Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
b, Dry Goods and Carpet House. Have the arges stock and choloest patteras of — CARFPETS Ever Brought to the City and at HARKNESS BROS. ILOWER PRICES Do Not Fail to Call and Examine Stock Before Purchasing, 401 BROADWAY, v = EVER OFFERED IN THIS VICINITY. COUNCIL BLUFFS. WILL SAVE YOU TIME, TROUBLE, MONEY If you buy your OF — HARKNESS Bros. GROGERIES & PROVISIONS, BOSTON TEA CO.. 16 Main and 17 Pearl Street, Counici Rluffs COUNCIL BLUFFS RAILROAD TIME TABLE. | ‘The following are the time of arrival and departure of trains from the local dopots. Tho traing start from the Union Pacific depot about ten minutes carlier Ehan below stated, and_ arrive at the depot about ten minutes later. Trains on pool lines and K, C. run on Chicago time, a0 hour faster than local, “Wabash trains run on t. Lo , twenty minutes faster than local. U, 2 i Linore: tretag o o ot Biofl Gont. CIICAGO, ROCK ISLAND AND PACIFIC. Depart. Arrive, AtlanticEx|. \ p.m. | Counail B'uffy ex m | Mail ana Ex, CIHICAGO and NORTHWESTERY. Arriv Pacific Ext 150, m. . | Mail and Ex*'6:15 p. m. . | Accom (Mon) [ 1:45 p. m. ND COUNCIL BLUFFS, Dey Arriv Mail and E Expross . m. Express. Mail and Ex. . m, ACIFIC, Depart, Aarivy § Overland EX......11:80a. m. | Overland E ) Lincoln Ex.. "1 Denver Ex | DemverEx L g Local Ex. ‘;{ Emigrant o “Cannon Ball. Depart, Arrive foux ¢ 5 Frm Sioux C ., TN Frm Fort .m. L, Leaves Ot Sail ane Z Atlantic Ex CIICAGO, MILWAUKE] \\nnr v, Leaves MMail and Atlantic couerL, Leav: ( FFS AND OMAIIA STREET RATLWAY. Bluffs. Leave Omaha. 1a, |80 w04, m. 10 m. 11 14 a1 m. 2p;m. 8 p, m, trips at 9 cularly during the day at 9, and rian to city time. “FOR TABLE USE.” The Natural Mineral KAISER WATER, From Birrest the highest mey m onthe Rhine, 1 authoritie Recommended b HOLLENDER & €O, 8. and Conada, 115, 1 Fii Solc agents for the U Elm strect, New York. ot u-«lmu.mlk Y fEEE ¥ ') i P “An excellent. appetising tonic of 3 exauisitolavor,uow used over tho Lole world, ' curcs Dyspepsia, | l‘t\erudAf:nu and all disorders of the Digestive Urgane, 4 A fow diops fmpart a deiicion favortoag chumpagze, nd f 1o al sumitier driuke. K1y it but ‘beware of counterfeita, Ask your or dmg‘hl 'u! Ihe ‘unnllm mnnu clll! . BIEGERT & BO J W. WUPPERMANN, Sall Agut. Succemr lo. . W, Haneor, "= 51 Brosdway, N. ¥, Western Comice-Works, IRON AND SLATE ROOFING. C. SPECHT, PROP. 111 Douglas §¢. = - MANUFACTURER OF Omaha, Neb, Galvanizea Iron Cornices) garDormer Windows, Finials, Ti Roofing, adjusted Ratchet Bar and Brag the general agent for the above Fencing, Crestings, Balustrades, Rainngs, Window Blinds, Cellar ocht's. pate) Metailic ight, P t ) agent for Pecrson & Hill patent Insido Blind. DR. WHITTIER, 617 St, Charles St,, St. Louis, Mo, A REGULAR GRADUATE of two medical colleg has been ongaced Ionzor in the treatmnt of CHIRG 1C, NERVO ANDBLOOD Discase: Louis, as city papers sho ses than sent by mail or express eve Curable cases guaranteed; whero doubt ox- Tron and Slate Patent I am Tron onsultation free and invited. Weakness, Mercurial and_other affotions of “Throat, Skin and Bones, Blood Impurities and Blood Peis why al attention. Excesses, ithe e e B i |,. pstage or stamps, wmmm BEFORE AND — AFTER Electric Appliances whole t on 30 Days’ Trial, Y0 MEN ONLY, YOUNG OR OLD, ‘Vuu are sufforin AL NAT ACK OF NENVE FORC n o i o Grandest discovesy of tho Nl Ha,rd and Sot‘t Goal,: rillustrated Pamphle COKE OR W00D. MANUFACTURB %1 from NERYOUS DEMILITY, BUCK STOVE CO, BAINT LOUIS, Pierc/ & Bradford. 8. E. Cor. Farnam and Tenth Sts) 2 | make so mm:{ B0 AGENST FOR OMAHA T, EXARIIS, BUYS CAST-OFF CLOTHING. HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID S Oall orsend ' F e | THE DAILY COUNCIL BLUFFS. ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEWS. BRONCHO SAM { A Desperado Who is Said to Have [ Killed Three Men Besides Rob | bing Stages and Stealing | Horscs, | Wiishi | Robert Boyd, Jr., sheritt of Penning [ton county, Bk, together with his | Ferguson, here having in their custody a hard deputy, David arrived darkey, known as “‘Broncho They were taking the prisoner to looking Sam.' Sioux Falls to place him in the peniten- | horse stealing. Not being able to make close connections they put their prisoner when in jail until evening, they started [ again with him on his trip Broncho Sam, who was sentenced as Sam Morris alias Charles Hicks, is a husky looking follow and appears to be much older than he but 33 years of age. really is, he being He s the reputa tion of being one of the worst does in the Black Hills He has been concerned in one erime after another until it is con fidently predicted that if he was in the hands of citizens in Montana, they would promply see to it that he was ush into another world, There are several charges pending against him, and when it known that he was captured by Sheritf Ferguson, requisition after requi sifion came in for him. As soon as his time is up he is to be tried for stage rob bery, and other like serious ¢l s will be kept in waiting, so that the is no inmediate prospect of his following the life of a frechooter again. He is said to have killed three other men at least, hav ing shot them in different as the victims thems nd well rid of, he will Dly never be called on to stand trial for killing them. ““Broncho Sam™ seemed to take the sit- uation quit od-nature nd is comical talking, humerous of a fel- low, but he showed red hot passion while en route from the depot up town, A | slick looking young fellow in the 'bus be- gan joking him, and making rems about him which he considered altogether too smart, and he shut the young fellow up in a hurry. He said he just wished he had him “out on_ the plains for about half a minute, and he looked as though he meant it. m won his name of “Broncho” from gility in catching and riding a bron- cho, despite all bucking or plunging. He has the reputation too of being an expert shot, and has for so many years followed this sort of a life that he is as toughened in hody as morals, It is also asserted that he belonged to Big Nose George’s gang, in Wyoming, and the various chapters of his life, it they could be learned, would form a thril- ling volume of adventure and misdeed ——— GextLeMEN—Your Hop Bitters have been of great value to me. 1 was laid up with typhoid fever for over two months and could get no relief until 1 tried your Hop Bitters. To those suffer- ing with debility or any one in feeble health, I cordially recommend them, J. C. STOETZEL, 683 Fulton st., Chicago, 11l. S A Great Juvenile Drama-- How It Brought Down the House. Some of the nice children on Common- wealth avenue, says the Boston Globe, recontly proposed to surprise their par- ents with a dramatic performance! with the distinet understanding that no adult was to witness a rehearsal or toask about the nature of the play written by a young miss of 10 years, who was to assume the role of heroine, assisted by a lad of the same age. On the nightof the perform- ance the parents of the children assem- bled in the front drawing-room of one of the large residences and waited for the | drawing aside of the portiors with com- mendable patience, The first scene rep- | resented the wedding of the hero and he- roine and the dqmrtmu of the former for the wilds of the West, where he was to reap his fortune in raising cattle and mining. This went off finely, and the portiers were closed with a loud burst of applause. A lapse of ten years was sup- posed to have passed between the first and second acts, and when the act com- menced the had returned, and his wife, not looking a day older, greeted her Ispouse in a formal manner, and even asked him to rmeain and dine with her, which he consented to do. While seated at the table cating ic am the husband told how he had toiled for wealth and ac- quired millions, all for the sake of the dear wifc he had left behind. This had such an effect on the matron that she finished her ice-cream, sighed to think there was no more on the table, and then addressed her husband, speaking carnestly and firm] “You ¢ done well” she said, *‘but while you have been at work I have not been idle. You shall see what T have accomplished.” She touched a bell, and | a white-capped bonne entered the room | ling a toddling infant a year old, and | followed by nine others of various ages, one for eachyear of married life. The s to this day do not understand why the play was interrupted by shouts of laughter from the fathers and mothers who were present, At any