Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 21, 1883, Page 2

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sy Lnm UALLI BESUMAHA, FRIDAY, SEP I EMBER 21, 1883 POG OIL AND CATS' SKIN. What becomes of the Dead Canines and Felines —Queer Articles of Commerce. Philadelphia Record. ““We skins the horses and the dogs. Sometimes we skins the cats. Then we bile'em all up together, and make that and these here otu of 'em.” The speaker was bloody from neck to boots, and the “that and these here” were two piles of black stuff, the odor from which was somewhat off color, The place was one of the four or five carrion-rendering establishments which dot the river banks a quarter of o mile below Bridesburg. The cats and dnp{n roferred to were the twenty or thirty barrels of these animals received each week from the city dog- pound and the “‘cat home” on Lombard streot, below Thirteenth, Here also are taken all ths dead carrion which can be begged or purchased in tho city. In the darkest hours of night great covered wagons make their mysterious way through the byways of Philadelphia. These lumbering vehicles are large enough to carry two dead horses, and no matter how long the carrion they may find has been dead, if it will hold together it is gathered up, and the wagons' march resumed until their rounds have been complered and they dump their repulsive loads at the establishments on the river bank. “Sometimes,” said the man in charge, tyvo gots a big supply in the way of afire. After the Knickerbocker ice company’s fire wo had all we could do for some time. In the ordinary run we gets here about thirty horses and mules and twenty barrels of dead cats and dogs every week. What do we do with 'em? Well, you see, they goos threo or four ways. Wo cuts ‘om up, bones and all, and tesses 'em into that big bilor over yonder. When that has biled away for twenty-four or more hours wo got out the bones and they go to the boneyard to make \mnnphntu. We press the oil outen the ballance, and that goos mostly to make lubrication (lubricat- ing) oil or to soap-makers. The other stuff is put in the sun and dried, and we make phosphate out of it ourselves.” The skins, the men said, were sold to the tanners, In the winter and early summer the cats are skinned, and the hide is used in the lining of winter circulars for ladies. Two curious uses are, how- ever, frequently mado of the dogs. Their fat is carefully taken off and manufactur- od into “*dog oil,” which among suspersti- tions persons, especially tho colored people, possess almost_miraculous virtue anyother means now known. n lLu cure of various diseases, but chiefly of rheumatism, In all localitics where the colored population is large this oil is for sale, and always sells for a good price. 1t is also in demand for comsumptives. Very frequently people who have been pronounced incurables go to the establish- TRUE Temperance Is not signing a pledge or taking a solemn oath that cannot be kept, because of the non-removal of the cause —liquor. Thewagptomake a man temperate is to kill the desire for those droadful artificial stimulants that car- ry so many bright intellects to premature graves, and desolation, strife’ and un- happiness into so many families, Ttisafact! BROWN'SIRON BITTERS, a true non-alcohol- ic tonie, made in Baltimore, Md., by the Brown Chemical Company, who are old drug- ists and in every particu- ar reliable, will, by remov- ing the craving ntpelilc of the drunkard, and by curing the nervousness, weakness, and general ill health result- ing from intemperance, do more to promibte temperance, in the strictest sense thon it is a well authenticated fact that many medicines, especially ‘bitters,’ arenoth- ing butcheap whiskeyvilely concocted for use in local option countries. Such is not the case with Brown's IroNBirrERs. Itisamedi- cine, a cure for weakness and decay in the nervous, muscular, and digestive or- gans of the body, produc- ing good, rich blood, health and strength. Try one bot- Price $1.00. tle. ERVOUS Ures pusicase Debill GrxiTaL LOSS B\ OF MANLY VIGOR, Spermatorr- P haa, ete., when all er reme- + fail. A oure guaranteed. ” a bottle, large itlo, four times the quantity, §5. By ex- press to any address. 