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OUNCIL BLUFFS, VO MATTV LEL.TDTMAY MALC: . an 'lfiE‘ DAILY BEE O %A 4, THURSDAY. 7. PROPRIETOR OF————— MARCH 29 7 MU ELILEIR, o TOW A. “"PALACE MUSIC HALIL! * Mall and Ex,.*9:20 a m | Mail and Ex, Headquarters for the justly Celebrated WEBER PIANOS, now ap COTTAGE AND BURDETTE ORGANS. Guitars, Accordeons, Music Boxes, Italian Strings, Etc., Etc. proved and used by a'l first-class Artists. WESTER Importer and dealer in MUSIGAL INSTRUMENTS 0F EVERY DESCRIPTION, such as Violin Also a full line of MUSIC BOOKS. MUSIC BINDERS AND SHERT MUSIC Fancy Goods, Childrens' Carriages, Velocipedes, Bycicles, Carts and Wagons. will seli at To make room for new stock EXTRA LOW FIGURES FOR THE NEXT SIXTY DAYS. Good Organs at $60 and upward. Pianos and Organs sold for Cash and on Monthly Payments, Orders solicited Address, J. MUELLER, Council Bluffs, lowa. COUNCIL BLUFES LANGTRY WAVES. stylee from the esst, in Langtry Waves and Reversible Lan J. GOOD'S, 29 Maln street, opposite post cflice. WINTHERLICH BROS., Are now ready to_contract for small castings ot every description in MALLEABLE IRON, GRAY IRON And any ALLOY OF BRASS, Bpecial attention is called to the fict that the metals are melted in CRUCIBLES which gives the very best castings, Burnmg Brands DISTILLERS, BREWER.S PACK- ERS, OIGAR and TOBACGCO FAOTOKIES Etu Eto., As well as Cattle Brands ARE NICELY EXECUTED. Is tho old Favorite ana mwoxr.gx.:.xn FOR — CHICAGO. PEORI 8T. LOUIS, MILWAUKEE. DETROIT, NIAGARA FALLS NEW YORK,BOSTON And all Polllh llltlndflnulh-lnb E COMPRISES ‘Warks: Corner Sixth street and Eleventh aveuue, COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. W. R. VAUGHAN. JUSTICE OF THE PEACE. Omahs and Council Bluffs Real Estate & Collection Agenoy. n Odd Fellow s block, over Savings' Paxy, 8-ty OOUKOCIL BLUFFS RAILROAD TIME TABLE. OHI0AGO, ROCK ISLAND AND PACIFIC, ve Pacific Ext.. Ex and Maii* Des Moines ac*.4: OHICAGO, BURLINGTON AND QUINCY, Depart. ve, Atiantic Ext,..630 pm | Pacio Exi., foo: 8ol Bagoth A Vare tisto 1a GRION. BEPOTS his a Natlonsl Eepnfation aa being the ¢ eat Through Oar Line, and fs_universall nceded fo bo the FINEST EQUIPPED Rail ad In the world for all claseos of bravel, o7 1t and you will 0 Sraveling a ‘Inxory “ul“l 'h er Celebrated Line Mail and :20 & m | Mail and Ex* 0.0 a4 Al oicoe n tho Weet, N R 40 p m | Nob & Kao bx oAl intormation abort Ratee o Fare, Slow 160 AND NORTHWRSTARN. NMM ons, Time Tables, &o., Depart. Pucitc £ nhnrmlly fiyen applylning $o Atlantic Ext...5:15 pm o Mall and_Ex am i Vice-Lroi™ & Gen. Mansger,Chloage. Accom (Sat.)..5:50 p m PEROIVAL l.ow:u.. 'sssenger Agt. Ohloage Gen, w3, DAVSRPOIT Gen, A$unl Connoll Blaffs. Mall and Ex....9:55 8 m o2 Xapros. oo 00 9110 P -I Mol and A JUELL, Ticked jAg. oms UNION PACINIO, omhub .:I‘.IL -. On-lndn..cm . Lincols Ex. 1120 . m, | Deaver Ex > I % . " fi 4 —OF THE— WABAAH, 87, LOUIS AND PACIFIO, P OA g Arrive, s a-anm Mall and Ex.. 4:30 pm Cannon Ball,|11:06 » m : m“ AND PACUIO, e SR Nilwaukee & St. Paul Fon Niobra Neb.. 50 For Sloux &.ly 755 8 m For Fort. Nlubnn. RAILWAY Leave Council Blufs. - Arrivos Counci Bluth g ™ | Mall and Bx. . *6:56 pin | 18 now running ite FAST EXPRESS TRAINS 9:1 from OMAHA AND COUNCIL 'BLUFFS ~WITH— *Except Sundays. tExcept Saturdays. $Exce) Monduya, (D | St 3EXCR piman'y - Magnificent Sleshers Council Blufts & Omaha Street R. R. Leave Council Blufs, Leave Omaha. —AND THE— 8am9am 10am|8am9am,10am, Mamlm2pm3p|llam tpm, 2pm,3p m,4pm5pm6pm. |m4pmbpm,6pm. Street cars run half hourly to the Union Py Depot. On Suxhlni the cars lmglnthfl(r trips 9 0'clock a. ., and run rej during the d Atlantic Ex.