rate they say the play was a success, but the parents think it a littie Frenchy in construction and plot. | —— Says He Would Smile, Well T should smile in rapture gay, 1 she would only deign to kay, “ Tike you as a friend,” and lip thin my palm the finger-tip She snaps in her coquettish way. Andif her eyes of loous of May, pnionship Lu warmth of my Vell, 1 she But, O, if she her head should A u.., Butdon Tl bou y giddy b o till Judgment Day T should unile! ——— Much To Large. | ehinadenyhia Press Somebody put a small mud-turtl about the size of a silver dollar, in a be |at a New Jersey hotel and the strange who was assigned to that room, on pr at once resumed his clothes, r king; “I expected to have a pretty night « but if they're as big as that, I don't pro- pose to get in with ‘em.” — It scems impossible that a re Hops, Mandraki and such great cures as Hop Bitters but when old and young, rich and poor, pastorand doctor, lawyer | and editor, all testify to having been cur- ed by them, you wmust beliove aud fry them yuuruellv and doubt ne longer. tiary there on a sentence of two years for | mine,” | paring to retire, caught sighte of it. He made of such common, simple plants s | Dandelion, &c., should | ATURDAY Babies in |h:'u r When the scortching heat of summie Beats on millionairs and bummer When the rich man's son and davihter k the mountain and the water ooling off at broeay highlands Quiet coves and soagirt islands fes oh, the pity wdad ity BEE stowing, frying failing, gasping, dying Helpless babies—oh, th elter in the crowded city. | Though the blassed air of heaven I« to man so freely given Stnall tha portion of the dwellers | In the garrets and the cellars, he noxious odor smothers Babios in the arms of mothers, Aud the lives that we would cherish Daily pine away and perish. When the sultry days of summor Make the grummest man grow grumumer When the nights are close and torrid And tho city smells are horrid; Then the babies, feebly crying, Tn thoir mothors’ arms are dying, A« they swelter—oh, the pity! In the hot and crowded city Now York Sun, —— ADA MELNARD, ‘It is an insult, sir, that 1 shall never ve | And she laid her hand on the door in | her anger, to leave him there. But plac’ng his hand gently on hors,ho said 5 “Stop, Ada. God knows I did not mean it as sucl y explanation, Theodore St. Clair What you have said is more than 1 e endure, Our engagement w severed from this moment ; and you “Be caroful, Ada, Do not speak in angrer words that you will regret for a lifetime. You well know that T am not naturall 1 humble man, and weakness is entirely inconsistent with my acter, but 1 can bear much from you, because 1 love you; and if we once separate Ero he closed his sentence, Ada began: “1, too, have my pride, and will retract nothing 1 have said, Heretofore 1 have gratified your every wish, and submitted to all your petty exactions. I have borne long enough with your imperious will, and I repeat that our engagement is dis solved. You shall ne be forgiven un less it be in your last moments, or in *‘As you will, miss. You will live to | see retribution follow your word: And taking his hat, he passed out into the hall, and was gone. Undisciplined, wayward, petulent at and, withal, warm-hearted,was Ada rd. Showas the only daughter of althy and retired merchant. Her mother had died when she was n mere child; and, being left to the care of her indulgent father, petted by all, we won- der not that she was a spoiled child; and I hope, dear reader, that this may plead for her an excuse for the manner in which we were obliged to introduce her at the commencement of our story. Ada pos- sessed a warm heart in the calmer mo- ments of life. Her impulses were her rulers. As she felt, so she acted. She had no concealments; yet, with all this’ there lay within her a pride not easily quickened, but having latent elements, that, once filled with life, made her as in flexible as iron., Capt. St. Clair was & man of placid ex- terior, of thoughtful habits, sensitive and roud. Deeply he loved the woman of his choice, and would have given worlds to possess her had mot this affair hap- pened. Ada went slowly to her room, and ere she had closed her chamber door had forgiven him—yea, a hundred times lover; and had he been there then she would have sought his pardon on her knees. Too late she felt how deeply she oved him, and how lonely she was with- out him. Naught was left for her to do but to again take up the old thread of lifo where she had dropped it two years ago, in that sweet summer time when the new joy had first come to her, Wiiat a desolate existenco was hers! She had lived but one day in this miser- able state, and the thought of a life-time to come almost maddened her, She did not die, or share the fate of the suicide as novelists would her do; such weakness was not a characteristic of hers, Did she weep over her great sorrow? 