Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 6, 1882, Page 2

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i i e { ( 2 THE DAILY BEE-—TUESDAY JUNE 6 1882, - splllmu THE BIB mnny’ to a test which will severely tax its strength—a searching ocrucible from which no element of weakness or de- ilroad | fectiveness can escape. Thirteen of A i PRt tho largest losomotives will be run Bridge Across the Missourl |upon the strusture and remain in the middle of each span long enough for a A et photograph o be taken. Should the bridge succesfally pass throvgh this .| ordeal—and the builders seem deter- Proms? eI N mined that it shall—its sustaining struction and the Present |, wer would of course involve not the Status of Operations slightest degroe of doubt. A POSSIBLE PERIL. Conversation among residents of The Present Danger to Mandan |y Bismarok and Mandan develops from the Dyke Contracting | not a little speculation touching the the River Channel probabls effect upon the latter town — by the dyke abeve described, which reduces the channel of the river to ) el e loss than half its natural width, It is feared with a great rise of the river, like that of the mpring of 1881, tor example, a colossal lake formed by the acoumulated volume of on-rushing Correspondence of the Pioncer.Pross. Brsmarck, June 1.—Few are the joint products of corporate nocessity whish would quick as T could find something that would touch the spot I would commu- nicate with him. Tha: stood him off for W a time, but I supposs the girl and her mother kept at him to do some- thing about it, and he goes for me once a wevk, and threatens me until my life is & burden—a heavy, eighteen carat burden, with a blue background, I try to be joyous, but it seems to me as though everybody knew of my eon- dition. The old man says I have got to marry the girl within two weeks or stand a lawsuit. If it should become fashionable to paint our bodies sky- blue, and not wear clothes, I could see my way clear; or if I could get a con- sulship to a warm climate, I would marry, but the idea of beginnin, to keep house with a husban and wife subject to heriditary blues is too much, and I kick. I S S THE GREAT have told nobody but you and the druggist who furnishes me with drugs, but I think the girl has told every- body she knows, because half the girls " BITTERS. Mrs J. G. Robertson, Pittaburg, Pa., writes: T waa suffering from general debility, want of ap- petite, constipation, tc., o that fife was a bur- len, g Burdock Blood Bitters 1 folt bet- ter than for years, I csnnot praise your Bittors too much,’ R.Gibbs, of Buftalo, N. V., writes: “Your Burdock Bloc . Bittors, in chronic diseases of the blood, liver aud kidneys, have been signall marked with success, IThave used them mywelf with best results, for torpidity of the liver, aad in caso of friond of mine suffering from dropay, and engineering skill that will rival, in point of strength, durability and symmotry, the bridge across the Mis souri river, between Bismarck and Mandan, now nearing completion. Since the extension of the Northern Pacific railroad west of this point, all waters would oceur, speedily creep back and across the long stretch of bottom land between he river and Mandan and administer disaster_dire to that aspiring young town. It is an event that to any one acquainted with the location of the I meet look at me as though I was a white elephant. Can you save me?” The young lawyer said he believed he could, but he would have to look up the authorities, and he took down a ‘‘blue book” of the legislature, and FOR RHEUMATISH, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, trains have been transported across | business part of Mandan would ap- theriver by means of a transfersteamor | pear quite hkgly to oceur; and a very steamr, consumes considerable time [ unpleasant exigenoy that it seems en- at each trip, which is the source of [ tirely impossible to guard against, as much expense and labor to the rail- [long as a dyke is permitted to remain road company, and not a little un.