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STRENGTH to vigorously push a business, strength to study a profession, strength to regulate a household, strength to do a day's labor withe out physical pain. All this repre« sents what is wanted, in the often heard expression, “Oh! I wish i had the strength!"” If you are broken down, have not energy, or fezl as if life was hardly worth live ing, you can be relieved and re- stored to robust health and strength by taking BROWN'S IRON BIT- TERS, which is a true tonic—a medicine universally recommended for all wasting diseases. so1 N, Fremont St., Baltimore During the war I was in- juredinthe stomachbyapiece of a shell, and have suffered fromiteversince. Aboutfour yearsagoit broughton paraly- sis, which kept me in bed six months, and the best doctors in the city said I could not live. Isuffered fearfullyfrom indigestion, and for over two years could not eat solid food and for a large portion of the time wasunable to retain even ! liquid nourishment. 1 tried . Brown’s Iron Bittersand now after taking two bottles I am able to get up and go around and am rapidly improving. \ G. DECKER, BROWN'S IRON BITTERS is a complete and sure remedy for Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Malaria, Weakness and all diseases requir- ing a true, reliable, non-alcoholic tonic, It enriches the blood, gives new life to the muscles and tone to the nerves, AFTER USING. d favorable conditions. CHES or WHISKERS. sent postpaid on receipt of price. B&~FOR SALE BY ALL DRUCCISTS. THE BENTON HAIR CROWER A PHOSPHATE. fresh growth uader the Bew i HOW THE HAIR GROWS ON THE BALD HEAD. ‘What will grow HAIR will grow MUSTA( PRICE, s1.00 Nobraska Loan & Trust Oompany HASTINGS, NEB, Oapital, = - - - $250,000' JAS, B. HEARTWELL, President, A. L, OCLARKE, Vice- dent, E. 0. WRBSTER, Treasurer C. P. WEBSTER, Casbier. DIRECTORS, Samuel Alexander Oswald¥Oliver, E. O, Wobater! A. L, Clarke, . C, Wel Goo, H_ Pratt, Jua. B. Heartwall, D. M. McEl Hinney, First Mortgage Loans a Spacialty MThis Company furnishes & perman institution where 8chool Bond sand other legally issued Municipal securitle to Nobrasks can be be_ negol on the most favorable terms Loans made on {mproved farm in all well settled counties of the through responsible 10cal ‘corrsspondents. JOEN'D, PEABODY, M.,D, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON OFFICE ROOMS. 8 & 5 1607 FARNAL, Residence 1714 Douglas Street, Omal howe (L The only OIL STOVE that will burn all of Kerosene with “ABSOLUTE TY.” Send for descriptive cirour oall and exawmine it. Address MILTON ROGEES & SONW', 1821 and 1323 Farnam Street, sat-mon-wei-2m THE WILY CAN. Bnormous Extent of Trade in Preserved Provisions. Three Hundr¢d Millions of Oans in & Year, Of Corp, Fruit, Vegotables and Fish N. Y. Journsl, ‘‘Here are some figures that may {nterest the readers of The Journal in rogard to the consumption of oanned products Jast year: Of canned toma- toes, 50.000,000; corn, 25,000,000; ealmon, 53,000,000; lobsters, 35,000, 000; oyaters, 36 000,000; other fish, 12,000,000; peaches and hard fruit, such as spples, pears, apricots, eto., 000,000; vegetables, 36,000,000; #mall froits, berries, currants, eto., 12,000,000; meats and poultry, 25.- 000,000; total, about 300,000,000 tors, " The speaker was Mr, Alex, Wiley, manager of 013 of the largest manu- factaring firms of canned produots in the world, ““Where did all these cans go?"” “‘Well, outside of the Uaited States they were distribated in France, King- land, Gormavy, Penaog, Borneo, Baukok, Singapore, Oalcutta, Madras, slong the Malabar coast, and New South Wales. Ouar agent at Moscow ordered a very large oconsignment in anticipation of the coronation of the czar, for these goods are a novelty In Russls, whero they are now selling fast, Well-to-do Russians will pay al- most any price for them," ““What clawses of people eat canned food in the Ualted States?” “‘The middle olasses, so to