Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 12, 1882, Page 7

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| - I'HE OMAHA DAlLY BEE: FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1882 T COMMISSION Agents for the Celebrated Mills ot H. D, 0. 0. COOXK & CO. MERCHANTS, City Market, Couneil Bluffs, Tows, WHOLESALE FLOUR HOUSE, . Rush & Co,, Golden Eagle Flour, Leavenwosth, Kansas, and Queen Bee Mills, Sioux Falls, Dukota. Feterence, Smith & Criitenden, Council Bluffs, is. H. E. SEAMAI, WHOLESALE | STATIONERY AND | AND RETAIL PRINTER'S -GOODS, COUNCIL BLUFF8, IOWA. Lands and Lots MONEY TO LOAN AT 1O | TITLE ABSTRAGT OFFICE Bou%ht agd Sold. A} RATES. | NOTARIES PUBLIC . AND CONVEYANCERS. COUNCIL BLUFFS - - ! 10WA, 16 North Main Street. | WHOLESALE DEALER Ready-fitted uppers, in calt skin and kip, IN SHOE FINDINCS. Oak and Hemlock SOLE LEATHER, and all ining to the shoe trade. Gocds sold as cheap s in the East. = Go MRS, -NORRIS' NEW TO MILLINERY STORE “®OR STYLISH SPRING MILLINERY. PATTERN BONNETS AND CHILDREN'S HATS A SPECIALTY. 105 Bouth Main Street. - - - - - Council Bluffs Ia. WATEHIR WAVES That never require erimping, at Mra. J. J. Good's Hair Store, at prices never befere touched b; any other hair dealer. Also a full lino of switches, ctc., at kreatly reduced prices. Also gold, elsewhere. All goods warranted aa reprosonted. 29 Main street, Council Blufts, Iowa. silver and colored nots. - Waves made from ladies’ own hair, ‘Do not fail to call bofors purchasing 7 MRS. J. J. GOO! {0 bexsd MASON WISE, LIVERY, FEED & SALE STABLE The largest and best _stables in the west. Roadsters, Saddle and draft horses for sale, also afine lot of mules . just received which will be closed out cheap. SC0IT ST., NEAR BROADWAY. COUNCIL BLUFFS. IA. REMOVED_without the G AN E drawing of blood or use of Kpite, Garos lung discases ts, Bcrofuln, Liver Com: AND OTHER |10 “Dropay, Rheuma. TUMO RS i, Fover ana Mercur- ial sores, Erysipelas, Salt Kheum, Scald Head, Catarrh, woak, - inflamed and granulated Eyes, ~crofulous Ulcors and Fe- male Diseases of all 'kinds. Also Kidney and Venerial discases. Hemorrhoids or Piles cured or money refunded. Algdiscases treated upon theprinciple of veget- oform, without the use of mercurial pois- or the Knife. Eloctra Vapor o M-dicated Baths, furnished those who desire them. Hernia or Rupture radically cured by the use of the Elastic boit Truss and Plaster, which hay £ superior in the worla. . CONSULTATION FREE o CALL ON OR ADDRESS rs, B Bice and F, C. Miller, CO?N C~IP BLUFFSL_In. LIVERY, Feed and Sale Stables, 18 North First Street, Bougquet's old stand, Council Blufts, Iowa. B WILLARD SMITH, Prop. W.D.STILLMAN, Practitioner of Homeopathy, consulting Physicianand Surgeon. Office and residence 615 Willow avenue, Coun- cil Blufts, Towa. W. K. SINTON, DENTIST. 14 Pearl Street, Ceuncil Bluffs. Extracting and filling a specialty, First-class work guaranteed, DR. A. P. HANCHETT, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office, No. 14 Pearl Street. Houa, 9 12, 0d2 p, m, to 6 p, m. Residence, Bancroft_streef. Telephonic connecti Central office, DR. AMELIA BURROUGHS, — OFFIOR No. 617 First Avenue __Hoursfrom10to11 8. m., and 2 to 6 p. m. BANKER'S LIFE ASSOOIATION, DES MOINES, Iowa, Incorporated July 1st, 1879, for the mutual nefit of bank officers and’ their customers, on principles of Equity, EcoNoMY AND S . A few experienced life insurance solicl- fors wanted. Address, H. M. Stevens, district wolicitor, Office No. 7, E block, Council Bluffs, lows. Resiuence 101 4th avenue, P. O. 5. 