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T ?, A & gty o ¥ & WOMAN CAN HEALTH OF WOM TN 1S THE HOPE VMPATHIZE WITH i .§ THE RACE) s Vi b 1 b :\} WOMAN. 24: P 2,287 S Zg P "j‘%:i_’ Z NDSSES, Inclu cogalar and I wl Menatroation tnflammation and Ulcoration of tho Vomb, Flooding, Pit tore the public; and for all s Ib.a the Groatest Remedy tn the Wo Y GIDNEY COMPLAINTS of Uither 5a elief in Xtn Uso either, 91, Sixbottles the forn of pilla, or 0f " Mention thin Puper. asSold hy all Det g yinta. G0 BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS, An excellent appetizing tonic of ] exquisite flavor, Low used whole world, ' cures Dyspepsin Dinrrhea, Fever ard Ague, and al Qisorders of the Digestive Urgans, ps fmpart a delicions ask of champagne, and to all eummer drinke. bewaro of counterfelts, Atk your arl manufactured b G. B. BIEGERT & 80! A rogular graduste in , HENDERSON clne. 603 WyandotteSt. | years' practice—twelve in s i harges | the tiny coll wh zoand | do foolish, wicked deeds as do the inhab- | ) ¢ sl | itants « for two 8 cont stamps. BUILIDEX.A I Have Found clamation of & man whon h e Ointment, which is sin) and all Skin Diseasos, + » box | guide informs you that here d wure | the dead w conts by | 1y The American Diarrhea 00d the tost for twenty years, N a, Dysentary, and Chole UEHHU’S‘PBVGF and Agne Tonic & Cordial, to supply the rapid sale of the same, SURE CURE WARRANTED For Fovor and Ague, and all Malarlal troublos. W.J. WHITEHOUSE LABORATORY, 16TH ST., OMAIA, NES. For Sale by all Druggists Or sont hy Exjiross on receint of pric &. W. ROSS, M. D, Physician & Surgeon 1671 AND WEBSTER STS. WHITEHOUSES' Office open all hours day and night. Calls attended to both city and country, J. B. SMITH, Expert Book-Keeper A Practical Book-koeper over thirty yoars. Opening and Closing Books vo their hooks kept posted up attend to Examinin Business men can nicely at small oxp ud furnishes situations. Juamdorasop Bunot oy : dpeoe ‘2018d °0 ‘PURIBAR) ‘Y20I§ PUEUTIG “0J KINDHS HIVH NOLNIQ ‘SSOpRY v Ve NOA 4" *0dyad j0 3d10002 uo predirod Juae 100 P 0 ] 0y JoumD O1] U Ssews quoequ womep) pun spuwd og) puw tasmean oyl Jo werrwHddy O} THOJIAH 4§ 2004 Mmal® [{IM 1) 'QIVE 23w 0ok JT 14 Awan S41 | Prann opqwaBas o3 uf ey e spuw® og) i pausyos oy SROIPUOD QRSN AT PRT NOW S SPUR GYRAIE QELY ® We wpavIe SUG O PUV ANNANVQ $AvY 0o J) *S1SI100NAA 1V AR - T m o m = - [-] = T z o <] L4 -] £ m o » v x o @ v : - n AW puw CRows mon eru porwIRmI T Arwos oxy o Jurve Srawid puw yos o ONITIVE ® THE DAILY BEE---WEDNESDAY, AUGU 1 he n pr before seen nor heard of a - SANTA FE ‘.\ priest who h.'u‘lm\ln-ll much in l‘lurmy-m! GAMBLING LICENSE holie ch h with a Hebrew inscrip- | No More Fortur (A City Whose Past 18 f GIEAt I0- shms and muite n seier to- the ourist, | forgst--The Cathedral Bl | Sent peonc St o a bright | sacramento Bee, Ang. 6. Imost feels Various members of the police depart . overy day. Not the noble red man of | occupied by Othello, Their occupation’s | . ne gination, but the dirty, miser tuing and RelicsDusky Red 4 ik English, but if you ask them the | swell the purses of the finest police forc Men and Boys in Blu of the wares they sell, they can find | " the \\"rkrhl. » longer I ways of letting you know, all terious ‘‘sack” assert its potent sw about the bargai hptded 3 e ., | the wherewit Saxta Fe, N M., Aug. 8, 1883.-Did | and taw dry ornaments, Their dress is you e er visita city of the past and linger {s | 80 long amid tumble down old rnins that you began to feel as if you were yours a representative of dead ages? " If you | gy colors is still natural to them. They have undergone this forture you will be |Fave becomo civilized enough to cha able to appreciate our feelings, when tired | so0d round prices for all_their wares and dusty, with weary eyos and aching | derive a close bargain. There is quite ) ] | Timbs dragged hotel-wards, after | Jarge Indian village about ten miles from |48 # Western Union ““doing nta Fe, the Mecea of touriats | & does to blunc [ who revel 1n antique things. Perhaps it | is very beneficial for persons, at least|yodern things of Santa Fe Only one once ina life time, to make o he Denver News. love for speculation is inherent in man kind, and humanity in genc regiment is quartered there now and [0 0 town composed of ruins hey scem to be taking life very casy. |dens and r