Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 28, 1883, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

S — o ——— THE DAJLY BIEE--OMAHA WEDNESDAY MARCH 28 OCOIDENTAL JOTTINGS. CALIFORNIA. Sacramento, miles of the Need at's 2 Se tain Phelps, near Stockton, has & s SOOI ECEDEeS wenty fiu'yur- old and thirteen [ in ciroumference. It covers over sion and has a world of meaning. How much suf- 4,000 square feet of ground. ing is in i The force at work in the railroad shops ool Klgimed p n it o Sagramento will, in accordance with in. structions from the head office, bs reduced The singular thing about by the discharge of 200 men, The order goes into effact to-day. it is, that pain in the back | “ryerg has boen no strike among the rall. is occasioned by so many road employen st Sacramento, except the eighteen from the boiler-makers’ depart- 1} 3 ; ment, who declined to work on account kidney disease, liver com- of the time being reduced from ten o eight plaint, consumption, cold, hours, The majority of these are again things. May be caused by 7 / at work, rheumatism,dyspepsia,over- work, nervous debility, &c. over the location of the court house, Rosa offers to donate s fine lot to the coun- - M ty for the court house site, Petaluma of- ‘Whatever the cause, don’t fors one of her fing plazas .nuflsw},ww i ing i the county neat [s permanently loca neglect it. = Something s |(e ougly Seab s permanertly Heoaion wrong and needs prompt o decide the location of the county seat. attention. No medicine has R P. Hearford met with a singular yet been discovered that death near Fresno Flats last week. He was out hunting and shot and wounded will so quickly and surely | hog, and in goug forward to cut the ani. cure such diseases as hroat acoidentally stuck the knife in ight leg, just above the knee, d Brown's IRON BITTERS,and | gevercd the main artery, Ho walked back it does this by commencing to his gun, somo ten paces distant, lay down and bled to death, at the foundation, and mak- For & long time I have been & regard to the body in the box an sufferer from stomach and kidney and the very small amount I disagreed with me, 1 was annoyed very much from non-retention of wrine, 1 tried many remedies with no success, until [ used Brown's the peace of . My appetite is simply immense. My )\ L1820y, troubie 16 oo, Move, Al iy ered recently. neral health is such, that I feel —_— ke a new man. After the use of UTAH, Brown's Iron Bitters for one month, J 1 have gained twenty pounds in Quite a numberbf buildings are being put weight. O. B. SAxGNT, up in the vicinity of the er & Rio Grande grounds in Salt Like, i icians An extensive and very damaging cave In Ll i L LI e L By i clergymen use and recom- Silver mine, mend Brown's IroN Bir- The mines in Bingham and Cottonwood TERS, It has cured others in shape to send out large amounts of aeon, suffering as you are, and it vein is about being stuock, The Mormons at Paris, Bear Lake, are setting fire to saloons, They are sure, however, to drink all the whisky bofore firing the buildings. FALLEY & HOES, . Western Agents, Latayette, Indians, TEE PATENT article is equally as good. A very flue quality of brown stone for - building purposes has been found within a mile of the city limits of Salt Lake, and preparations are being made to open the —FOR— quarry quite extensively, Rubber Boots and |, i rgiiey o o by Tribune predicted some time ago that at Boots and Shoes lhaut 1,000 new buildings would ve erected ere this year, OF ALL KINDS, mfinuthm Utah fs reported as having but in the mountains, while the To Thelr | vallays are very dry, ¥ i uon B0 PER T, Wouerr [yateys ses very Wity 'l suffer this % hon over, 80T DR Samine full line of Leather and the Re ,Candee” Rubber Boots and Bhoss with Ofllbl:lfl MES. M. HE'TBO: ‘ Oave Valley is now attractiog the at. 1nld rock " v discovered there is reported as belng quite tention of the prospector, The rich, Preparations are being made to work the tailings at Cornucopis, Washoe county, 7 There is & huge deposit of thess tallings, \\\\\\'“N( y////;', 3 /}// and it s said they will pay about $15 per / on, i\ \ ///// / Pioche boasta of afive year old young- \ ster with aporoved cowboy proclivitics. / Hisname Is Donahue and last week he [ obtained his brother’s pistol and took s shot at his little baby sister, The ball hit the baby i the cheok, near the mouth, and made a flesh wound two inches in length, Mr. Bolford, of Carson, lost $2,500 worth of flags by the burning of Piper's opera house in Virginia last week, He has been collecting