4 S. E. MAXOH, “Lnonxm.:flow. Office over savings bank, DUNCIL BLUFFS, - - - Iowa. REAL ESTATE. N, James, I connection with his law and caon businessbuys and sells real estate. "“‘1 wishing to buy or sell city property call & M ofle, over Bushnell's book store, Pearl way, Council Bluffs Deeds and ingtgages drawn sud acknoledged | B HAIR GOODS. WATER WAVES, In 8tock and Manufactur- ed to Order. ‘Waves Made From Your Own Hair. TOILET ARTICLES, Nets, Combs, Brushes, Face-pow- ders, Bands, Hair Orna- ments, &e., &e. All Goods Warranted as Represented, and Prices Guaranteed. 337 W. Broadway, and 109 8. Main St. MRS. D. A BENEDICT, Council Bluffs; - - - Iowa. MBS, E. J. HARDING, M. D., Medical Electrician AND GYGNECOLOGIST. Graduate of Electropathic Institution, Phila- delphis, Penna. Office Cor, Broadway & Glenn Ave, COUNCIL BLUFFS, I0WA. The treatment of all diseases and printul {dif- flculties peculiar to females o speciaity. The Star Bakery, HOWARD & ROBIE, 227 MAIN ST, Empley the best Broad Baker la the Wost; also a choice hand for Cakes and Ples. Bread delivered to all parts of the city. FRESH FISH! Game and Poultry, 9 Can always be found at B. DANEHY'®, 136 Upper Broadwar. JNO. JAY FRAINEY, Justice of the Peace, 314 BROADWAY, Council Bluffs, - - Towa. W. B. MAYES, «|Loans and Real Estate. Proprietor of abstracts of Pottawattamie county. Office corner of Broadway and Main streets, Council Bluffs, Tows. JOHN STEINER, M. D, (Deutscher Arat.) ROOM 5, EVERETT'S BLOCK, Oouncil Bluffs, _Diseases of women and children a_spocialty. P. J. MONTGOMERY M. D.. FrEE DISPENSARY EVERY SATURDAY, Office in Everott's block, Pearl treet. Reel] " | dence 628 Fourth street. Office hours from 9 to F. G. GLARK, : PRACTICAL DENTIST. Pear] strect, opposite the postofice. One of the oldest practitioners in Councll Bluffs, Batls: istaction gusrantoed in all cases. ODELL & DAY, GENERAL FIRE INSUBANCE ~—AND— REAL ESTATE AG'TS. MONEY TO LOAN. JOHN LINDT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW WUl practice in all state an courte Germau Lavguage, TA TA, TABOR. The Flourishing Growth of an Oberlin Oolony. Its Religious, Hduocational and Business Interests, Closing With a Dissertation on the Manner of Cultivating a Hedge. Correspondence of The Bee. Tasor, Towa, April 18.—Tabor is a city of ‘“‘magniflicent distances,” it being eight miles south of Hillsdale on the “Q,” 10 miles north of Sidney, 7 miles west of Randolph, and 8 miles east of Bartlett on the K. 0., and its houses scattered around over the prairies, and its long, regular strects often deceiving the stranger into a mile walk when he only expected it to be ‘‘a few steps,” or *‘ablock or two.” THE TOWN and college was the outgrowth of an Oberlin colony who came to this “‘western wild” about thirty years ago, to establish, like the Pilgrim Fathers, a ‘‘home,” to plant the seeds of Christian truth in the ‘‘garden of the Missouri valley,” and to build up a college of science, literature, and good morals, blended with a full con- servatory of music and the fine arts; and surrounded by the pure atmos- phere of a selected colony, good moral training, and the inspiring energy of our western ambition, prolific soil, stimulating breezes, healthy climate, and great, unmeasured, and almost unexplored fields of