17 all druggists. ENGLISH MEDI- OAL INSTITUTE, Proprietors, 718 Olive Street, St. Louis, Mo, pas “I have sold Sir Astley Cooper's Vital Restorat: for years. Every customer speaks hl*hly of it unhesitatinglyendorse it s remedy of true merit. GooDNAN, Drugglst. Omaha Fob.1 1858 mée. ST, LOUIS PAPER WAREHOUSE. Graham Paper Co,, 217 and 219 North Main St., 8t. Louls. WHOLESALE DEALERS IN JPAPERS, Vil ENVELOPES, CARD BOARD AND PRINTERS’ STOCK, g7 Cash pald for Rags and Paper Stock, Scrap Iron and Motals.” A Paper Siook Warchouset, 1229 to 1237 North ixth stree! wopt21d-3m- Broom Corn MACHINERY | A FULL LINE—CONSISTING OF Presses, DOUBLE CYLINDER SCRAPERS ~AND— HORSE POWERS The Best in the i\larket Manufactured by C.D. COLTON & CO. sarsond tor Gircular and Priee List ™" 'JUST STARTED! THE Omaha Gigar Factory 1207 FARNAM ST J. HIRSHSTEIN, PRCPRIETOR, MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN CHOICE HAVANA AND DOMESTIC CIGARS. ALSO ALL KINDs OF Smoking and Chewing Tobaceos, AND SMOKERS' ARTICLES, BOXTRADE ASPECIALTY It will be to your interest to call and examine our oods. BOOK, NEWS, ment and beg the people there to sell them some of the, oil obtained from the dog fat. Occasionally persons will bring dogs which they have killed them- selves and have the oil manufactured from them. Some of the rendering establishments along the river do an enormous business, roceived their supplies not only from the city but from abroad by the car-load. Some of them use the intestines and re- fuso mattor from the slaughter-houso and abattoirs. e — et A Cure of Pneumonia. Mr. D. H. Barnaby, of Owego, N. Y., says that his_daughter was taken with a violent cold which terminated in pueumonia, and all the best physicians gave the case up and said who could nat live bt s fow hours ab most. Sho was in this condition when a friend recommend- ed DR, WM. HA 1LL'S BALSAM FOR THE LUNGS and «wlvised her to try it. She ac- copted it as a Lust resort, and was surprised to find that it produced a marked change for the better, and by persovering iu its use & perma- nent curo was effectod. ——— Appearance of a Tornado, From 5"“Oyclones and Toruadoos,” by George C. h, i Popular Seionce Monthly for October. As the tornado now sweeps onward in ita course, it rises and falls with a scries of bounds, and, with a swaying motion, describes & zigzng course, now forming a chain of loops, and again shooting oft on an obtuse angle, varying in the speed of its forward motion, which may b any- where from ten to thirty miles an hour. At the same time it is rapidly whirling on its axis in the opposite direotion from a screw, or the hands of a clock, the air re- volving around the vortex necessarily at- taining a speed of several hundred miles an hour. First widening, then contracting, mnow bounding above the tree-tops, and again de- scending to sweep the earth of every ob- jeet within its reach, the aerial monster surges onward. The largest forest-trees, mere playthings in its grasp, are plucked up by the roots, or suapped off like pipe- stoms, substantinl buildings are first crushed like egg-shells, then caught up in the vortex and the debris carried some- times for miles, before it is again thrown off by centrifugl force, and falls by gravitation anywhere, everywhere, as soon as released from the monster's rasp. 1t is difficulv accurately to describe the tornado’s appearance and work, even for those whohaye been eye-witnesses, or who have personally passed through the hor- rors its coming brings. While accounts diffor as to its appearance and bohavier, as witnessed from differents points of ob- servation and under different circum- stances, all substantially agree that it is cone-shaped, its motion rotary, that its apox resembles fire and smoke, and that vivid lightning and heavy rain-fall ac- company it. In rare instances, elec- tricity in the form of St. Elmo's fire, will precede the vortex, and a white, steamy cloud will follow. 