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

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MAlFEASlNGE IN THE MML Duties and Doings nr the Special Agents or Inspestors Employed in the slons, St. Vitus nnm Alcoholism, Opium Fating, Seminal Weakness, Im- Postal Department, potency, Syphilis, Scrofula, and all . Nervous and Blood Diseases. l’E"'ln( lergymen, Lawyers, Literary Men, ferchants, Bankers, Ladies and all ‘Whose m entary employment causes Nervous Pros- tration, Trregularities of the blood, stomach, bowels or kidneys, or who require a nerve tonic, ay petizer ot stimnlent, Samaritan Ner- vine 1s invaluable, a Fingere Highwayman W Daily ¥ plitied stanced Frauds Spotiing or Pighting a ys that In- | Theinspectors number about forty, and are under the charge of Chief David B ed a sinking system. ‘BEDDE' Parker, at Washington. Their care ox $1.50, at Druggists. tends over every point in the United | g | States where there is | rh< ese offices number 4 ThoDR. S, A, RICHMOND MEDICAL CO., Sole Pro- ONQUEROR. prietors, St. Joseph, Mo. For testimonials and circulars send stamp. (18) postoftice, and as 10, their labor is | very at and the number of miles tr eled enormeus, The forty agents are not all employed in general work, as a num ber are assigned to duty inletter car | oftices. The work of the special agent | or inspector consists in looking up lost | mail matters, examining postmasters’ ac | counts and offices, catching thieves, de- tecting mail frauds, examining mail routes, and laying out’ plans for them up | on orders from their chief. The lotter carriers inspector looks after the offices which demand an increase of force, which_is granted on proving up tho re quired population, or in looking Perfect substitute for Mother's ot ourising Wit for. nvalids and | Commended d 1! ’l‘ll Oonl Milk. Th nursing moth Keeps He also suggests routes to the erintendents, amd tries to lighte his plaus, The mone attention all taken up | manded. s, | local ‘Himstangh & Tapler OFFERJA NE lh; the | inspects the work of postmasters at any | time to sce if accounts balance. He also supervises the work of hunting down the | men who obtain money orders by fraud, sign for them and receive money to which the not entitled. For this charac- | ter of rk the inspector receives a sal- penses while traveling. STOZK OF | FULL ASSORTMENT OF | The inspector having tlnn Inn- of duty ty be a first class man. to enable BUILDERS’ IIATERIAL. Newest styles in Bronz8 Goods. Carponter and Machinists. Tools. Warranted Cutlery and Buf- | falo Scales. must be gentlemanly in his meetings with the public. He must be a good auditor and accountant, and must possess a con- stitution which never breaks down with long travel, and a pluck and perseverance | which never tires umtil the thief is caught. These points almost all of the special agents possess in full, They are as & rule the citizens fear. Their comir Was the exclamation of a manwhon he got & BOX | ¢roings are unknown to any one bu Buseict Pils Olitment, which s simple and aure | Sieg e e and mi S Discascn. "“Fhiey vents by | selves, unloss perchance they have a man ‘mail, postpaid. . |in the larger oftices in whom they have | The American Diarrhea Cure ;|implicit confidence. . The dealings of the inspector is with | ears, Sure euro {or | the hetter class of humanity, or at least | Discrhasd, Dysentaryy and Chole- | 4146 who wear the best clothes and tall and act like gentlemen, Men whe nd dress in this way and who have crim- inal instinets are th v hardest class to | handle, and arve the shrewdest at heir | [ work. Has 6tox the test for two all. Newer Fails, s Morbuy. Deanes Fever and Ague Tonic & Cordial, | 14 is impossible to supply the rayic sale of the same. ‘ BURI URE WARRANTED For Fover and Agne, and all Malarial troubles. PRICE, $1.00. Ww.J. WHITEHOUSE’:‘ TRACING THE LOST. One great advantage in the service is hat each man w om a chief of divi LABORATORY, 16TH ST., GMAHA, NEB. sion .md Hnl cl his erders | For Sale by all Druggists When com ived in a post- it they shall Or kent by Express on receipt of price, m&ed Uflnn the orde J to ations, Making | is signed by all the s to wham it 1207 FARNAM STREET. Under the uanagement of Mr. Kxlish PALACE BILLIARD HALL, 1204 Farnam Street. P. H. McGuire, Proprietor JAMES C. BRYAN, Managor. SEVEN NEW TABLES. 