Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 29, 1883, Page 2

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- SEEK health and avoid sickness. Instead of feeling tired and worn out, instead of aches and pains, wouldn't you rather feel fresh and strong? » You can continue feeling miserable and good for no- thing, and no one but your- self can find fault, but if you are tired of that kind of life, you can change it if you choose. How? By getting one bottle of Brown' IroN Bir- TERS,and taking it regularly according to directions. Mansfield, Ohio, Nov. 26,1881, Gentlemen :—1 have suffered with pain in my side and back, and great Soreness on my breast, with shoot- ing pains all through ny body, at- tended with great weakness, depres- sion of spirits, and loss of appes tite, I have taken several different ‘medicines, andwas treated by prom- inent physicians for my liver, kid= Beys, And spicen, but 1 ot no elief, 1 thought I wou'” try Brown’s Iron Bitters ; 1 have now taken one bottle anda half and am about weli—pain in side and back all gone—soreness all out of my breast, and I have a good appetite, and am gaining in strengthand flesh, Tt can justly be called the king of medicines. Joun K, ALexoen, Brown's IRON BITTERS is composed of Iron in soluble form; Cinchona the great tonic, together with other standard remedies, making a remarkable non-alcoholic tonic, which will cure Dys- pepsia, Indigestion, Malaria, Weakness, and relieve all Lung and Kidney diseases, There hasnever been an instance n which thigster- ing invigorant anti- febrile med ENTE GELEDRATED HOS! icine hes failed to ward off the complaint, when taken duly a8 a protection 'y aing ~. miada. Huot dreds of physic- ians have aban. daned allthe off- cinal specifics, and now pre: weribe this harm lews v goabo tonfe for chilly and fover, ns well B STOMACH s as dyspepsin and and e vous af- tetter's Bitera is thospecifio you nood., For sale by all Diugglsts ard Dealers gener- ally, my 16 m&e eod &w DUFRENE & 'MENDELSSHON. ARGHITECTS! REMOVED TO . | flmaha» National Bank Bvilding, BEWARE OF G I & BONs. Seld by ali Drug. &lsts, Grocerw and Liquor Dealers 3, W, WUPPERMAN, Sole Agent 51 Broadwav, N, Y. me-eod & GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 1678, BAKER'’S GHOCOLATES PME} Zaker's Premium Chocolate, tho best P)o5=? preparation of plain chocolato for fam- ily use.— Baker's Uiveakfast Cocoa, from which the excess of oil has been i Baker’s Jiroma, invaluable as & dict for chile dren.— German Sweet Chocolate, o most excellent article for famllics. Sold by Grocors everywhere. W. BAKER & CO» ] 7 i W apouat\© TONIC S 2 { .r“‘,p('_'f,f_..gi STIMULANT T teLobo aosTReneTHENS THE b oiecsTive Fonces Rl PADDY'S MARKET. Straits to Which the Game of Forty- Five Brought an Immigrant—How Vietims of Better Days May Let Themselves Down Easily. “Wholr will I folnd ‘a Paddy's market,” yer honor, If you plaze sor?"’ {rquired a bright youog Irlshman of a Philadelphia Times ropotter who boarded the British Prince the other afternoon out in the Delaware, The steamship had just arrlved with 168 evioted Irlsh people, men, women aud children. The speaker evidently be- longed to another class, and made one of the grand total of 1,398 steerage passengers, “‘¥iud » what?" “‘Well, sor, I'm in nade of ‘a Pad- dy’s market’”’ sald the newly arrived immigrant, ‘‘And what isa ‘Paddy’s market?” was asked, “'A place wholr I kin realize on phat I've got on, Ye say, sor, whin I lift Qaanestown I had » gud shats of close and nine pound tin in me pockit, but a-comin’ acrass I fill in wid two men from County Galway 'nd one from Donegal, Divil take 'em, Well, nor, se I in’, Ifill in wid 'em and we war a play at forty-folve, first fahr a tupence hapenoy and then fahr » shillin’—and now I folnd meslif in Ameriky wid nauthin’ bat the close upon me back, barrin’ elghteen pence in me pocklt, Ah! they done me up, they did, the thaves of the worruld. An’ now, sor, will ye be so koind as to tell me whor 1 kin foind » Paddy's market, sich as they hev in Glasgow!” “‘Tell me about ‘Paddy’s ot’ In Glasgow, and perhaps I can.’ “‘Well, sor, many of the byes who are poor and starvin’ at home, God help 'em, In eld Ireland, whin the harvests come 'round in England and S:otland take thelr sickles and whet- stones and go over to work In the Scottish fields. Thoy lave home about the first of June, as many as 150 to 200 in a lot, and work for about fif- teen to eighteen shillings a week and found. They kape at harvestin’ all the different crops, and by travelin’ from placs to place use up most of the time ontil the middle of August. Thin they are paid, Abont the 156th of Angust or thereabout, comes the Glaegow fair, wkich lasts for six days. Paddy strikes Glasgow about the time wid his pockets full of money, and after workin’ so hard Is ready for some recreation. The fiest thing, he buys & bran’ new shute of close— boots, hat 'nd all—and a good, strong shilala in caso of nade, ‘Yo know, sor, wid some pounds and pence in the pockets of his new breeches, some of Paddy’s ‘eye water’ ander his weeklt, 'ud some bonnle Scoteh laesios at the falr, Paddy’s in fer fan, And, what with tratin’ and beln’ trated, aud forty-folve, 'nd other devices, In about tree days he folnds himeelf widout a fardin, And, then, eor' comes Paddy's market, It's a great Institootlon—a long row of boothes under one roof, over by the bridge. “Phat kin a mon do whin his money's all gone and the falr only halt over? Well, sor, ho goes to Paddy's market and sells his noo close, phat cost him, maybe, four pounds, boots, hat eund all, for fifteen shillens or a pound off the first price. In the same shop he kin buy himself a sccond-hand shute, boots, hat und shurret, for from olghteen to thirty pence. Hochanges his rig, pats the shillin’s ke's made by tho transaction 1n bis pockot, Thin, sor, begorra, he's ready to see the fajr ont, He's In fet any row or ruotion until all his money’s gone, when he athrikes out for the harvests in the north of Scotland and worka for money to take him back home to ouldIr¢land agin.” ‘‘But, do all the Irlshmen who go to the Soottlsh harvests spend their woney in this way?’ “Ob! No! Sor! Some, a few, poor crathure, save their money and take it back to Ireland to pay thelr winter's rint on the little holdin’,” Carlous to find the nearest approach to ‘‘a Paddy's market,’ the reporter got ashore from the British prince as she awaug at anchor la the stream off the Narrow Gauge raliroad pler and sought the lower portlon of South street and vicinlty. The ateerage passengers were not allowed to come | th, ashore, but the reporter found and states for the information of his prospective Irish fellow-countryman that the Qaaker Clty Is not devoid of resources for oases like his. There sare places where a man can exchange everything he wears and by acoepting & poorer artlcle recvive the difference in cash, At one place an outfit, in- cluding *‘sult, boots, shirc, and hat,” would be furnished for § At anether &5 would foot the bill. Second-hand boots sell for from 60 cents to 81, Should a man dealre to reduce his style of liv. ing, his furnitare, china and cooking utonsils would be exchanged in kind for inferlor quality and a som in cash agreed upon paid in addition, The farniture of & bed-room, includ- fng bed, bedding, two ohalrs, table, vashbowl and pltcher and looking- glass, can be furnished for §5 15, Cooklug utenslls and table dishea (ohins) for a family of six can be secured for the modest sum of $2 25, In many places about the lower par of the clty this ‘‘exchanging” business 18 carrled on to a large extent, and the proprletors of the various shops ssy that the olasa of customere s much better than would be expected from the natare of the business. Many familios find this means a desiravle makeshift to conoeal from their dire necassitles, HOPPERS AND SNORERYS. A