Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 13, 1883, Page 2

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EAL Fsmare AGENGY. THE STATE STENOGRAPHERS. in the 6,000 odd sheep which four months New Zea- as fresh mutton to the butchers in Smith field. The carcases weigh from sixty- five to eighty pounds. The sheep are a cross between the small Merino ram and the larger Leicester ewe. The mutton is said to be excellent, and some of it has no douht already ap) tables, The trade e great development, to our ship. It is produced by a steam engine of 115- horse power, which, setting in motion a air process machine, fills with in- tense mlr] an interval which is left be- advertised to be deliv- | tween the sides of the iced rooms and | enpd by Mossrs, H, (. Stripe and James |the sides of the ship, and also fills | Meeting. A Brief Account of the Duties of the Stenographers. i} idently admits of Thestate stenographers had aninterest ing meeting Friday night ahd an excep- tionally large crowd of artists of the | winged art assembled together in Prof. Point's office to listen to the two papers | | which had been To return, however, | last How is the cold produced 7{sold, and in tie last five you might THE DAILY BEE---MONDAY, AUGUST 13. 1863, [gan o be put. wp in boxes and became wane 1" | " “The paper eillars never looked as the linen article anl the dressier men soon |came to_this corclusion, Then too, the | doctors began tc swear that the paper col- |lars poisened the skinon the neck, and | pared on West End | that helped things when the down-hill part of the rond was reached. ten years ‘ew of them have been The day of paper collars 8, but in that say none. was about twelve ye: time hundreds of me tunes out of it VANCOUVER'S ISLAND. ! | or the ade their for- | miggion will inform candidates for depart | mental clerkships throughought the coun main interest of the cargo lies, of course, | were generally worn, and then they be- | half a dozen chickens. Then the neck | of an illfated rooster was stretched across ago were bleating in cheaper. In tle umlrlm-nl nfehw );(onru,‘tlh]e block and the cleavel descended. | . |iand, "and sre now, we ate told, | however, the lixen collars cxme back.” ~|Blood spurted, ‘feathiers flew, jurymen The Hold a Large and Interestilg |seliing “for meven pence & pound| ‘‘Why did tie popularity of paper |and the rooster folled about the floor in a thousand and one somersaults, much to | the detriment of the pantaloons of those |around. A match was applied to the yel- low paper, there was a b sickening stench, and all ‘“What does this all mean?” horrified reporter. was ov asked th “Only & Chinaman For the i taking an oath,” was the reply. The Civil ervice Rules, A Washington special says: To-morrow ay following the civil-service com try of their standing, and inform heads t flame, a| Has the Best Stégl; in Omaha and Mékesithe LowrestAPti;cev; | CHAS. SHIVERICK, FURNITURE! | Haye just received a large lot of Chamber Suits. All New Patterns, | and the most desirable styles, and am offering them at much LOWER PRICES than such goods are usually sold. | of departments that they are ready to 3 various channels of flues which cross and | - [ andidates on requisitions to. Bl [ ] Vi, recrons these marine larders. To maintain | The Delightfal Climate Which En- | vacancies, There were threo hundred | PASSENGER ELEVATOR. M. J. 8. Shropshire, the president, | the required temperature the engine has | tranced the Princess Louise -A | ions for departmental places, all | presided over the meeting, and Mr. J. | to be kent uum;.:{ t‘)'lir(l't'll hours, on miw nall Section of England, e papers have now been examined of the anc OFFERYBARGAINS IN | programuie, average, out consum B. Haynes, the sécretary of the associa- tion, performed the secretarial part of the twenty-four, s each day about two and a half tons of I. The burning question | among the shippers is whether the new trade, which will plainly be a large one, will be best worked by steam or sail? Mr, H. G. Stripo opened the proceed- ings by reading a very able paper on “The Stenographer” in which he de- A correspondent of the St. Louis Globe Democrat writes: Crossing over th Straits of Juan dv Fuca to the pretty city Victoria, we stood on British soil and |only, and the relative d their absolute and relative standing dete ndidate will be in- form solnte standing anding of each be published. The d respecting hi on the list will not .