1f 80, it was in secret. No one ever saw that proud eye dimmed by a single te Misfortune never comes singly, and Ada little dreamed of the t sorrow which was to befall her. Her father had been out riding, and, by some means, the horse became frightened, and he was violently, and received several injuries. He was removed to his home, | g and although the greatest care was bestowed upon him, and the most emi- nent physicians employed, yet they failed in their eff: hin thi o3 great wealth, But what was wealth to her, now that hope and love were shut out from her, forever! O, the weariness of her spirit! Oh, the utter desolation of her heart and home! Another grave in her heart, an- other fountain filled with her tears, and another prayer gone to heavenfor nuulgth and humility In the meantime she chanced to ta up one of the daily papers, when her | o fell upon a paragraph which told that Capt. St. Clair had departed for a tourin | the cast, This added the last dregs to her cup of bitterness, for now she felt him beyond all power of reconciliation. How his last words rang in her ears! Retribution had indeed ln]lu\wlnlmckl'y in her footsteps, but had not her own evil passion brought it upon her! The f.ndnyn.nhh world wondered why tho beautiful and smplished young heiress rejected some of the most eligiblo suitors, She felt isolated upon a barren mountain, looking downupon numberless gardens of happiness; but she could seo none for h they were all for oth- ors. How she prayed that from the plen- titude that waits upon some souls might fall a crumb that would stay the eraving of her own bleeding heart. ~ In imanina- tion she would wander along memor's gallery until she reached her favorite pic- ture, There she would stand and muse | until the bit svelation came | that the past, so replete with happiness, had forever passed away. Ada still lived, mourning for the | who, waking or sleeping, was ever pros- | ent to her mind. She was musing d {of him at the close of a more sad day at her country house, some twen- niles from London. The evening was warm but not oppressive—one that dis- | poses us to « lu«l her than langour 1 out over the fiolds until | her feet mm\ in the velvet sward, and the air fanned her f‘\«rwl brow, It was a meet hour for a maiden’s fancy; il the scene being enticing, she tarried under the open sky and looked around her. How she \\Ingull for such a gladness | to fill her soul ! She wandered on until | she came to the side of & brook, and sat down beneath the shade of a tree to hold communion with herself, though it was a torture that nearly bore her to the earth, But tired nature gave way, and she was JULY | not ita life as you | delay not one moment, | speak no longer. to her| The a dreary year passed away and | wun | 14, 1883. tlocked in the 80 arms of morpheus 1 She dreamed of one who, she thought, {had trodden on all the little flowers of | atfoction, How et hopes died out one by one, and vanished \ke the gleams of { suinshifie that had Just A bohind the |grove of troes! Chsting her eye 0 the | ground, she chanced to some loaves Iying at her foot she heheld a beantiful white to was buried beneath the dead leaves; while in the act of plucking it, she | prevented from so doing by a noise as if Some one were approching, sing noth. | o turned again to pluck the flower, | 300 wer, which Hen, when, re her, s Theodore St Clare, gahstly and pale, and holding th flower out to her | He said, **Ada, take this, and mm..