speak. There are large arid tracta In this coun- try where poople meldom see green frult the year rcund excopt In this form,” “Do you clalm any superiority for the canned over the green vegeta- bles?” “Yes, In this way: We are now canning asparagus at the rate of 6,000 cans a day, and putting it up within three hours after puilicg {e oat of the ground. It s gathered In the early morning before sonrlse while the dew in etill upon {t. The rame remark ap- plies to tomatoes, of which we are patting up 42,000 cans daily at oun factory at Morristown, where a strlug | of wagons o raile long is waltlug every mornirg to recelve the oane. The same hoids good with peas, which are also gathered before the sun's heat can got atthom. It you buy similar veget- ablos green at & retall store they aro urnally from one to three days old. They lose thelr freshnees, whercas under our process they will remain fresh and sweet for three years.” ‘‘But what abont the chemical ac- tlon of the solder?’ ““All our goods are now soldered on the ontsldo by a new patent process, by which it is impossblo for the solder to touch the contents, Here, for ex- amplo, s cne of our new cans of the kind L refer to. _You ean nee for your- self that it s as I way,” “‘What ta the seoret of sucocasfal canning?’ ““To destroy the germ of the fer— mentation—that Is all there ls in it, apart from rigid cleanliners, ““Which ts the largest packlng centre in the Uaited Siater?’ ‘‘Balumore, deoldedly, for all kinds of frult, vegetablos and oysters, Now York is the great distributing market. And you must rewomber that it Is only the seaboard cltles that really erjoy fresh vegotables,” *‘How are the various kinds of fralt, eto., parchazed?” “Vast tracks of market garden farms aro bought up In the locality of the factorles, 6o that the produca s gathered rlght on the epot, The veg- etablo buzinees in largely developing into still greater proportfons under this system,” “'Aud your fish?” ‘ Tho majority of ealmon comes fron the Pacifio coast, and lobsters Malne and the Britlsh Provinces.” “‘What about fictitions branda?’ ““T'hat used to oanse & great deal of trouble but it is now dying out. Peo- ple are beginning to find out the best for themselves. On our labels we stato in Gorman, Itallan and English that our canned goods are warranted pure and wholesome and our dealers are authorizsd to refund pur- chase price in any oase where son- sumors have caase for dissatisfac- tlon."” “Who arethe largest manufacturers of cane " “A firm in Baltimore. We are now manufacturing our own of the best tin plate. You see it Is necessary for us to be very partioular becanse our for- clgn trade is becomiug very large. Oar market in India is rapidly Inoreas- ing, where canned goods are a god- send to people who never saw them before, Boaldes, forelgn govern- ments are very strlot in enforcing thelr sanltary regulations, to which American manufacturers must confirm if they wish to hold thelr own, The Erench government is particalarly vigilant in this respect. With regard to alleged charges of blood polsoning let me say that out of the 300,000,000 oans sold last yesr not a slngle case of slckness was reported so far as I am aware, and this ought to be answer enough to such 1ll-fouuded complaints. In self-defense’ we are compelled to watoh all evch cases as come to our notice. When they arlse they are unually traced to irresponsible partles of limited faculties, for If any euch result were traced to us, or to any re- epoueible manufacturer, It would be a very serlous thing, and fnvolve a loss A movement 18 on foot among the wholeaale grocers for the establish- ment «f s *“Wholeeals Protectlve Geecers' Ualon,” in the Interest of that particular branch of trade. The object is to regulate, nmong other thiogs, the forelgn traffic. Jt ls the prosent custom with many large mer- chants to oherge cartage dutles for rallroad conelguments equal to about a dollar on the tov, Several