1207 | Panl. “To provide uguinst ov | ed in the Chic niail ] aul .v..lliu- ‘.h,u-.m with the minrm ation obtained. Themajority of letters and packages which > believed by the sende: lulm) are cither withoutsufli Idress, or else | the na “n i to have been ent stamps are unmailable. When | the sender is on the packet the duty of the clorks to return the or lutéer to the sender, and when | R T R e s The handsomest Billiard Hall in Omaha, The fnes | wyle to notify the s s Wines, Liquors and Cigars are previded for patrons rule to notify the addressed. In thi Wrad® | way the are now less frequent than Itis right to suy that to the ice and Dr. Day belongs the ating this practice, TICRETS TO EUROPE' Ruy your Europeas via the the advantage of receiving reports ALLAN LINE | MCARTHY & BURKE';::,"";':.X.. ":3,...,,.3‘.:|.;tlf;'~,.~ #d Skl UNDERTAKERS! among the thousands of clerks is domng | the stealing. When pointers center on 28 14TH STREET, BET, FARNAM |& ||Il.ulln.||h, ulul’ nmllllmT]In" 'n\;x m both ways is taken, he then finds on AND DOUGLAS | whose yun it is, and has to use trip re- Jokn D. Peabody, M. D | ports to bring it down to the individuals, . , M. D, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, | | In offices losing mail ho can tind out his | men without as much work, unless the | | oftice happens to be large, and the mo; OFFICE ROOMS, 8and 6 57 FARNAM, help there is the more diflicult the case, aiamoatinid Dot | In case it is in a letter carrier T { the mail received tl s being lost, T fmust first find whethe mail stolen is | | handled by box collectors or s deposited {in the office divect. If in the latter he maust deal with the man whe arranges the letters when they are thrown in, then the mail stamp cancellers, then the dis tributors and then the men locking the pouches. In the form 1 ho adds the box collector and drops the ranging the lett If letters being re cewved in an office are being lu xlnl inl such as Chicago, the clerk in the dead il matter division, to whom losses are worted, notifies the inspectors, \\l ve their headquu in the office they notify the chief inspeetor. ' atly diminish the work of nm ud save him miles of tra genuine stealing is goir on makes itself apparent to the ]n r8ons receiving complaints, as well as to The mspector has, how- | Omaha, Neh, JAS, H. PEABODY M, J. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, Residence, No. 147 Jones St Offies, ¥o, 160" Far. naw street. ' Oflioe Liours, 12 m. to £ 8 . m. to6p. m. Telephoue' for office, 97, Kewidenco, 15, JOHNC.JACORS. Formerly Gish & Jacobs stolen, he ’ wail, then those who take it to the dat stampers, then with the latter, then th PROBATE NOTICE. letter carvier di ter and then wi I the matter of the Estate o Martiu W. Keunedy, | tho letter carriers, J FRAUDS DETECTED In 1880 a letter carrier was arrestod convicted after months of hard labor. 1 plan was to steal mail from the carriers distibuters' eases or from other letter carriers’ cases and put it in his own until there was 4 chance to dispose of it 1870 & clerk emplo; .m for the purpose of presenting the ) atnination, adjustnent and allowance. Kix month are allowed for creditors to present their clais, one year for theexeentors to seitle said estate, 1 the & day of August, 183, this notice will Lé pub lished in the Omala’ Daily Bee for four weeks sic cemively, prior to the 3 ¢ d in the mail service | Sidney, was arrested and convicted by [the inspectors. His plan was to see & | packet over his own route, and then by | y of October, 1 A M. CHADWICK, (A trus copy. ) County Judy aug? 3t ewk over | town, where a letter carrier foree is de-| ounting of that division, and | e modest, quict men, whom' an observer would 1 e for a detective. They [ never havetheir star exposed tothe view uf VU ILEA any