‘ have mine ;" and stooping to kiss her cheek he was gone With a wild seream she awoke, and for a long time could not collect her senses. Sho had seen Theodora and ho had given her the white flower What could it mean ! Hor reverie, however, was inter- | rupted by her maid, who had become alarmed at A long absense, and start ol in pursuit of her. Onreachind home she found the evening post had arrived, and among the letters was ome written in a strang hand, Tremblingly opening it she read 1y Love-Lost Danuise me L am dying, but 1 cannot world without seeing you They tell lewve this again You will find me at the Bath Hotel Piceadil- and ly ant me my dying request that I n win Treononre,” For a moment she was quite bowilder. v.l I»m knowing there was no time to . hastily summoned her maid, and was soon on her way to seo him, Lato that night her carriage stopped befor his hotel, and she was usnren into his room. Ho was lying, gastly pale, upon his bed We will not attempt to deseribe hes foel from your own lips that given, and still love, yoi ings- They ean be botter imagined than exprossed, © She by o him, Kissed his palo brow, and him t just one word to He opon eyts slowly, w8 from adream, and he said my come at last!” Taking he hand in his, cotinued, *“Kiss me, ling, and tell mo you forgive me bofor die. Yos, Ada, Tamdying. Sing tome. His voico failod him, and ho econid foebly, I “that Ada ha She voice, ng one verse for him in a brok i when she had fiinished he closed his eyes, and she knew his lnst moments had arvived. Her griof becamo almost uncontrollable, and she leaned over him and called on him to speak or smile on her hen all was blank. When she awoke she was in_her own room at her town rosidence. She asked to be taken to see him, and they told her he was burried. She had been delirious a weel Again she sank into unconcious- ness. She lingered in that state for three | days, andthen went to meet Theodore | where thoy nevermore would be separa- ted. In her will she bequeathed her en- tire fortune to_the poor, and many have sen up to call her blessed.” 1 —e— DID SHE DIE? “No! he lingored and suffered along, pin- ing away all the time for years.’, “The doctors doing her no good;” “And at Inst was cured by this Hop Bitters the papers say so much about.” “Indeed! Indeed!” “How |h|mHul we should be for that medi A Daughter's Misery. “Eleven yoars our daughter suffored on a bed of misery. ““From a complication of kiduoy, liver rheumatic trouble and Nervous dobility. “Under the earoof the best physicians, “Who gave her disense various names. Father 18 Getting Well. My daughters say w much better fatherls sines he used Top Bit s getting well a it incurablo 1 we are glad that he used your Bitters."—A l.ml\ of Utica, N, Y. his long suffering froma e— A Russian Conve Fom the London In the next church I entered, that of the convent in the Kremlin known as the Vosncsensky Monastir, thero was great crowding (o kiss the body of Exodia, wife of th id Duke Dimitry Dons- koy, who commenced the building in 1303, and whose remains lie here in a golden sarcophagus, the lid of which iy raised in order to show the jeweled robos | worn by the reposing corpse, of which the forehead alone is uncove But from head to feet the relic comes in for oseula- tory worship. Generals, colonels, count- osses, milkmaids and peasants passed in | an unbroken stream, while on each side a | nun was selling chaplots, and ln.nl;-nmr-y kers to all who could afford to buy. As T passed out T was much struck by tho black head-picce and tho robes of the nuns, Phough I begged some of them stay o moment on their way from church to con- were too shy. They wore in it adl i standing or sauntering, and wearing their curious th century head-dress. Their black veils and their long sleeves stood out against a wall on which a brilliant sun- light threw up the early monastic deco- rations of impossible flowers and gro- tesque detail, till the whole looked like a pago of some old missal, or the pictu in that magic Persinn book which w gifted with life and motion, As 1 very much wanted to make a sketch of the nun’s costume and a8 no _encouragement was given me hero, probably bocase service had only just termin , 1w to another convent ac some distanco the Kremlin, the Rsjestvesky monastery, hoping at least to get a glimpse of some | benevolent sister who would mn.l my | wish, After passing under 4 at | the head of a