss in the nited States, Of course they went into outside speculations. English and French doctors don't agree as to what causes sea-sickness, We thought it was caused by going on the wa- ter,—{ Detroit Free Press. William Henderson has been arrested out in Utah for o desperate assault upon » Mormon, William seems to be a prac- #ical sort of Anti-Polygamy Bill.y A maon who won’t take his horse out on account of the weather isn't abit surprised to meet_his wife slushing arouud down town. What injures a horse won't hurt a woman & bit. ¢ A Colorado miner had a piece of inch gus-pipe driven through him and yet lived three days, or until the mun who read the meters came along and was going tocharge him up 900 feet. Ieia gotting to be common nowadays for men to murder somsbody and then kill themielves. Well, that saves the expense of trying them and turning them loose to kill somebody else, It is said that the population of this country has increased 17,000,000 since the war, but & man who wants some one to help him move n coole stove can’t be ma Lo | - to believe any such yarn as that, A Nebraska woman missed her husband for thres weeks before she raised any row about it, and she might not have said any- thing then if his boota had not been drawn up id the well bucket.—[Detroit Kree Press, “*The execut've force of Russian opin- ions,” says an English critic, “lies in the army.” —[New York Horald. The execu- tive force of American opinion lies in the newspaper, and lies like thunder, too, sometimes, An Towa man crowded a turnip into his mouth to show what sleight-of-hand could do, and a doctor cut at it for two hours to | ' show what surgery could accomplish, | That chav will keep his mouth shut for two weeks to come, An Irish sttorney practicing in the Butte police court was reminded by the opposing connsel of an errorin his state- ment of facts, **May it plaze the court,” he replied, “if I am wrong in this I have another point that is equally conclusive.” Thoy tell of a man out west who was puttiug.a blast in a well, and it went off prematurely and blew him out into an apple tree about fifty feet away., Ina moment ho recovere1 himself, and remark- ing, *“Ihe Lord knows better than 1 do, aftor all; 1 gaess it is almost time to go OSTETT CELEBRATED BIfFERS For a quarter of a century of mort Stomach ! itters has boen the reig for Indigestion, physical star dors,and has ¥ u and comforts the aged and inflrm, For sale by all druggists and dealers generally. al to ml TRUTH ATTESTED. SomeImportantStatementsof Wel Known People Wholly Verifled. Tn order that the public may fully realize the genuineness of the statements, a8 well as the power and vaiue of tho article of which they Bpenk, we publish hor. with the fac-simile signs. tures of parties whose sincority is beyond quea tion. The Truth of these testimonials s abso. Iute, nor can the facts they announce be Ig- not OxAmA, Nun., May 24, 1881, H. H, WanNmk & Co.: DrAR Sth:—I havo frequently used Warnor's Safe Kidnov aud Liver Cure .or local affections attendant upon severe rheumatic attacks, and have always dorived benofit therofrom, 1 have alao used tho Safe Nervine with satistactory re. sults, 1 consider these mediciues worthy of confidencn & A. Ao/ Deputy Treasuror OMARA, NuB Y 24, 1681 H, ¥ Warx#r & Co., Rochestes Wt GrNTR:—I have mse (your Safe Kidney and Liver Curo this spring a8 & iver invigorator, and 1find ic the best remedy 1 ever tried. I have used 4 bottles, ard it has made me feel better than ever I did before in the spring. U. P. R. Shops, Oxana, Nz, May 24, 1681, ARNER & CO.0 For more thar 10 ch in onvenience fron: combined kidney and liver aiseases, snd have boen unsble to work, my urin.ry organs alao being affected. I tried o ‘medicines and doctors, but 1 grew worss and worte day by dry. 1 waa told I had Bright's Discase, and | wishod myseli doad if | could not have speecy rolief. I took your Safe Kidney and Liver Cure, knowing nothing else waa ever known to cure tha diseaso, and 1 have not been disappointed. Tho medicine has cured me, and 1am perfec Iy well to-day, entirely mmu%‘I your Safe Kidney and Liver Cure 1 years T have sufferod wish ou all suce ss in pubiishing this valuable remedy through :h 0 world U. P.R. R. Shops. Thousands of equally strong endorsements mariy of them in cases whore hope was abandoned bave boen voluntarilysgiven, showiug the remarkable power of Warner's “a‘e Kidney and Livor Cure, Inall diseases of the Kidneys, liver or urinary or- gavs. 1fany one who reads this has any phys- ical troublo remember the great remedy. IMPERISHABLE PERFUME. Murray & Lanman’s FLORIDA WATER, Rest for TOILET, BATH ind HANDKERCHIEF, D i e . iid Is tho old Favorite and PRINCIFALLYNE —FOR— CHICAGO, PEORIA, praning,” took a large pruning-kife from his pocket and set to work, Now arith metic: A house painter con- sumes forty.eight minutes in