1t will be ob- sorved that the form of the tornado- cloud is nicely 1llustratod by tho *proof- plane’ used in teaching natural phileso- |)hy, The small end of the plane is most heavily charged with electricity, and, the nearer it approaches to a perfect point, the greater will bo the accumulation: & high tension is caused, and the eloc must escape by somo conductor. So, in the tornado-cloud, the smaller the point or stem, the greater the force ex- erted when it meets the earth, —— WARNING! How many poople ruin their stomachs by awallowing cold driuks on hot summer ds when they could avoid all danger by adding 10 drops of Angostura Bitters, bosidos iwparting a delicious flavor to. thoir sawmer The — pstive Crocodile, t legs out of sight in the ooze, its murderous siout sunk to the upper juw, a tangle of river drift caught upon its shoulders, and the tail perhaps lying in & pool of watr, the bulky reptile looks 8o harmless that birds sit twittering ts armor, and hunt among the s of the fungoid-grown and slimy scales for insects. — Lts very size disarms suspicion; the outlines become indistinet, the complete monster indistinguishable. And a crocodile's patiente for mischief is rodigious. Hour after hour, and all y long, the abominable fraud lies in its place without a sign of life. Natives oing to their work in the morning look down from the bank and see the birds flitting about the dark object at the water line in pursuit of the swarming mud-flies that are attracted to the brute by their keen sense of smell; but, familiar as they are with thefwiles of muggur and gharal (as they call the blunt and the sharp-nosed crocodiles respectively), they are deceived to the last, and go on their way to the field or shop thinking it was only drift. wood that they have seen, If it had been a dead body, bullock er tattoo, washed up by the river, the vultures would have been close by, patiently wait- ing" for the carrion to ripen in the fester- ing heat, and the crows would have been there to, hopping on and off it impatient- ly, trying the tough hide here and there with their boaks, and cawing and croak- ing in discontent with their baffled appe- tites. But by and by, if the crocodile will only hold out, or unless some one passing halloos to it at a venture ~“just to see if it is a mugger or not’--there will come along the water’s edge a hun- gry pariah dog, trotting in an aimless, shuffling way, and sniffing as it passes at everything in the line of drift, with its head turned toward the river, and away from the crocodile. And so, along, thinking only of chance offal, it comes up to the waiting brute. A sand- piper, startled by the dog's plash- ing feet, tumbles up with a sharp cry from under tho shade of the reptile’s side, and the pariah stops dead, startled at the bird, watches it flit along the shore and resettle a few yards further on, and then resum s its jog-trot, or rather, it has just made up its mind to g0 on, when suddenly the ooze all around it ncems to hoave up, and in a shower of mud there is an instant’s vision of a huge pair of jaws, glistening with whito teeth, and then a erimsoned ripple on the river, and the tragedy is complete. The native thinks he heard a dog yelp and turns his head, There is only a scared sandpiper wheoling in the air. If you have failed to receive benefi from oth presmmtinnn, try Hood's Sar- saparilla ; it's tho strongest, the purest, the best, the cheapest. | — WASHINGTON NOTES. The War Remini: nces of a Colonel. Philadelphia Record. WasiiNetox, September 14,—“T've Killed many a man,” said an army Colo- nel to-night, *‘but always in batle. I never was 8o placid as to feel obliged to kill a man in cold blood but once. I never want to be placed in such a posi- tion again.” “How was it?" I asked. “Well,” said the Colonel, sighing,with unwillingness to go back to that disa- groeablo day, ““you sce, T was ono of the ono hundred federal prisoners brought down from Savannah to Charleston to stop the shells and balls from General Rufus Saxton’s batteries. You