~ CHAS. SHIVERICK, {1206, 1208 and 1210 Farnam Street, Omaha Neb. IS s Th o GIIfAEy 6F “\an. | commintio ses this policy in orde T scribed tho arduous duties of the true | Probably experionco alone will decide. |enioyed the far-famed climato of Van-|EEER B I0RER BT G TR stenographer and pointed out in clear and [ There is much to be said on both (cquvers islnd, Seon trom the sea the | L (0 5 g0 B0 G Sood. high 0 s BRADFORD Busi Propert lucid torms wherein the man of the [sidos. A steamer would perform | Fhelc Blace prescuts a Sioron SNTAOter U0 it would be apt o do ) USINESS F'TOPEITVY, | rofeah’ could be distinguished from |the journey in little more than g ogetsound: | what they could to find and even 9 Residence Property Suburban Property. the amateur. Professionally his paper is | half the time employed by a sailing ship. | a very valuable one and it proved of pecu- |On the other hand the Lady Jocelyn's liar interest to the gentlemen who - pass | cargo has arrived in much better condi- their time in making mystic symbols. tion than that of a steamer, the British At the close of Mr. Stripe's address | King, which preceded herby a few weeks. Mr. James Wilson gave his experiences | There are many other points in the argu- in connection with the English press. |ments. For the solution of the problem After apologizing for not proparing a pa- | We may safely trust to the energy and en- per which he had been prevented from | terprise of the two great companies—the oing by an unusual pressure of business | Shaw, Saville & Albion company and the where shingles and shavings, mortar-beds surround nearly every fin- shed structure to tell of its newness, 'he solid red-brick fronting the harbor and the unmistakable signs of English solidity and stability on u\'crf' hand car- ried convincing proof of the British rule, without the union jack flying from all the official flagstafts and buildings. There is a little bother with the custom-house force vacancies by personal solicitation and the assistance of influentinl friends. As it is now, candidates will be held in suspense, though they will not be able to surmise about where they stand when the appointments begin to be made by notic- ing the marks of those who reoeive them. Chief Examiner Lyman, who had charge of the papers, says that the larger nu Ho wont on to. doscrive. tho. mannor in | Now Zoaland Shipping_ company, whons inspections if you wish to land any bag- | bor of spplictass passel above, tho Wit which newspapers are run in Eng.|fleets now maintain the communication |8%® at Victoria, but as duty falls alike | T - 0 $o sl it IMPROVED ANDEUNIMPROVED {ind. A"ml"l} BEHEE EhERDALHG ;n{f] and carry tho trade botween the colony |01 articles imported from England or the average is very good. Some of the can- Lands Near Omaha ! that every English newspaper reporter | £nd the mother country. had to be a stenographer. T Any man who would make an applica- Horsford's Acid Phosphate. tion for a position as reporter on an En- Unite States, the stranger cannot grum- ble more than the colonists themselves. Whenever you hear anyone descant up- n Victoria, the drives come in for chief didates, on the other hand, were curious- ly ignorant. The papers were examined i1 e tveren cara e | FATE ORI system, and one which made collusion ooty kbl B For Nervousness, Indigestion, &c. mention after the climate, and in these | impossible. — One curious fact brought AND fand would not stand ghost of show, |, Send to the Rumford Chemical Worke, | two respects Victoria is entitled to prece- | 0ut by the examination is that Farms in all Parts of Nebraska. WE HAVE A RANCH OF Providence, R. L, for pamphlet. Mailed Mr. Wilson also claimed that the English froo. newspapers as a rule were more partiou- lar about the veracity of the news that they allowed to appear in their columns than were the American journals. He { said a paper such as the Chicago Times, | A few daysmee a well-knownDetroiter, With its “Jorked to Josus,” and such like | Who is a bit of a wag, visited a friend who headings, could not exist more than o |resides in one of Michigan’s young,grow- CEREEE P The Wind Mill Cow. Detroit Free Pross. A tour of the dence over any small spot on the con nent. English rule had nothing to do with the estimate, which is mild and equa- ble the year round, with an average tem- erature of 42 degrees for the month of January and 63 for the month of August, and every citizen relates with royal pride that the Princess Louise came here to spend two days, and became so delighted many of the highest candidates are colored persons. This is perhaps to be explained on the ground that salaries of- fered for the clerkships are more of an object and attract a better class of men, comparatively, among colored peoplo than white men, Salaries in the postal service, for instance, begin at $40, and do not'get much above $800 or 81,000, DEALER IN Lumber, Sash, Doors, Blinds, Shingles, Lath ETC.; LOW PRICES AND GOOD GRADES, Call and Get my Prices before buying elsewhere. Yards, corner 9th and Douglas. Also 7th and Douglas. WM. SN YDHER, MANUFACTURERZOFS0FSSTRIOTLY FIRST-CLASS day in England, He maintained that the | ing and aspiring villages. 