flight of steps on ul-u h pic turesque, hut nasty, beggars we or lying, & dyornik or porter carried my | wishes to asister, who came to the door | of & winding staircase and took in the sit uation with merry eyesand a comic grin | on her vory tussinn face. Sho woro tho | complete costume of a nun who las not taken vows, the tall casque-like head- | picee made of black velvet and trimmed | with black fur, coming low on the fore ; head, descending over the ears and rising | again over the nape of the ne To this iy attached a bavolet or curtain of black silk, falling and winding over a dress of black silk, relieved by white ]m ’ enround the neck above a broad flat e lar of velvet. The long full k| the folds taken in at the back of the waist complete what is really a most graceful | costume. On asking permission o sketch | her my merry young religiouse disappear- | ed up the carpeted staircase with my card, | which sho had requested; and presently I heard mysclf addressed in excellent French by a sweet voice belonging to the lady abbess herself. This lady whose distinguished appearanceand perfect man - ners evidently shows she had known a court before she ever entered a cell, bog- t. News, dead | and moving them | i Stone-gatherers FURNITURE! } HE— OCHEAPEST | PLACE IN OMAHA TO BUY wa. 2 urn —I8 They always have th- NO STAIRS TO CLIMB iture AT DEWREY & STONE'S largest and best stock. ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR TO THE DIFFERENT FLOORS ged me to come into the convent. The | nunssome 80 or 100 1 number, were st going into the refectory, and, if T wounld wait until the dinner had taken their pl ¢ mothes | would give me every opportunity in her power to notice her flock. T was roceiy odiin her drawing-room filed with paln trees, India rubber plants, and photo graphs of tho n'mp«!nl.-‘m]wwn d of |h.v metropolitan of Moscow, with views of the convent and econvent church, In this room T was given the best cotfee and thoe thickest cream ever drempt of, with o baskotful of the sweetest cakes and wa- fers. While talking with the abbess just as inany London o Paris salon at five o'clock tea, the bell rang and 1 was usher. ed into the dining-hall, on either side of which was a long table, and two rows of ladies of whose profound bows o the lady superior did not prevent them from taking stock of your correspondent. m their heads ap like that we give toa The four o8 and eaps bowing unlly during the few minutes wo romain ed, made the meeting look like a storn picture of the Iniquisition. As they wore all hungry 1 retived as soon as 1 could. bowing my thanks. “The abboss sent for a novice to sit to me. The n ice was o little girl of ten years old, rath- er tall for her age, but with a round baby faco and blue eyes, With the full sleoves | of her dress and her littlo fairy eap on her head, she looked as if sho had stop- ped out of a picture by Holbein on to the parquet hofore mo, The youngest novices wore v tall —— Manufacturing in fowa, Burlington Mawkoeye. Town is s0 cminont an_agricultural state, that her industry is hardly oven spokon of when the resources of the state are added up, and yet she is not by 1 means the smallest of the manufacturing statos. It is true, sho has not many gi- wantic works, such ng tho traveler can ob- serve from his car windows, when travel- ing from Philadelphia to New York, or in the New England states, or near Pitts- burg; hor industries are still in their in- fancy, but they are developing at a very flattoring gait, and wo may live in well- founded hopes that we will yot bo a first- class industrial,ag wo are now a first-class agricultural state. The United States haus gives us somo figures, which will startle many good citizens of the state by their sigificance, There were taken in the state in 1880 these figures: Numbe of establishments. yoars of ugo.. Females above 15 yoars of ago Children. ...... Wages paid in one yea Value of material used. Value of products. . . . 