remember we were stockaded there on a space in front of Charleston as a sort of target for the federal guns. Well, on the way down from Savannah to Charleston we were to escape. As a matter of fact, wo didn't escape; but, then, it was all arranged that we should. We planned it in Savannah, The 1rain, a rambling shambling affair—you know what a Southern train in those days at best—made up of old passenger cars, box cars and flat cars, drawn by a wheezy old locomotive capable of something like ten miles an hour on a dead level, was to be uarded, as usual, by a detail from the Home Ciuards—old men and young boys unfit for field duty. They were armed, of course; but we outmunfien\d them six to one—yes, ten to one—and in point of brain power there was no comparison. So we arranged a plan by which escape weemed certain, with hopes as confiddt as though it were no sooner said than done. At a certain point on the rail- way, not far from the coast, where our men-of-war were continually on the move, one of our number was to give the signal, the guards were to be overpowered and we were to take to our heels—every man for himself, and the Lord for us all. Of course, wo kuYt the plan a secret within a comparativsly small circle, 'We had to guard againt the timorous and the traitor- ous. But we knew perfectly well that we could depend upon overy man after we had seized the guards and captured their guns. Every man in the secret had his part to play—a signal to give, a guard to watch, a gua to sel Each of us car- ried an improvised weapon of some sort. Remember 1 picked up the bolt of an old car-coupling and hid it under my shirt, and I suppose all the others had arms of a similarly torrible description. My duty e guard who stood right in front of me at the end of the car when the signal ehould be given. It was an old passongor ar. 1 sat in the lastseat acing the woodbox, and the guard stood by the stove, Presently he ca over and stood by the woodbox. such n guard! A~ white-haired farmer’s boy of some 17 years, so sleepy with long duty that ho could scarcely keep his eyes open, Ho had a good face, with a very innocont expression, that refined the apposrance of his course clothes and dirty shoes, He had an old-fashioned musjet a muzzle-loador, with a big percussfn cap. And this was my victim! I looked him all over and measured him cave- fully. One blow of my hard bolt on that soft head would end him, There would be no dificulty about it. 1t was simply question of time. The train started. The motion increased the poor boy's drowsiness. He kept erect and awake with evident difficulty. ‘Why don't you sit up on the wood-hox!' %id to him, as his head began to sway from side to side. It showed how remarkably green he was that he at once olimbed upon the box and sat there with his musket between his dangling legs. 1 have no ideaof the scenery of At route. 1 saw but one thing all the way—that boy. 1 watched him as the hawk watches the little chicken, And as | watched I pitied him more and more, Ho was 80 young, so fair, 8o innocent. 1 steeled myself with the thought that he must die if he would be free. At the time, though, T was looking for some way in which T could do my duty and yet save that boy. 1 tell you it's terrible thing to sit for hours opposite a tow- fear is, but I confess to a tremor every 1 don't know what without hesitation time I thought of his dying gasp. As T watched hia (and everybody clse in the car wa watching me) I wondered whether 1 could not disable his gun and then content myself with stunning him when the moment came. With such care as you can scarcely con- ceive I reached forward through those short legs for the ni;?.h- of the musket. Aftor several trials I touched the gun, ol so carefully, and in & moment more had the cap in my hand, I threw it out of the window. Then the whole car breathed freer, I know I did. The guard still slept. 