Base Ball Novelty. The latest novelty in base ball was a game played in Polladelphia on the 231 {ost., between the Snorkeys and the Hoppers. The Soorkeys are one- armed men and thg Hoppers are one- legged, An lmmense crowd witnessed the game, and there wero some re- markable feats with the bat and ball, The Philadelphia Times says of the game: “‘In the first foning two batters of the one-armed nine got thelr bases on called balls, and stole thelr way hume, thanks to a series of accldents among the one-legged fielders. A ball that was thrown by oatoher to pitoher passed that athlete and rolled between the two fielders on cratehes at left and center field. They both grabbed for and missed it, then one of them lost his balance and fell upon the other, THE DAILY BEE-TUESDAY MAY 29. and the ball stopped about five feet a By the time it was sent in e runs had been seored by nimble one armers, whose strengh and agility seemed to be transterred to thelr legs, which falrly twinkled as they ran, In the third Inning the one armed men got five runs on the slightest kind of hits and laughed as they swung around the diamond at the hasty sorambling for the ball among the one-legged fielders In the fourth inning they made seven, and this left the game 19 to 13 In favor of the one-armod nine, It was then growing so dark that play was suspended. ‘‘The ‘Cripples,’ as the nines are called, never played together before, and thelr success was 80 great that It has been resolved to take them on a tour to New York, Chicago, 8t, Louls and other clities, Thelr play ls ex- caedingly amusing to the outsiders, and In some cases illustrates the capa. bilitles that a crippled man can arrive at with practice and skill, in spite of physical imperfections, It s certain that the pitching and catching were not far below the amateur scale, whilo the general fielding, barring two or threo fll-advised colllsions, was pass- ably good. Chinese Shrewdness, San Francisco Call, The vice of gambling has such a strong hold upon the Chinose that they will play for money despite the best efforts of the polioe to suppress the games. Every time an arrest ls made in the Chinese quarter for viola- tlon of the gambling law and a con- viotlon follows the accused and their frlends watch the case closely to as- certaln what evidence the officers se- cured, and in what manner an en- trance Into the gambling place was effected. This they do for the pur. pose of gunarding in the futare against surprise by the police, Recently a case was dismissed agalnst gamblers who were tried In one of the police courts, because the officers had falled to discover tho fmple- ments usid in the game of chance —an indispensable link in the chain of evidence to sccure a conviction Theo Ohinese having obtalned knowledge of this polnt in thelr favor, ut once set themselves to devise means to have the evidence put out of the way when officers enter the premises, In this zhafl have been very successfal, for within a few weeks Sergeant Birdeall and his men havo ralded a large num- ber of gambling and lottery places, in every ove of which they found & num ber of Chinese, who appeared as luno- cent as & number of Sunday 1chool children, but they were unable to dla. cover any of the fmplements of the game, Yesterday Officer Travers, while aselsting to raid a lottery shop on Jackson street, In which were two Chinamen, but no evidence of a lottery In sight, accidentally over- turned a lmllf wooden bench, and as it strack the flocr the top flow off, disclosing a shallow arawer, in which had been red lottery tlckets, Ohinoso ink and brushes. The top of the bench was so arranged that It ocould be raised, the evidence thrown into the drawer, the top replaced and fastened by a spriog lock in such n manner that no ene wonld surpect that it could be raized. The cfficers then vlatted a namber of other lottesy shops and gambling places, and found in each a bench fitted up In the