but it is most dreadfully wes 14|-|,,N morning at 6 o'clock the cavalry the city tr. Inst evening when we roturned to the | dyilled, and at 9 there was a dress par- | i the suport of defenders of the peace. [ hotel we felt as if we had lived a fow |ado, but it is not improbable that the | The ordinance goes on to say that ever; [ hundred” yoars, and bright, ac boys in blue find tine hangsheavily upon | Placo where games of chance |ahead Denver seemed a long v thoir hoads and_some times they o far | Moncy must pay a license of | Santa Fe is a_city not of the present or| g, their country as to indulge in a |9 future, but of the past. People do not |Jively flirtation with the female tourists |#dvance. Al such toll you of what they are doing, nor of | who wre here to-day but gone to-morrow, | ducted on the second st what they are going to do, but over and | For even soldiers are only poor weak men, prohibited from playing Minor these game: are li in the fifteenth and sixteenth cent- | hrage huttons always prove to ro uries. After a littlo this sort of thing | voung women who - fo grows wearisome to the average Amer-|the fact that soldier: ican, who prefers the new to the old, but | g4ijors have nunerous swe for a short time it seems very good to| The tortio mil tio | enter. If they do, they to 1 Nielson wanted the hearts. nineteenth century city and find yourself | wq niot a very big show. The art gal- | City wouldn’t w in placo that speaks plainly on all sides | Jury was quite interesting, The pictures | countenance if rond of its antiquity. Tho hotol is about the | were old, awfully old, and evidently took | costly amuse only thing that is not old, and some of | 4 gort of artistic license. There was a | the comfort of the guests, The first | L fathe! place that the tourist hears of and|pqee consequently the first place|had pr one starts forth to seo is the cathedral of | boots, whic and mother of the attired in the raim d, but the evil one wc would seem to indicate that | San Miguel. The most credulous cannot | ¢}iere’ wero shoemakers at a ve doubt, that the building is old, dirty and | poriod. Anothor exhibition of ‘th tumble-down—a regular ruin, The sign |tistic license was seen in a picture which on the door, “Ring the bell twice for the | yapresented a woman standing upon the usher. Admission, 25 cents,” is the only | ground, and her arm was around the top modern thing one sees. The bell is rung | 0f what was supposed to be a and a youth, J. A. Ancheta, (the bright- | yery tall tower. ~ Evident ost and most wido awake Moxican we | master whose brush produd v gain. have seen,) makes his appearance,pockets | icture lived at the time when giants |81y of its officials. Besides, this act the quarters, ushors you in and begins | Puapled the earth., The pictures were | Dot lure any more to the gr his story. ~ You are informed that the | old, at least they looked ancient, but |&0 there now. Men love that bell you have rung was made in Spain in | they wore frightful to look upon, and we | forbidden, and ebservers in_this line 1366, It*is a good long while ago, but it | felt very thankful that Denver was only | 8ert their belief that as many go into is old looking and cracked enough t ive | 4 quarter of a century old, a proper coloring to the story. — Ancheta | uet gallery at the Exposition contained informs you that the cathedral was erect- | now, fresh, clean canvasses, instead of od in 1582, destroyed by tho Indians,and | works of masters whose antiquity dates | restored in 1710. The gallery and several | hack nobody knows or cares how far. | of the beams are from the original build- | Santa Fe is interesting and old, but ing erected 501 years ago, The cathedral | o1d ugo brings many disagre is of adobe; it looks as if a good, hard | iy its train, and while it is all very pleas- | Pinkham, Lynn, Mass, l.ull\ would tumble the dirt right down, | ant to linger tor a while in the grave of | e —— but it has stood the storms of centuries. | ¢ past centuries, it would be tedious | COMMERCIAL TRAVELERS. The exterior prescnts the appearance of | enough to drag out in existence in a place , | being little better than a dirt hut, but | whoge past was the interior is more interesting, There | lived twenty-fiv - is an old confessional used in 1710, and | t one feels a sort of roverence in lookingat | imously pa into force