the flags of the world for tl t ten or fifteen years, and spent 6,000 in cash for them, As he had nly complete collection in Awmerics, were worth at least $10,000, 1o its wearer in MI’J the person from whom it was bought. The only Corset pronounced by our leadiny t i RACSTT et b7 ok g sy |7 8t 10 c8plerog b riable ana'perfoct tting Corset ever --;::; . ) NEW MEXICO. b Palds Beaith Prescrving, 01,60, Belf A A water tank with a capacity of £0,000 Belf-Adjusting, 61.50 et e on, 0o, Adlusiing $1.80 | gullons has been bullt at Poach Springs. rrasglhy it 4100, o | Block ofand in Silver o by leading Dealers everywhere. AGO CORSET GO ) R @ erection of a convent thereon, dogs, nolsy bo; 100, ey srintrons 5w Congreas has ») riated $800 pairs on the old . urg.p pnllneo, Sm‘lo:l": which has been government 'property in sucoession. for cent: tolegraph The new line between Dem! sad Silver City is now built t-ny-(h‘ :flmu. sud Is belng put up .nh.nhu}u: a day, A contract has been let for the ereoti of & br l‘BflmClly?’Afllhmo: fixty there! Demlag awiting sbipment. A mining capitalist of Montana has pu; chased one-third interest in_the Mul:h:-r Lode Sonp of olalms in the Telegraph dis- triot, Grant county. The nm comprises was paid, cight claims, and $18,000 in ARIZONA, They estimate thy i Eflvp-r Basin, Yavapal sounty Yet Hing, » Chinese baker at Yum: in his shop and the place fired. The body was fonnd in the ruins, completely roasted, with the throat ont Robbery was the motive, was murdered from ear to ear but there is no clue to the erimiuals, An electrio light company h 3 ganized at Tucson, The yc"n l!:“:x ‘;:0 0se in use Angeles, with the I B, (APURLEY ".;'S:'" Tol lights, and the Swan lnct‘;g:-u;;utl’l:g lighted with masts, similar to REM SEMEDY ! cespenizE! will be used for domestio lighting, the storage reservoir system being used, IDAHO. river, was recently rol raLY PUASES wealth, CMARK g » & rernuron. Fig trees are putting out their leaes at A fine hotel is being built at the new town on Ontario, San Bernardino county. y . The Mojave branch of the Southern Pacific raiiroad is rndod to within sixteen There is an_agitation in Sonora county . : Reocently a bedy in a rough box was dis- ing the blood pure and rich. covered in the Bantas graveyard by men ¢ who were exhuming the remains of girl, Logansport, Ind. Dec. 1, 1880, The circumstance sugzested fuul;l‘;’y“lc: nlllfieen hlvcbo;; e;‘ds;_.v;r{ngl to nm:;l disease. My appetite was ver) r the mystery, L M. clears uj 1] s d¥GE | mystery by s ing ihat whilejurico of i‘n are county he acted as coroner in holding an inquest on the body of » German who was drowned while at- Iron Bitters, Since I used that my tempting to crons Tom Paine slough, and stomach does not bother me any, his body was buriedin the manner discov- r The shaft on the Lucky Boy mine, Bing- will cure you. ham, has reached a depth of ninety-five foet, and appearances indicate that the The Denver & Rlo Grande snow fences in Spanich Fork canyon are being in. jured by persons, tramps and teamsters, g the lumber for fires or carrying it A shipment of Castle Valley shale, to be tested in tae Salt Lke k b REVERSIBLE made soon. Australian shale has hereto. fore been used, and it is thought the Utah be | The Olaims of a Deaa Wife 10 the At- Frank Stillwell, confined iz the Hum. t Eureks, last weel dis rs over the ventilator and crawled up the ventilator te the af Breaking a hole in the he rdl ing, Evory Corsot is warranted satis- he lowered himself to the ground by his blankets aud escaped. Hig. ah or the money will be rotunded by soon discovered, bt the cfficors haco wat The Sisters of Chult&:nn %\am‘l‘)luad » y, snd will soon 1t is suid there are more dead hogs and burros and goats in Ratan than any other town in New Mex- questions you ask about that woman,” she do?! What was her particular line?” The postoffice at Naples on the Wood of ts The railroad laborers below Holley are - h crowd at fi time. An OMAWA , NEB. rougl eeding B, N 070 rings, and with hataon dive for every disl in reach, The table looks me if struck lightnivg lnide of two ml atid ever; man of them tries to gel with the most grah, The ranch of J, Q. Shorley, on Raft river, embracing 4,000 acres snd including 3,000 head of cattle, 1,000 sheep and 100 horees, was sold last week to the Keogh brothers of Nevada for $90,000, MONTANA, Miles City will have a board of trade, There is some talk of building reduction wocks at Livingston, The county debt ot Custer county now approximates $200,000 The late territorial legi United States