Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 10, 1883, Page 5

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TR AR SO TORPID BOWELS DISORDERED LIVER, and MALARIA From theso sources arise three-fotreths of the diseases of the human ru 0 ms indicate theirexistenoe : X0 + Bowels costive, Slok achc, fuliness o er eating, aversio of body or mind, Eructation of food, Irritability of temper, Low splrits, A feoling of having neglected | somo duty, Dizziness, Fluttering at the | Peart, Dots before t ored Urine, CONSTIPATION, and do- dicine TUTT'S oir action on the y ) Liver, AsaLivorn PILLS 1avo no equal. T Kidneysand Skin 18 1150 prompt; romoving all impurities through theso throo ** scav engers of the Kystem," producing appo- tite, sound digestion, regular stools, a o skinandavigorousbody, TUTT'S canse no nansea or griping nor nterfero with dally work and are a porfect { ANTIDOTE TO! MALARIA Hold everywhere Office, 44 Murray 8 TUTT'S HAIR DYE, GRAY HAIR OR WHISKERS ehanged in. | stantly to o GLOSEY BLACK by n&inglo ap. plication Sol T stsy | orsent by Offico, 44 Murray Stroet, New k. TUTT'S MANUAL OF USEFUL RECEIPTS FRER. The Public s requested carefully to n the | aew and enlarged Scheme to be draion Monthly 4+ CAPITAL PRIZE, $75,000. Tickets Only ares in Proportion. | | do heveby eertify that s Jor all th o the Loui < andt 'i.qmsmna Tlate Lottery u g | COMMISSIONK Y s hy the legislature rposes—with a cap- erve fund of over By an overwhelming po was e part of _th adopted Deccr Th r ovote its franchise | it state constitution | anly Lottcry ever voted on and endorsed by | o any state 1t nover Scales or Postpon | Its grand single number drawings take | place nonthly LENDID Ol | ORTUNITY TO WIN A TOR. | Drawing, New Or , JULY Monthly 10, 1583 2 155th Drawing. MITAL PRIZE, 200,000 TICKETS at FIVE D( tions, in Fifths in Proportion. LIST OF PRUZES. 75,000 smae: 1 CAPITAL PRIZE td do do . § OF 86000 .. 2000 1000 20 do 500... 100 do 200. .. 500 do 100 700 do 50 4000 do 2 9 Approximation prizes of 750 a o do 9 do do 250 1067 Prizes, amounting to i Application for rates to clubs should only ta.tho office of the Company in New Orle For further informatior addross. Send orders ar Money Order, addressed %M. A. DAUPHIN, s, La. nth St., Washington, D.'C. LOUISIANA STATE LOTTERY CO | B. Frank Moore. 127 La Salle Street. Chicago, 2 Broadway, N. Y.) (Formerly 319 and Kow Manager of Chicago Office. information and tickets Drawing, To whom apply for 155th Monthly | Firsts ehs at 000 &, Soll in ull scheme olsewherd | | i Oaly Perfect substitute for Mothcrs ik Tho most nouriahing diet for invalids and Commiended 5. Sold by all othe T. M 11 Central Wh i | | Y | | ¥ ACKNOWL WHO HAVE P! TEST, Hard and Soft Coal,| COKE OR WO00D. MANUPACTURS %1 | BUCK STOVE CO,, BAINT LOUIS, Pierc’ & Bradford.| L AGENST FOR OMAHA | M. R. RISDON, | (Gen'l Isurance Agent REPRESENTS: x Assurance Co., of London, Cash D TO BE THE BEST BY THEM T0 A PRACTICA ADAPTED TO ALL L W | The Merchas Girard Fire, Firemen's Fund, Capital, OFFICE: —Room 19, Owmaha National $Bank Build fug. Telophone No. 976, eve edly | Ao, was the founder of | praivie and there, [mill and « homestead near by, . | city of fifteen hundved people: w long | Sioux City & 0| for the pr the prospects of the Omaha & Northern. 500 Tuesday, July 10th. l4 THE DAIL BEE-OMARA, TUESDAY JULY 10, 1383, od? Why is this #07 Why has_not | i Leigration poured into this state at Mis 1 £ Dailnaad o - ri Valley Junc 1, at Blair, t has | A City of Railroads, the Future Mo- ', Pttt = o, Hont’ the . un sscs the Missouri river Why the North Platte Country is not More Thickly Settled Nowrrork, Neb,, July - Matthewson, who Charles ied about three yoars this town, hay ing built a will in 1870 upon a consider Wl stream which empties into the Blk- | lorn viver near here “North Fork,” | from which the name Nofolk. This | etymology s correct: lot no corespon- | the next decade we the N g the name North Folk derivation wo rth Platte fits future metropolis ny com plitne t1 country by t that however interesting might be. Tt requires | Pluck to turn one’s back to the comforts | Colton with his the raw | of civilization, to push ont ontc with Indians and coy build the otes for company, to the solitary howse which shall e nueleus of o | city. Noxt to the patviot who gives his Bifc i battle for his. govermment. stands | the patriot who devotes a life ta cloaring the wilderness or breaking () that his childven may live in comfort and | prominence. Col. Matthewson