rallroads deduct this from their regular bllis. Sald Mr, Moorehoure to & Journaller: “This eyparently small jtem amourts | r100ng large firma to maay thousand dollars & year. S me merchants in order not to offend _their customers will lot the amount go, but in large transactions the loes 1s & very serlous one in the ageregate.” It is to producs harmouy in thisand kindred market that the organization is moosted, —_— - THE OIRCUS OF THE FUTURE. Permanent Lopations at Great Cen- ters, a8 In the Days of Impe- rial Rome. Boston Her ald, It is not possible that anybody has forgotten the' circus ¢f his boyhood days. Then they were used to hav. ing an elephant or two, They had camel and » fow other anlmals. There was but one ring, and the performers did not live at hotels, but tried to be contented with whatever good things ~more likely they were bad—the gods sent them. There were no aleeping oars then, was he who could pick up & nap here or there on the road, when the fit took him undisturbed by the roaring of the lion or the loud talk of his keeper, Olrouses then went to small towns, comparatively spesking, such as the big shows of this day can not afford to vitit. Oaoe tent, one brass band, one rope-walker, one elephant, or possibly two, one great rlder, aud a fow other Individual specimens—these made up the show of the days of our fathers, Talking with a friend just now, he recalled the memories ot his fiet olrcus down in Piymouth county, and more thad fifty years ago. There was one elephant sttached to that— “Bet,"” by name,—snd she not many years aftor crushed the head of her keeper, which he confidingly placed in her mouth. Foolish man, foolish ele- phant, The animals of this day are better tralned and held In closer sub- jectlon, In the old days some of these shows exhlblited la the open alr —In the tavern yard, or some other convenfent place, While here at the north, one doy or two was enough; in smaller southern towns, a show would stay a week. Here, fifteen miles was s far as you could expect a man togo with his famlly to a clrcus. Down there, fifty miles wasn't a great dis- tance. There Is nothing particularly new about the oirons of the present. There s an awfal lot more of it—too much, some paople think, Bat Mr, Watson had other ldeas of tho clrgus of the past, Eis recolleotion went no far ther back, but his suggestions did. Thero have been clrcuses for two thou- sand years, and, If one thinks for a minate, it will bo seen how easy was the transition from the old clrcan of olaseical deys to that of these later times, Twenty conturles sgo they did things on & tremendous scale. In Rome, for example, thero was the oir- ous Maxlmus. In the ilme of Bulias Cesar 1t was 1,876 feot long wnd 625 feot wide. The depth of the buildive surrounding the spece was about 312 fect, Its dimensions were snbeequently much greater. All the cirel in Rome, of which there were a conslderable number, are ncarly ob- literated, but a circus oa the Applan way, sbout two miles from Romo, known as tho Circus of Maxentino, i stillfn a state of preservation, Ita constraction s belleved to have dif- fared very littlo from that cf other avclent buildings for similar purpores. Along the sides and at the ond were ranges of stono seats for the specta- tors, At the other end were the car- ceren, or stalls, covered and furnished with gates, In which the horses snd chariota were driven, terminating at both ends in wilae, or goals, The games were loaugurated by a proces- slon from the caplto!, in which per- sons bearlng the tmuges of the gods wont firat, and were followed by the performers in the games, tho covsuls and others, Tho clrcus wes partica- larly deelgned for races. A pitched battle was somotimos represented. Saa fights were ocoaslonally exhivited Vast sums of money were exponded under the empire for the kililug of wild beaste. Pompey gave poblic ex- hibitlons In. the clrcus for five suc~ cesslve days, during which five