lighting his pipe; fifty-five minutes in telling stories; twont‘\;-twu minutes in watching a kitchen girl; thirty-six minutis in binding up a sore finge, and quits work nine minutes before 6, How much time did he heat his employer out of, an t how long will it take him to work himself to death? The stage of a western theater took fire the other evering, but & rnic and rusl for the door was averted by the manager who, with great presence of mind, slipped to the front and said: *‘Ladies and gentle- men, we have prepared a little surprise for you. An immense kettle of whisky punch is now being heated, and in fow | * moments waiters will pass through the audionce and distribute it.”" After that the audience had to be pulied out, oue by one,—[Philadelphia News, Free of Oharge. All persons suffering from Coug! Asthms, Bronchitis, Loss of Voice, or any affection of the Throat and Lumgs, are re- quested to eall at Schroter & Becht's drug store snd get a Trial Bottle of Dr, King's w Discoyery for Consumption, free of , which™ will convince them of its uderful morits and show what a regalar doller-size bottle will Call early. Geo. P. Bemis ReaL ESTATE AcENcy, ). 16th and Dodge Bts.,, Omaha, Neb, Thiy gency 40es ETRIOTLY & brokerage bust Dot nt spoc ulate and thorefore ':-'v bu;.m ©aoks are lnsured 10 ¢ B natend ST. LOUIS, MILWAUKEE. DETROIT, NIAGARA FALLS, NEW YORK,BOSTON, And all Poluts East and South-East. THE LINE COMPRISES Noarly 4,000 miles. Solld Smooth Steel Tracks All oanniections are made in UNION DEPOTS. Great Through Car Line, and is univorsally conceded to by the FINEST EQUIPPED Rail- read in tho world for all classes of travel, Try it aud you wiil find traveling a lnxury inetéad of a discomfort. ) ckets via This Celebrated Line for o8 Vi Car Acocmypdations, Timo Tables, cheerfally glven by applyining to T.J. POTTER, 24 Vice-Pros't & Gen. Manager,Chicago, PERCIVAL LOWELL, W. J. DAY Gen Agent, Connell Bluffs, M. P, DUELL, Ticket Agt.fomaha. morn-ed Ly THE KENDALL PLAITING MACHINE! DRESS-HARES COMPANION, 1t plaits tro 1-16.0f a 0 inch to width in the coarseat folts or fincst silks 1t does all kinds and styles of § Iaiting in use. o lady thai does her own drosswaaklag can 10 do without ono—as nice plaiting ls never out of fashion, if seen it sells itself, Machines, Circulars or Agent's terias addr CONGAR & 00, 113 Adams St. Chicavo TIL For ves Buidock - 00D yon suffer from Dyspepsia, use BURDOCA 'LOOD BITTERS, It you are afflicted with Biliousness, use BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS It you are prostrated with sick Headache, take BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS 1t your Bowels are disordered, regulate them with BURDOCK BLUOD BITTERS, ® | 1t your Blood is mpure, purity it with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 1 you have Indigestion, you will tind an antidote in BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 11 you are troubled with Spring Complaints, er- adicate them with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 1t your Liveris torpid, restore it to healthy action with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS 1t your Liver is affected, you will find a sure re. storative in BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 1t you have any species of Humor or Pimple, fail not to take BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 11 you have any symptoms of Ulcers or Scrofulous Soros, & curative romedy will be found in BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. For imparting strength and vitality to the s tem, nothing can equal URDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. For Nervous and General Debility, tone up the system with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. Price, $1.00 per Sottle; Trial Bottles 10 Ots HENRY LEHMANN, JOBBER OF WA LL PAPHR, AND WINDOW SHADES EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED. |08 FARNAM ST. - - OMAHA. J. A, WAKEFIELD, WHOLSSALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN U R R IR R Lath, Shingles, Pickets, SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOLDINGS,CiLIME, CEMENT PLASTER, ETO. MrSTATE AGEN1 FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANYY Near Union Pacific Depot, - - OMAHA NER e 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 Sold at wholesale by Ish & McMahon and C. F. ‘Goodnian. fe 27 eod-me The qat Engiish Remedy Never fails to ‘cure Norvous Debility, Vi- tal Exbaustion, Emis. sions, Seminal Weak- \puyuesies LOST MAN- WA[HOOD, and ali the vil effocts of youth. ul follies and exces- ses, It stops perma- nently all weakening, involuntary 1oss. s an Iraing upon the sys- tem, the inovitablo re- S yult'of these el prac- tices, which aré so destruotive to mind and body and make life miserable, often leading to insani- ty and death. It strengthons the