3 English press endeavored to clovate, the l|lnco was made, the resident calling the oplo,while the major part of the Amer- | Detroiter's attention to every two-story ican press seemed only desirous of pan- house, and all the places of business, the dering to the vitiated taste of tho gencral | new church, the spot where the fire-en- and consequently the commission find that fewer candidates of good parts and education_apply than they could wish. Salaries of this range are of much great- that she remained two months, and then left with regret that she could not stay longer. English rule is demonstrated, however, in the excellent roads that run 1,900 AcresiStoclkked WHICH WE OFFER AT A (LOW PRICE! WITH A Range of Several Thonsand Acres. BEDFORD & SOUER, 213 14th Street, omwms | This Electric Belt will Cure the Tollow- | ing Diseases Without Medicine. Paing in the Back, Hips, Head or Limbs, Nervous | Debilty, Lumbago, Ge ebility, RKh Paralysls, Neuraliia, S of tho K Spinal iscases, Torpid ul B tion, Seminal Emission yspepsia, Constipation, Hernia or Rupture, Impot lesy, Dumb Ague. rysipclas, 0mnh;-1'o-t_ITnonlnl. ¥ OxatA, New., April 1 Dr. W. J. Horxw, 191 Wabash Aventi 1883, Chicago: Drar Sir—I purchased one of yeur Electrio Belts in Denver, Colo,, December, 1852, * 1t relieved tho pain acroxs my kidneys and 'stengthencd them so that they give no more trouble. Thespinal irritrtion it re- lieved fmmediately which nothing could have don Your agent here has sold them to sexus | weakness, neuralgia, paraly weal ness, with who sults in each case more thanmeet ex r any one to these partios who d Kospecttully, -~ DIL M, MAIN OFFICE: g4r For Sale at CGREAT ENCLISH REMEDY. RVOUS 1 sicat. « ebiit L LOSS when all other reme- guaranteed. Tottle, four o Rl drugyista, CAL INSTITUTE, Proprietors, 718 Olive Louis, Mo, ve sold Sir Astloy Cooper's Vital Rostorative speaks highly of it. o 1 unhesitatingly endorao it us a remed true merlt ‘C. F. GoooaX, Diuggist Omaha Feb. 1 1883, vigm&o-coll i 1k Hail B i i ¥ SADED HIVH 3HL AOH "S1S100N¥A TIV A8 ITVS ¥0d X *31VHJSOHd V ¥3MOND ¥IVH NOLN3E IHL *@o4d Jo 3d1ede4 uo predisod Jues {00°IS ‘301¥d LS i "0V3H Q1vE 3HL NO 8 & ¥ kg R public, gine house is going to be built, and all Mr, Wilson also gave a graphic and the other village lions. After the round amusing account of his experiences on | had been made, he turned upon the De- the London pross, which.were very well | troiter and inquired: ‘‘How do you like our town? Give usa W received, He related one instance which is funny enough to be worth producing. He had been engaged to report the spoech of a noble lord by acortain con- servative paper, but knowing that his lordship always wrote his speeches in candid answei “It seems to me to be a wide-awake, stirring kind of a village.” “Wide awake! You bet it is! Stirring? There's more git up and git here than in manuscript,Mr. Wilson managed to see his | any other place of ten times its sizo in lordship Rt get him to ken b copy of | thestate. ~ We will be a city when the the manuscript in advance on_that par- | next legislature meets, and I'm going to ticular occasion. There was to be another | Yun for mayor. What do you think of banquet, to which Mr. Wil |our streetst S son had been requested to at-| ‘‘They are of fair width, and when tend with the view of reporting the graded and paved yuu‘\nll have some same. The spenker duly rcported che | Very pretty drives, especially if you set noble lord’s address, fully supposing he | out shade tr : would attend, but alas such is the frailty | *We are going to pave themall, sir, of the earthly habitation of tho soul that | everyone of them, aud not have muddy awst moment the noble lord was streots as the old-fogy cities do. | suddenly stricken with o severe attack of | How do you like our mercantile - estab- the gout and could not attend, Lut never- |lishments?” | theless a verbatim report of his speech “‘Some of your shops and stores appear appeared in the next morning's paper | to be well stocked, and I should judge which the speaker then represented, with | your wants can all be supplied right here laughter duly rted where the jokes b hom ) were supposed to- be, and loud and en- ] I 3 thusiastic applause at the patriotic por- |#re entirely independent of everybody tions of the speech. {and everything. Whenever we discov Wilson also claimed that the |® Want, some energetic man of [.u, nes English nowspapers were more particular | steps right in and supplies it. No mat- egard to the veracity of the statcments | ter what business a man may be engaged they made and called attention