[§5:15 p m | Atlantic E; i CHICAGO, MILWAUKER AND ST, PAUL. Arrives at Omaha. m | Pacifi 5 3:40 p m | Mail and Ex.. Finest Dining gags in the World. COUNCIL BLUFFS ADDIIIONALLOOALNEWS COMMERCIAL. OOUNOCIL BLUFFS MARKET. Oorrected daily by J. Y. Fuller, mer. chandise_broker, buyer and shipper of grain and provisions, 89 Cenrl street. Wurar No, 2 spring, 76¢; No. 8, 68; rejected b0c; good demand. CorN—Denlers paying 83c; rejected oorn Chieago, 450; new mixed, 480; white corn, 8bc, The receipts of corn are light. OAms—Scarce and in good demand; 85, Hax—4 00@86 00 per ton, Ryr—40c; light supply. CorN MEAL—1 25per 100 pounds, ‘Woon—Good supply, prices at yards, 5 00@6 00, Coar—Delivered, hard, 1100 per ton; soft, b 50 per ton, Burrkr—Plenty and i fair demand; 2%c; creamery, 80c. Faos - Ready sale and plenty at 130 per dozen, Imm—F-u-h-nk':1l wholesaling at 180, PouLTRY—Firm; dealers paying 18c per pound for turkeys and 10c for chickens, "VEGETABLES—Potatoes, 45c; onions, 50c; cabbages, 30@40c per dozen; apples, 2 50 @3 50 per barrel, City flour from 1 60 to 3 40 Broous—2 00@3 00 per dozen, BTOCK, CATTLE—S8 00@38 50; calves b 00@7 50, Hoes—Market for hogs quiet, as the packing houaes are closing; shippers are paving 5 50 to 6 560, The grain dealers are paying good prices for corn, Farmers can et from 33 to 85¢ now and farmers will do well to take advantage of these prices, The dealers continue to pay these pricos, notwithstandiog 8 marked decline at all the other points, Money for t nmarried. One of the most rolid and subst: acial lnldtuflom in this country is the .iar. e Fund and Mutual Trust Ass-ciation, o! ar Rapids, Iowa, They are organ- ized under the laws of Iowa, and heir of. ficers and directors are among the leading and most prominent business men o Cedar Rapids, Every unmarried person should have a certificate in this assoclation. It is » splendid investment, as safe as vernment bond. You can justas well ave & good sum of money to commence married life on as not, A large number of memban have been paid off, receiving over nflmt on their investment, rite for circulars fully detalling the plan, which 18 the finest known. Do not postpone it. Good agents mud. Mention when you aw A Typical Western Venture and Ite Results. Before us 1s one of the handsomest, best edited and most artistlc maga- zines in the world. To the outslde observer there is nothing to distin- gulsh it from the average magazine of London or Boston, save a certain western flavor and & freedom from conventlonalities. To us thereis a romantlo bit of hls- tory In close connectton therewith, In February, 1875, No. 1, Vol. 1, of the Western Magazlue was printed by Tue BEE job office. It was only a 32 page magazine, and the writer of this svetch was Its editor, mansger and proprietor, Its pages reflected the crude efforts of the literat! of Nebras- ka, and one or two rude {llustrations per month was all it could afford. It had no capital, and its exlstence wholly depended upon the persistence of the canvass made in its behalf. Two years later this magazine was 2 o e sdran e | IF YOU ARE GOING EAST ™ Seud 81 3, or §5 OHICAGO' MILWAUKEE., G AN DY At et by Express, of the best Or 40 any polnt beyond; or Oancles in America, pat wrin s e s | IF YOU ARE COING NORTH siricly pure. Sulble | gy, PAUL OR MINNEAPOLIS for pregents. | Expross Take the BEST ROUTE, \he churesgllent. Referndo | hioago, Milwankeo 8t. PaulR'y all Chicago, Try If once. Addresy Ticket office located 1n Paxto Hotel, M ‘corner C. F. GUNTHER, | pernum anofFourteenth streets and a4 U. P, De- Confectiier, pot and st Millard Hotel, Omaha. Chicago | garBee Time Table in another columa. F, A. NASH, General Avent, G. H. FOOTE, Ticket Agent, Omaha. 