|at that point. Much might be ad- told the young man to come in again Saturday with $10 more. It sertainly will be one of the most singular cases that has ever been before our courts, and will attract wuch attention, no doubt. Backache, Soreness of the Ches!, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell- ings and Sprains, Burns and #, $calds, General Bodily Pains, Yooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted the effect was marvelous.” Bruce Turner, Rochester, N, Y. (writes: T have been subject to serious disorder of the kidneys, and unable to attend to business; Burdock Blood Bitters relieved me before half a bottle was used 1 feel confident that they will entirely cure me,” + Asenith Hall, Binghampton, N. Y., writec: 1 gufferod with o dull_pain_threugh my left lung and shouldor, Lost my spirits, appetite and color, and conid with difficulty keep up all day. Took your Burdock Blood Bitters as di. rected, and have felt no pain since first week af- ter using them.” Mr. Noah Bates, Eimira, N. Y., writos: “About four years ago 1had an attack of bilious feves -out the mud from beneath these mat- avoidable annoyance to the traveling ublic. All this, however, will have en a thing of the past in a few months, to the unqualified satisfaction of the company, travelers and resi- dents of both sides of the river. The work of constructing this bridge began in the winter o f 1880-1, operations being inaugurated by the building of adyke on the Mandan side which contracts the channel from ite original width of 2,900 feet to 1,200 feet This dyke was constructed on the Eads jetty system, woven willow mattresses 200 toet wide being sunk under the weight of many carloads of boulders. The constant action of the current washed tresses until they rested upon the hard clay, forty feet below the bed of the steam. Ten thousand carloads of boulders have been employed in this rip-rapping, and 10,000 more will be put in, making an aggrepate of 20,000 carloads of stone, This dyke is nearly up to the highwater mark, and during future rises in the river the water will flow over it, thus finding vent for a rtion of that strength which exper- ience and observation have shown to be resistless, 'The bridge will consist of three spans, each 400 feet in length, and a short span of 126 feet on each end. From the west end of the bridge a trestle is to extend over the dyked portion of the channel to an embank- ment seventy feet in height, which is being thrown up, the dirt for the pur- pose being obtained at a point north- enst of Mandan. A trestle will like- ‘wise be placed at the east end of the bride, being, like that on the opposite end, fifty foet in length, . THE PIERS are each sixty feet inwidth and fifteen feet in thickness, “constructed of the ‘best granite from the quarries at Sauk Rnpis:: Minn. They are models of impregnable masonry, extending from a point twenty-five feet above the channel to over fifty feet beneath the bed of the river, and each pier is said 4o re) nt an outlay of $117,006. All QKQ 'Rm- are finished but one, which will be completed by the 10th inst, The first short span on the Bia- msrok nide is done, and & Howe truss will be emp! ed in ltringin? the -other spans. e iron is mostly on the ground, and all that now remains is to put it together. Of this great structure it may be said that it is being built with special reference to higl winds and all varioties of weather,and ‘when comgleted, which will probably be in October, wil be the strongest bridge across either the Missouri or upper Mississippi rivers, It will be seventy-five feet above average water mark, a sufficient height to permit the passage of the largest steamers with- out peril to their upper works, Esti- mates touching the total cost of this work vary, but common oconcession laces it above $1,000,000. Nota Solhr is wasted, but the entire sum is being expended in such & manner as to secute the best service, the most substantial material and the highest duced both to fortify and antagonize the assumption; but it is evident that the question must be submitted to the arbitrament of time and experience for settlement, That the disquieting apprehensions at present nourished by the dwellers along the Big Muddy may not be realized is to be earnestly de- sired by all. Not a Beverage. “‘They are not a beverage, but a medicine, with curative properties of the highest degree, containing no poor whisky or poisonous drugs. They do not tear down an already debilitated system, but build it up. One bottle contains more hops, that is, more real hop strength, thao a barrel of ordinary beer. Every druggist in Rochester sells them, and tfia physicians pre- soribe them.”