to the |in here, his market is right here, and all | fact that tho American press was ever to | he needs w make his busi profitable prove to write up any scandal or almost |i8 at hand.” ; any falsehood so long as it tickled the | ‘I am satisfied that such is the fact,for| readers. I have scen many evidences thercof this | Both speakers were listened to with |afternoon. Here, directly opposite on at’s one of our strong points. We applauded at the close, stanc ! ; At the conclusion of this part of the| And the Detroiter pointed toa large programme some comments wer offered | Windmill for pumping water, bencath the | upon the remarks made by the preceding | revolving arms of which stood a covered | e delivery wagon, upon the sides of which | Mr. Boyden in a very amusing and | Was inscribed: ‘Pu Farm Milk. pleasant specch denied several of the T charges brought against the American press and wound up his oration with some smart sallies which evoked 1 genuine laughter on all sides. it, One genial stenographer Mr. C. A - Potter by special request read some utterly intensely too-too poetry which was iforously applauded and after some ine business the associationadjourned to meet the first Sunday on October. Good health is the greatest of fortunes no remedy has 8o often restored this prize bursts of | to the suffering, as Hood's Sarsaparilla, —— An Opinion. There were cight or ten of them seated on the grocery steps as the stranger came up, and one of them led off with: “Yes, gentlemen, this village needs capital, and needs it bad.” ““That's s0,” added a second. wo want here is money.” “Yes, wo want capital to develope things,” signed o third, and so it went down the line until every one of the lot had expressed his opinion that eapital was wanted. T last man looked up at the stranger and adde “Don’t it seem that way to youi” “I¢ does, sir,” was the prompt reply. “What would be your opinion of the way capital ought to be invested here?” Well, my plan would be to lay out the first 5,000 ‘in bar-soap, crash towels, barber's shears and kicking-machines!” was the firm reply, as he prepared for a run of ha ile to the depot.—Wall Street News. AL St. Vitus Danco is o distressing mala- dy. There is but one cure for it. Samar- itan Nervine, “Samaritan Nervine cured my wife's | fits,” says Henry Clark, of Fairfield, Mich. “She Inu{thcm 490 years,” At Druggists, $1.50, MEAT FROM ') “What 1 ANTIPODES, How London are Fed From New 1 Other Distant tries, Pall Mall Gazette, If any one dosires a novel sensation,lot him leave the haunts of west end life and penetrate the regions of the east to where the Lady Jocelyn, a ship of over 2000| o0 <o - tons burthen, is now discharging her | ise gt P cargo of frozen mutton in the Victoria | powder is the only cosmeti dock, The Great Eastorn railway takos | ljuro the sk, ¥ you there from Fenchurch street in loss - than half an hour, and, m return for your trouble, if the G600 carcases shoop which lately arrived in her di- rect from Wellington, New Zealand, AR A L e | A Smithfield, you will behold the solution of ono of the problems of the age, the question, namely, of the supply of the London market with fresh meat from the antipodes, It is only two years since this new trade began. It costs £5,000 to fit a ship like the Lady Jocelyn with re- frigerating apparatus, with the result that rooms are provided for some twp or three hundred tons of cargo at & temperature which, during u three months’ voyage, xSuiw rogardless of the heat of the tropics through which the vessel sails after | —— or later acknowl- cated complexion made that will not or sale by all druggists. —— The Paper-Collar Boom, Pittsburg Commercial-Gazette, “Paper collars! You may get them i some of the Gerfian barber shops, but we don't sell them,” said the proprietor of one of the oldest gentlemen'’s furnishing stores on Fifth avenue to a countryman recently, As the representative from the rural districts passed out a Commercial- Guazette reporter asked: “Do you have wany calls for paper collars!” “Not very many. Once in a while vy i dropin and ask for them, but this don’t happen twice in a year and we don't keep them. As 1 told that chap, some of the barbers keep them. They have a little stock on band for the benefit of customers who occasionally want a part, far below it The rock laborers, as they work at the task of unloading, pause now and again to blow on their hands, for they are working in o climate of an English Christmas or a New Zealand July, The carcases, each wrapped in a neat white shroud of sacking, and that again coated over with thick hoar frost, are hard as stones. Though the main cargo is mutton, beef is also presented, and some turkey and fish have also been thrown in, so that Londoners may know