8.8, MERRILL, A, V. H. CARPENTER, General Managor. General Pass. Agent. J. T. CLARK, GEO. H, HEAFFORD, General Sup't, Ass't Ger “oss, Agent THE NEZRASEA MANTIFACTURING 01| onarervi-comronrmo Lincoln, Nab Corn Plantors Hrrrows.Farm Rollers BREARKFAST, Bulky Hay Bazes, Buoket Mlevating | By s thorough knowledgo of the natarsl law Wind which woveru o operations of digestion And Wo are .mmd ln do Job work end mauohe lmhlur)u and by a careful spplication of ths turlug for othor partles, ) ropertios of well-s locted O Nr Address al orders rovided our lresktast fabloa with ¢ oJtke NEHRANKA MANUFACTURING 00} m cately flavored beverage which may eave s Tdneoln Neb many heavy dostors’ bllis It fe by the )x:xli‘lci;;m YL ase of such articles of diet that » constitutios “ anted--Aeee for ,;f" Lite, “"’“- sy bo gradualy bult oy until strong enongk Dy Bt lr o rosiat mmename, :n‘d.mw ] un-l:::c LA of subtl floating around us r MRAK my s wire. JO88D aman 10 sétack whurltv: ‘!';no 1 & weak polot. We el ouly life authorized by her and which will | ,5'CLCl %25 ahats by keoping ous 1804 b & “Blood and Thuder” story, such as has o ,m“,_d " A bon “od will o pullahed, but » b it by the | (i Py only person wi 1n posession of the tacte & | *Fif yezished Eaithll and dovoted wite: — Trath s more nier . boflll"lhlu-lli Bou | lfluflyfhlbmlbh by Grosers, labeled e e A L, Poet. e Bock JAMES EFPS & 0O., P o = a'--. Poorinds sibmbny SR g tana. Another Monopoly. Cincinnati Eoquirer's N. Y. Specia’. One Wilson, president of a sewing- machine company—not probably tke man who marrled his wife's daughter in Cleveland—appeals to all the sew. ing machine companies, with thesingle exception of the Singer, to form a big consolidated company, and invites the presidents of the various compantes to meet in New York for this purpose at an esrly date. The new vompany is called “Union Sewing Machine com- pany,” with a capital of 5,00C,000, each company to subscribe for as much of the stock as it deeires, and to pay for che same with its tools, machinery and ‘‘assets.”- This done it is pro- posed to form an alllance with the Sipger manofacturing company, to es- tablish and sustain prices which would afford an average gross profit- of $12 on each machine sold, The Brother-in-Law Trouble and the Judges. New York Herald, It appears that the story of the dls- placement of the clerks from a United States court ln this state was not after all a ptece of political corruption, as reported, but only one more case of that fine old difficulty, the brother-in- law in a good place, and the judge thus favored reciprocated by glving a good place to the brother.in-law of the other, That is as old as the hills. They all do it, and {t seems that it is convenlent to have brothers-inlaw in such cases. Judges, however, gen- eraliy prefer to have their own rela- tions in their own courts, foras the ary is small and goes to the judge, while the fees are large and go to the clerk, then if the clerk will not di- vide with the judge at least the money is keptin the fan.ly. Subetitute for Lumber. For the ordinary lumber in the shape of boards it is now proposed to employ straw solidified by chemical means and then shaped Into the size and thickness desirable for building purposes. Allkinds of straw are used, the raw material being used first made up into pulp by the ordinary process and then rolled Into thin sheets, about twenty-four of which equal an inch in okness, While wet and hot, and In a condition to readily absorb liquids, these sheets are passed thrnuqf: & vat of chemlicals heated to 280 degrees F., the excessive temper- ature ielng sufficlent to scald the li- quid into the sheets till they are thoroughly impregnated with the chemicals, At this stage the sheets pass through ten palrs of polished fron rollers, drawn so olosely to each other by means of powerful steam pressure that the space between them is not perceptible; the sheets are in fact forced through apertures which seem- ingly do not exist. Cement s applied by the operaticn of mechanism to which a system of brusheo 1s affixed, and a farther pressure Is applied, ultimately resulting