one, a jound looking | I Have Found It! 1| into the faces of the ordinary tough,whom |, which | In the large postoftices, | on the | | office and on the Union Pacifie nmnnw east from | and four will b THE DAIIY BEE ‘-(W[AHA l‘ RIDAY AU(:IJhl 10, 1-383 — | bontdling snothor man's run or working | | point, steal it from him. When he wa [found, after a great deal of work it was | | known that all tho other clerks on the | road, except the chief, had been suspect ed and watched, Perhaps the most daring case of misplaced confidence w hat found in the Chicago postoftice, THE MARTIN MELEE. The Soldiers Who Thumped Him will Be Bronght to Trial, in ,IH &) .h»||[L :,)I” the ‘,l‘_'m ervicn o the | Flying Beor Kegs and Abusive Wrath route from Chicago to Cincinnati Ho | il the Purcell Place, met with an accident and lost his arm ® \duty. Every one there pitied | : Jake wu,’“h. was the thiof, and he| Aninteresting trial will take place in was given the position of night watchiman | Justice Wright's court this morn {in the € |..ML'.‘.n,..- He w udl«»nlln\\ul‘"w at 10 o'clock. { headquarters in the postmaster’s room o time after he was appointed lotters wn to be missed in large quantitios. fearful, and were [ in unde Keptat their work all the time, yet could | viot, o points, The man Gross' was put On complaint of Den nis Purcell, Constable Page went out t Fort Omahayesterdamorningand brought rest four soldiers charged with and battery, and The names of the offend b The inspectors were assault various | other offences. on the watch, ana by his reports placed . wany men under surveillance. One day | €1 are Bentley, Mackafee, O'Day and | his reports went too far, and he was | Olliver. proved a liar in a statement which he had 1t seems that on Sunday last these men made in orler to acquire the keys then went into a saloon owned by one Martin Dhold by two men only. He was give d resumed a quarrel which eommenced the desived koy, but the inspectors de- |4ty pienie at Rediman's grove some tim termined to keep an oye on hin.— One | hfore, — They ealled for drinks, which night they announced that they were go- | Magtin refused to let them have and or ing out of town, but instead of d.,mL 80 | dered them out of the saloon Where went where they could wateh him. After | ypon one or two of them aseended the o watching Jake was soen to put | yeaffolding of the said Martin and throt pack under his - coat and o to the [ led him till his tongue lolled out postmaster’s voom. The detectives in|— Nurtin escaped and canme to town. Ho | their stocking feet hastened after him, | aftorwards drove out to the fort and | but it was of no use; he heard them com- | found his enemies still surrounding his ing and got inside the door, which had a | house, R spring lock. If they de & moment They again pitched into him, dragg BOW LEGS. their chance Sl e "-'""ll gt Lim outof his buggy and over-turned the i | vid of his spoils. In the door was a large | vohicle on top of him. Martin managed | % . stained glass window. — This was broken | t extricate himsclf and fired two shotsat | ™M Operation of Oste tomy Per | by & blow from a revolver butt and that | hig persecutors, neithor of which took furmcd on Chitldren at. Belle- weapon turned upon the traitor, who was | told not to mave, He sank down to the floor when the inspectors entered and iy 1 on his knees for mercy, but the { had none. On his person was found ov fifty lotters, and, in spite of political in- fluence and attempted pardon, he was effect, thereupon he tled Qu parts un known, Not content with v.’lul[ulnhmg the im mediate cause of this wrath, the soldiers owners of the building, ths front part of which was occupied by Martin s o sa [sent to work for the government ina{loon, Mr, Purcell, the landlord of Mar | state’s prison. tin, occupying the rear part as a resi | DOWN ON PARDONS, den They th ened the life of My Purcell and the destruction of his One of them seized & beer ke banged it through a window. | As to pardons, nothing does the in- | spector detest more than to sec the rat | caught, after hours of