government ) Forty.five of the inmates of the Mon. tana insane ssylum are pronounced in. curable, About five hundred patents for agricul. tural lands are awaiting claimants at the United States land office in Helena, The patented mineral claims of Montan; wre represented in the surveyor general office at Helena by 1,300 choice specimes of ore, Missoula s enjoying a quartz excite. ment., Some Wallace district ore has been hrought in assaying 8977 in gold und $219 in silver, Other samples assayed loss, but up Into the hundreda, Business at the Helena U. S, land cflice a8 hea during the first ten days of March than during the whcle month of February. The fees received on the 15th |}, and 16th of March were nearly $600, WYOMING. Over 200,000 pounds of freight were ship 'rom Cheyenne to the Black Hills one day )ast week, The county hospital at Cheyenne is ap- pronching completion and every appoint- ment about the building is complete, Philip Bernharchy, a young man who had charge of the railroad hotel lunch room in Cheyenne, accidentally shot and killed himself one day last week, The court which recenely convened at Laramie City is called upon to dissolve the bonds of wedlock uniting four couples, The bicycle club at Laramie City take runs over the Sheep mountsins, a distance of fourteen miler,and return to town again between morning and night. On account of sanitary reasons the peo- rlo of Cheyenne urge the erection of a new ail. A large portion of the citizens fre- quent it, hence the anxiety to have it com- fortable, DAKOTA. Jamestown’s hotel capacity is not large enough to supply the increasing travel. It cost the Manitoba road over $20,000 to keep the snow off ite lines during the winter, A school house, a church and & hotel will be built at Carrington, Foster county, this season, . Howell is the name of & new town in Hand county, about half way between St. Lawrence and Faulkton, Grand Forks is to have a syndicate brick block fin{ feet high and one hundred feet equare, It will be built this year, Manufacturing establishments for the purpose of making lumber from straw are being talked of in several places in north- ern Dakota, Every railroad lot in Lisbon has been sold, and fifty housesare in process of erection, but the work cannot be finished until more lumber is obtained, ille, Trail county, will soon organ. ize a board of trade. The place has neyer had a business fsilure, and a large number of Illinois people are settling there this spring, A Lisbon editor is busy answering let. ovidently on the The city councP of Fargo recently rati- fied the contracts for two bridges across el Tfiy will cost aboys A%y A WOMAN OF *ROMINENCE. tention of a Reporter, From the Brooklyn Eagle, “Kin you send a reporter around to my house t0 do a send off?” asked a middle-aged man approaching the cashier, with a visage in which timid- ity and oheek were curtously blended. ‘What kind of a send off? When 1s it9" o P morrow afternoon,” replled the stranger, ‘‘To-morrow at 3 sharp we aregoing to plant my wife, and I promised her that I would have a re- porter present, and a long article about the way it was done. She was o great stickler for ruch things when she was alive, and I want her to have the right thing now that she has gone up the flume, Kin you send one around?” ‘‘Was she a prominent woman?” in- quired the cashler. ‘‘We don't often send reportors to write up the funerals of private citizens unless there is some- thing particularly interesting about the person or the exer Did I understand you that she was a very prominent woman?’ ‘‘Well, mister, there was times when she was the most prominent woman in our end of the town. There was times when she was the only cltizen that oould stay anywhere arqund where she was. There was times when she would keep every reporter that ever was born as busy as a tramp at a free lunch, and if that prominence lsn't quite up to your pitch, there was times when if she’d kum in here and ssked you to do anything tor her, you'd have done It, or it would have taken all the rest of the employes around this bullding to have found where you went out. Is that proml- nenoe enough for a reporter to write something about the send-off to-mor- row” 's very well, as faras It goee,” the cashler, in a sympathetio ‘‘But what part did she seem to take In public affairs that would warrant us in belleving that the publio is Interested in her obsequles?” ‘“‘Part! What part did she take? r In the public affairs that Sue felt an intorest in? ® | ever located where you could look on In safoty when that Interest