manner desoribed. —_— The Channel Tunnel. The London Times, of May 2, con- talos an interesting discussion before the jolnt comm!ttoe of the houscs of pariiament, of the expediency of con- strocting the channel tunnel. Several railway men thought tralns could, by asuitable blozk system, be safely ran evory quarter of ao hour, or about forty passenger and forty freight tralns per day of twenty-four hours, carry- fng about 5,000,000 passengers and 1,260,000 tons of goods per annum The only doubt in the mind of one of the gentlemen as to the praotioal work- Ing of the tunnel, was on account of the ventllation. He thought it ques. tlonable whether the signal men could remain In the tunnel any length of time. A member of parllament stated that the tunnel would be of great importance in the dellvery of perishable goods; wonld not distarb e carrylng trade of the country, and & land connection with France would bs of great advantage to Eng- land in the event of the latter golng to war with some other great conti- nental power or the United States. In ruch a case, assuming that England would not be able efliclently to pro- teot her commercoe at sea, she counld not get her wheat, cotton and other commodities as comfortably by way of Boulogne as by way of Calals through a tunnel, The manager of the Great Northern railway preferred to refraln from expressing an opinion upon the advisablility of constructing the tunnel from a natlonal point of view. REMEMBER THIS. If you are sick Hop Bitters will surely ald Nature {v making you well when all olse falls, If you are costive or dyspeptlo, 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 soverelgn remedy in all such complaints, 1f you are wasting away with any form of Kidney disease, stop tempting Death this momont, and turn for a cure to Hop Bitters, If you are sick with that terrible slokness Nervousness, you will find a ‘‘Balm in Gilead” in the use of Hop Bitters, If you are a frequenter or a real- dent of a mlasmatic district, barricade your system against the scourge of all countries—malaria, epidemie, bilious sud Intermittent fevers—by the use of Hop Bitters. If you have rough, plmple or sal- low skin, bad breath, pains and aches, and feel miserable generally, Hop Bitters will give you fair ak{u, rich blood, and sweetest breath, health and comfort, In short they cure all diseases of the stomch, owels, Blood, Liver, Nerves, Kidneys, Bright's Disease, 8500 will be paid for » case they wil not cure or help. That poor, bedridden, Invalld wife, ister mother, or daughter, can be made the pleture of health, by a fow bottles of Hop Bitters, costing but & trifie. Will yoa let them suffer} If you are not married, write the Mmh{‘:l"und Mutval Trust Association, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, for circulars explain. ing the plan, STATE JOTTINGS3. Fullerton wants a fire corapany. Claim contesting s lively in Holt coun- y. Ord is agitating waterworks and water supply, The Orete Standard hav a big libel suit on its hands, Red Cloud is having & boom in briok buildings, The B, & M, has 26 miles of track in Clay county. Cresco is the name of a new town in Holt county, Antelope county bas organized an agri- cultural society, Six newspapers are now published in Nemaha county, Fremont has passed an ordinance estab- lishing fire limite, The McCook land office will be open for business June 15th, An addition is to be made to the Otoo county court house. An effort is being made in Grand Tsland to secure a new postoffice, Judge Savage will deliver the decoration day address at Grand Island, The Cass county Tair this year promires to be the best exhibition ever held, A number of country Sunday school conventions will be held next month. Richardson county now boasts of nive newspapers and claims the banner. A farmer near Clay Center has sold this year 81,:00 worth of hogs and has $1,000 worth more in the pen. There will be tbree brick yards tribu. tary