It od, to g the | and if they are to persist in the pi this | the city should receive the gain. and nc 1 to enter. L — *Among.the most cfl dial agents ave the me its all. Before one had | Paxes Imposed on the Genial “Dru 5 it could not be wondered at if one imagined Noal . the other Biblical heroes were personal | s listened to the | yequaintances. L. L. 1. | A question of special interest to soci | penitents of conturies gone. — Did they ty relates to a new departure in comme cial rs of comparatively recent date, | Under the old regime, when mere | remote from the | wanted to replenish their stock, they make a journcy to the city where th mer” in us States, the earth to-day? It seems hard-| The Baltimoi posterous to speak of substantial sy There is a sort of hole in the wall, a \\.xlhnllf intrinsic, unquestioned me | place not high enough for a d nor is | St. Jacobs Oil, the great pain-cure, i |1t 0 window, peering into it, you see that |most pronounced example. Its immense | dealt. True, orders could be forwarded it Teads into n low, dark room, and your |sale is due to its merit. by mail, but in that case there was great | g e uncertainty in regard to qualit were frequently uns: ness of the commer was that | L re” deposited during service, BALEQADBIONOMY | iing from this rather ;:1u.unf» subject, | T lie picks up o hurdy-gurdy and propares | Heavi to e a most awful noise, and tell; that during holy week this is used inste of the ancien® hell. Around the altar are pictures of all two of which, youare informed, are between six and nine hun- dred years old. The building is not gen- | Managements erally used for scrvice and it is probable [ western roads a that it will be kept as along as possible | brains of wl they can ceonomize in | understandingl without repairs. It is interesting enough | in operating expenses; office expenses on | of a trip to the to repay one for a long and tedious trip. [ most roads have been reduced to a mim- | time, often of more importan A fine school for bo, d the convent |mum, hoth in salar Squipments and a Moy stantial Road-Bed Now the “Hobby," nded the wholesa sur ble benefit to all concerne mercil traveler virtually of goods of the house h f both eastern and |him to his customers. y now ing their | the goods, learns the y 1 Indianapolis Journal | dens, walled in by high brick or adobe | more economically. This has led to the [mers at a reduced figure, and hence |fences. Going from. the hotel to the |building of heavier locomotives, 80,000 | ciety participates in the advantages cathedral you pass through the old quar- | pounds now being considered a fair-sized ter which is laid out after a fashion re- | locomotive, 38,000 ten years ago being markable for its startling originality. | the dard weight for freight engines, | There do not secm to be any streets and | the capacity of cars has as well been in- | and commerc all over the wholo city it is difficult to tell | creased 000 pounds 10 year visit them when you are on the sidewalk or onsome- | the carrying capacity of box ca ¢ | their body's gallery, and if particular care is [40,000 pounds is the standard, and sowme | not ‘used you find yourself wandering into | roads are building cars of 50,000 pounds a back yard. Doors and windows are wide | capacity. The weight of o passenger car Kansas, Kentugky. open half the time and everything|has bean increased from 25,000 to 45,000 | chusctts, Minneso wears & sort of freo wmwl casy air.|pounds, and the parlor cars now used |ri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, 1f & Mexican woman sees you looking | weigh 76.000 pounds. With this there is | sey, Ohio, Oregon, Rhode I A numby s subject York, Colorado, Conn akota, Idaho, Ilinois | | throws open her door and bids you enter; | laying of a heavi 1...upmn.1ly they offer you. None are too |number of cross poor to do that. Yet they are a queer | two years all new rails laid on the Penn- | commercial travel sot, these Mexicans., The women wrap n?'l\'uuiu system, west of Pittsburg, or on |merchants and ci n shawl, usually a black one,around their | the Vandalia, have weigh: 3 leads, and the much talked of beauty of | the square yard; the Cine i, Indian- |adopting a wise and libe similar drapery worn by the Mexican | apolis, Louis and Chicago alr sonoritas is lost sight of when the man- |have 40 miles of road laid with a r tilla is a dingy old shawl and the dark- f weighing 67 pounds to the yard, and this| which are of interest cyed Spanish” maiden is o copper-colored | month are putting in 17 miles more, On | Alabama has no state tax old hag. The very children are old— | some of the Pennsylvania ronds this im- [ charges §3 a day or 818,75 a y ¢ .