ot hern began to take a gripi I guess you couldn’t have been, partner, by the “But who was she! What did ‘‘Mister, it's hard to tell who she wasn't when she got started. Some- times she was & buzz-saw; sometimes I thought she was Intended for a steam triphammer; there was other times when she was an electrio-light wire, That's who she was. As to what she did T'lNl refer you to the walls and buildings around where she lived. The marks {8 there, You can see for your- selt, Her line lay right through the went lnto everything that visited the sels | Belghbochiood, uad §hes ho seess ooy ‘of the same Institution for £30,000. & draft, and had found a safe lodg- were entire), rant, asum vhhh'wl‘:.id make of 1t she left a hole that there was no mistaking, Is that prominence enough for a reporter to kim around to mor- say a world lalr” .tlu way we ive her the d launch?" ¢ “I don't ug:.;ot that she was of enough Importance for the pablic to take any Intorest in her funeral,” ar- gued the cashler. “P'raps not,” sighed the bereaved. “P'raps not. There la them who never ha knowed her wouldn't think, to see her In her $12 coffin, that she ever run our section of the town right up a tree and stood under it and threw bricks at it until it dmprd down again, I don't know how im- portant people has got to be to have & reporter at the wake, but I kin tell you that it's d—d lacky tor you that she pegged out before me.” “T don't see what I've got to do with that,” smiled the cashier, “If she'd come around hers for a reporter to be present at my plant, nd you'd glven her the gyme you © beon giving me you might never realize what you had to do with it, bat them as looked on in awe as you and she was figuring It out weuld have had to send a reporter somewhere, that ls, i€ you be oning around these premises 1s {lhly to put you In the light of be- ing in any way prominent. Now you ear me.” “Well, I'll think it over,” muttered the cashier, ‘It I think it amounts to anyching In the way of an item I'll see that the paper is represented.” ‘‘That's all right,” growled the mourner, turning reluctantly toward the door, “‘If you don't send a re- porter there to-morrow, and you have one or two whose time is heavy on their hands, you'd do well to send them somewhere to render thanks that you never knowed the deceased. I don’t know," he continued, musingly, “‘if she's where she can hear this con- veraation she's liable to get right out of her coffin and comedown here and hold the faneral services right on your shirt collar. 1If you see a ghost flop in at any time between now and dark, and oommence to slam the daylights out of this institution without offerin’ any reason for the circus, you mi know that the departed knows wha golng on in this world, and is still prepared to take a hand in where an odd hand a| rs to be wanted, Good bye, miste; And with this direful suggestion the bereaved took his line of march to the nelghboring saloon, pondering the elements Indigenous to sufficlent prominence to secure the attendance of a reporter af lant. Ve notice the Marriage Fund, Mutual Trust Association, of Cedar R‘Dm".ell:l“' highly spoken of in many of the ing papers of the state, ‘‘Money for the Un. married” heads their advertisement in snother column of this paper, £5-3m THE RANK OF ENGLAND. What a Yankee Correspondent Found in Conversation With the Chief Accountant, The first person I met on entering the bank of England was a venerable porter In a quaint uniform, which dates back, I think, a hundred yea or more; it left a green and bouff i sion on me, but [ cannot accur- tely describe its detalls. The porter me to & roo| s w.‘enuu J Ly WAy Aot e oflo‘r, Mn ?Gn , is entitied ‘‘ohlef accoungant,” and his position corresponds very much to that of oashiar of one of our banks, Mr. Gray, who sat at his desk surrounded by & corps of busy clerks, and who s & gentleman of the most courteous and unassuming manners, gave me a cordial welcome, and uuder his guid. ance I visited every department of the bauk, and had everything which 1 explalned to me, The capltal of the bank £14,500 000; its olrounlation In the hands of the pub- ile about £25,000,000; its deposits, on no portion of which interest Is paid, average in three days about £32,000,- 000, With its customers it has two kinds of account, deposit and discount. T was told that In order to fl::o. dis- oount at this bank it was lutely necessary to have a deposit acoount, but it can hardly be possible that a banking institution with such an enormous working capital, amounting to nearly $290,000,000, is