built his | The road strotching westward from there to the hills is now the princi thoroughfare of and a handsome street, lined for six | squares with business houses and the| residences of the rest of the way with been within the Inst two years, since the railvoads came here. N¢ lines now, stretching out in five dirvee- tions. It is the terminus of the Niabrara & Black Hills rvailroad, known | as the “Union Pacific,” and which con neets with that road at Columbus; of the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha | ling, ustally called the **Alphabet | which runs” from here to Sioux City the Creighton branch of the Sionx’ City & Pa running north into Knox sunty; and it is on the main line of the fie, betw uir and Valenting With all the future of Norfolk seems see U, P. and C., St. P., M. & O, 1 aunion depot up town; the S. C. & P. built their depot about a mile and a half from town, on the hottom land, and laid out a quantity of town lots in the hope of drawing the city down to them, but it is building in just the opposite dirceti the hills, to prevent overtlow. there is one thing that can be compl of, it is that the town is situated on too low a piece of ground. Speaking of rail roads, it was reported here yeste that grading had just been commene Wakefield, in Dixon county, northward, posed line of the C., St. P., M. & O. railroad through Cedar county to Yankton. This will give Omaha a di- rect line to Yankton, but rather dampens Omalia, | of | The | 1s have NORFOLK ENTERPRISES. Col. Matthewson left two sons, **Char- ley” and “The Mujor.” verybody knows *‘Charley” Matthewson, ex-speak- erof the house. He has a solid bank lere in a substantial building, and the Major takes of the mill, which is about to change its old machinery for the roller system, the improvements to t has the best of power, the north fork hasa deep bank, a ater fall, and is not so wide as the car by is Norfolk's wreat e of J. E. Olney, and it is eally something to be proud of. It is a building 32x128, which cost $16,000. article that a would de from a needle to a | carpet or a suit of clothes, all aranged with wonderful neatness. We chanced | to overhear a conversation in this store which will interest Omaha people. A | 0 drummer had come in and was | tke some sales to Mr. | He has for s rhE e Of Baxton GlCANE AT | seript. -~ The country would be plastered have established a branch store in Nop- | With it, and in a short time it would be | folke. " "W, 8, Spencer, who has for somme | Picked up at big discounts by spoeulators, time acted for this Omaba fivm in north- | 0 the detiment of that class of set ern Nobraski, has charge of hix new ex. | emont onthe public. lands most to tablishment, which is in the very best| D¢ desir In the end the soldier wonld Elklhorn | d¢ from such a mock situation to supply the whol ! valley. In the way of churches, the| town is well provided, the Congregation- | al, Methodist, Catholic and German Lu- | theran all having houses of worship. | Lots on the main strec valuable to hold churches, so they a heing moved off. On the spot where .1...,| ierman church stood, which sold for | 0, Burroughs & Egbert, two young | Indiana, who are making in the building husines; tend to put upa bank. In the spri Dr. Bear thinks of erecting a hote wout the center of the town, and Dr. | Richards contemplates o brick block, 50x80. It seemed like g tting back to Omaha to enter so good a hotel a e ; it % g | el is neat, it is roomy, its table is well pro- | vided. And it has a me i Not that Omaha hotels hay but this interesting collection of animals is inducement enough to travelers to put up here, so they may oceuy hours in watching the manauvers of the baby bear, the prairic wolf, the intelli- went coon, the deer, the little minks, This collection is in the side yard and the guests sit around on the sidewalk half | the time, petting these animals, for they watching them play. the travel are very tume, or On the unter in the offle will be startled when he r a furry ballat his clbow unrell into a little wolf and look inquisitively at him, 1 I Jortion of Nor TN Te P ‘es, who owns five six lumber yards hereaboutsand a pinery in Wisconsin h 000 rosidence thix street; Majo wson has put 000 into Lis new next to him C. P. Matthewson has five lots for build ing soon; Mr. McClare, the dry goods merchant, also has a $7,000 house. Lots along here are worth from #8600 to #1,000. We climb the hill and look down upon Norfolk from the point where the artist