usefulness. What is now known as Percival, a station on the K. 0. R. R. was the first selection for the town, but the flat country and bad water caused a change and the present location was selected in about the center of the northern border of the country, on the high lands ac the head waters of Plum Creek, and on the divide be- tween the Nishna and ‘‘The Big Mud- dy.” v THE EDUCATIONAL INTERESTS of the place are, of course, para- mount, and give a distinctive tone and habit and general interest to the lace that reminds one of thoe New ngland atmosphere, and that is strongly like Oberlin. As we intend to give an extended notice of the col- lege and its work within a few days, we need only say that this school has about 300 students yearly, has a thorough and full course of study, with unusually fine advantages in music, and for a young school, has good buildings, is in the best of work- ing order, and is the pride of the citi- zen, and is respected and well patron- izad. The public school has a fine brick house, with three or four department teachers, and is trying to fill its place of responsibility. There ars two church buildings, one of which (Baptist) is idle; and the Methodist house still stands empty, because the church society, like Joseph, was ‘‘sold,” and now ‘‘is not.” The Congregationalists are the lead- ing church here, and it 18 said there is but one stronger society of that de- nomination in thescate. Among THE Bee readers we notice 4. T, WEST with a large stock of groceries, pro- visions and hardware, and it is said Poke Wells went there a year or two ago, expecting to enrich himself, and tried to think of something Mr. West had for sale that was in the warehouse or up stairs, or down ecellar, so he could send him after it while he se- cured the money, but after an hour’s thoughtfulness, gave it up, as here is a full line of goods, and well displayed. 4. M. _BARBOUR, of the general merchandise store across the way, does an exchange banking business that is an accommo- dation to the business men of the place, while . D, FEAST, the popular meat vender, was for some years one of the respected and enter- prising business men of Council Bluffs, and his increasing buawness and well known energy have given him the monopoly of his business here. THE NEWSPAPERS are two in number, and youngin years, containing an abundance of editorial pluck, and business energy, and *‘brim full” of that original indepemdence and solid chunks of spicy individuality so noticeable in the Yankee nation, when they get out of the beaten paths and «old ruts, and are on opposite sides of the fatal ditch, | THE MAILS wre carried by stage, twice each week day, to Hillsdale and coméortable teansportation is afforded the business man and the visitor, who desire to reach this young Oberlin, OBAGE HEDGE, As 80 many of our farmers are plant- ing young hedges, and pruning and training, at this seasun, 1t may be of interest to the readers of The Bee tu make a few suggestions on the calti- vation and training of osage fences, as the result of many years of practical experience and observation in many of the eastern as well as western states, and by a careful and studied gleaning of the idéeas of a large number of our heaviest nursery men, dealers, and ractical gardeners, An article in The Boo a fow days ago, on the subject of planting the hedge is no doubt re- membered by all our readers who are intorested in