hun- dred ltons and twenty elephants were destroyed. ‘‘The clrcus of the future,” sald Mr Watson, ‘‘interests me much more then the exhibitions of the days and yeara gone by, Think of its possibili- tles! We can't do things on the scale of the Romans, The coming showman will contider our big shows too big. ‘Even now people look wit! upon the man who honestly that he oan seat fifteen thous; P ple ucder his canvas. Bat what alit- tle handfal that s compared with the throngs who were accommodated, as the existing rulos show they could be, at Rome and Atheas aud Alexandrle. In Jorusalem, it may loterest some people to know, there are the ruins of agreat clrous bullding. Bat none of these were to be compared to Rome's Olrcus Maximus, which had altars and chapels, images and statues of the deitles. In it was an iron ralling as high as onoe man upon another, and also a ditoh to protect the people from poesible Injury from the performers. Now, what this suggests to me 1a t| the clrcus of the present will disap- poar; the olrcus of a half century ago nobody wants. The clrous of twenty centuries ago we can not have. What we shall have 1s & combination, The msgnificence and permanence of struot- ures of the Roman emplre, the sim- pliclty and singleness, so to speak, of the more recent days, but no three- ring displays, They sound well when you read an advertlsement, but few people can look intwo directlonsat once They are the best we have, but by and by we shall have better; the best the world can afford In the way of novel- ties and feats of akill and daring, but as much superior In atyle and sur- roundings to the show of to-day as can be Imagined, A combination of Ea- ropean solldity with American enter- prise and liberality. Think of thils as & possibility—In Boeton and New York and Philadelphia, In Chleago and Cloclonatti and New O:learvs, suppose we had substantlal, handsome bulidiogs, elegantly finished like thoso in Parls or Berlin, "or & half dozam other European citier. Would there not bo drawn even larger crowds than we have had here? And there is an- other thing, Speaking of the con- trast botween the two continents—in the Earopesu oltles where companles are located for months, as I would have them in the eities I have named, there is a change of the bill every night in the week, A man of fawily can go to-night and see a different The happiest man | ‘Johnson 1s la St performance from what was given last night, Nomoremen would be em. ployed, but they would be able to do more than one thing—they oould ride or perform on the tze, or perhaps do a half dozen other things as might THE UMAHA DAILY BEE~FRIDAY JUNE 15, 1883. bo reqalred. See what a saving of expeuses this would cause, A as cheaper, moro fashlonable,more varied in {ts attractions, more pleasiug to the wearlsome apon the the clrcus of the PR———— Reiicn of the Lost Cause. The Washington S8anday Herald has an interesting article showing what has beoom o confederate gener- als. It aa) ny have dled, and a few have disappeared. But those of higher rank who survive are getting on hrfly well, Of the five field generals of the confederate army, J. E. John- ston and Beaurcgard surviva, Gon. Johnson s the general agent of & prominent New York Insurance com- any, and Gon. Biauregard 1s the ad- jutant-general of the state of Loulsl- ana (where he has created the finest body of militla for fts pum- bers in Amerlen, He In also one of the commissioners for the liquidation of one of the old Louisiana state baoks, outeldo of which he has other {mportant bueinosa connections, There wero twenty-one leutenant generals In tiie Confederate army from first ‘o taxr, wnd of theee all were from the U .t ed Sistes aramy bat four, vlz : Richard Taylor, N. B. Forrest, Wade Hampton and John B. Gordon, Of them the following are living: D. H. Hll, who is in North Carolins; Stephen Lee, Early, Buckner, Wheeler, and A. P. Stew- art, besides the two not from the old United States