of the N, Y. Graphic, who was making a picturo of the town, exclaimed, ‘In all my tours about the United States] never waw a place more beautifully situated!” | The artist was right though the remark | was undoubtedly one of which he had mado liboral use in the course of his perigrinations NOKTH PLATTE NO DESKRY This is Norfolk, in the conter of the castern half, the populated half, of the | North Platte district, and that district, be it remembered, forms two-thirds of | Nebraska's avea. But in comparison with | | Sund there is, flof fraud | would probably be by are beecoming too | " [ the balmy ith Platte circulars arc o; South Platte stuck into his | pamphilets tell him fortile farms_ and the vich farmers o that district, and agents of South Platte railroads hang to lim until they see him safely landed. In this way Saline and Gage and Jefferson counties have been filled up, and Webster and Franklin aud the Republican valley is being filled up. But what do theso strangers in the new | world Tearn of the northern half —the two-third's part of Nebraska ¢ Very lit- | tle, except an idea that it is not so good wregion as the southern half, an idea which wo may put down as the lst rem- | nant of the long exploded **Great Amer ican Desert,” and one which is ly too eagerly encouraged by the stockmen of the northwestern counties who would have one think theiv territory good for nothing but cattle, How fondly tl wpliers, old § half the west a dun yellow and named it the | “Great American Desort, How the children gloated over that mysterions yellow bloteh and wondered camels there the v ALl onses now and not a camel to be seenl | to be sure, here in the road, but it docs not seem to prevent the finest corn in the world in that field right beside it The trath s, the sand will disappear under the plow. The | ranches give way to the farm. Sand in| if they had | and where ORSES W arowing | Holt county, for instance, pronounced | blow seem, the sobs t utterly worthless now, will be a billowy | son of wheat and_golden cornten years | from this date. The 8. C. & P. Ry, | dallice too long abt Wisner; it should have pushed throngh years ago. 1t is| now striving to repaia the loss; it _calls itself the “Free Howes for the Million” | route, It has only to advertise liberally, | May the million come ! IansER | et Another Pension Shark Scheme, aul Pioneer Pross As was announced in dispatches some days W movement is under headway to wipe out the require ments embraced in the h tead laws which make it ne for soldiers to live on the claims in order to get a title, The substance of the law is that a soldier may deduct from the required five years residence the length of time he was in the wur Washington service, The demand that ev veteran soldier shall be given 160 res outright, without being obliged to put his foot on his land or to live on1t, and become a settlor of the public domain, is the climax of a good deal of extravagant importunity that has been encouraged largely by the busy and petty go-hetweens of the pension business. It is not a_matter of surprise that this should be done. It is only part of a mass connected with the pension government, and one against sms to be no suflicient de- policy of th which the fense. It should by no means be understood that every man who has fought for his ~country joins i such demands. The real herocs of the war are generally too proud-spirit- ed to be put in the attitude of beggars by shystering pension agents. The propo- sition to give every veteran of the rebellion a quarter section of land without restriction upon its face the fi marks of the pension shark, as hav many other similar demands for subst tial “gratitude from g nent effect, if it comes law, would be to expose the public domain to seizure by speculaters to an extent rarely witnessed in the history of the American land sys- tem. Individual nstances, no doubt, o beneficent result would occur. Persons who have not the means suflicient to tra- vel to the region where they desive land could sel it from a distance and wait until they had accumulated savings suf ficient to buy a pioneer’s outfit and trans port themselves and their families to thei chosen home. But in the g j ses, the result would be vest for speculators. In the fivst plag claimant would need to some one on the ground to select his land, and this would put him at once in the hands of designing class of real estate ope The husiness form to 160 acres of land constructing a c 1 the public do issuing ve