to Arapahoe this season and upwards of 50,000 brick will be manufactired, A York county farmer recently sold 99 head of cattle that averaged 1,418 pounds, for which he received $8,500, Auburn having been incorporated as a village exveats to make greater strides in the upbuilding movement than ever. ‘Wood river wants the modestsum of 8315 to p‘f off 8215 indebtedness and to run the village government for the next year. A load of hogs were brought into Red Cloud on » hay rack, They were too large to be hauled in a common wagon box, Service has becn ordered on the mail route from Fort Niobrara, Neb,, to Rapids City, Dak,, and the route has teen placed under contract., Nebraska has one newspaper to every 2,400 persons, which is more papers to the B ulation than any state esst of the sisaippi river, The sheep raisers of Harlan county re- cently met at Alma for the purpose of taking steps to have a sheep inspector ap- pointed, Judge Pound speaks in complimentary terms of the Plattsmouth bar a# being the moet prompt with their bussiness of any set of lawyers ia his district, There is an active demand in Crete for resdences, There is scarcely a vacant house in the town, and in many cases two families are residing in one house, The dirsctors of the town site assocla. tion of Minden recently filed the plut of their addition, and about thirty lots were immediately selected and eold, Over six thousand head of cattle have been unloaded at the B, & M. yards in Kearney sivce January 1. Soms of theee were scrub lots brought from Missouri, but the greater number were half breed Durham heifers and Durham and Here- ford bulls, 1 The ©ldest Rallway Conductor in the United States. Philadelphia Record, Conductor Willism Coulter, who runs the fast morning express between New York and Philadelphia, on the Pennsylvania railroad, has been a railroad paseenger conductor for near ly half & century, and is the oidest conductor in point of active service in the United States. He began rail- roading when there were but threo railroads In the country—one in South Carolina, one near New York City, and the old New Castle French- town road, on the route between this olty and Baltimore, He was one of the first conductors of the old New Jersey Transportation company, taking charge of his first train, which ran between Newark and Jersey Clty, in 1849, For seven years he was In charge of trains be- tween those two citles. In 1847 he was promoted and became conductor of tralus between Jersey City and New Brunswick. The road at that time was not built through to Phila- delphia, Mr, Coulter has still in his possesslon the schedule of time far. nished him in 1847, when he was placed in cherge of the New Bruna- wick traln, It Is a written time table, showing that the trains were to leave New York at 9 o'clock in the morn- ing and arrive at New Brunswick In one hour and forty minutes. To-da tralns ran through to Philad~\phia in almost as short a time, “‘Rallroading in those days, said Mr. Coulter yesterday, ‘‘was not so comfortable a business for the con. ductors as it is now. We were com- pelled to asalst In breaking, help the !htgdglca-mn or and not unfrequently LY a fight against the roughs who ted upon riding for nothing. In co of the splendidly upholstered saloon cars now In use connested with the engine by a bell-rope, and with patent steam brakes, we ran compart- ment cars, after the English fashion of to-day, with the passengers facing each other, There were no cushions nor any backs to the seats. He says that less than three hundred passen- gers daily oonstituted the entire through traffio in 1847, Daring the forty three years he has been a con- duotor, Mr, Oonlter has ridden not lees than 1,600,000 miles In New Jersey, and hundreds of thousands more in Pennsylvania, and has at- tonded to the numerous wants of over 4,000,000 passengers. While he was on the Jersey Oity and Newark trains he ran 100,000 times between the