this subject, and we may omit any repetition of statements made in that article; and will take up the Jwtion after the plants are set, at & istance of from four to twelveinches, according to the taste of the planter and the design of the hedges, How many tarmers in Nebraska and Iowa have remarked or have heard some one else say, “The osage is a failure It is too much trouble,” “The worst looking thing on my farm,” or “I bave been trying to make a hedge fence fora dozen years, . |and it is of no account!” Now let us see if we are not treating our osage as we treat our children in school, How many school children in these states are rushed through, to the back part of the arithmetic aud into the fifth or sixth reader at the age of 9, 10or 12 years, without physical or intellectual strength to comprehend the ideas presented in the subjects treated on, and both teacher and parent all hap- py in the ‘‘advancement” of the child, aa they term it, when both teacher and parent by the law of ‘‘right,” in view of the responsibility resting upon them, should be sent to the state’s prison for “murder,” murder of the moral being of the chitd; and often murder of the health and physical vitality of the child, and all to gratify the pride and supreme selfishness of the parent, or as the result of ‘‘mal- practice” on the part of =& “legally appointed,”’ but incom- petent erson; who assumes to be a teacher, because he has been to school a very little, and who comes as near being a teacher as a sick man does to being a_doctor by being doc- tored a little. Now let me draw the osago picture: Ninety-nine out of every hundred of our farmers watch with anxiety to see the osage attain to the height required by law, say four feet, and there they cut off the to) and rejoice that there is so muol fence. In a few years each plant has attained to four teet, and been cut off at that place, and from that time the farmer regularly cuts off what grows above that. Some haye been regu- larly chopping off these top shoots for ten or fifteen years,and the hedge no better than it was ten or fifteen years ago. All the new wood is grow- g on the top, and the big shears take it off before the next spring, and the owner wonders why fiia hedge don’t *‘fill up” as the ‘‘pictures” rep- resent them, or like some hedges he has seen in ‘‘other lands than ours.” Stop a moment and think, that the sap and the growth of the new wood is all at the top, and you each yearcut off and destroy what grew last yea:, and are no better off than last year at this time; and this will continue as long as you live and the hedge be no better; and keeping uo the compari- son, thousands of children pass through our public and high schools every year who are ruined berause they are not kept on the natural food for the mind until they become stron enough to advance, the parents an teachers thinkihg, f they think at all, that in after years they will “‘fill up” all this deficiency. Yes, but my dear friends, did you evsr see a mason, in building, begin at the top, and build downward? st assured, that you can no more (build the education of the child by giving the child man- studies, and the man child-studies, than you can by laying the top brick in the chimney first. %he same reson. ing will apply to the hedge, the hedge must be built from the bottom. To meet this kind of bad management and use a neglected line of hedge plants, many have fallen into the