\-rfl..uly is tired, the children are born | provement is to be carried still further, | license Arkansas also has ne st tired, and you cannot get info) tion | The Phi from any one. Thoy areall polite enough, | compar but the probability isif your inquiries re- {a longes quire long answers your informant will | now in u v has dotermined to manufacture | week, The length of the rails now | license law, allows her cities to 0 to sleep before he has told you all you | used is 30 feet, and those of which th ant to know. The Moxican, both men | company will soon begin to manufactrr and women, drop down on the sidews will just double that length, The weight | as much as 8100 & (if there happens to be any)in the streets | of the latter will be 70 pounds to the | for | oron the doorstep. The burros look [ yard as compared with 68 pounds in the | of weary, only now and then fhowing ani- |former. An especial feature of the new | quarter, : wmation enough to kick., It cannot be s will be the uniting of the ends by | In Delaware the state tax i the elimate, for the air is clear and brac- [an angular splice-bar, which has been | year; the District of Columbia ch ing. Noone scems to know exactly |much improved and strengthened. 1t is | 200 oy and Florida whiat is the mattor, but everybody wears | claimed by the officers of the company | year a sort of listless, dreamy air’ that the increased length of rails will pos- | The majority of the "Mexicans do not | sess fmany new, features of economy. |do now follow he t ok, and yot the shopkeepers assure you [ The proper keeping up of the joints ut|tax is $100 a year, and ‘Augusta’s $3 they have plenty of money. They gam- | the ends of the vails is o care that entals | day ble at deal and perhaps much of the | considerable expense, and it is a care| Louisia has a state tax of filthy lucre is used now in that way. | that any reduction in the number of these |month, to which Baton Rouge adds Santa Fo is most lively at night, ( v music is played in the saloons, gambling | g economy. The inereased length of | #nnum, 3 vooms are brilliantly lighted up, men and | the rail and the decreased number of | Maryland levies a tax of 8127 women saunter up and down the strects | joints, it is claimed, i the language of | annum on those doing business of quart There are very fow buildings which are modern or handsome. The houses for the most part are built around u squ th an open court or plazita in the o rolling stock, | taxed §150, 3 | Michigan lovies a tax of 850 per an | WARNING!, {num, Montana one of Now Mexico one of §250 per an | crease the wear and t ) 0 their sto by ter, The adobe walls are very thick, and 1 hot sun evada one of $20 a month f the houses are delightfully cool in sum cer by adiling | county, North Carolina $100 & year, ex- | and comfortably warm in the winter ) t those dealing in liquors, who must ceilings are low, and in many houses | inm floors are rough and uneven. Many |of the gardens are beautiful,«fruit trecs | seems to w finely, and numerous [orchards are scen around the city. The b [bishop's garden is one of the beautiful | and interesting places which is visited by nearly all tourests, and the cathedral of St. Francis is a place not to be neglected Here may be seen the old and the new The old building 1560 years old is being e AT ol e e anlandd stone structure. One very strange thing about the new building is that over the new portal is the Hebrew word Jehova. Dayton home, per day. tos of the eighteen more on most of her counties there are local taxe: Philadelphia has the credit or discredit lovying the heaviest tax in the country 00, An evasion of tax is a misde Butisfactol J. W. Graham druggist, of Austi DR JUN Tex,, writes o boen handil WoalHALLS BALSAM FOR THE | imprisonment for thirty days. | | H a ot salable mod I have ever | but Charleston taxes dr uad i iy house for Coughs Colds and even | wook Beaufort 810 year | Comunyon, whways giving entive satistaction. | 90 JUaNGE0 Sorwn 81'a day ¥ wend 10 #rows by Saturday's steam- Y T 