In the production of a hard and firm fire proof subetance, After belng made, the lumber is dried thoroughly, this re- quiring one to four weeks, in a store- house %ree from damp. If used before it 18 dry the lumber will warp, but it is claimed wlil not do sojwhen dry. This materlal, which has stood some sponser. That child was brought up at Napoleon's expense at Montjole, and then sent to an Italian convent, from |whict, having arrived at young womanhood, ehe was released batweon the years 1830 and 1840, The prop- erty Inherited by the young countess at this time was soon disslpated, fmlly by luxury and partly by benevo- ence; and so 1t came about that sho came In poverty to Cologne at the beginning of the year 1850, in order, with the ald of prominent citizens, to petition Napojeon IIL for a further support. When every effort in that direction had falled, she was compelled to earn her living with her own hands. and under the name of FAlkenherg she led the wrotched lifoof a solitary § seamstress until last week death re- leased her from it. Such s the story of the Mauelheimer which is ready to vouch for its truth. According to a Cologne dispatch in the Berlin Tageblatt, the dead woman re- celved to the end of herlife a monthly pension’of thirty marks from an illus- trious family {lvlug on the Rhine, which derived its origin under simi- lar clroumstances—that s to say, from an Intimacy between Jerome Napoleon, King et Westphalia, and | the self same lady who at Cologne in the year 1811 brought the deceased Falkenberg luto the world. To make a good salad dressing in the ordinary way, good condiments, plenty of time and no little skill are essential, Durkee's DressiNa supplies these requisites, All grocers sell it. Fire Risk in the New York Dry Goods District. New York Tribune, The sub-committes appointed at the November meeting of the Board of Fire Underwriters to suggest better methods of prolection from fire in the dry goods distriot have completed thelr reports. More than one hulf of the buildirgs In the distriot are found to be over 80 feet high, and of these 186 are over 80 feet, 24 are 90 feet, 7 ever 100 feet, and 1 1s 129 feet hlgh On this subject the ngort say The number of bulldings above sev- enty.five feet In helght In the dry goods district (as well as In o*her parts of the olt; )h agreat and grow- ngdanger, It may be that the most effectual of conquerlug this ob- stacle 1s by quflng in an Incressing ratlo for each five feet above sixty-five exoept where the bulldlng are abso- lutely fire proof. In this connection the committee call your attention to the matter of stand plpes, for which an allowance has heretofore been made by the compantes, By consul- tatlon with the chlef englneer, your committee learn that the most of these are useless through negleot. No further allowance should be made for the stand plpe commonly In use. Your committee find that within the lmits of what the underwriters now understand as the dry goods distrlot there are placed but two steam fire engines, There are such erglnes near the outer bor. ders of the district, but the cost of property within it is seemingly the reason why It Is within itself so bare of fire extingulshing apparatus. Your commlittee know of no better use to which a section of the city hall park, on the corner of Broadway and Cham- bers streets, can be put than the erec- very satlsfactory tests, is made prin- removed to Chicago, and it was lssued from the Lakeside bullding with a bona fide subsoription list of 15,000 names, but it became {nvolved in debt and the hurz burly of a year in Obi- oago found the magasine with a large inoome but with still larger expenses and no prospect of deliverance. The writer resovered from aserlous illness, to find his late y In other hands, but his .mpgm os had left the Dnew company an ballt for