1 wondered whether 1 couldn't get that musket away. I could try. troteing | healed boy measwring him for a coftin, | 1 did, with inconceivable patience | gists. and care. 1 slowly disengaged the dang- ling legs; 1 carefully lifted the clasped fingers; 1 put the hands in his I took the musket slowly from between | his legs, and quietly pushed it under the seat on which I sat. As I did g0 he shook himself, turned over with his head on the wall, and went on with his nap. Now I was myself again, FHe was in my power, and no blood would be shed. But just at that moment word was passed to me that the plan had failed The coward who was to give the signal was afraid to give it; the point was pass- od; it was all ever; the locomotive was whistling for the nexs town. ~ Oh, how | mad I was! I could have killed that coward without a quiver. Dut there was | no help for it. I slowly and carefully pulled out the gun of the il sleeping | guard, put it between his legs again and quietly clasped his fingers around the barrel. And then we rolled into town; and he awoke and shook himself, and | yawned and looked sharply at m But he tor for his slecp. never missed that cap.” AMany cosmeti somplexion have | from time to tim put upon_ the market But none have stood the test as has Pozzoni's medicated complesion powder, Tt is an_also- tute curative for hlot discolorations, freck les, ete. For sale by druggists. B ik HE WOULDN'T HAVE IT. Libertics Taken by Detrofiters with o Distinguished Visitor. Dotrolt Freo Press A squatty little man, very corpulent, very stiff-necked, and very much out of sorts, halted a policeman at the corner of Jefferson avenue and Waynestreetrecent- ly and said “‘Ha, sir! but what kind of a city is this, sir? Ha! sir! (blowing his nose) it strikes me that you'ro a queer set.” ““Anything wrong?” “‘Ha! sir! yes (blow) sir! T come from —with the sxcursion. 1 had scarcely put foot on the strect when a boy called me a caravan, sir! Ha! (blow) a cara- van!” “‘He shouldnt have done it.” “And a stranger slapped me on the back and yelled ‘Hello, pard!’ in my ear! Yes, sir (blow), he did, sit—in my car, ir!” “That was wrong.” “And a boot black, sir (blow), had the impudence to call my feet freight-cars, and to ask me what line T run on! Yes (blow), sir—what line I run on. Ha! sir!”s ‘e deserved arrost.” “Hay! he (blow) did, sir. I want the people of Detroit to understand that I'm worth $14,000, sir, mostly in cash— mostly in cash, sir.” “Yes.” “And I've been a justice of the peace for twenty-two years, sir! Ha! (blow) sir.” ““Is it possible?” “Yes, sir. (A long blow). And when one of your villaina calls “out to *shoot’ this hat, sir, I want himto understand that I'm also postmaster.” “You are?”’ “Yot, sir; and when anyone sneers at my clothes, sir, let him remember that I’'ve run for the legislature—the legisla- ture, sir! Ha! (blow) and was almost elected! I won’t have this undue famil- iarity, sir! Why, no man in my town wonld dare to call me ‘pard,’ let alone slapping me on the back! Why. sir (blow) why—but T want this stopped!” ““Yes, sir.” T won't put up with it!” “Yes, sir.” “T am entitled to respect, sirl Yes (blow), 1 ha, ha! T am, sic!” “Yes, sir.”” He walked np Jeflerson Avenue, but had not gone far when a_truckman, who was tossing watermelons to a man on the walk, made a miss, but hit the $14,000 man in tho back with a_tncuty-pounder, and cried out: “Look out, shorty, or you'll be count- ed in and sold for a quarter!” MR S Homored for Life. Dr. J. C. Chanonhouse, of Eganville, Cntario, Canada, writes in favor of the groat cure, St. Jacobs Oil. The {on. ‘hlln Flint, Life Senator of the Dominion Parliament, also says it cured him of rheumatism. e — A Mountain Alligator. Virginia City (Nev.) Enterprise. William Blackheath, who has just re turned from a six months’ sojourn in Ari- zona, has brought to the Comstock the skin of what he, for want of a better name, calls a Gila monster, but which is species. The skin now measures seven foot from tip to tip, and_is evidently shrunk some inches in drying. Though about the color of the Gila monster the reptile is evidently a kind of inland croc- odile, or, more properly, cayman, as it had not the webbed feet of the crocodile, The strange saurian was found in a small valley in the Whert-sthne mountains, When alive it stood two feet high, and its body, just back of its fore-legs, was over three feet in circumference. The creature was as savage as a bulldog and as full of fight as a viper. 