work, and then This | sufiored o o through political influence, | brought Mra. Purcell to_the rescuc, and A case of this kind occurred a few years | in her efforts to defend her property sho ago, and it is not long since the youthful | Was knocked down and _slightly injured, | and was besides subjected to all manner of insult and abuse, On the whole, thero seems to ] been a high old time, for which the dler has not yet been paid. The soldiors were taken in charge by thicf appeared in St. Paul in a musical party, and become known to some of our s, though he did not occupy a higly a professional, The young man was a nice boy, had a good record as a Sunday school scholar, and as a hard vo fid- studont. While he was employed letters | the military authorities and were about | were missed, and he was almost the last | to be court marshalled but constable Page }‘..k. suspected. Iny on proved | induced the commanding officers of the | Fort to turn them over to the civil autho rities. H. D. Estabrook Esq., appears for the complainant and Mr Murphy for the defendents. Since writing the above Mr. Purcell | came in and requested that his thanks and those of his neighbors be returned to [ that, though he was receiving a small sal- he spent monc, and_loaned t deal to his associafes. He also | bousted of a fair Imperia who lived in a J..m- Lotel. 1t is needless to say that he | t stealing, and confessed when mmed in, and even wrote out ont the \femsion and signed his name. Ho was ary c found guilty bya jury. His friends|Gen. Carlin for his prompt efforts to of the church and men and women |suppress the and his_assistance in |in the ofice plead for him. The |bringing the offenders to trial. t | judge sontenced him, but the influenceor | g kvl TR R IMAGH, [ tales of the boy's pioty had touched him [and 8o he suspended sentence until a { pardon could be had. The pardon ¢ [ much to the disgust of the inspecto ‘Ilu' curly locks of the pretty boy w I not out by the prison shears. Anofher The Royal Ar |‘|1I~llll’0 I n Route to| the Const, Tug Bek yesterday contained & notice the arriv | case of the ]hnnlnlu(l unsuspected thi red in 18 nesse and North O Another lae partyr d procecded w special car **Silver City. ina Knights. ached this city yes t at noon in the It contained | The man was over .l old Scotchman who w v spreader of mail by nves of third-c ocens i e 7. E, HOURE, {once for Washington, Ui watelh was Kept. Othor men | hirizone siv ity i udios. . B, {the complaints are recorded potted, but finally he was caught in oston, en route to Si cisco, d x rmation is sent to the division chief, | the act. Mis house wa searched and in .md h‘”m'm;.'l“"h‘.l,‘:"rm;y.E \:“,“l‘ ,L,‘ Ny \\hu in turn ull ' sends out one of his | it a huge bateh of stolen stuff’ was f d chapter »of arel Dunguiting el CESENEIDRer Sl e sSA e ek ouk e ol 10 gl Mo e Sl R e SURVEYOR e pteath atTei e o of “the” routo looked down on the bald spot_on his | Denver. - ho party s tuder tho lead s en by the leitor or. packet in transi | hoad, and ho ot a pardon, and i & few | of SitKnight Alfzony Clapmian, the g ml ting crand high priggt as bra; | weeks I o enough o show up | Plave, s |is referrad, and theso clerks embrace all |among his follow clorks and talk | ehiapter of royal arch masons af the U. A T e ks e e (l‘.l.]“llil."'q."l’ e S i e T e L R e . decross banner. The party is made up packet or who would receive it when it OUTSIbE Wortk [ H. PHILLIPS, ad lost its wrapper oraddress. Tf alost | of the inspectors is not all nu‘“',“”“ 3. Smith, grandhigh prisst; Wil THE LEADING NEW YORK packet was wailod in- New York for 8t. | g0 l“"‘“”“ s, Movover. Somo y |y Al '{”‘ mith, grand high priesf il r....l howover, i would b Dandled by | o g rager ot iam A T ert TS T e T Oy TP C ) (A R o et Py 8 Lot were | Dadmon, John Goods, would g0 in anothcr pouch or sack o 5. 3 Haige, M. and S, med the task of bringing the mm.