—[Evening Express on Hop Bittera. PECULIAR UASE OF BLUES., If & Girl Gets Marked for Life Can She Make You Marry Her ? New York Mercury, A pale young man_ entered a law- yer's office and closed the door with his back, like a Vermonter, and said he wanted a little advice. The law- yer told him he had struck the right place, and asked him to proceed. #Well, what I want to know is, if a man marks me for life can I collect ‘damages in such cases, “Then,” said the young man, “‘if a girl goes out riding with me to a pic- nic, and she gets marked for life, can “Every One Was Astonished.” NewoastLe, Ind., May 30, 1881, H. H. Warser & Co: 8irs—About 3 years ago I was stricken with calou- lus of the kindneys. The best physi- cians could do me no gnod. I used your Safe Kidney and Liver Cure and every one was astonished at my complete and rapid recovery. bdlw T'HOMAS —_——— The Kind of Horse he Wanted. Boston Journal, The Charlestown district, as every- body hereabouts knows, proposes to celebrate the approaching anniversary of the battle of Bunker Hill by an ‘‘antique” parade. A company of mounted men is expected to bea prominent feature in this display, and . Larr, those who are to figure it are at present zealously search- ing after horses to ocarry them upon the important occasion. It will eurprise many persons, who may have thought the supply of horses almost inexhaustible, to learn that they have encountered serious difficulties in this endeavor. An explanation of this fact, however, is found to be that they are not to be eatisfied with any and every horse that is offered to them. This is shown by the following conversation, which re- cently occurred between one of them, who has not much confidence in his horsemanship, and a man of whom he made inquiries touching the matter in hand: “Do you know where I can find a horse?” asked the would-be equestrian, “No,” said the other; “‘what sort of a horse do you want—a spirited animal” ‘“Well, no, nota she collect damages from me?”’ The lawyer scratched his head a moment, looked wis, then thought a moment again with his forefinger on his forehead, looked into a fvolume of patent-office reports, and finally ex- preased the opinion to the young man that in the latter case there was no souihla show of the girl's collecting amages from him., The young man threw down $10 as a retainer, an said that the lawyer could consider himself engaged for the season, to prosecute one case and defend the other, The lawyer put the money in his vest-pocket, mechanically, as though it was a mere matter of lorm, and told the young man to state his oase, Taking off his hat and wiping the perspiration off his forehead, he roceeded: “Well, I want you to commence against a livery stable keeper for $10,- 000 damages, Yon see, last summer T hired a team and atop buggy to take a girl out to Ogonomowoo to the acht races, and we were going to take dinner at the hotel. On the way out there the almightiest thunder-storm you ever saw came up. It drenched us from head to foot. ' There wasn’ta dry rag on me, ard the girl said if there wis on her she didn't know where it was, But it finally cleared off, and we drove into Oconomowoc and around by the bank ,of the lake, and got out in the woods. We had on white very spirited one.” ‘Well, then, do you want a quiet one?” ‘No, nov exactly a quiet one.” ‘‘How would a medium sort of a horse do?” ‘That wouldn't be the thing, either. Fact is, I want a horse that loeks a good deal more spirited than he really is.” e—— Horsford’s Acid Phosphate IN LIVER AND KIDNEY TROUBLES, Dz. 0. G. JILLEY, Boston, says: “I have used it very extensively, and with the most remarkable sucoess in dyspepsia and in all cases where there is derangement (of the liver and kid- neys.” bd-wlw The Man who Told the Doctor. that “‘he felt | | a8 it ne didu’t want to do anything,” was accused of laziness. Yet theusands experiance this foel- ing—oapeciaily in summer—in consequence of & disordered condition of the stomach, which & few retroshing drau;hts of TARRANT'S BELTZER APER- 1ENT would be sure to remedy. SOLD BY ALL DKUGGISTS. D. M. WELTY, (Successor to D.T. Mount.) Manufacturer and Dealer in Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. Preparaiic rth equale 87, Jacom O1i 10k o ey stmplf shd cheap Extormal Bemedy. A trial ents ut the comparatively srifling outlay of 50 Cet and every one suffer- with pain can have cheap and positive ssot o ite claims, d Directions in Kleren Languages. (4 #0LD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AN, DEALERS IN MEDIOINE, A.VOGELER & CO.,, Baltina . GRAY'S SPECIFIC MEDICINE TRADE MARK _The GrestTRADE MARK English rem- ady. An un- tailing cure for Seminal Wenkness, Spermator- rhen, Impot. ‘ b, ency, andall AR Discasesthat 452N follow as a BEFGRE TAKINQ.equence ot AFTER TARING, Self-Abuse: as Loss of Momory, Universal Lassi- tude, Pain in the Back, Dimness of Vision, Pre maturs 0ld Age, and many other Disoased that fead to Tnasaity ture Grave. £arFull particulars in our pamvhlet, which wo_desiro to send freo tv mail to avery one. £ Tho Specific Modicine is sold by all drugglaté at 81 por package, or 6 packges for 85, or will be sent free by mail on rec: ptof the money, by addressing ~ THEGRA JEDICINE CO. Duftal The feeble ahd -I-a suffering from dys- s or indigestion in any form, areadvised, for lots and restorative properties, Physicians everywhere, disgusted with the adulter;tcd liquors of commerce, prescrine it &3 the afest ‘and most reliable of all stomachics, For salo by all druggists and dealors genorally al tom The Great Linglish Remedy A/Anently all weaken % .y\\ 4l voluntary loss: drains upon the ltem, the inevitable re- ult of these evil! m- tloes, whi 80 destruotive to mind and body ‘and inake lifo miserable, oftcn leading to insant ty and death. It strengthens tho Nerves, Brain, (memory( Blood, Muscles, Digestive and Repro- otive Orguns, It restores 1 il the orcanio functions their’ former vigor and vitality, ma- \ing life oheerful and enjoyable. Price, §8a e y ‘or Consumption and o Prema- | 3) | ORI degree of architectural excellence. clothes. I had on a pair of white Mar- : THE APPROACHES, seilles pants, and tke girl had on a The topography of the low, level | white muslin dress. Well, eir, do you bottom, on_the west side of which |know when we got out the whole back Mandan is built, renders the question | of us, from the knees oclear to the of an approach to the bfldfi on that [small of the back, was as blue flduoflgu river a very simple one, |8 indigo. The buggy ocushion was and not at all diffioult of solution; but | blue,and when 1tgot wet the blue just on the east or Bismarok side of the | fairly run off, and it was the bluest Missouri, the situation is differert | blye you ever saw. Well, I thought and more pregnant with obatacles, | that girl would die. When she stood whose removal requires no off with her back toward me I could ol of time and labor. The Bis- | think of nothing but an Italian sunset L consisting of a long bluff, | on the Lake of Chromo. She was the in sixty-five feot Ear than the op- | bluest girl, true blue, and no mistake, posite shore. * This fact has rendered | And my pants! When I went away neceasary & vast excavation to admit | from her to get a better view of the of an eastern approach to the bridge, | yacht race and BWoar & little I must Eighty-five thousand cubic yards of | have looked to her like some old blue mh&va been displaced, making a|ruinin a theater. Woll, we didn't out over sixty feet deep for the imme- | dare to go vo the hotel for dinner, and diste The earth thus re-| were afraid to stop at MoDowell’s, toward the river, yhem the Light Horse squadron was moved is dumped making an area of level ground for|in camp, where I knew all the boys, switches and other purposes, The|and we didn't 1:# anything to eat ex- track will ap) the bridge from |cept a glass of beer and a piece of dog the soath and east, winding around in | sausage at Pewaukee, which I had a such a shape as to describe an in- | Prussian bring out the b“IS- The verted 8, Along this sinuous route | girl got mad because I laughed at her the trains will glide smoothly, and | having the blues, and she wouldn't out upon the bridge, at an altitude of '\V.k to me at all on the way home, fi'ty feet above the piers and seventy- | e came into vown after dark, and I five feet above the water, :h‘:“fl::t the :H“;:' "';‘;ld blow ey ul me e blue color didu’t T MW I ORADGN ‘set’ on my skin, and nothing will