1t was found by the dogs of Mr. Blackheath and purtner. When the men arrived at the haunt of the reptile—to which they were attracted Ly the fierce and peculiar barking of their dogs, three in number—they found that one deg had already been killed and the | others were badly eut up and covered | with blood, The creature displayed such activity and was 8o diabolically vicious that tho two prospectors feared to g aear short dle. Fiaslly the thing got one | of the dogs by the fore-leg, and finding | that it held on like a terrier, with no sign of loosing its hold, Mr. Blackheath ran forward and struck his pick into its head. Even then the reptile held on, and | blows with the pole of the pick that its | juws relaxed and it gave up the ghost, When the dog was released it was found that his fore leg had been broken at & point about two inches above the |knee. Mr. Blackheath says he hag met | with several of the creatures known as | Gila monsters that were two feet and a | | half in length, but nover before or since | saw or even suspected the existence of | one so large as that whose skin he pos- | | sesses. It was a surprise to all the white | | men in that section, but some of the lu- | dians assert that far south in the Sierra | Madere mountains th had seen some | that wero as large or larger. Unfortu- | | nately, in flaying the saurian, Mr. Black- | heath's only ~ idea was to have the hide [ tanned and made into shoes and gaicers, and therefore he did not preserve the | feet, otherwise tho skin might be stuffed | and mounted by « taxdermist. He says the tecth of the creature wero over an inch in length, were sharp as needles, and in shape resembled the teeth of a shark. e | “Meno sana in corpore sano.” A sound mind in & sound body” is the trade mark o ‘Allen’s Brain Food, and we assure our reade that, if dissatisfied with either weakness Brain or bodily powers, this remedy will pe PIPE ORGANS [25 STOPS] ONLY I Have evidently that of a saurian of a differont | & it, being armed with nothing better than | a prospecting pick and a shovel with a | spi itt was not until it had been struck several | ¢ manently strongthen both. $L— At dru st s $49.75 ollowing brief deseription and oa order is news. anyway, whether you buy oF not:— & further re. e, Paate o Jou order within five dayas will bo \ced trom thisStop are |~ @—Wremeh Horn. Imitates & dollars. K AND MUSIC, n thirteen (13) days from' this paper, or I Holiday Presents. 1-Voix Celeste.—The sweet, pure, | of this Stop is Beatty's INCLUDING BENCH, 15 'WARRANTED 6 YEARS. $49, s [ = in'direct conjunction with ersh o e and Seal, thig 21st day of Sept. . ing Offe: ] xpired, OTICE must accom; Given under my 55 U s e, g e " Viol df Gamba. 30— Viola Doles, fi—Grand Ex- 24— Aerostatic Expression Indicator. cope are operated . 14—Violina. 15—Clarabells. 18—Grand ‘mand of the performer, most charm: 4 ; ited time . 750r $49.75 istered Letter. Chock] for this handscme PY the mie of these FOPULAR INSTHUM) ioa raticd v 523 trom hame with beautiful extend ‘iate your efforta. ogether with only 5 T m e Remembe, witafas they days it costs $46.75 ; within 13 days, §40. 'DANIEL F. BEATTY, Washington, Five Full Octaves. itively o orders * 0. Mon 17 IMPORTANT NOTICE. _This Spoct: not good on and after & Friends of yours may desire. Special Price the following N &rand or above ten pros ou order £ possible, orter within Five Days, thus secu e T A B the e time, aaspecifiod above, has or Call upon the 'ACTURER, Address MAN BEUREERKA Found Por The A Tlas stood the test for twenty yuars, Sure curo for Wi Never Fails, Diarrhaea, Dysentary, and Chole- Morbus. [eane’s Pever and Agne Tonic & Cordial. 