two citles. For twenty-hve years his average run per day was 128 miles, and he now averages 182 miles per day. Mr, Coulter looks as if he were good for twenty years more of service, sithough he ls nearly seventy yesrs| old, Tragedy In & Bridal Uhamber. Montevideo Razon, A horrible affalr took place recently at Rio Grande del Sur, near the Ura- guaysn frontler, A youug farmer was bitten by a mad dog,and the remedles were immediately applled to the wound, Oauterization was resorted to, und there was every reason to be- lieve that the viras had not entered the victim's systema, When the acel- dent occarred the young man was about to warry, but In consequence of the untowsrd occurrence the ceremony was postponed for three months, when the medical men who were consulted on the cace gave it as their opinton that thero was not the slightest ground for apprehending any duwger from the bite, The marriage took place on the farm, and was celebrated with the customary festivitles, After the nuptlal supper was over the bride- groom appeared to be seiz:d with & fit of despondency. caprloes, said somebody. After sup per camo the bill, and when this was at {ts helght, the newly wedded couple withdrew from the feetive scene and retired to thelr apartment, About an hour atterwards the house resounded with feroclous crier, inter- mingled with shrieks and groaus. As eoon as the guests had recovered from their atupefaction they sterted fn the direction of the cries, They pro- ceeded from the nuptial chamber The door was burst open and a horri- ble spectacle preseuted itself. On the floor lay the young bride ia a pool of blood, had been seized by a tiger. corner (f the roomn was the bride. groom, covered with blood and foam. ing at the mouth, scratching, biting and tearing sway at the wall and far- niture. With a eudden bound, he sprang like a tiger upon the invaders of his lalr, and he would have made one or two more vlotima had rot a brother of the dying bride sent a ballet crashing throagh the madman’s brain 1S_UNFAILING SAMARITY )y s o’ vai\ ness, Con- Sic vulsions, St. Vit~ holism, Opinm Eating, Seminal Weakness, Impotency, 8yphilis, Scrofula, \nd all Nervous and Blood Di leases. ¢%~To Clergymen,Lawyers,) teraryMen, Merchants, Bankers, Ladics and all Whose sedentaryemployment causes Nervous Pros- tration, Irregularitiesof the Blood, Stomach, Bowels or Kidneys, or who require a nerve tonle, appetizer ot stimulant, Samaritan Nervine 18 invaluable, §&™ Thousands wonderful Invigor- ant that ever sus- ‘DEEDE' tained aelnkingsys- tem. $1.506% gists. For testtmo- uias and cireuiar] GONQUEROR. The DR. S. A. RICHMOND MED, CO., Sole Propr’s, St. Joseph, Mo. () BT LOUIS PAPER WAREHOUSE ! GRAHAM PAPERCO, 217 and 219 North Main 8t , St. Louis. —WHOLBSALE DEALRRS IN— BOOK, : PAPERS { WRITING. NEWS, ( WRAPPING ENVELOPES, CARD BOARD AND Printers’ Stock. £27 Cash pald for Rags and Paper Stack, Scrap Tron and Mutals. Paper Stock Warehouses 1219 to 1237, North Sixth street. may 24 3m EsTABLISHED 1868, IDE BPRING AflA%gMENr—NoT PATEN? A. J. SIMPSOMN. LEADING CARRIAGE FACTORY 1609 sad 1411 Dodge Stroat, aug7-maefim Omana, Nrs, #I0UX FALLS Jasper Stone COME.ANY" (INCORPORATED] Th's Company s now prepared to rocelve ordors or SIOUX FALLS JASPER 'STONE, Bmldmgmf’urpusas. And will make figures on round lots for prompt deilvery, The Company is shipping PAVING BLOCKS To both Chicago and Omaha, and eolicits corres- pondence and orders trom contractors en- goged 1o peving streets in any of th e Western Citios. TESTIMONIALS, EUPRRINTENDENT'S OF¥icE, Chicago, West Divis- fon Rallway. Cnicago, December b, 1582,—T. Elwel, Presideot Sioux Falls Water Power Com- paoy. 