army mentioned above. Gustavas W, Smith is the rank fug major general living, and s state commlesloner of in- surance in Kentucky. W, T Martin lives at Natchez, and 1s a rall- rond president. C. W, Fleld and L. L Lomax are in Florlda, and are both in the employ of the Unlted Btates corps of engincers, Marmaduke Louts, and is weslthy, Willlam Preston lives in Kentucky, and has a fortune he Inher- ited. Humes lives Tenn, Wirt Adams Is an agent for Misslsalppi, and lives at Jackson, Frank Armstrong lives here and in 8t. Louls, and s connested with the Gould eystem of rallroads in the sonth- west. Ohurchlll was governor of Ar- kansas, and lives at Little Rock. Col- quitt was governor of Georgia, and ia United States sonstcr.elect from that state, Colston roturned from Egypt, and ‘s ilving somewhero in Virginfa. Dubrell {s a member of congrees {;om iennessce, Lyon, who commanded one of Forrest's divis- lons awhile, lives at Eddyville, Ky. I don’t know what Mackall, who was a brigadler-general and chief of Gen. Bragg's staff, Is dolng, but I belleve he lives In Gaorgla. McGowan is a member of the supreme court of South Oarolina. W. R. Miles, s a cotton- planting magnate on the Yazoo river in Miastesippl, R A, Pryor s a pros- perous lawyer in New York, and, mir- abile dictu, I hear Le is an enthuaias- tlo advocate of Gov. B. F. Batler for the presidency. Ripley, “‘Old Rip,” s he was oalled, Is in London, the agont of an American rifls com- pany, and Roddy is there with him, John G. Walker Is in Mexico, and is getting rich in ellver minlng, and Holmes is his partner. Wililam . Wickham Is a prominent railroad man and republican in Virglnla, Of the three L ho were generaln— Custis, who was Mr, Davia's chlef of otaff—{s the prealdent of the Wash- ington and Loe college in Virginia; Willlan Henry Fitzhugh Loae, general- 1y cailed ““Runey,” is planter and s rosperoas on n%,un\a. Fitzhigh ce,'s cousin of‘the others, and a famous oavalry cfficer, owna the “'Ravenswood” estate on the Poto- mac, about fifty miles below Wash- ington, where he is living like a fino Virginis plautor of the olden time. Robert Lee, tho general's youngest son, who served In the ranks a greater partof the war, lives en the James river and owns & handsome estate there, Longsireet lives at Gaines- ville, Ga., and Is United States mar- Gen, Early practices law at ynohburg, Lieut. Gen, A. P. Stew- art {s president of the univereity of ipp!, at Oxford,and Lleut.-Gen, Lee 1s president of another sippl Institution cf learning. R, H. and Patterson Anderson aro dead. Gen. B. Frank Cheatham 1 the euper- lnundin% comm{ssioner of the Tennes- see penitentlary, and W, H.,, or “Red,” Jackson, one of Forrest’s di- vislon cemmanders, is living near Nashville on a magnlficent plantation. | Gen. Wheeler, who commanded all of Gen. Johnson's cavalry, Is_a planter in north Alabama. Gen. Lawton, the | quartermaster-general of the confed. |/ in Memphts, | eracy, is a leading member of the Sa- vannah (Ga ) bar, and Gen. Gorgas, the confederate chlef of ordinance, died Ib Alabama the other day. Cock- rell, the ranking confederate gen- eral fcom Missouri, is a United States senator, The skin in of that delicate nature upon which the most improyement_can be made and by the use of Pozzoni's Medicated Complexion Powder all roughness, sallow- ness snd irritation can be overcoms leav. ing the skin delicately white, soft and smooth, This preparation has & world- wido reputation, so no fear, need be enter- tained of th res It. Bold by all drag: L4 e A Oourteou? Retort. Tho Hour, A good story is told of the wife of sn Amerloan diplomatist, who is fond of calling upon the celebrieties In overy place which ehe visits, Belug in F{orenca some time ago, she ex- pressod her Intentlon of ealling upon “Oalda,” the well kocown novelist. Her frlends attempted to dissuade her, sayivg that “Oalda,” had a vio- lent prejudloe sgainst Awericans, Undeterred, the female diplomatlet