15, 1863, ‘ = but in Nashville there a license of 8100 4 3 AL sar, and an evasion is punishable with E y J \ the fee is as has recently changed its lic imposes a tax | every salesman, with penalties for evasion & to be Made by In Utah there is no genoral | Ogden city charges 810 a quarter for a to | license, | _ Virginia imposes a tax of 8250 a year, law the penalty is a y. | fine of 8200 for the first offense and” 8500 5 which will bring them | 'his morning the board of trustees de- | thereafter. al to purchase fire “,:mrih-rnml 1 that the city should receive the | mone which, it is asserted, has hereto- | bec a sort of mixture. They wear pants, and ‘fur»- been going into the pockets of some | th do, 1 sometimes coata, bt elthet in lmp, wash | Who should be the last to obtain it. | tax is 810 per year;in Queboc, $60; in or o scarf they show that the love for | They came to the conclusion that gam- | Halfax, 8100, bling is an evil that cannot beabated. The | law, but gone. Nolonger will the coin of the will the mys- | For violation of th, Neither provinces of Ontario « x traveling salesmen, but Janadian cities do. Que- eral of rrel the assumed o 1 be brought ght congress and a law 1 which will put at rest last gress a bill was introduced to remedy T s Hovaor | CHKS, SHNERCK, The subject had of la much importan before the forty will be deman A takes to games of chance as naturally g operator | the So this morning, at cy is one of the comparatively | the meeting of the hoard, an ordinance by Mayor Brown, and passed |of New Jersey, and it will } which li enses gambling | forward again when congress meets. the owners contribute to sury, in the place of assisting | decided to be in eff was 't unconstitutional in that it discriminated against other states, It was argued that all laws are unconsti o it WM. SN X DER, y e run for 00 per | between states arter, or 850 per month, invariably in | said, “is not simply a nes must be con- | im ° “The question,’ it has These nal com- which the consti- ¢ imposed on the inte | merce of the countr; over again yuo hear of what was away | and everybody knows how s h“.'"‘.‘unll the owners must not allow them to | tution has forever declired shall be free. opposed to the spirit of the age They are of the same nature as the old feudal taxation in Ger- nany, when merchants were considered a v petty baron.” ad, free trade d since the that it shall be free le to a | all | fine of $200, or 60 days’ imprisonment, |in which we live. well as |or both fine and imprisonment. Trustee words “except dur- nium is o thing of the | ing fair week’” inserted after the second- | drop out of the hurry and confussion of & | pagt and the exposition soon will be. It | 8tory clanse, probably thinking that the its usual smiling awu and all the other its of that ostly season were not allowed to the viands are altogether too ancient for | picoure of Adam and Eve in the garden, |80 on openly and above board. The uman | mayor demurred, however, and the point nt nature | Was net pressed, The ordinance was then un What ever else may be between states is des constitution provid the states should nof The standard restorative—cspecially in Samaritan T am porfectly cured,” said Jas, Corbin, of Washburn, Richmond’s Samaritan And the Last for This Year. To All Floors. } 1306, 1208, Street, Omaha. One Nore Special Sale Until September Lst, we will offer some Special Goods in all Depart- ments of our business at Greatly Reduced Prices, to Close Out. No such BARGAINS have ever before been Offered in a General Line of FURNITURE. MANUFACTURER OF OF STRIOTLY FIRST-CLASS d this action and uphold the trus- | therein. All the statutes in the| world will not stop men from gambling, | ctice, First National Bak | oot 3 ~—OF OMAHA— |Cor. 13th and Farnam Sts. that the | gambling dens now as would if the doors hrown wide open, and everybody | | The Oldest Banking Establishment lous of Teme- Al preparations ble things |from the laboratory of Mrs. Lydia E. SSORS TO KOUNTZE BROTHERS. COrganized in 1858. Organized as a National Bank in 1803. i $200,000 SURPLUS AND - $150,000 OFFICERS AND DIRKCTORS. HxRMAN KouxTz F. H. Davis, Cashier. vikr, Assistant C Tasues time i j 5 Draws drafts on ates hearing interest. ud the principal b centers of trade UNITED STATES a veler, ore, grew out of the necessities and re- | [ tail business, and has been of incaleula- The com- es the stock presents with The buyer se .