themselves & trim little oraft which they oalled the United Btates Monthly, It was without capitsl while lu next door had pald all outstanding accounts,andits owners were wealthy, It was capltal without experlence, agalnst experlence with- out capitul, snd while the details of the fight micht not be interesting, the reeult will ba. The western man- agement lust winter changed its name aud became a weekly, and geadpally it hae faded ftrom view, It is stlll published, but its circn- latlon is not remarkable, and its pages have not improved. The proprietors of the U. 8 Monthly have been its canvassere, and they have estabiished its cireulation in Florida, Celifornis, Minuesota, and, in short, alwost every busizess man in the country hes been visited by theso bard-workicg money gatherers. The best talent obtainable has been em- ployed to conduct its pages, and the most skillful artists are engaged upon its lllustrations, forty-two of which sppear In the April number. The articles are keen, original and spark. ling. The typugrlrhy, the binding, the paper and all the detalls are -lmpl{ perfece, The west s well rep. resented in this magasine, nlptl‘lly Into flooring, celling, black- strips and frioctlon-wheels, Kidney Disease. Paln, Irritation, retention, Incon. tinence, Dopollu Gravel, efo., oured by ‘Buchupaiba.” Napoleon 1.'s Daughter. Vienna Neuo Frele Prese. Lhw’d h;‘nom German news- papers of o lrmd that & daoghter o Nlpbloon"md died there in the most wretched ofr. oumstances, The only fact actually known 1s that some days ago in Lin- denthal, close by Cologne, an aged un- marrled woman dled and was burled at the expense ot the parish. This woman, Falkenberg by name, durlng her life betrayed an almost childish veneration for the great Coreican, and her poor room wan adorned with num- erous pictures of the Bonsparte fami- ly. When dlsease eelzed her and she saw her heath at hand, she bade the woman who weited upon her uu- lock a desk and take out a ban- dle of lettes and burn them before her eyes. At last, 'in the delirlum of death, ehe s said to have declared hersolf to bo a daughter of Napoleon, This is at present all that can be posi:ively esid of the mys- tery which surrounded thls person, aithongh the Muelhelmer Volkezol. tung claims to know from trustworthy sources that Miss Falkenberg was the very child that came into the world at the archblshop's palace in Cologne, in the year 1811, as the daughter of noble malden who had sustalned inti- mate relations to Napoleon—the child who at her baptism recelved the name of Countess von Falkenberg, sad for | whom Frederick Willlam was tlon of a builalng to contain at’ least two steam fire engines, Referring to the water supply of the clty, the report says that it will take five years to bulld a new aqueduct from the Oroton water shed, and urges that an abundant supply can be secured from the Ramapo valley in two years. E—— Hersford’'s Acid Phosphate {s a preparation of the phogphates of lime, magnesis, potash n(f iron la such form as to be readily assimflated by the system. Descriptive plismplet sent free, Rumford Chemloal Works, Providence, R. L. DUFRENE & MENDELSSHON. ARCHITEGTS! REMOVED TO! Umaha Natioi al Bank Bulldmg [}emus Rewarded Swlng HMant ') et '.’.‘.‘; prt GIVEN AWAY g for 18, af any bravch or sub-office of the i r Manufactur ng Com pany, or will be seht by mall, post-pald. to any pereon liviog at & d stance from our office, The Singer Manufacturing Co,, Princlpal Office, 84 Unfon Square NEW YORK, o any adult porson cal Voikezoltung, | cures, all the time, aud was under the trea Our Watchful Quardianand Falthful Protec tor Restored to Active Duty Agaln. Mr, Henry A, Waterman, of the city of Providence, R, I., for many years the faith- ful and vigilant night watchman of the Barstow Stove Company's very extensive establishment, having been confined to his bome several weeks by a very distressing illness, on resuming duties again avails himself of this early opportumity for sta ting briefly a fow plain facts, Mz, WATERMAN says— “‘A few months ago I was taken down GRATITUDE. DrxvER, CoL., August 29, 1882, Grxts—1 cannot find words w th which to ex- Dross my geatitude to you for the cure your Switt's Specific has effocted In my case. 1 was affiicted with the horrible disease for three yoars, and aftor spending some time at the Hot Springs 1 used only one dozen small small bottles of 8. 