Nerves, Brain, (memory( Blood, Muscles, Digestive and Repro: ductivo Organs, It restores t» all the orzanic functiens their former vigor and vitality, ma- wing life cheerful and enjoyable. Price, $8 a hottle, o four times the quantity §10. Sent by express, secure from observation, to any address, on recelptof price. No.C. 0. D, sent, except on receipt of §1 as o guarantee. Letters ri- Guesting answers must incloso stamp. Dr. Mintie's Dandelion Pills aro th 3 best and cheapest dyspopsia and billious cure i+ the market. Sold by all druggists. Price 50 cents. DR MixTins KiNEY REMEDY, NEPRRTICON, Cureaul kind of Kidney and bladder complainte, gouorrhea, glect and leucorrhea, For eale oy all dauggists: 81 a bottle. ENGLISH MEDICAL INSTITUTE, 718 Ofive St., St. Louls, Mo, For Salein Omaha by C. F. GOODMAN. Jan25-1v To Nervous Sutterers THE QREAT !UTOPEAN REMEDY. Dr. J. B. Simpson’s Specific MEIIDXOXINE. 10 18 & posjtive cure for Spormatoirhea, Semina Weokness Lmpotancy, and all disesses romulting trom Self-Abuse, as Mental Anxiery, Loss Memory, or 8ide, and discases Toon | that lesd Consumption [noanity an. | earlygrave The yps:clfl: Medicine 1y being used with wonder. g 4 ful succoss, AN, o RS M| Pamphlots sonc treo to all, Writa for thewm and got full par- tioulars, Price, fic, $1.00 per package, or six pack. ages for 85,00, Addrees all orders to B. SIMSON MEDICINE CG, Nos. 104 and 106 Main St. Buffalo, N. Y. Sol4 1n Omaha by O, ¥. Goodman, J.'W. Bell, J.K. lab, and all drugglteeverywhero, " 8. dAw GRAY’S SPECIFIC MIDICINE TRADE MARK _The GrestTR{ DE MARK English rem- ody. Anune failing_cure for Seminal Weaknoss, Spermator- rhes, Impot- ency, and all Discasesthat? 2N follow as & BEFGRE TAKIND, sequence of AFTER TAK Self-Abuse; as Loss of Memory, Universal Lassi- tude, Paln in the Back, Dimness of Vision, Pre- maturs Old Age, and many other Diseases that lead to Insanity or Consumption and & Prema- ture Grave. £@ Full particulars in our pamohlet, which we desire to send free tv mail to every one, &4 The Specific Medicine 18 sold by all druggists at 81 per package, or 6 packages for 85, or will be sent free by mail on rect ptof the money, by addressing THE GRA [EDICINE CO., Buftalo, N, 'Y, orsaler ocTme-eod O EUROPE, Arranged by Haraugari Maen- nerchor. CNLY 890, in the [Cabin for jRound Trip. From New York to Atnwerp and Return, #@rLeaving New York June 10, 1882, on the tho new and splendid Mail Steamer Belgenland, &4 neturn tickets good one year on any steawer of the Red Star Line, #irRallroad Fare from Antwerp to Paris, Unly $1.50. Tickets, | Prospectus and all Information Oniyto be had from M. &. R, BURGHEIM, c . | Bookseliers, 484 Vine Street, Cincinnatti, O. |16 has & National Repntation s being_ the [ 2O°Kse!lers nRRsteely ingiany The Cincinnatti XHnrugarx Manper- chor. apl-mie-ev sat 4t MAIL LETTINGS. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS, DEPARTMENT ) March 10, 1882, § PosTorFicn Wasmixatos, D, C, Proposals will be received at the Contract Office of this dopartment until 8 p. m., of April 9, 1882, for carrying mail of the United States, pon mossenger and transfer route lu_the City of Omans, State of Nebrasks, from July 1, 1852, of June 80, 1586, Advertiscment of roul +tructions to bidders, and all other nece e formation will beffurnished upon application to the postmaster at Owmaba, or the Second Assist antPortmaster Genoral, T, Ar HOWE, Pdstmaster General, MorlSme evSatdt, W. DOANO, NB, A, 0. CAMPEELL DOANE & CAMPBELL, Attorneys-at-Law WHOLESALE GROCER, 12183 Farnham 8t.. Omaha, Neb. DOUERILE AND SINGHILE AOTING [POWER AND HAND B2 T NE IBE° S ] Steam Pumps, Engine Trimmings, MINING MACHINERY, BELTING, HOSE, BRASS AND IRON FITTINGS PIPE, STEAM PACKING, AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.3 3% HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH’AND.SCHOOL BELLS A SRANG,V __205 F"f“f‘"‘“‘ St. Omaha H M & M PEAVY THE GLOTHIERS! 1309 Farnham Street. ORIAEIA,K6 - - - NEB. WM. ROGERS Manufacturing Company, ———MAKERS OF THE——— Finest Sitver Plated Spoons and Forks, GG The Rogers Bros. \ stance ~ single All ouw Spoons, plated Spoon a Forks and Knives plated triplethickness with the greatest plate uly on of care, Each lIot being hung the, maotlois dn a scale while where expo d being plated, to to w}alr, thereby insure & full de- making a single posit of silver on htedtig Doon them, ‘We would call wear as long as a triple plated especial atten- one, Rival. All Orders n the Wost should be Addressed o OUR AGENCOY, A. B. HUBERMANN, Wholesale Jeweler, OMAHA, - NES WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN O NV IR ER, Lath, Shingles, |SASH, DOORS, BLINDS AND MOULDINGS. 15thra.nd Cuming Sts. OMAHA, NEB R o ol Hair Goods, Notions, Ladies’ Furaishing Goods, Ulsters, Girculars, and Buits, 507 TENTEH STREEYT IV A S A ®EE

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