small benefit reward, and the new States and Territo rics, in which the public lands lie, would e almost permanently injured. The dict of common sense and nst such a falsc npt at gratitud n extraovdinari scatter- it will | be silly congress that | f | tho | 170 will listen scriously to the matter. trugedy Leing enacted, After hin fimt | diad L4 shot the hunter pauses until guiet is ro- | 107 1 000 the Queen, | stored, andagain fires at another cow | a8 Fouse i roun, 2 stors on 1 stroct x'um The il TR with similar results. ~ He always aims to | 16 Hous iy " Al LY, ) hrer W put his ball just behind the fore ghoul- | 104 e five oo, Hanii BIINAT Todb e our €Tl der, which “will cause death in- five | 105 T hou -, il lots, 20 a1 1 o0 N e i minutes at the furthest. When the cows [ 181 Twe story o near 1ot strect i N that Queen Vil fell down Ben used the great pain cure, | wcobg Oil, and was all it the next | ay; if Vie, had done the same thing she | wouldhave been all right in the mornine, time, st [ Chicugo Trilnne, | “Pass the butter, Out beneath the star-gemmed sky, and under the stardy old oaks fhat had hid defiance to the storms of Girofle Mahafly and Gec were sitting that beautiful breath of the eve centuries, > W, Simpson June night, g that was ted in sighing kisses from the | ades of Fle by the chirp of the cricket, and the low, mellow note of the dissipated tom-cat, as he andered listlessly around the back yard, | cheerfully | herds of buflalo, antelope and de _ | appes » [aclects w cow for his first victim, Rt instead of this the darksome shadew \ aitd foar fell over on the purs, 1 young face weet brown thore w yearning, heivel Knows. 1y 8- wore - ty ror ¢ lat was patiful You eannot love me, Ge of you would_not I \ et go away for two w s know that my he you, and that cvery o absence will be an of days, when ) be breaking f ment of your torture and doubt™ - and coming t side she places her arms about his nock W ashy, hesitating, don’t-know-whe Lam-afoot-or-horseback fashion that 3 its own swoet story of a love that will never fade or falter as long as the collat eral seeuritios hold out And so thoy stand there, the monents 1 nestling in trustfulness passing by unheeded, the his arms secure in the d of an overpowering passion, while the man, smoothing her fair forehead gently, bends over her now and then the vosy lips that are upturned tol A then wonders in a dreamy, idyllic, North side fashion who the last man that held v similar situation on Girofle's stafl wight have been. Suddenly the girl | the silence —she has broken the wan the last watinec day. And you must veally o she says: *really and truly “Yes," he answers, “when duty we must obey. and L have seldom known duty to call on the poorest hand oBut Leannotlet, you uo,” she suss | oy neting assistant_inspeotor gonoral puasionately, | 1t i erel 1o et kg g Dopurtment will proceed to and | love so sorely” and, breaking down in | {1 SelRRSERERAC ol o | storm of sobs, she clings to- im oo | 1RDYG RO closely than ever. And the fears for her reason, so terribl just as e t are making the lithe form quiver with anguish cease Givofle Tooks up to him with a smile upon ler face, 1 will he hppy she says, “but you must make me one | promise; a holy, red promise, that © death itself may not absolve you from.” “Iwill Qo it gladly, my precious one, he murmurs, “What is the prouise “You must promise,” she sy, lend me your razor. he replios, gay I will, sweetheart, y. 1 promise you that But why do you make such a strange request !’ “Because, ’ says, “in those low mellow tones that would lure a mun through Inferno or to Harvard Junction, ST have a large, throbbing bunion.” she Children's New York, July 9. xeursion Nearly Hoo chil drenof The Tribune fresh aiv fundleft the | city thisafternoon on a steamer. They are under the care of missionaries and school teachers, who assisted in sclecting the children. They expect to mak at Troy to-morrow, where they will take a special train for the Lake Champlain re gion. Arrangements have been made for a reception to the children at different towns along the lake. - —— THE BUFFALO. His Tramp Will Soon be Heard no More on the Plains, Helena (Mont.) Independent. In going down the Yellowstone and across the vast region lying between(len dive and Mandan, one is struck with the evident scarcity of game. This famous region, where two or three years ago were to be seen on ev side, is now, to all ces, stripped of its game. For the entire distance from Livingston to Mandan T