1t 1a fnpossible to supply the rapid salo of the same. SURE CURE WARRANTED For Fever and Ague, and atl Malarial troublos. PRICE, 81.00. W.J. WHITEEQOUSE LARORATORY, 16TH ST., OMAHA, NEB. For Sale by all Druggists mied £ sent by Kxpress on voceipt of price. Dr. E. C, Wost's Nerve Brain_Treatment, guaranteed specific for Hysterls, Dizziness,2Convul sions, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, 'Headache, Nervous Prostration caused bx the use of aleohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental Depression, Softening of the Brain, resulting in insanity and leading to misery, decay and death, Prematuro Old Age, Barrcnnese of power in'cither sex, Involuntary Losse © Sperinatorrhma caused by 'over exertions of brain, solf-abuse or over-indulgence. Each tains ‘one month's trestment. $1.00 & box, o1 boxes for §6.00. Sent by mail propaid on recelpt price WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cureany case. With cach order received by us for six boxes accompanied with §6.00, we willsend the urchaser_our written guarantee torefund the money f the treatment does not affect a cure. Guarantece ued only by C. F. GOODMAN m&o wi Druw ist_Omaha Neb. " DR, FELIX LE BRUN'S ANID PRAVENTIVE AND CURE. FOR EITHER SEX. This remedy being injected directly to the seat the disease, requires no change of diet or nauseous, wmercurial or poisenous medicines to be talen intorn- ally. When wod us a proventive by either sox, it s mpossible to contract any private discase; but in the case of those already unfortunately affiicted we guar- antee three boxes to cure, or wo will refund the wmoney. Price by mail, postage paid, $2 per box, or threo boxes for §. WRITTEN GUARANTEES ssued by all suthorized agents. Dr.Felix LeBrun&Co SOLE PROPRIETORS, Neb Sole Agent, for Omaha e mke DR. HORNES t will Cure the Kollow- Without Medicine. Head or Limbs, Nervous eral Debility, Rheumatism, of the Kidneys it, Sexual Exhaus- Heart D , Ind Dyspopsla, Constipation, ~Exysipela Hornia or Rup mpotency, Catarrh, Tesy, Dumb Ag 5,000 Would Not Buy $£8, Di. HorNk—1 have used 0 some time, and it has d med for it. An or sciatica, I would'sa) one of the thirty dollas disease in & short time. Any ¢ \ith me, ean do so by writing or caliing ak wy store 1420 Douglas S¢. Omiaha Neb. T eheerfully recomm efficiemt cure for rheul Lt malady For sale by Fos t Bro' MAIN OFFICE &4 For Sale vt [0 Westem fihrniceQWnrks. IRON AND SLATE ROOFING. C. SPECHT, PROP. 1111 Douglas St Omaha, Neb. MANUFACTURER OF Galvanizea Iron Cornices garDormer Windows, Finials, Tin, Iron and Slate Rooflng, Specht's patent Metallio Skylight, Patent adjustod Ratehot Bar and Bracket Shelving. 1 am the general agent for the above line of goods. Iron Fencing, Crestings, Balustrades, Verandas, Iron Bank Ralungs, Window Blinds, Cellar Guards: also general & eat for Pecrson & Hill patent Inside Blind. Tl MANUFACTURER OF OF STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS Cartinoes, Brgis Roa AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. 1219 and 1320 Hae utrated Catalogue furnished fre T A.H.DAILEY, MANUFACTURER OF FINE Buggies Carriages and Spring Wagons Office and Foctory S. W. Corner 16th and Caprtol Avenue, Qmaha GATE CITY PLANING MILLS! MANUFACT EKS OF, Caroenters’ WNaterials. —ALSO— Sash, Doors, Bliuds, Stairs, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window & Door Frames, & First-class facilities for the manufacture of all kinds of Mouldinge. Planing and Matching » specialty Orders from the country will be prompt). d. cuted, amunications to AY MOYER, Propricto { PIANOSKORGANS 0On Long Time--Small Payments. At Mannfacturers Prices. A Hospe Jr 1519 DODGE STRE CARPET SEASON! J. B. DETWILER, ¥ Tnvitesfthe attention of theZpublic to his Large and Well Selected Stock —Or— EWr INT CARPETS Embracing ali the Late Patterns in everything in the Carpet Line, Matings 0l Cloths and Window Shades | IN LARGE QUANTITIES AND AT Pottom PPrices. LACE CURTAINS A SPECIALTY J. B. DETWIILIEKIR, 1313 Farnam Street, - - - Omaha, Neb / | et antiioe - san s, —~QMAHA, NEB My Repository Is constantly fillod with a seloct stook. Best Workmanship guaranteod. j

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