«x‘ S | OF OMAHA, xpense » saves his o than the | J€Ct tO sight check. | Certificates of Deposit issued pay- Yl ablein 3,6 and 12 months, bearing | ——— = ! interest, or on demand without in- |9 0. PRES ‘ J. 0. PRESCOTT & CO, and the number of | money required to make the journey to for young women are close at hand in fine | men Zemployed. - Now managements are | 1 Having saved money he is in buildings surrounded by queer old gar- | turning their attention to moving trains | position to offer his goods to his custo- Advances made to customers on iy approved securitiesat market rate 1 by the visit of the commercial | of interest. + of states have taken | The interests of Customers are closely guarded and every facility with principles sound banking freely extended. Draw sightdrafts on England,ire- land, Scotland, and all parts of Eu- elers are invited to | d transact budiness with | ns free of taxation. These compatible Indiana, Maine, Massa- | , Mississippi, Missou- w Jer- and, Ver- ously at her adobo dwelling she |a proportianate strengthing of bridges, the [mont, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. Tt | rails andfincreasing the | may be well in this connection to show | spor mile Tho last | Whit other states are doing to hamper s and deprive their ens of advantages 1 64 pounds to | which other states have secured by 1 policy. In dy | commenting upon this subject the New 1| York World prints the following facts, Sell European Passage Tickets. Collections Promptly Made. BENZON & COLLIN REAL ESTATE AGENTS. id much heavier rail than that | = California, though enacting no general | 211 - South Thirteenth x ommercial travelers, San Francisco | wxes those doing a business of §90,000 | A pro rata s amounts, those doing a business | ),000 and less being taxed $206 o | but Mobile delphia and Reading railroad | tax, but Littlo Rock levies one of $5 a | st Opp. Omaha National Bank, 0 o 6 Lot 415182, 10th str Gieorgin has no state tax, but her cities example. Atlanta’s | ay | joints will be attended by a correspond- [ per annum and New Orleans 50 per | o7 per | 1,000 nd until past midnight the revel is kept | railroad engincers, give the rail increased | or less, and pro rata upwards, those doing up. life, and in a corresponding measure de. [# business of $10,000 and over being | {Farming Land For Sale Houses For Rent, | arter, m, and | BENZON & COLLIN, John D, Peabody, M. D., PHYSJICIAN & SURGEON. each | 200 a year. Several of her cities ' additional tax. In Wilinington | | | | | OFFICE ROOMS, 8 aud 6 507 FARNAM, | Cushs, N | | ALMA E. KEITH, DEALER IN Fine Millinery. HAIR GOODS, WAVES, BANGS, ETC. | Stock Entirely Fresh and New 105 15¢th Street Opp. Postoffice. Penusylvania has no state tax. Butin | | & "' | meanor punishable with a fine of 300 and | for the past year, and have found it | In South Carolina there is no state tax, uners 810 a Columbia 1 Teunessee does not levy a state tax, — (arrianes, Buoaies Unltedistat;si Depository. AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. wetand dor 8. wthsiee, 1 OMAHA, NEB. l fiPAINTS, OIL & § SRR OMAHA L A. M. CLARK, ‘Painter & Paper Hanger SIGN WRITER & DECORATOR. WHOLESALE & R WINDOW SHADES & CURTAINS, 24 Cornices, Curtain Poles and Fixtures. 107 South 14th Street, Booth’s ‘Oval’ Bran . fi AND NH ]lal Hflfile D. MALLORY & CO'S “DIAMOND” D. BRAND. B. BEEMER, Omaha. Frosh Fish at Wholesale. ACTURER OF FI $100,000.00 T A.H. DAILEY, c.w. HAM;?:';::;\;, Cashier. B“gglfls} [:allrlagfls fl[][l Sl]l‘lflg Wagufls’ | Acgountsisolisitediandikeptisuby Sy L L e Office and Factory S. W. Corner 16th and Capitol Avenue, Qmaha COTT. WWholesale and Retail In thoe Stato. NO. 1509 Farnam Street, - - - - ‘PIANOS & ORGANS! Music, Musical Instruments of all Descriptions. CHEAPEST AND MOST RELIABLE HOUSE CALL AND EXAMINE OUR STOCK OR SEND FOR PRICES, GATE CITY —ALSO— " | Sash, Doors, Blinds, Stairs, Stair Rai Orders from the country will be_promptly PLANING MILLS! Carpenters’ Niaterials gs, Balusters, Window & Door Frames, & First-class facilitics for the manufacture of all kinds of Mouldings, Planing and Matching a specialty ate A MOVER, Proprietor ey BT.1 FORSALEBY it G OUIS.MO IN PERFECTION Heating and Baking 2 1s only attained by using ““CHARTER OAK For sale’by MILTON ROGERS & SONS, OMAHA.