71,045,920 Theso are respectablo figures. They ap- pear all the more when compared with the census of 1850, when Towa had but 522 establishments, when the capital em- |vll>)u| but $1,202,875, and the on- tire value of the product was only 83,- 500,000. Now Towa as a manufacturing state outranks Alabama, Arknsasas, Del- aware, Florida, Georgia, Colorado, Kan- sns, Minnesota, Mississippi, Louisiana, orth and South Carolina, Oregon, Ver- mont and West Virkinia. The mechanical and manufacturing in- dustrics of the state are divided into the following classes: Agricultural implements Bread mul baker G 1431 1,659 | 49,725,062 is mhy B shops. irniture . ‘e Liquors distilled . Liquors malt Lumber plan Lumber sawed . Marble and stono work Oil linseed . ..., .. Printing and ;.ul,lmlung Saddlory and harness. .. 4bl A v Slaughtering and meat pmmm, . 88 Soap and candles. BT Tinware, copperware . 881 Tobaceo and cigars, 133 Wire. . Pane sna 3 Woolen goods g Other industries . .8,046 Naturally Towa is an agricultural stato though it would he hurd to think of anything she docs not maaufacture—pays s attention to her requirements inug- ultural implements, and thiv is what she made in the year 1880 13 Corn planters. . ) A lod ¢ Cultivators, . Harrows Hocs Plows | Shovels Rollers Grain cradles Harvesters Hand rakes Hay-forks Hay-louders Horse-rakes . Mowers Potato-diggers Reapors and mowers combined | Seythes | Beythe-snaths . Corn-shellers 160 | 1,428 Fanuing-mills 78 Soparators AR 800 | Threshers ... ... AR 70 Oaune-mills. ... ... 11 Food-steamers . 178 Hay and straw-cutters, . 1,280 Horse-powers, ! Stalk-Pulle 0,7‘m and the tons-all of which are fu Iihod Ly the greatest eailway in Amerka, Ocaco, [ wAvkEE And St. Paul. 1t ewns and operates o sin, M o8, Treanche connee- Busivess contros of the it naturlly answors the 1 Bost Route betwoen Paul ands Minnoapolis. al Winona, rdoen aral Ellondale. au Claire and Stillwator. Wausan and Morrill Feavor Dam and Oshkosh. Waukesha and Oeor Nadison and Praieie Chicag, Milwaukee, St Chicago, Milwaukee, La Cross Chicago, Milwanke Chicgo, Milwaul Chicae uncil BInfs and Omaha, ni City, Stonx Falls and Yankton, Mitchell and Chamberlain, Rk Tsdand, Dubugiie, St Paul o Minnoapolis. Davenport, Calmar, St. Pau Chicago, ¢ ost I\hlllu:i'm in the ) on the main I s anu ‘Eclaw & ST ¥ fo .w....(.n. by courte- SOLID SHOT ACAINST BLOOD POISON, ATIANTA, GA., April17, 1853, T 1878 1 was the vietim of a terrible Blood Pols: and aftor heing treated by th ]l\h\annn W ca flnod to my hod, not alle to ral e wpitting clots of blood, from 18 I poun: of SWIFT'S & , and in Toss than throo months Twas ontirely well, wefiched 196, and have never had @ sypmtom Uisease since.” 10§t had not boen for Swilt's Specifie I bllove T wou T then bogan tho uso n 1NV, BISHOP. ['WO YEARS WITHOUT o8 my appotite g to finprove, and 1 gained flosh rapidly., Whon Tl taken twelve bottlos | folt as’ well ay 1 over did. 1t 18 now twelve monthy sinco 1 took 8. Hoalth and appetite are good, and Lam ablo to €0 all the business 1 eange CHAS. BERG, Hot Springs, Jan. 1, 1845, ki $1,000 Reward. Will bo paid ito any Chemist who will find, om Analysis of 100 Vottles o particlo of Mor- cury, Todido Potassiu neral substance. [ FIC (0, ‘Atlanta, Ga, g4 Write for the little book, which will bo mailed frec. DR, FELIX LE BRUN'S G AND PREVENTIVE AND CURE FOR EITHER SEX, Thisremedy belng infected directly to tho seat of the discaso, requires no change of diot or na morcurial or poisonous wmodich Wh nos to bo taken Interns eventive by eithor sex, it i8 private discase; but in the. unfortunately athickid wo guafe to auro, or wo willretund WRITTEN GUARANTEES Jasucd by all authorized agents. Dr Felix LeBrun & Co 'SOLE PROPRIETORS, §, - Gooduan, Druggit, Solo Aganty tor Omatiey Neh. n&o wly Health is Wealth. rve and Brain Tre !Ill.n‘, Hysterla, Dizzines slons, 3 iralgia, Prostration caused bx the use o ‘nuktluhuh‘n dental Doprossion, Softend raln, resulting in insanity as ading to lll(“l’y wnd death, Promature Old' Agor BArrennece” power in cither sex, nvoluntary Losse rrine causd by OVer Sxorlon ot ulganoe. Each0ox Allve treatmont. 41,008 bov. or Seut by wiall prepald on recelpt ARANTEE SIX BOXES | To cure any cas With each order rooelved by us for six boxes acoounpaniod with §6.00, we willsend the [Jechasr our wriien guarautos torefund the money f the treatuient does not affect & cure. Guarantocs Issued only by C. F. GOODMAN, | ™ o wa: Drurrist, Owaha Nob, | T B P USRI RYRUVA L0919 Puv § ‘SKO0YH HOLALO 'NOIDUNS B NVIOISAHL “@ 'K ‘Apoqeeg '(x uyop