‘\ to justice. fearful of nothing. Gen. Spurling, camp and we went right into | evider m their | lowed to keep their it nf | Holbrook, past {grand commande Tohn They were both brave men, | One of them was They visited the outlaw | 00 Saumders, ptured, but as they | ¢ Hutehinson \p, and had no tell-talc p were ishire; grand commander; deputy grand com y, grand generalissimo; 7. Chapman, nd captain gen , by proxy, and grand record ok, pust grand command, id - standard-he Baalis past eminent eminent com AThert ¢, Smith, eminent com lin ed to capture him. One bright day they | | informed him and his crowd that he was « prisoncr. All drew their revolvers and | a fight occurred, Two men were killed, but t1 > inspectors brought in the balance | and seeured convictions, One of the flne | | mander; mand Guards and Escorts Chas, K, Thomas, ), 0] 1 | A picees of inspoctor’s work was the cap. | aen v ' ,L'['”'" Vi e T I il oL | |ure of Col. Young, the moncy order| Wighburn, Jf. ILGilbert, Othollo A. Fay, | b civealution ol blood i the et 40 sipiaplen, sone - Talinel) "‘”'"“’“"“““"" uol Bl | prevents inflanmation and lessens the in o wny, and i a gomine| ' s = M, Colah |1 .'n. s influnmation ens the adventurer, He was employed " in the | gamders, winders, shn R, | ehildr Hi e i fiod with boing in u good berth, o Bulin Sanford. Miss Irono G. Sanford, | mtie mtoctebin oo Tpesred to e s it Mus, Juntes D. | froful, but the nurses said3their une | ot ini eures oeders to Obio, | Ronimu. B. Washburn, noss whas caused by forcad innction, Most | having had the hl.m)m[um(ulnfl hicago. Ontitlio i train were ulso Sir | hf ‘”“um‘““ y '““.”n“““” n [ Ho was captured after a long and sovere | uights . 1 Wright. 4. W. Hugehin tlo o il of |struggle, by Inspootors Hawl [son, and D, J. Seampton, of the Rebort | SRaiAAd g (Feeryanc fordie orpaicy MeCoy commandery, Madéson, Wis., R | jitted to walk alone too carly and bo SYOyeammhonino. . T Ainng D. Pulford, of Mincral = Point com- | sy their hones are soft from lack of thlek wliojvia oapbirod o fow. weaks mandery No. 12, Mineral Point, Wis., | roner norishment, Dr. Fullor exhib B Tow auspenie Uil ensarly. everyl AL S BiomonTand witubotaiimanly (RGN B 0RE SRS i SR | nmie ohuractr had boen looked into and | Minn,, and D, Clintan Locko and wife |l lo had porformed tho oporation of | | all the time letters were being missed, of Chicago. Dr. Locke has boen fia | a0 ad | s'{m ap 8L as looked after and no taint could be found against him. A lookout | Finally he [igucst of Bishop and Mrs. Clarkson in | Omaha, & fow days. This is his sccond was kept, however, and he was observed | qorn v el I i (e sl to finger the letters. — Anenvelope of | gunpment of the United States, it [pronouneed Kind, o that it could be| casily seon, was loaded with marked THE money and then dropped into the box where he was ot work, The inspector | o g { hurried to the lookout just in time to seo | stter disappeare was arrested when ho left the and denied having it. A search was made and nothing could be found of ‘m. envelope, He madea motion toward | his vest and in an instant the inspector Other Lt Gleaned Police Court Records, from | the finger,and then the | He Judge Anderson issued a body exceu tion upon Bernste'n in the police conrtyes terday morning, hut upon examination of cision of the supreme court, the opened it and in an inside pocket the | ® money was found. The *‘fingering is | ound that he was not warranted spoken of in the above case and it may | mitting him to jail, 50 he was re leased, for a man wh The legislature remedy, but the supreme court vefuses to There o he well to state what it is. Every expert who is used to handling lotters "can tell their contents by rubbing the two sides of an cavelope together and diseoveri lie extra thickness in every part. If the s to bhe no ry is maliciously pro has provided ped sustain it on the ground that a person contents are mony, it is soft and plia cannot b depr'ved of his liberty, with but if any card or ordinary paper is inside | out a chancs to dofend himsolf, it is harsh to delicate fingers, When a| One disturhance of the peace was fined man who is honest is distributing letters | three dollars and costs, paid, Anothes he never foels of