callod at the novelist’s house and was mot *'Onida.” whosald: ‘I must tell yon that I oxceedingly disllke Awmerl- cans.” ‘I am very much surpriszd to hear that,” was the reply, ‘‘for they are the only people who read your naaty booke!" Eyos brighten, cheeks becomo rosy, muscles galn strength by the ute fo Brown's Iron Bitters, v st S TR Gambliog in the Army. Sald an old army correspondent re- gardiog the revelations of gambling among army cofficers at Washington: ‘It 1s not to be wondered at that idle army cflicers should gamble when it is o fact thatthe vice was a common one during the most sctive ocampalgns of the lato war. I have seen men the evenlngs between two da) battle in playing cards for stakes. It 'wnn't exactly gambling under fire, but It was the next thing to it. Thero was hardly an cfficer’s mess, regl- mental or staff, {hat was not a poker club, and thousands of doilars changed hands after each visit of the paymas- ter, Freezs.out poker, the winner to malntain the mess untll the next day, was a cowmon form of gambling among the officers, Many of the private soldlers were llvely gamblers, and hardly mpany was without Its ‘poker sha —n-uullg s ocool, qulet, ‘goody-goody' sort of chap from some sountry district, Early In the war professional gamblers haunted overy depot of supplies, and prossed upon commissioners, quartermastors, and paymasters, Oneor two puymas- tora lost fabulous sums to these sharks; then defanlted, were sent to prison snd the gamblers flad to Canada until the storm blew over, The vice Is as common and as fashlonable in the army, among « flisers and privates, as it ever was—the only difference s that the army (s not quite as large as it ", P —— Extreme Tired Feeling. A lady tells us “‘the first bottle has done my daughter a great deal of good, her food does not dlstress her now, nor does she suffer from thut extreme tired feeling which she did be- fore taking Hood's Sarmaparilla.” A second bottle effcted cure. No other preparation contalns such a con- centration of vitalizing, enriching, parifying and nvigorating properties a8 Hood’s Sarsapariila. - —e— The Duty of To-day, From Rey, Henry Hopklos' Memorial Sermon at Kanuas City. Comtades, to pay honor to dead men’s memory and be false to llving {ssues {s mockery. He who votes for a dlshonest man, whether for a city offise or & natlonal trust, dishonors the soldlers’s memory. He who di- rectly or Indirectly barters his ballot insuits the grave on which fresh flowers shall fall to-morrow. When, then, yon see mon at the polls led about by thelr masters, voted lnstead of voting; when you see them drunken; when you see them acting bllnd- ly through ignorance, or pas- stonately through prejudice; when they vote for money pald them, call out to them—Hold there! do not thls sacrilegious wickedness! Oar broth- ers by the hundred thousand dled, and men were maimed who still live to save the Institutions that you are try- ing to destroy. When your nelghbor stays from the camcos or the polls throngh Indifference, tell him that some men gave four years of fighting, and that his sloth Isa shame to him, Standing In the Interest of the present Isay, lot not the scenes and the sacri- fices of the past be forgotten, The sufforings and deaths of north and south alike are the argument of to- day. THE BAD AND WURTHLESS Are nover imitated or counterfeited. This s especlally true of a family mediclne, and it {s poeitive proof that the remedy imitated is of the higheat value. Aseoon as it had been tested and proved by the whole world that Hop Bitters was the purest, best and most valuable family medicine on tearth many lmitatlons sprung up and begon to steal the notfces in which the press and people of the country had expreesed the merits of H. B, and in every way trying to induce sof- fering invallde to uss their stuft In- stead, exfecting to make money on the credit and guod nome of H. B. Many others started nostroms pat up Inwimilar style