8, 8. and there is not .+ ign of the disease remain- Ing. My [sores are allhealed, my throat s en- with a severe sicknsss, which confined me %‘N‘ I':f"’: ble dissase. to the house quite & long time, and much | tha B s of the time T was 1o very lame as to be un- able to walk, and my leit leg from the hip the toes, beoame monatr.usly swollen, nnd T suffered extremely from the constant , intente pains produced by so great inflam. * mation; I was trying the various so-called 1 have sean 8o many hundreds of men dosed with Calomel, Todide ot Mescury and Iodide of Potash, uatil thoy wero eomplete wrecks, that I shudder to thtuk of the mis:ry which has bson brought on ths human family by the use of Mercurlals for Blood Diseases. It s crying shamo that physi- ctans will not acknowledge the marit of your GRAND Blood Medicine, Use my name a8 you wish, J. H, RAFF. ment of a physician seven weeks, but get- ting no substantial relief. At this time an old friend, a police officer, caled upon me, and during our conversation informed me of the great benefit which he had obtained by the use of Hunt's Remedy, and urged me to try it, as he considered it a wonderful medicine, I commenced taking Hunt's Remedy, having very little faith that it would do much in such a stubborn case as mine, but m; .5 doubt was soon dispelled; for before I had taken one bottle I began to got batter, the severe pains disappesred, the awollen leg gradually decreased In size, and T was anmnrlged to continue the use of the remedy; the improvement to m{ health continues; my appetite is_good. have regained my strength, and Tam now performing again my duties ss watchman at the foundry, Every night I go up and down stairs more than one hundred times, and am in good condition, and feel that my recovery is due to Hunt's Remedy alone, My severe sickness and terribly swollen leg was caused by the disessed state of my kidneys, and I think it is » most valuable medicine that will so speedily re- lieve and cure such a case as mine. I therefore most cheerfully recommend Hunt's Remedy to all » filicsted with Kid- ney Diseases, s I know it to be a safe and reliable remedy.” *Providence, Deo. b, 1882." 1t you doubt, come to sec us, and we will CURE YOU, or oharge nothing! Write for particulars and a copy of the little book, * Message to the Unfortunate Suffering " Ask any Druggist as ¢ our standing, *0.81,000 Reward will he pald to any Chemist who will find, on analysis of 100 bottles of§.8. 8., one particle of Mercury, Iodide of Potassium, or other Mineral substance. SWIFT SPECIFIC C0., Proprictors, Atlanta. Ga. Prico of Small Sise, Largoe Size,.... SOLD BY ALL DRUGGIS DOCTOR STEINHARTS Q 5 b 3 The Great Popular Remody for Piles. Burecure for Blind, Bleeding & Irching P And all forms of Hemorrholdal Tumors. These Surresrromins act directly upon coats of the Blood Vessels, and by thelr astri ' effects gently force the blood -from the tumors, andby making the coats of the vllun .tnn[, pmanz thoir to refllling, and henco a. ndl cure is sure to follow their use. Prioe, 78 ::li- a box. Ipt'ol' ‘fllu b; flldmfihfi’é‘n i °fl.