only saw two o three small bands of antelope and not a sign of a deer or buftalo. The fact is the slaughter of bu and deer | has been immense for the past two years, and partienlarly of the former, It is cstimated thiat during the past winter there have heen 1,000 hunt ers engaged in the business of slaughter- ing buffulo along the line of the Northern Pacifie, between Ma and Livingston. n eagle-cyed hunter g rd of the rain at Glendive, and e gave me the following interesting de as to the mo. dus operandi in slaughtering herds of buffalo: In the first pl th enced hunter used the Sharpe rifl calibre. With this he can kill 1,000 yards., When he sees a herd of huflalo he usually slips up to within convenient range, from 300 to 500 yards, and always this for the reason that the cow is fol lowed by botir her yearling and two-year old ¢ wd they will usually stand by her to the last. But under no civenm stances will the experienced hunter kill his buffalo outright. If he d the herd will stampede The policy is to wound fatally, but so that the animal will dash aroand in « circle before fall- ing. Thisit always does when mortally wounded, and aftera few moments lies down. The inder or the herd are lared at this, but continue to graze 1 dazed spectators of - tho have all been slain he turns his atten to the The on ves, and lastly f0 the bulls oxpe | his entire herd, unless he is o unfortu- | 15 nate as to drop his gune immediatoly, when all the survivors stamped The buffalo doos not scare at th agun, He has decidedly mor than discretion te fall lizes its deadly nature and takes alarm, The policy of killing the cows first and then the calves has resul ted in the almost utter ion of the female buffalo, icholy bulls can still occasionally be seen, some times in bands twenty or thirty, and often without a single cow. The fow re maining cows now having their pick of Jovers, and always ehoose from the youn | blood of the herd wi now and then dogging in a nonchalunt, languid fashion the latest bootjack as it| came hurlin, through the air with | cruel force, or stopping beneath | a window to see if his howl was still within rescue. Up from the westward came the sound of the sea | w its silvered foum plashed in rythwic cadence on the white sands of the beach, and theough the masses of foliage that en cirled Brierton Villa could be se 1, ever | and anon, cspecially anon, the ditul | TS s N iy ) the horizon in every direction, It wis s night for a poet’s pen, & painter's brush large schooner of weiss beor, and as | Girofle sat there in the gloaming her | thoughts wandered back te the days of a e life gone, when every moment of ler was brimming over with joy, and every day seemed a rose tinted dream | from which one would never care awaken And now all was ¢ Standing on the verge of womanhood and watching with wistful eyes for the mists of futurity to rise, her life should have been a happy ono as Hope called to her with jocund voice and Youth laughed back response, | The buffalo bull, after he passes his | fourth year, loses his attractiveness to the opposite sex, and the aversion seems mutual. Gathering about him his bach elor frionds of oqual age, he sullenly re tives into the wildemess and forever avoids the female bers of the herd, who mate with younger and more uxori oms masculines. As 1 have said the hulls are about all that are now left of the Wuffalo, They la y owe their safe ty to the fact that théir hides are less val %2, while that of the cow brings and that of the two-year-old calf is w from %1 to #1.00. But of late there has sprung up quite o demand throughout the east for the head of the buffalo bull The well preserved head of an aged bull cked out with glass eyes and horns in tract, will readily sell for $2b in castern markets, Consequently the butfalo hun ter of the future will wa, destructive war upon the bull tribe, and these venes able relics of & by-gone era will also puss swiftly away ©{having comploted the a landing | Hedoes | enced hunter generally bags | MILITARY MATTERS, DIsTRINUION OF PURLIO MONEY From tho public this department for year disteibmtion te money the lotted fiscal | wdo as follows t Omahia t Niobr 50 00 W 00 00 00 10 00 10 00 S0 00 0 00 | 10 00 8000 | W0 00 | 5000 | | D AR |aramic MeKinney rt Thornbur The allotment for “extra duty men [t posts includes those at subposts The extra pay of necessary school ors will be allowed in addition to these | wnounts, and will not e diverted to any | other purg The numl duty at fixed by the