to H. B., rwith vari- ously devised namos in which the word ‘“Hop"” oa “Hops” were used in away to induoe peoplo to belleve they were the same as Hop Bitters, All such protended remedies or cares, no matter what thelr style or name is and especially thoso with the word “‘Hop" or Hops in their name or in sny way counected with them or thelr name, are imitations or counterfelt. Beware of them. Touch nome of them, Us'ng nothing but gennine Hop Bitters with a bnach or cluster of green Hops ou the white label. Truat nothing else. Druggists and dealers are warred against dealing in imita- tons or counterfelta* N ? MRS Are acknowledged to be the Yest by all who have put them 0 & practical test. ADAPTED TO HARD & SOFT GOAL COKE OR WOOD. MANUFACTURED BY Buck’s Stove Co., SAINT LOUIS, | PIERCY & BRADFORD, HOLE AGENTS FOR OMAH A RUBBER BOOTS, SHOES & ARCTICS. 10,000 CASES, moloding etandards and grades to match, are offored tothe jobblng trade ot less than manufacturers’ prices by FIELD, THAYER & CO., 178 Congreis 'Strect, BOSTON, Nebraska Land Agancy DAVIS & SHYDER, 5056 Farnam St. Omaha Nebraska. d| 00000 ACORES Oarctully selected land In Eastern Nebraska for alo. Great Bargalng in improved farms, Omabs {ty.property. HAS THR BRS? STOCK IN OMAHA,AND'MAKES THR LOWEST PRIORS IMPORTANT IMPROVEMENTS Have now been finished in our store, mal ing it the largest and most complete FURNITUREHOUSE 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. These immense ware- rooms---three stores, are 66 feet wide--are filled with the & rand~ est display of all kinds of Household and Office Furniture ever shown, All are invited to _call, take the Elevat: the first fl and go throng& tfi building and inspeot tlye.l s%ofl? Nt AS. SHIVERICK, 1206, 1208 and 1210 Farnam Street, Om=ha e ———— HENRY LEHMANN, W ATLL :E’_A.PE R, WINDOW SHADES EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED. I8 FARNAM ST. - - OMAHA The Qldest Wholesale and Retail JEWELRY HOUSE in Omaha, Visitorscan here find all novelties in BIL- VER WARE. CLOCKS, Rich and Biylish Jewoiry, the Latest, Most Artistic, and Choicost Selections in PRECIOUS STONES and all descripuions of FINE WATCHES at az Loy ¥ri- ces a8 18 compatible with nonorable dealers. Oall and see our Elegant New B3tore, Tower Building, cornor 11th and Farnham Btreals THE LEADING MUSIC HOUSE IN THE WE3T! Gleneral Agents for the Finest and Best Pianos and Grg:-.ns manufsctures, ur prices are as Low as any Fastern Manufaciurer and Draler, Pianos and O gavrs sold for cash or installment. at Bottom Prices, A SPLENDID st ck of Steinway, Ghickering, Knabe, Voo & 8on’s Pi- anos, and oti:r makes, Also Cicugh & War en Sterling. Imperial, fmith American Cryans, &c. Do uot fail 70 see us before purchasing. MAX MEYER & BRO,, AARUFAGTURERS OF SHOW OASES A Targe Stockalways on Hand, PERFECTION HEATING AND BAKING ie only sttalned by using CHARTER OAK Stoves and Ranges, WITH . WIRE &AU!ZE OVER DOORS, ‘oz salo by MILTON ROGERS & SONS OWEAIVA. falimes ANHEUHSR-BUSCH. oy Brewing Association, CELEBRATED KEG & BOTTLED BEER, (4 THIS EXCELLENT BEER SPEAKS FOR ITSELF, Orders from any part of the 8tate or the Entire West will be promptly shipped: All Our Gouds are Made to the Standard of our Guarantee, GECORGE HENNING, Sole Agent for Cmaha and the West. Office Corner 13th and Harney Streets. —— e ey SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Cthers. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Ground Oil C 1t s the best and cheapest food for stock of any kird ake. One pound Is equal to three pounds of corn, Stock fed with Ground Uil Cako in the fall and win. ter, instead of running down, wili inercase in welght and be in good market- able condlllux\!u the spring. Dairymen as well as others who use it can tes- T tify to its me charge for sacks, Add od-eod-me ta, Try it and judge for yourselves. Price $25,00 per ton; no ress WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO., Omaha Neb .. —