cus- tom of allowing the plants to grow two, three, or four years, and then “‘lop” or ‘splash,” or ‘‘pleach,” as it is variously termed, and a few even contend that this substitute is better than a real hedge. I contend that a close oMservation for many years shows that a good hedge, closely built at the ground and properly handled 80 as to save the growth and not throw it away eyery year, will make a good natural and reliable hedge that i8 no trouble to take care of, isas per- fectly reliable as any hedge can be, is long lived, because the pqmu are not mutilated and always dying, and is at the samo time an ornament that will advance the value of the farm and neighboring property, and make a fence as soon as any otherway. Mulch the plants the firat season to protect them against changes of ~weather. In the spring, one year after plant- ing, eut the plants down to the ground. If the ground is smooth a mowing machine may be used for this purpose. In June and September go over them each year and cut them down, each time cutting a little higher than the preceding, and fill up the bottom of the hedge; always keeping in mind that the hedge will grow up as easily as you can build on top of a brick wall, but you can not well fill up bad epots at the sides and bottom, if you have gone above them. J. E. Barnes, of Kirkwood, an ex- | perienced and well known nursery- man and hedge grower, pays one cent a rod for trimming his hedges on this lan, Remember to ‘head in” and ‘““train” trees and hedge, instead of cutting off and wasting the season’s growth, Remember that the oftener you go over and ‘“‘head in,” the sooner you will get it as you want it, and the slower you build, the better and more perfect the hedge. And remember to not prane much in July and August, because it is then growlng wood fast, and such pruning “‘stunts” and injures the growth, BeckEYE, Uarivaled Asboing a certain oure for the werst forms of dyspepsia, indigestion, consti tion, lmzurlty of blood, torpid liver, dis- ordered kidneys, ete ,and as a medicine for eradicatingevery pecies of humor, from an ordinary pimple to the worst ulcer, Burnock Broon Breress stand unrivaled, Price $1.00 mb-dlw IOWA ITEMS, The congregationalists have 240 churches in Iowa, A Cass county man exhibits a kitten with seven legs and two tails, tlces, The contract for a $25,000 build- ing was let at Clarinda the other day. Dubuque policemen have petitioned for a raised of their salary to $60 per month, The pink eye has made its appear- ance in Linn ounty again. One farmer lost three horses in one day. Hon. N, 0, Deering has withdrawn from the congressional race in the|go new fourth district. At Keokuk, the other day, a 5-year old girl was badly gored ~about the face by a vicious cow, while the little one was passing along the street, Ex-Mayor Cushing, of Dubuque, has invented and received a patent for an elevator safety gate, an invention for the prevention of elevator acei- dents. The Rev. J, P. Kimball, who died in Amherst, Mass., recently, was the first pastor of the Congregational ch at Keokuk, about the year —e = 860. Thieves broke into the ticket office at the passenger depot of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St Paul railway at Sabula and robbed the money drawer of §4b. The special election held at Water- loo to decide the question of a b per cent tax in aid of'the Towa, Wisconsin & Nebraska railway resulted in a ma- ority in favor of the proposition of ‘bl. The result was lnl‘l’ouneod amid DIRECTORY OF LEADING WESTERN HOTELS. groat enthusiasm, HOTELS. PROPRIETORS TOWNF Waterloo has been chosen as a suit- ARLINGTON. J. Q. McINTIRE, Lincoln, Neb. able place for holding a oolvnleren'ce BARATOGA MOTEL, 0. 