take The construction of this mammoth |it oft. T have tried everything, but it bridye 18 under the direction of Chief |is just as blue to-day as ic was the Eogineer Morison and his assistants, | night I got home from Oconomowoe. Mesars, Parkhurst and Orosby, The | From my knees to the small “of my latter two gentlemen are constantly on | back I am deeply, dnrkl{,.homtlfn!ly the mf,?nmdly supervising all | blue, and probal { shall be during my the of the work, in accordance | natural life, and 1 want the livery man with the designs of the chief engineer, [swed. If I wanted to travel with the Mossrs. Morison, Parkhurst and |circus as a tattooed man, I wouldn't Crosby, have all worked with OCapt, | mind it so much, but I don’t. I never Eads, the engineer of the famous jet- | knew before that ‘blue was a fast ties of the lower Mississippi, and by | color,” reason of natural ability and long and | ““Well, this is only half the trouble, valuable experience in their profeasion | About a week after we got back, the are ly adapred to the success- | girl's father came to me with a gun, ful excoution of 80 important an un- [and asked me what kind of a_colored dertaking as the one now inhand. As|person I was, It seems the blue was the labor is nearly all done by steam | just as set in its way in his family as shevels and other machinery, the num- | it wus in mine, I explained it to m‘d‘nflmfllmh;lm m- the bu:l\uy 1 could, but he said there vely , wi - | was o one reparation a man of tude of the work is considered; there | honor w{nld mnkop‘i': such cases. I not more than 2600f the former | told him I was trying all the different dhhmr-‘nt The | articles in the tores, one aff &'h-m'fll subjected | another, to remove :N.:.ln:.n:nd: ity $10. 8ent by Dotdle, or four times the quandty §10. Sei . b ni Saddles, Harness, Whlps. on receipt of §1 ab & guan ‘-2 *Letars 2 healthy Kiduoys, Tiver and Urlo ussting answe inclose stamp. FANUY HORSE OLOTHING [VDp b%rn‘?d;hfi;mm& i are thy yspops! Robes, Dusters and Turf Goods m;mmfi V7 Al droggist. Prics , Mperw's Koy ReMuy, NxPRITIOUN, Outea ] bind of Kidnoy and biadder oa:rhh.lh uorrhes, u;:&fl loucorrhea. For eale by all o, et NGLISH MEDICAL INSTY o O118.0tveSt., BH. Louis, Mo, o ien 7 0. ¥. GOODMAN. Jan2b-1v of ALL DESCRIPTIONS, inany stage Agentfor Jaa. R, Hill & Co.'s OBLEBRATED CONGORD HARNE:$S *The Best in The World.” 1412 FARNADM ST, Catarrh, Orders Solicited. me 1y KENDALL'S SEAVINOURE, lost ccess! ly_ever discov. R FROM A PROMINE! L gy Waklaguie oms,yans B oo | I8 4 .._-..A..,...,'Z!. . Kondall's Bpavia T oo | N 0 sel ity o v 1t B o' s Epavta for Dottle by expross, which 1 six woass raucyod | Cures When Hot Springs all lameness and calargement and & largs spiint T g g LS X TS TR ety 0 00 Bothle” undred dollar. . ‘Respeobtully Yo, B 1'%, Bukvouwrr i B s, . A, BrkrousrT, M, D, Soud for lllustrated circular giving 'positive | IF YOU mbzm-mm us and \E WILL . Price§l. I Dy 'OUR OR charge noth! 11 Write tor BTt o Dr o il h o rad | SR R R copy ot livla ook ~Mesmage slm-b osburgh Fails, Ve, 0 OLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. dwly OMAHA, NEB wisgewneyy pue Mavary, Aux., May 5, 1881 Wo havo cases 1o on 0w towiy v‘a“h\lid Bprings, fnally Lured wi oo o e Ao Muiw auy SET I T A TR ANTI-MONOPOLY' LEAGUE, ot pr ot sitnliow b gt g o KA e never fully recovered. H{' digestive org: were woakened, and I would be completely pi trated for days. After using two bottles of your Burdock Blood Bitters the improvement was so visible that I was astonished. I can now, though 81 years of age, doa talr and roasonable day's work. O, Blacket Robinson, proprietor of The Canada Presbyteria, Toronto, Ont., writes: “Fer years 1 suffored gréatly from oft-récurring headache. 1 used your Burdock Blood Bitters with hay results, and I now find mveelf in better health than for years past.” Mrs, Wallace, Buffalo, N, Y, writes: “I have used Burdock Blood Bitfers for hervous and bil- {ous headaches, and can recommend it to anyone requiring a curé for billiousness. * Mrs, Ira Mullnolland, Albany, N. Y, writes: “'For several years I have suffered {rom oft-recur- ring billious headaches, dyspepsis, and com- laints peculiar to my 'sex, Sluce’ using your urdock Blood Bitters 1 am entirely relieved.” Price, 81,00 pei Sottle; Trial Botties 10 Ots FOSTER, MILBURN, & Co., Props, BUFFALO, N. Y. Bold at wholesale by Ish & McMahon and 0. F. Gooduinn, Jo 27 cod-me en preventes by a timely use ot HepSitters L ¥ D-1.C nnd irresisic biocure fo. [drunkenness nse of oplum tobaceo, o Yo sured 1 Y Ol HEX Hop Bitters/ Discase is an effect, not s cause. Its origin is within; its manifestations without. Hence, to cure the disease the cAUSE must bo removed, and in no other way can @ cure ever ho_effected, PAEERBRN A inciple. I¢ realizes 96 Per Cent. ofall diseases arize from deranged kidneys and liver, and it strikes at once at the root of the difficulty. The elements of which it is composed act directly upon these great organs, both as s 7000 aod estokxk, and, by placing’ then, in & bealthy, conditicn, drive disease and pain from the system. For the innumerable troub'es caused by un- Orgaus; for the dutroulng Ditordersol Women; for Malar aad physical dersogemeuts genorally, this g romidy has no equal, Biware of impostors, im- itations and concoctions said to_be just as good. 'S I‘l’l P To Nervous Sutterers THE QREAT IUH_OPIM REMEDY, Dr. J. B. Bimpson’s BSpecific ICENID X O XN EL. /e curo for Bpermatoirhes, Bemina mpotancy, snd ol diseasos resulting buse, a8 Mental Anxlety, Lose: W.B. MILLARD, ¥. B, JOHNSON MILLARD & JOHNSON, Storage, Commission and Wholesale Fruits. 1111 FARNHAM STREET. OONSIGNMENTS COUNTRY PRODUCE SOLICITED. OMAHA, NEB REFERENCES : OMAFHA NATIONAL BANK, STEELE. JOHNSON & CO., TOOTLE MAUL & 00. J.J. BROW N &CO., WHOLESALE DRY GOODS, NOTIONSS, Boots and Shoes. OMAHA, - - o« = .= NEB C. F. GOODM.A N, TWHOLESALE DEHALEER XN DRUGS, PAINTS, OILS. Window and Plate Glass. 447 Anyone contemplating builalng store, bank, or any other fine front, will find it to thelr ad¥~ vantage to corres ond with us before purchasing their Plate Glass, C. F, GOODMAN, OMAHA - 3 - . WHOLESALE GROCER, 1218 Farnham 8t.. Omaha, Neh. FOSTER &GRAY, —WHOLESALE— LUMBER, COAL & LIME, On River Bank, Bet. Farnham and Douglas 8Sts., ONWVNIATELA.. - - - WNWEB. P. BOYER & VO., ~——DEALERS IN— HALL'S SAFE AND LOCK GO. Fire and Burglar Proo S A E ES ., VAULTS, LLOOEKS, &0OC. 1020 Farnham Street, ONIAEIA, - -~ -~ NNEEB. STEELE, JJHNSON & CO., WHOLESALE GROCERS/ AND JOBBERS IN Flour, Salt, Sugars, Canned Coods, and All Grocers'’ Supblies. A Full Line of the Best Brands of CIGARS AND MANUFACTURED - TOBACGO. Agents for BENW00D NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDEB 0 HENRY LEHMANN, 2. WINDOW SHADES 5 e Bn..| ™ pamphlste sont frce o all, Write for shem and get full par- Price, Bpecific, §1.00 per package, of six pack u-hrm “Aiivoss all Srdors 40 B. SIMBON MEDICINE 00, Nos. 104 and 108 Main Bt. Buftalo, H.:.. - NERVOUS DEBILITY, A woaclia o 01'2' Dizatness, cn Memmory pavmatorshoa.posdasy. Emissions, Premature Old Solf-abuee, or over- wi % inisery, decay and death. ~ One box will cure recent cases. Each box contalns one month's fve elie; oous by ‘el peopald o ecaiph o vo X on pilos. Wo iarante six bokea 10 6ure any tase ith each order recelyed by us for six boxes, a with five dollars, will soud the pus teo o return the money If the does nob effect & cure. . ¥. Goadman, Drugyieh, Bolo, Wholeeale tud rogul Agent, Omahs, Neb, Orders by mail at R etallaprice. dhwiv W anted s or e Lifo Times and ("Written by i "hi),i :‘"“ James th only lite authorized by her, sud which will not be & *Blood aad Thunder” story been nnd will be the ouly p:eon w —a fall EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED. 1118 FARNAM ST. - - OMAHA J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLRSALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN . COIVEIEIEER. Lath, Shingles, Pickets, 7] 8ASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOLDINGS, LIME, CEMENT FPLASTER, BTO. MWSTATE AGENI FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT OOMPANYY Near Union Pacific Depot, - - OMAHA NEB e —— DOVEBLE AND SINGLE ACTING POWER AND HAND U MEPES ] Steam Pumps, Engine Trimmings, MINING MACHINERY, BELTING, HOSE, BRASS AND IRON FITTINGS PIPE, PACKING, Al WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. ° |HALLADAY WIND-MILLS CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS A. L STRANG 205 Fovmhem 8t, Omaha Agents for Peck & Baushers Lard, and Wilber HMills Flour / il

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