them, all having to him | diselare s character ca A dishonest clork will, howeyer, UNDY or rub an envelope to find its con . n he has on en b and the Defeat of I, f K ) 1own to st is captured | Corraspondence of the B, e Scrantan (Pa.) Steel Co. now havethete| ©@'NEILL Ciry, Neb., August 6,—The wol auton in nearly full operation, In | small grain is out of danger, the potatoe rail at once when the mill works used s fuel, the rail mil we rolled at onee crop is abundant, but the success of the is o full operation culin or goal dust from a mine close by, whick p ia biumed on & patent grate, Thin fue) "cons | condition of the only 10 centy | por tou at the mine, | corn crop depends largely on the futur: With weather. good proceeded to visit punishment on the | and departire of the Ten- |! “1 cover from such operation!” | “The bone is set within four weeks after the fracture, but the child is not permitted to use its limbs much for sov eral days after the splints are removed. Walking is allowed by slow o8 When the children ble to run about f the | - {increnses as the child grows older, 1 have been operating upon all the how legged children we could got here for a i1t adequate | weather extending well into the fall, the | prospect is good; a small otherwise we can expect arop. The battle on the “proposition to bond Holt county for £22,000 {uiot is all over uull rostored; and the “‘proposition ground, low ‘ You folks, down Hun in Douglas, would think nothing of vot ‘swoetly sleeps low in the n the ground.” ing 22,000 why, you'd pay it for sand stoning o few rods of a street - but, in Holt county it s weer-toy-tweo | Uheosand Doddlars, About 84| ut of 10 (that was about the proportion f the votes) of the tax payers have strong | misgivings as to the propriety of accumu lating many shekels in the county vaults; wd one writer (the quostion was fought with the pen, too,) on the question, re forring to the court house ring (we have | that, too, hore) went o far as to insinu ate that there was something in “Don {mark” that \\ w not altogether sound, | The “*press” (heg pardon) of the county 1\\M||‘l the »osition,” counts, in a measure, for its defeat. The “Frontier” has such a roputation for de | coption, dishonesty of inten ion, treach |ery, ete,, that whatsoever side of a ques tion it champions is sure to be defeated | The Banner is honest and trathful, but | when that much, T say everything it de serves, It has no placo in journalism, The material for the fall political cam paign is being collected, but has not | taken shape yet. 1f time permit, T will | keep you posted. Yours, ete. | which ac vue Hospital, New York Tribune. In one of the surgical wards of Belle- vue hospital a reporter of The Tribune was surprised to see about adozen chil dren lying on their backs, with their feet bolstered up and their logs incased in l‘\]il\ls and plaster of Paris. The oldest child in the lot was under b years of age, while the youngest was about 2 y old. “‘Every one ot theso children has had both legs broken,” an attendant said, “When were they injured!” the re- | porter inquired, “Bight of them had their legs broken to-day in this room,” was the reply. A tall young man with fair hair and a smiling face, who was introduced as Dr. Frazer C. Fuller, a member of the Belle- vue hospital surgical staff, said: I am | res) onsible for the troatment of these little oncs. They all were either bow- logged or knock-kneed. Their limbs {were so much out of shape that they |w hardly able to walk. 1f they had been permitted to grow up without surgi- cal attention, they would have become confirmed eripples, They have been | subjected to the operation known as osteo- | tomy. In the case of a bow-legged child an incesion is made in the leg, be- tween knee and the ank! The skin | and underlying tissues are cut through with a knife as far as the bone. Then an ordinary carpenter’s chisel is used. The bone is eut about two-thirds of the | way through, the chisel being held some- what obliquely. As soon as the chisel is withdrawn the leg is grasped firmly {above