8. STELLINIUS, Mitford, Neb. 3( delegates from Y nu;llg hgen (] ghmci MARSH HOUSE, E.MANS, BROWNSVILLE, Neb TThir d‘;‘:fi‘r:::‘.‘f" . Wy, Revne se OOMMEROIAL MOTEL JOMN HANNAN, Btromsburg Ne HALL HOUSE, A, W. HALL, Loulsville Mrs. Beard, of Centetville, brought OITY HOTEL, OHENEY & OLARK, Blalr, Neb, suit against Dr. Sturdevant, of the COMMEROIAL HOTE J. Q. MEAD, Neligh, Neb. :ln'n« l(nwn,' for 83,000, nlle{mg t};fl GRAND CENTRAL EJSEYMOUR, Nobraska Olty, Neb fractured. arm. Tho 'jufy geve the| MISBOUR PAGIFIO MaTEL, P L THOR. v i IO S'?):)m. jury g OCOMMEROIAL HOUSE A. O. CAARPER, Hardy, Neb, bl ) GREENWOOD HOUSE, W. MAYFIELD, Qresnwood, Neb) Daniel Peck was found drowned in OOMMERGIAL HOUSE, E. 8TOREY. Clarinda, lowa the river near Moingona a fow days ENO'S HOTEL, > E. L. ENO, Eremont, Neb, since, and the belief is that he com- mitted suicide. He was formerly an engineer on the Northwestern road. A few days since at Guttenburg, twenty miles below MecGregor, A. Dahlman fecovered the body of his ©. B. HACKNEY, FRANK LOVELL, E. L. GRUBB, BWAN & BEOKER, JUDKINS & BRO,, Ashiand, Neb Atkinson, Neb, Quide Rocd, Neb, Oreston, Ia. Red Oak, EXOMANGE HOTEL, METROPOLITAN MOTEL, MORGAN HOUSE, BUMMIT HOUSE, JUDKINS HOUSE, i A HOUSTON HOUSE, GEO. OALPH, Exira, la, ;,'f“;;,fi:; ::d t;‘:“'r::”t.:;’;fl“;ln‘g REYNOLDS HOUSE, ©.M. REYNOLDS, Atiantic, 1a, a few months ago. WALKER HOUSE, D. H. WALKER, Audubon, la. ; e i COMMEROCIAL HOTEL, 6. BURGESS, Neola, a. th: h:m?,“'i"}'“g‘:?“ n“‘:"'g:‘f"'i“‘::‘“":": OITY HOTEL, DI B, WILLIAMS, Harian, la, ditched two milos below Fort Madi- btolshafle g et g el NEBRASKA HOTEL, 3, L. AVERY, Stanton, son. The engine remained on the track, but the tender, baggage and assenger cars wore ditched and roken up. None of the passengers Burlington Junction, M Blanchard, Ia. 8henandoah, la, MEROHANTS HOTEL COMMEROIAL HOTEL, PARKS HOTEL, J, W. BOULWARE, F. M, PARK, wero injured, OOMMERO AL HOTEL, HENRY WILLS, Dayld Oity, Neb The Maron: counell; and the ssloon BAGNELL HOUSE, OHAS. BAGNELL, Oollege 8prings, la. mon of that city are at loggerheads on OOMMEROIAL HOUSE, WM, LUTTON, Villlsca, la. the license question. The latter re- JUDKINS HOUSE, FRANK WILKINSON, Malvern, la, fuse to take out licenses for a year, as BALL HOUSE, H. H, PERRY, Ida Grove, la required, unless the city will guar- OOMMERGCIAL HOUSE B, F.8TEARNS, Odebolt, I antee to refund their money for un- WOODS HOUSE, JOHN EOKERT, Osceola, Neb, expired time, in case they are com- DOUGLAS HOUSE, J. 8. DUNHAM, Olarks, Neb, pelled to close upon the passage of the BEDFORD HOUSE 9. T. GBEEN, Bedford la. amendment, Charles Lewis, the telegraph opera- tor indicted in Linn county For crim- inal negligence on account of a terri- ble and fatal railway vcollision on the Northwestern last summer, and who left mysteriously some weeks since, has returned to Cedar Rapids and gives hinself up to his bondsmen. Marysville Mo Norfolk Junction Neb Beward, Neb. Aurora, Neb. ARLINGTON HOUSE, J. M, BLACK & 8ON, NORFOLK JUNOTION HOUSE A. T. POTTER, WINSLOW HOUSE Q. McOARTY, AURORA HOUSE M. B, JONES, OROZIER HOUSE 0. OROZIER, 8id N BUSINESS DIREROTORY Of Tabor, Fremont County, lowa. General Merchandise and Exchange Bank Fortunes or Farmers and Me- J. M. Barbour* John Asman, entral House chanjos. Thousands of dollars can be saved by using proper judgment in taking care of . .... Livery the r'.