limited to the In 1o ] I I 1 1 } Fort I | I | I rand character of the commandin actual wants will Jhe except in mon on | ts will bo licer, and | i the post allowance wado | extrn several o s excended, AN cergency ien the allowance for one month may | b inereased, provided that for the fol Towing wonths, the allowance be vedueed W in proportion \e approprintion lus heen greatly i duced below that for former yonrs, The utmost economy must be exercised to | keep the expenditure within the allotment | | | to this department Major I D. Do Russey, 4th infantry, duty on which he will Lto these 18 command i For _¥ou, ; Madam, | Whose Complexion betrays some humiliating imperfec- tion, whose mirror tells you that you are Tanned, Sallow and disfigured in counte- nance, or_have KEruption Redness, Roughness or ur wholesome tints of Complex- ion, we say use Hagan'’s Mag- nolia Balm. | 1t is a delicate, harmless and delightful article, pro- ducing the most natural and entrancing tints, the artifici- ality of which no observer can detect, and which soon becomes permanent if the Magnolia Balm is judiciously used. T. ITARRLIS, S. E. Cor. Farnam and Tenth Sts BUYS CAST-OFF CLOTHING. HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID. Sm | REALESTATE SHRIVER - &BELL. Call or send | Opposite Postoffice. | Bargains in Improved \Property. | No. 1160 House & roomns and basenent, 2oth amd | Mason 400 2 600 1160 Mouse two rooms, | xaswatons 6 vomns, 20t wid Clark | i Comiing, improved aid 24th street 4, on 18h, on car line b, near Paul | 147 Hous troet | 14 House 185 House "Shinn's wdition FIREWORKS, FLAGS, 'D. B. BEEMER, b ——— e e, . BALILOONS, Fire Grackers Topedoes, 4th July Goods. SEND FOR PRICE LIST TO THE HEANQUARTERS. Max NMeyer & Co. &c{l ING GOODSO wp5. Anheuser-Busch . BREWING ASSOCIATION | CELEBRATED ; Keg and Bottled Beer This Excellent Beer speaks for itselt, A0 ORDERS FROM ANY PART OF THE 3 STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, l?UlS,MOl‘/“ 28 Will be Promptly Shipped. ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE T0 THESTANDARD OfOoOur G-uarantee. GEORGE HENNING, Sole Agent for Omaha and the West. Oftice Corner 15th and Harney Streets. E. B. CHAPMAN & CO,, Wholesale Grocers ! 1213 Farnam St., Omaha, Neb. Double and Single Acting Power and Hand PUMPS, STEAM PUMES, ™ Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery,§ Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fittings, Steam Packing at wholesale and rejail. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELL! Corner 10th Farnam 8t., Omaha Neb. SALEM FLOUR. Flour i made at Balen, Richardson Cor, Nebraskn, in tho Combined Roller Stone System. walo of our flour to one fio i 4 place, We have o Addross eithor WALENTINE o« REPPY, And Tinners' Stock OF ALL KINDS FORSALEBY Rxcelsior M Ce ST.LOUIS.MO COLD STORAGE!FOR BUTTER & EGGS IN LARGE OR SMALL QUANTITIES AT SMALL COST. 24 Warehouse and Refrigerators 501, 803, 503, 807 Howard stroet. Omaha, Neb, Commission Juzo-te MANUFACTURER OF F Buogies, Carriages and Spring Wagons, My Ropository s constantly lled with a seloct stock. Best Workmanship guaranteed. Office and Factory S. W. Corner 16th and Capitol Avenue, Qmaha We o & branch ut 1015 Capltol avenue midm&e-0m — ————— Apply to Merchant. W7. F'. STOETZEL,, SELLS THE BEST [ 110 11 aworth 10 1 060 | | 118 Tho houses, full lot, 16tk aind Mason 2 000 B et i IN THE CITY. month, 13 6000 | 50 How 7th 1000 | o0 | 076 | 600 Thoss $toves touk the promiuin at the New York Stato Fair in 1852, whero they wers put on actusl trial by oxperienced fudges, (i competition with loading Eastern Braiuls, which are far_superior o all 4 Western Staves, ospectally In quatiey of Tron, Pine, Bakng and conomy I all kiads of fuel EH AR DWW AR EKE! 2 000 | wable than those of the cows, while at | the same time they are far more difli- | 1) 10t i cult to kill we Nide of the bull is only | 2 1ot in 1 worth to the hunter from $1 80 o | % 10 fas & 110 were lots, Park 4 acres on Cuming streot | 601t in Patr | 86 1ot in Khinn i B 521 South Tenth Street. e ——— GALVANIZED IRON GATES, COMPLETE, $500 EACH, “Wire Netting Fence,” for Farms, Lawns, Cemeteries, Sheep, &c., cheap XN SOKLKS BB fl&&fi?“ 3‘ ‘ v as barbed wire, If not for sale in { v R ¢ : l " ””’:‘:’:’:‘ % your town, write for illustrations to- ive Acre Tracts, § the manufacturers, t.‘.:"l"l.'.‘L."n‘.‘i.‘."_.:i“ 'H 'l"'l"'::"; A‘A‘A“ 1, HOLENSHADE, B ol s bl | 186 Lake Street, - Chicago, i

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