‘ fgetitute O e o DOCTOR STEINHARTS ESSENGE OF LIFE. For OLD AND YOUNG, MALE AND FaMALR. It 10 sure, prompt sud effoctual remeds @ digeation, s, Intarmittant Povery Waat of .A.rpetlk. Norvous Dobil 1ta 8 Woak Memory, Lows ot Brain ewsend on, Woakness nn-nlk-oi Powor. It nervous waste, rejuvenates the fadod_nbellech srenghthons g sufoabied ‘beain and Tostored tons and to the rience of m lo remedy. Price, $1. oFsix of §5. For sale by all drugglste, or sent socure from observation on recelpt of Syt by P Box 2 m . Cers tolllng o nighy work DR. WHITTIER. €17 5t Charles 8t. ST. LOUIS Mo 4 REQULAR GRADUATE of two wodica colloges,, has beon longer the treal- ment of CHRONIO, N:Mu BKIN AND BLOOD Discasos than any obher &Lylluhn in BY, Matter of Application of Kavan & Palik for Liquor License. NOTICE, Louls ag city papers show and all old residents Notice is hereby given that Kavan & Palik [ know. Coneultation free and Invited, When 1t did upon th 148, fily | 18 Inconventont to visis the ally for ‘treatment, thelr appli 11 City Colincil | madicinas can be sent by mall or expross ever . Curable cases guaranteed; where dou | Sxisbnlb o frankly stated. Oall or write. Nervous prostration, Debility, Mental of Omaha , Spirituous and Vinous Liquors, at No. F0_Thireonth Streot, b., from the 11th day of ay of July, 183, remonstrance or and_Physical Weakness, Mercurial and tost fllul within two cks from M 2 A. D, 1882, l‘lm‘:‘u-l Ticonse will bo granted other affections of Throat, Skin and Bones Blood Impurities and Blood Polsoning, Bkin_Affections, Old Sores -nd Imp&{lmmu to_Marriage, attention $o ul- nnrwrhdbnln. SURGIOAT, OASES KAVAN & PALIK, Applicants. The Omaha Beo newspaper will publish the above notice onee each week for two weeks at the cxpnse ot the applicant, The City of Omata ia not to be charged therewith, J.J. L. C. JEWETT oor-2¢4 City Clerk, Matter of Application of Kitehen Bro's Hotel Oo, for Liquor License NOTICE. o Notics s heraby given that Kitchen Bro's Hotel + did upon the 204h day of March A, D 1888 lll- um .pruut'un 10 the Mayor aud City Counel] lor 1icease o sell Malt, Spirituous and Tinous d"uan. 4 Paxton Hotel' Farnsm stret, third ward, Omahs, Neb,, from tho 11th_day of Aprl 1885, 0 the'11+h day of October, 1663, t thero be no objection, remonstrance or pro- test flled within two wooks from » arch 26th A, D. 1883, the said license w/ll bs granted. Kircliny Blo's, . may mas GHOTOM, Lo’ “Somrionns and cure, l-wunm-u.u.n. a0 evidence cf humbug abous this On tio contrary, the svortisers ‘:‘n vory highly in- dorsed Interes ed persons may got 8 cuIAn zlv(n' all particulars, giving all pmluu addressing Erle Medical Cc., P, 0. Box méfl Buffalo, N. ¥.~Toledo Foantog oo -1y A Tun Ouana Bvn newspaper will pbii. the above notice once eich woek for two weeks st the expense of the -pl.lum The city of Oma- ha s 10t to bo charged therewith 7.3, L OOL. L. T. FOSTER Matter of Application of Chas, Neber for {¥ouagtows, Oni, May 10, 18%. Liquor Lic#nse, DA B J. Kn¥oaii & Co. -1 had & very valus NOTICE, Hamblotonian « thy Tpriead vory bighly Notice is hereby given that Chas . oty did _upon I had him of two veler A D., 1883, | Mayor and licenso to sel MKy SEIKCONA Wil § or 10th and Capitol ave- nue, Third Ward, Omahs, Neb.. from the 11th day of April, 1883, to the 11th day of July. 1883, I{ there be no objection, remonstrance or protest filed within two weeks from Morch 27th, A. D,, 1883, the said license will be grantod, el " 1to be lame and dhe . 1 used but oo bo A8 froe of lum w0 lu Who ytate Ho ls onf y euro care WAy 80 Fomarkable thay have lobtwo of my nelghbore b ‘ Ahe remele. CHARLES NEBER, ing two bobiles who are now us . Applicant., Vory respoct: ¥ The Omaha Bee newspaper will publish L, T. FOSTER the abovo Rotlce once cacl weak for two o Eriou bt Douiat iviog postiive i $1. Al D b8 bav, weeks ab th 2“of the applioant, | fet bar you . Th. 0‘:‘"{‘""“; ‘L:n-“ o w; jvplican L : ;,":i) n;yu- B. ;‘ Keadul's o. e herew swery, ¢ y AL ret: City Clork, dewely DRUGGxa ra P