'Dear Bir—I have recelyed from your com- pavy ince October of granite paving b have laid them be- bo most regu erl aud 1o far a8 I have been abla to jud sessed of ns durablo feature as any has over been offered or laid in 'ho city.. Yours, K (Copy.] St. Louis, Maroh 22, 1883, TO WHUM 1T MAY CONCER ‘This 18 to certity that 1 have examined a plece from the Sioux Falla Granite )y opinion, it is the bast stone a a NRY FLAD, Pres. Board Public Improvements, Stone for Paving Purposes Aud any pergen Interested i such improvements will ficd it greatly to his sdvantage to communicate with us, We invite CORRESPONDENCE ON THE SUBJECT, ral management and mupervision of pazy’s business i now in the hasds of Wi, McBaio, Address your letters to A. G. SENEY, President of the J. sper Stone Co. ml w&e-t/ SON AX—"Parts of the human body colarga Hovaiopad and sirsagieced.” ey an interceting advertiwement loug run in Gur por, In reply to wquirios we will say Ohat ere’ a0 evidence ¢ humbug about thie. ~ On the contrary, the advertiscrs arv very highly in dorsed _ Intorested porsons way got sealod cir. culars giving all parvicalars, giving all partico by adtirossing Erle Madical Oc., P. 0. 518, Buffalo' N, ¥ ~Toledo Ev L—udl-ly One of love's She still breathed, but her body was torn and bitten as Ifllha n & us Dance, Alco- about 100 ‘car loads {iway tracks in the STEELE, JJHNSON & GO., WHOLESALE GROCERS AND JOBBERS IN Flour, 8alt, 8Sugars, Canned Coods, ana All Grocers' Supplies. A Full Line of the Best Brands of CIGARS AND MANUFACTURED TOBACUO. Agonts_for BBI!UDD RAILS ARD LAFLiN & RAND POWDER 60 P. BOTEHE O =—~DEALERS IN-— HALL'S SAFE AND LOCK GO. Fire and Burglar Proof =5 L8, JE™ JER & N AULTS, LOOERKS, &O. 1020 Farnham Street, ONIATFELA. - ~ -~ NEE DOUIESA &Y JADNED SAIDCHLE ACTENG POWER AND HAND 8team Pumps, Engine Trimmings, WINING MACHINERY, BELTING, HOSE, BRARS AND TRON FITTINGE PIP PACKING, AT (OLVSAL AND RETAIL. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS CHURGH ARD SCHOO0. RELLS Cor. Farnam and 10th Streets Omaha, Neb. aTRAN (RO Poss The Ol ; ; “THE LEADING ot weszynovse MUSIC HOUSE in Omaha. Visitorscan here N TR WEST) find all novelties in HiL-| deneral Agents for the Finest and Begt Pianos and VER WARE. CLOCES, Orgens manufzcturec, Rich and Biylish Jewelry, Our prices are a2 Low as the Latest, Most Artistic,| 20 Fastern Manufacturer and Choicest Helections in angifg(fie‘;‘.m 0-gavs sold PRECIOUS STONES and |for cash or installments at f Bottom Prices. all deseripucns of FINE 5 T WATCHES at a5 Low Pri- gy §or ol VD10 Fbeck of Fteinwey. Chickorin, ces a8 18 compatible with Knabs, Vore & Son's Psi!: honorable dealers, ©all and see our Elagant New anos, and oty r makes, Also Clough & Warren 8tore, Tower Building, Sterling, Imperial, Smith corner 11th and Farnham [Smerican Orsans, & Do not fail to see us before purchasing, MAX MEYER & BRO,, MANUFACTURERS OF SHOW CASES A Large 8tockalways on Hand, FREDERIC GOAL. The only Coal mined west of the Mississippi River thatis equa in quality to the ROCK SPRfigG COAL. THE ONLY IOWA COAL That will stock for a year without slacking or shrinking, Pronounced by all the leading brlck men in Western Iowa us the very best coal for burning brick ever used in the Weet, EUREKA COAL AND MINING CO., Frederic, Monroe Co., Iowa. MANUFACTURER OF FINE BUGGIES, CARRIAGES & SPRING WAGONS My Repository is Constantly filled with a Seleot Btock, Beat W O IMLAN S EX GUARANTEEID. caetory. 3. W, Cor. 1otn ana uapitol Avenue, #trests ™ 2 m&e-ly i | HAS THR BEST STOCK'IN OMAHA AND'MAKRS THR LOWEST PRICRS IMPORTANT IMPROVEMENTS Have now been finished in our store, mal ing it the largest and most complete FURNITURE HOUSE In the West. An additional story has been built and the five floors all connected with two HYDRAULIC ELEVATORS, One Exolusively for the use of Passengers, Thase immenss ware- rooms---threg stores, are 66 feet wide--are filled with the Grand~ sfi; gmplay of all kinds of Household and Office Furniture ever 0. All are invited to call, take the Elevator on the first floor and go through the building and inspect the stock. k. HAS. SHIVERICK, 206, 1208 and 1210 Farnam Street, Omaha.

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