‘.fiud of )ymlk:elf and f-mnf. 1f you General Merchandise and Farm Implements are bilious, have sallow complexion, poor SXUIN & g b VS RIS Groceries and Hardware appetite, Jow and depressed epirits, and Harry Sherwood, K .Jewelry, Clothing and Notions generally debilitated, do not delay & mo- |y o Thent, bt go at oce; and. procure. a bot | Williams & Oti tle of those wonderful Electric Bitters, | Nate Feast, which never fail.to cure, and that for the | Mrs, M. L. trifling sum of fifty cents,—|Tribune. Sold by C, ¥, Goodma TO JONTRACTORS, Bids for the orection of & Normal College (100x 60, iour storles high) inthe city of Shenandoan, Page county, Town, will be receiv 23rd day of May E & Drugs and Jewelry P! arness, Boots and Shoes . Blacksmiths Blacksmith .Pleasant Hill Nursery President College ‘Wagon Shop G. W. Beckwith, cipal, in Bushn Charles Mansinger, wiil Be found tn Shenandoah al Bank. The | W. M. Brooks, right to accept or reject any and all bida is re- | John Sanborn. served. mideod3t | Dy, J, F.[Sanborn, FAST TIME i M«;mh Otln, M. D. Monroe Lyman, M. D. Phonicd In golng East take the — — Pinkerton, M. D .'Phgm!u‘: Chicago & Northwest- |5 = e ke H. & L. Vincent,. ormists wazxr. ([l wwaw.|Bic4 Snith,.... ..Tabor Union Mrs. Mary E. Cox ygenic Physician Tralng loave Omaba 8:40 p. m. and 7:40 a. m, | John Glover. .Shoe Shop full information callon H, P, DUEY, Hawk Bros, Barb Wire Facto Agent, 14th and Farnbam 8ta. J, BELL, U, Live Stocl Raflway Dopot, or at JAMES T. CLARK, G Samuel Daulton, d Avem, Omaha. a17m&e 8! | John Weatherhead, . Brickyard = | Hanghton Bros., Job I’nqtlng 8. H. Adams, . . Furniture {THE JELM MOUNTAIN G—OmLZD STILVER Mining and Milling Company. Worklns:&lm‘ - - - - - ‘- Capital 8300 PAF Valuo of Sbares, = - 2 o STOCK FULLY PAID UP AND NON-ASSESSABLE Mines Located in BRAMEL MINING DISTRIOT. OFEIOERS: i DR. . L. THOMAS, President, Cummins, Wyoming. ‘WM, E. TILTON, Vice-Presidens, Cummins, Wyoming K. N. HARWOOD, Secretary, Cummins, Wyoming, A. G, LUNN, Treasurer, Cummins, Wyomin :Phyu iclan nany stage Catarrh, ECZEMA, 0ld Sores, Pimples, BOILS, or any *ouTqdAg Jo [ELmMOTO T ‘wisyjewneyy pue - $300,000, $1,000,000 826,000, % — | COures When Hot BSprings Fail MAVERN, ARK., m‘ :llml 0 Wo havo cases In our own town who lived at sty het Sy Hot Bprings, and were inally vured with 8, 8, 8, | D.J: I Thooiaa. Louls ; A . G. MOk umon & Morey, | B N. Harwood, Fraacl Loavens. . Geo, I Falos. Lewls Zolman, noffmebm GEO, W, EENDALL, Authorised Agent for Sale of Btock: Bov #4¢ Nmaha Neb, lm.'SHOII_T_ LINE. 1880, KANSAS OITY, 3t.dos& Gnuncgy,lumt Vi gheulst who wifl Fud, "on anaiyss’ 100 Sottios . 8, 8., on o of Mercury, Iodide Potas: y Hineras suhstancn sium of say ! BWIFT SPECIFIC 00, Props. Price of Semall sise, $1.00, bl Large size 175, Sold by KENNARD BROS. & 00 and Druggints Generalls A ——————————————————————————————— W YHN ONLY The Grest Lnglish Remedy Direct Line to 8T, LOUIS or falls EAST Nervous Depility, Vi From and the West, L é‘gfi?fi_ Al traing leave B, & M. Depot, Omaha; Neb, , e : i N o 2 No change of cars betwoon Omaha and bs. Louls, vil effecta of youth- [’ X Nl 3 804 et gga hetress OMARA and Jjtul follies and exces- 4 XK ¢ Daily Passenger Trains RUACHING ALL EASTERN AND WESTERN OITIES with LESS QHARGES and IN ADVANCE of AL, :‘:lou;. belng the lwdm qnmm\,onil OTHER LINRS, connoching otropolls ns th Norvos lain, | 0AGO, and the Edsrans, :m-hmu,(‘)l. pufhia enkire line ls squipped with Vullmase ve an ro- Soura-] Idl-. hich terminate there , 1t nnn'ul: T>°all the orcanio Ludvauwonrn, . Atonison l"’-mmflmmgnmhonflu.udm':\.wm" former vigor and vitality, ma- d O the ' Coummnaral | gartioo funa that your tickeb reads VIA nANSAS Mng life cheerful and enjoyable. Prico, 3 a CITY, ST, lOfllPll & COUNCIL .LU'-I‘ Rall , or four times the quanuty §10. Sent by EVERY LINE OF ROAD road, vis Bt. Joseph and B4, Louls, €xpeoss, sooure from obser: $hat penotrates the Continent from the Missous | Tickebs for sale ab all el o Wi s o psrastes " Latar 1| OHIOAGO" ROOK. ISLAND & PA- | | G.0AWES, _aun on recel . . questing answers must [nclose stamp. D0 RATLV AT & PA- ) Y aoe, and Tickeh Agk B o Dr, Mintie's Dandelion Pills |, W (SACLEA a AnpY BoRoi, Tickeb Agent, are ths bost and cheapest dyspepsia and billious xm.:., me uh'_“h" l_“al"‘n "'l "‘“_ "y w3 m""ol" strced, cure |u the market. Bold by all druggists, Price o ve . No yRANSPERS BY CARRIAGE E“o nl::"l‘l 8 Kiowey Rewroy, Nepmwrioow, o Musne coxamnom - No Enddics ls N —SMANL MR, e ] , | ventilated or unclean cars, s every paseengor! Curousil nd o Kiduoy and bladdr coumplainte gam b roomy, cloan sad reatalod ee To Nervous Sufterers upon ¥4t Kxpross Traing fadl e 1o i cucerehea. For wl by Al | BB arivaled. maguifoence, Pouaax | THE GREAT EURGPEAN REMEDY. ENGLISH MEDICAL INSTITUTE, | PAuAON Ausxeixa CAks, and ourown world-famous — Disine Oans, upon which meals aro served of wn [ Dr, J, B, Simpson's Specific e e [n O A B8, Ay Mo, lonce, at the low rate of Ssviwy ¥y el Y . F. GOODMAN, | Fins Oxwes %AcH, wibh ample $ime for Bealbhru MEIDXCIXNE. ) 13 13 » postive cure for ) Bemina Joati-iv O firough. Cars betwesn Chicago, Peorls, ot Y o ST IL AT dk::::'nnlll‘ J0un Branm, Saoun omaur, | waukee And Missouri River Points; and close oon’ | from oll-Ablise, & ‘Mental Anxioty, Lose: resident, Vice Fredt, | sootons s ll pate of Lutersctlon with- okber | Wesaory, Faas i tho Back or i ) s W, 5 Dana, fos, 403 Trens. We ticked (49 ol forgat thi)diretly 4o gwory Consum E R importance in Kansss, No Bia- [asauity aa: THE NEBRASKA oining, Utab, Idaho, Novads, Callforr Ay g re ashington Terrltory, Coiorado, Arlzons The Specific MANUFAGTURING 00| 2 fimems s ] any other line, and ratos of fare alwayo asl Ow & with wonder. :aiwuwu. who turnlsh but s tithe 0 fhe com. tul success, Lincol “Bogs and tackle of sparteuen froe, Troo b all,~ Wil for oem [y coin, Neb. ickots, sy and foidors a6 all princips b il el nhaled o Houlars, \PURE cesdn tho Unf 7 X MANUFACTURERS OF oficuadn fho Unitod Statos aod Cauiada. Frion Spuct, 1,00 par . It OABLE, E. BT, JOHN, | ages,forf. Vioo Pros't & Gen, Gen. Tk and Pase’s Aj B, BIMSON MEDICINE 0G, _Manager, Chicago Ohlcag Nos, 104 and 100 Main Bt. Buffalo, N, Y, B, D. McLAUGHLIN, | 2%ub Sdsh Grugitsisvorywhiss oo dew ATTORNEY = AT - LAW | & via package of “ BLACK-DRAUGHT ™ And Notary Publio, froo of chasge, — Qorn Planters, Harrows, Farm Rollers, Sulk Hay Rakss, Bucket Elevating Wind mi & We aro propared o do fob work aud manat | turinyg for other partics. Addres all orders NEBRASKA MANUFACTUKING 00., Lincous Nes e

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