ever obliged to buy paper in the open market in order to keep up loans, The bank discounts no bill havivg over three months to rup; the smallest city bill which 1t discounts io £100; the small- est country bill, £20. It circulates no smaller notes than £5, but this seems to be the only limited denomination; inaframe in the building is a can- celled note of the Bank of Ergland for £100,000,000, and, if I remember rightly, tne banker poet Rogers had hanging in his library a cancelled note I have heard that a note for £10,- 000 once had a singular history. It was paid out to one of the directors of the bank, who soon after lost it under such olroumstances that he was satls: fied, and succeeded In satlafying the baok, that it had fallen fnto"his fire. place and been destroyed. He was finl:d & new note, for .::!uh he re- urned a proper recelpt guarantee, Many yoars after the original note was presented for payment; the bank endeavored to disown It, but could not, for it was genuine and In the hands of an innocent person, and the talned that, Instead of being burned, 1t had been carrled up the chimney by meht In some oranny in'the fle. Here it had remalned until alteration: In the house necessitated the remova of the chimney; then it was discovered by a workman, who regarded 1t as a legltimate find, and who presented it for payment, Right here 1 may as well relate |s: another story of the bank, of whicl there are wany, both fn print and a legends, but of whioh I will let these two serve as speclmens. A sewer workman while poking around under ground found that by ralsing a flag- stone he could penetrate Into the bul- lion room of the bank, Amszed at the discovery, he pondered over it, and finally concluded he would utilize ftto his pecunlary benefit withont steallog, Ho therefore wrote to the directors, asking what reward he would recelve if he should meet them at any appolnted hour of the night in the bullion room, and thus reveal to middle of whatever was golng on, She | th e lem & mode of Ingress of which tha‘ inde- pendent Jong ago. life, and 4o thelr over whelmlog sorpeise he kept Ma prow ie by popping wp throwch the sewen, for which he reselved £10,000 o o This fa suppored o have happened —_—— Heraford's Actd Phosphate 18 & preparation of the phosphates of lime, magwasta, potash and tron Lo such form as to be readily assimilated by the system. Dasoriptive phamplet sent free, Ruamford Chemtoal Works, Providence, R. 1. — A Rallway Eating House in Sweden, Forei.n Letter The station at Katrineholm 1 ahall never forget, nor the dinner that I had there. I was exceedingly hungry, having started very oarly in the morn- ing, and when the guard crled ‘‘Tjugo for midday” (twenty minutes for din- ner). I lost no time In making preparations. On entering the matsal (dining room) I for a moment forgot my hunger, everithing was so diffar. ent from what I ad before seen. In the centre of the room was a long table, with a snowy white table cloth, upon which was seen the most tempt- ing food imaginable, all smoking hot, having just been taken from the oven. Atone end of the table were two tareens, one of soup and the other of Sweden, before buttermilk, the last a favorite dish In tareens were piles of warm plates, knives, forks, spoont and napkins. and of which many partake their soup. Beslde these Each travelor who was desirous of din- ing helped himself or herself to a plate, eto.,, walked around the table, selocted what beat satistied the appe- tite, then seated himself at one of the small tables around the room, After the soup came fish, then roast beef, lamb, chicken, vegetables, jellles, puddings, bread, butter, cream and coffee. One could eat all he wished, help himself a second time if he desired to, and the price of a dinner, five or slx courses, was only 1 krona and 60 ore—about 40 cents, Those who did not wish a fall dinner helped themselvesfrom the smorgasbord or to a cup of coffee from running of dishes, no noise or confusion in any aooffee urn, There were no walters to and fro, no crashing of way. Each person went to the desk and pald for what he had eaten, elther | ! the dinner from the smorgasbord, from word of which a good meal of cold meats, bread and butter, for 50 ore (13 conts), or for a lunch of coffee and cakes. The there were no walters watching to see what each hadeaten. I uever enjoyed a dinner more, and I thought how pleasant it would be to have similar each person waa taken, and restaurants in America, when all REMEMBER THIS. If you are sick Hop Bitters will surely ald Nature iv