and below the cut and the bone is ken sufliciently to permit the whtening of the limb, Bandages and splints are applied and set in plaster to |\mll the bone in the right position until the fracture is' healed. The treatment s similar in the case of a knock-kneed child, except that the bone is broken | above the knee.” | “How long docs it tak achild to re again, however, the as those of other boys anc “Are not the children their lives while unde “There is com in_performing sucl child under six years of straight i wle to lose treatment!” wtively little danger operation on’ a age, but the risk None have e in the have died, and those who hospital long enough to gone away with straight hildren suffer much under the operation ! “They are put under ether while theirlimbs are being straight ulul and they suffer much less pain af. rward than o grown person would un- «hr like circumstances. Notice the way MAX MEYER & CO, IMPORTERS OF HAVANA CIGARS! AND JOBBERS OF' DOMESTIC CIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES : SMOKERS' ARTICLES PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS: |Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from $60 to $120 per 1000. AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CEN NT CIGARS |Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and Brigands. |WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES. SAMPLES, g SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND CURTICE. J. 0. PRESCOTT. N. P. J. 0. PRESCOTT & CO,, Wholesale ancd Rotail PIANOS & ORGANS Music, Musical Instruments of all Descriptions. CHEAPEST AND MOST RELIABLE HOUSE In tho Stato. CALL AND EXAMINE OUR STOCK OR SEND FOR PRICES. OMAHA. Tufs Flour is mado at Salem, Richardson Cor, Nebraska, 1 the Combined Roller Stone System. We cive EXCLUSIVE sale of our flour to one firm i o plae. We have oponed & branch at 1618 Capitel avenve Oniahia Write for Prices. Address either TVALENTINE « REPEPY. Salem or Omaha, Meb. MANUFACTURER OF Galvanized lronComices, Window CepsiFinils Neb NO. 1809 Farnam Street, . - - - @ mifmke m Skylights &1 Thirteenth Street A. FISHBLATT, Physician & Surgeon ovor the Omaha Nationol Bank. given to discases of tho 1) . Otilce hours to 11, m,; 2 to 4 and to fan 5-00d Is the Sole Agent for Omaha of the Celebrated “Quiclzs Meal” GASOLINE ~ STOVE | IS THE SIMPLEST the influence of | And Will Cook a Meal as Quick as a Coal Cook Stove. CANNOT BE MADE TO SMOKE. The oven will do as fine work as a baker’s oven, 521 South Tenth Street. | osteotomy within a year, pictures were taken before the « and others after the children had . A comparisor aled wonderful improvement. In one | | set of pictures children wore represented | with hoth legs 1 s0 badly that their knees wore a foot apart when they stoc with their feet ¢l together, The other pictures showed the same children with [Timbs straight and well shaped. An in crease in height, as well as the removal | of the deformity, caused a pleasing trans- ;fmuminm. ration v rec of the pictures re- —— | Bpace Thrown Away. | Some of the Chicago papers which in- CARPET ~ SEASON | J. B. DETWILER, “ Invites§the attention of the public to his Large and Well Selected Stock —OF— W7 CARPETS Ne [ find profitable cmployment for their sur. plus energies in hunfing up the inventor [ terview Dorsey in Mexico might of that Colorado railroad disaster, and in terviewing him. If he was talked to death, it would be all right. - Boston H i The California Tron & Steel Co furnuee, at Hot " h s sbo furtiaco of 8,000 to f buildings are of iron, and i every 1 s - Mo third annual pienie of Omalia Iy yers' Unien will be held wt Ha cal 1 Saturday, August Lith, Dancing until 12 o'clock Sat arday night Tickots 50 cents. uf) 24 MRS. LOUISA MOHR, Graduated Midwife ! 1508 California 'Street. Embracing ali the Late Patterns in everything in the Carpet Line, .o MatONS 0 Cloths and Window Shades LARGE QUANTITIES AND AT Pottom PPrices. LACE CURTAINS A SPEJIALTY J.B. DETWILER, 11313 Farnam 8treet, - - ~ Omaha, Neb.

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