what *‘schnappers” taste like, and inves- tigate the merits of ‘‘kingfish.” But the were job lots and were handled to draw oustom,” It wasn't always that way *No; the time was that oeverybody wore paper collers, The rage broke out ust after the war opened, when linen col ars were worth their weight in gold. They were sold by the hundred at from 83 to 85. The manufacturers used to ad- vertise the cheapness of paper collars by comparing the original cost of linen cn{- lars plus the price of laundrying with the cost of paper eollars, the latter showing up far the cheapest. For a time they rounding Cape Horn, is nover|clean collar. Within the past year one | allowed to rise above freezing |or two of tho big clothing stores have sold | point, and is, for the most | them at abouta cent a bushel They in every direction from the city, and the summer visitors, who come here from different parts of the coast, never find their longest stay half long enough to in- clude all the attractive points withineasy drive from Victo! Convict labor has been employed in making the macadam- ized highways, and convicts are constant- ly at work now keeping them in_perfect condition, A favorite drive is that lead- ing from Victoria to the naval station on Esquimault bay, whichis known com- monly as *Squimo. The Squimo T follows part way® beside a mnarrow and | curving arm of the sea, through which the tide rushes like the swift current of a | river, and half of the way it unrolls its | length between hedges of fern and under- | growth and walls of solid forest trees Picturesque rocks, tangles of wild rose | er attraction to educated colored than to white men, and are sought by them with great keenness. The same may be said of female npf!lic:\ntn. Up to the present there have been only one or two calls upon the commission from the departments for clerks. When the reform gets into proper running order, however, it is supposed that there will be 300 or 400 departmental cies annually to be filled on requi This, however, is only a rough estimate, gauged upon the working of the Curtis rules in 1873 and 1874. Itis thougnt t the effect of the change in the ser- vice will be to make the departments slow to call for new clerks. There will then be no necessity of filling v to ple politicians or influential friends, and cl will only be asked for as the are really needed. Mr. Lyman remembers that under the Curtis r and sweet brier, and forest nooks dappled with sunshine here and there, make one continu along the road, and the o jackets of the English marines and sol- | diers illuminate the landde with brilli ant touches of color. At 'Squimo the | flagship Swift-Sure, under command of Admiral Lyon, lay at anchor, with its port-holes open, and a general war-like and business air pertained to the y-of-war and the lesser ships corvettes at the station. On the Swif Surc alone there ave six hundred men, | and looking vessel, even th most patric 1 must blush for our own little navy and join in the chorus of **Britani: ¢ All Vietc the atmosphere | of a past and greater grandeur, and the | citizons feelingly revert to the time when i huge and itself, and Victoria the seat of t | ature court of the governor eral and commander in chief of its forces. Those | were the goodold days to which no latter- day progress can approach, and it is with no heartfelt joy that the people celebrate ‘‘Dominion day,” when British Columbia | and the two provinces of Canada were | made one. The recent visit of the mar- quis of Lorne and all the flattering things he found time to say have gone restor the political compl these people, and it requires no insistance | to make them believe that you consider Victoria the most charming spot in the ¢ mini- country. English traits and English | customs are maintained as well here as in the home island, and a charming friendli- ness exists between this colony and the United States. “*Dominion da; the 2d of July, and the celebration of it hardly exceeds'the spirit with which the glorious Fourth of their American cousins s the line is obser! week of July is the rin, With only twenty-three miles of salt water separating them from A ican shores there is one material ence that no one fails to obse In Victoria everyone takes life casily, and things move in a slow and accustomed groove, as if sanctioned by the customs of centuries on this same spot. The stores close every afternoon at 6 o'clock, although at this season daylight lasts for three and four hours later, and busi- ness men go home to their comfortable roast beef and pudding as if the feverand activity of American trade ad competi- tion werefar away and unheard of. Every separate article that you wish to buy Is kept in a different kind of a store than in America, and between the chemist, the stationer, the haberdasheries, and the green groceries many of the perplexities of London shopping assail you in Vie toria. The climax comes, however, when the young man at the postoffice window turns on yous look of surprise, and bids you go to the bookstore to buy postage stamps, forsooth! —— *Amon the most efficacious of dial agents avo the medical preparations from the laboratory of Mrs, Lydia E. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass, reme- “Call Another Witness, “Call another witness and bring forth another chicken!” were the words which foll upon the ear of a reporter who walked {into the state cireuit court-room in Pori- land, the other day, as usual. The was & bloody chopping-block before the jury box, and s swarthy Chinaman stood over it with a butcher’s cleaver swung o vor his shoulder, Fearing to interrupt some terrible incantation, the reporter slipped hehind Dist, Atty. Caple’s broad expanse of back and waited. Another Chinamwan waviug aloft a piece of yellow paper wized a pant-brush and, dipping it in a byttle, daubed a lot of cabalistic charagters upon it, At the same moment the hall was filled with the squawking of | once were sometimes thirty or forty Workwa L HAEN eV AR e o o w England very strong in favor of the veform. ~ In some parts of the west, in Indiana, for instance, the people show | interest. The examinations had b nd, in the main, sati ! ed.’ The papers were not stolen, but in Philadelphia. 1t was, of course, a difficult matter to avoid accidents of this sort, but they had exercised all pos- sible eare, and experience would supply new safeguards, In this matter, as in many others, there would be some diffic- ulty and friction at first, but when the n carefully, ily, conduct- reform was once smoothly in operation, its benetits would be so apparent that no backward steps would be possible. Ho found a more friendly | | spirit in the south than he had expected. | CARRIAGES First-class Peinting and Trimming. Repairing Promptly Done. 1119 Harney ‘Street, - - - OMAHA, NEB A.E. DAITL.EFEY, MANUFACTURER OF FINE Bugaies, Carriages and Spring Wagons, My Repository is constantly filled with a select stock. Best Workmanship guaranteed. Office and Factory S. W. Corner 16th and Capitol Avenue, Qmaha A. M. CLARK, Painter & Paper Hanger SIGN WRITER & DECORATOR. WIHOLESALE & RETAIL "§W’ALL PAPER ?Hli WINDOW SHADES & CURTAINS, Cornices, Curtain Poles and Fixtures. AEPAINTS, OIL & BRUSHES, W. F. CLARK. ALL PAPER,PAINTER, PAPER HUNGEA A1D DECORATOR, KALSDMINING GLALING And work of this kind will receive prompt attention, ORNER SIXTEENTH AND DOUGLAS OMAKA, YEB X! Ly Womati AN\ HEALTH OF WOMA R 7 Iy § 4 2 s F rsens oo H o | Y < VDIA E. PINKHAM'S | ~ VEGETABLE COMPOUND. Sure Cure for all FEMALE WEAK. NESSES, Including Leucorrhwn, Ire regular and Painful Menstruatl Inflammation and Ulceration of tho Womb, Flooding, PIO- LAPSUS UTERI, &c. @ Ploasant o the tasto, eflicacious and fmmedias its effect. It is a great helpin preguancy, and £t vos padn during labor and b regular periods. PHYSICLANS USEIT AND PRESCEIDE IT FREELY, ALL WRANNESSES of tho geprative organ 1t 48 second tono Femedy that bas eva tho public; aud for all discases of Uy HNEYS It s the Greatest Romedy {n the Worid. BLOOD PURIFINE it & ine a1 et 1 Dar p eint DR, HENDERSON, | 808 und 608 Wyandottost.! | vears' practiec KANSAS CITY, MO, | Uhicago. Authorized by the state to trea Chronic, Nervousand Private discases, lopsy, Rheumatism, Pilos, In, Urinary and Skin Dis: A regular graduate b medicine, Over sixtee case minal Weakness (night losses), Sexual Debility (loss nf sexual power), cte Cures guarantoed or money refunded. Charges low. Thousands of cases cured.” No injurious medi- clnes furnished even to patients st & distance. Con- suiation fres and contideatial call or wrte; afo and x| o€ rtant BOOK for h sexos— {itdutratod M4 clroulars of other things seni scaled for two 3 cent stamps. FREE MUSEUM 51 [=] wed ood-w twedve in | EXRIESIEL ‘OYSTERS Booth’s "Oval’ Brand AND D. D. MALLORY & CO'S “DIAMOND” BRAND. Fresh Fish at Wholocsale. D. B. BEEMER, Omaha. Aud Tinners’ Stock Y~ OF ALL KINDS Pxcelsior - M Co. ST.LOUIS.NO GATE CITY PLANING MILLS! MANUFACT EKS OF Carpenters’ Materials —ALSO— Sash, Doors, Blinds, Stairs, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window & Door Frames, &¢ First-class facilities for the manufacture of all kinds of Mouldings. Orders from the country will be promptly executed. Address afPcommunications to Planing and Matching & specialty A_MOY] Prop, PERFECTION IN Heating and Baking 15 only attained by using tor Stoves and Ranges, A WITH WIRE GAVZE OVER DOORS, For sale by MILTON ROGERS & SONS OMAHA-

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