making you well else fails, If you are costive or dyspeptle, or are suffering from any of the numer. ous diseases of the stomach or bowels, it is your own fault if you remain ill, for Hop Bitters are a remedy in all such complaints. sovereign If you are wasting away! with any form of Kidney disease, stop tempting Death this momont, and turn fora cure to Hop Bitters. If you are sick with that terrible slokness Nervousness, you will find a “Balm in Gilesd” in the use of Hon If youare a frequenter or a resl- dent of a missmatic district, barricade your system against the scourge of all I ion low skin, bad breath, pains and aches, countries—malaria, epidemic, bilious and Intermittent fevers—by the use of Hop Bitters, have rough, pimple or sal- and feel miserable generally, Ho) Bitters will give you falr skin, rio blood, and sweetest breath, health and did not understand, and at a glance | comfort, In short they cure all diseases of the stomch, Bowels, Blood, Liver, Nerves, Kidneys, Bright's Disease, $600 will be paid for a case they wil not cure or help, That poor, bedridden, Invalid wife, ister mother, or daughter, can be made the pleture of health, by a few bottles of Hop Bitters, costing but a trifle. 'Will you let the or? —en WWESTER N CORNICE WORKS ! Iron and Slate Roofing, 0. SPECHT, . . Proprletor, 1111 Douglas &, - Omaha, Neb MANUFACTURER OF GALVANIZED Iron Cornices | DORMER ~ WINDOWS, FINIALS, Tin, Iron and Slate Roofing, Specht’s Patent Metallic Skylight Patent, Ratchet Bar and Bracket d; Blhelvlnm I am the veneral agent for the above line of g Cresting IRON FENCING, Balustrades, Verandas, Iron Bank Kailings, Window Blinds, Cel lar Guards; also GENERAL AGENT FOR PEERSON & HILL PATENT IN. SIDE BLIND. A 8kin of uty Is & Joy Forever. DR. T- FELIX GOURAUD'S Oriental Oream or Magical Beau- tifler, pade One Et'ol\uivel for the uge of Passengers, These imme The distinguished re, said to & Iady of the HAUT ON (& you ladles will use them, I recomm ‘G uraud's Cream' s the least harmful of all the Skin preparati One bottle will last six months, using it every day. Also Foudro Jub- tile removes superfluous hale wichous injury to by all Druggists and Faoey Goods hroughout the United States, Canada and Europe. 24 Bew 1 14-weow of base imitations. $1,000 reward for arrest and proof of avy ono selling the same. me WANTED. 100,000 POUNDS OF RAGS & METAX. T E. MOTZ & CO., mism ke -lm 1115 Dougles Lire ——— S "STEELE, JJHNSON & CO., WHOLESALE GROCERS AND JOBBERS IN Flour, 8alt, Sugars, Canned OCoods, and All Grocers' Supplies. A Full Line of the Best Brands of CIGARS AND MANUFACTURED TOBAGCO. Agents for BRNWOOD BAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER 0. P. BOYIR JO° ==——DEALERS INw—— HALL'S SAFE AND LOCK CO. Fire and Burglar Pr>»> & A XET R & N AULTS, LOOKS, O . 1020 Farnham Street, OMNMAELA.,. -~ - - NEEB ANHEUSER-BUSGH w, Brewing Association, CELEBRATED KEG & BOTTLED BEER. THIS EXCBLLENT BEER SPRAKS ISTIOUISNDL S FOR ITSELF. Orders from any part of the 8tate or the Entire West will be promptly shipped: W All Our Goods are Made to the Standard of our Guarantee, GEORGE HENNING, 8ole Agent for Omaha and the West. Office Oorner 13th and Harney Str OMAHA CORNICE WORKS, RUEMPING & BOLTE, Proprietors. Tin, Iron and Slate Roofers MANUFACOTURERS OF Ornamental Balvanized Iron Oornices, Iron Sky Lights, Ete, 310 Soath Twelfth Street, - - OMAHA, N£B, mar 7-mon-wed-fri-me. PERFECTION HEATING AND BAKING 1s only attained by using CHARTER OAK 8toves and Rangas.! WITH WIRE hLlII;!IE muvan DO0RS, 'or sale by MILTON ROGERS & SONS: OMIATIA. faill.mse) HAS THE BEST ST00K INADMAHA AND MAKRS THE LOWEST PRICES IMPORTANT IMPROVEMENTS Havp now been finished in our store, mal - ing it the largest and most complete FURNITUREHOUSE In the West. 'An additional story has b built and the five floors all cor¥nectedeen ‘with two HYDRAULIC ELEVATORS, N80 Ware- imm rooms---three stores, are 68 feet wide—are filled wi rand=- :]alt display of all g'inds of Hous‘:iold a:d Oflfiewggr:fi:rg evfl. own. All are invited to call, take the Elevator on the first floor |and go through the building and inspeot the stook. e IVERIC HAS. : 1206, 1208 and 1210 Farnam Street, Omsha JOHN SPOERL, FINEBOOT AND SHOE MAKER, 410 Tenth Street, Omabha, Only the best stock used. Perfoct fits and satisfaction guaranteod EASTERN MARKET, MEATS, MHBEATS, Fresh, Balt, Smoked and Dried. at 0. CONNERS, - 1716 Burt Stree d“anlu Cute competition ln price and a thorough undesstanding of the business. Pat; m b-m-w-t-4m LY - ———— e — -

Other pages from this issue: