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2 THE DAILY BEE~-OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1883, A -GREAT-PROBLEM TAKE ALL THE Kidney & Liver Blood RHEUMATIC REMEDIES, Dyspepsia And Indigestion Cures. Ague, Fever; And Bilious Specifics Brain & Nerve FORCE REVIVERS, Great Health RESTORERSY Tn short, take all jthe host qualities of“all these, and the best qualities of all the best medicines in the World and you will find that HOP BITTERS have the best curative qualitics and powers of all concentra ted in them, and that they will cure when any or nll of these, singly or combined, fail. A thorough trial will give positive proof this. BEWARE 0 An excellent appetizin; A exquisiteflavor, now used over the whole wo © Dyspeptia, Aguie, and all Urgans, F COUNTERFE/ tonic of Diarrhos, A disorders of the rgane, A few dropa fmprt a delicions fiavor to a glass of champagne, and 10 all pummer dri (ry it, but beware of connterfelts, Ask your or the genuine art) G. B, BIEGERT & BONS, 2 W. WUPFERIIIH,USnll Agent. 7% Brocessorto J. W, H [mSTIL STTES B1 Broadwayz. ronicd yspep d_livercom: and in chronio tipation and other obstinate dis. conen Hostotter's Stomach Bitters I beyond all_compari- #on the bost remedy that can be taken. As & means of restorin the strength and vi- tal energy of persons + who are sinking un. z - der the debilitating BIfTERS effects of painful dis- orders, thisstandard vegetable invigorant s conf ly un- CREAT ENCLISH REMEDY. ERVOUS PHYSICAL & 5, Lures pcis a Dby P OF MANLY VIGOR, Spermatorr. oquolled. For salo by all Druggists and Deal: ers generally, hoa, ete., when all B dies faill. 4 iranteed. Lo $1.50 a bottle, Iarge le, four Y times the quantity, 86. af(' o pross to any address. Sold h{ all druggists, ENGLISH MED[ CAL INSTITUTE, Proprietors, 718 Olive Strees, 8t. Louls, Mo. — or yoars. Every oustomer speaks unhesiatinglyondorss itasn ey 'C. F. GOoDMA! O maha Fob.1 1883, I Have Found It ‘Was the exclamation of & man when he gob & box of Euroka Pilo Ointment, which Is & simplo and_sure -‘"Mlovl’n-ulndlll 8kin Discasos. y oents by The American Diarrheea Cure + Has stood the test for twenty all_Nevor Falls. Diarrhaoa, Morbus, Deane's Pever and Agug Tonic & Cordial, 1t ls mpossible to supply the rapld salo of the same, BURE CUR WARRANTED For Fover and Ague, and all Malarial troubles, PRICE, $1.00, W.J. WHITEHOUSE LABORATORY, 10TH ST., OMAHA, NEP, For Sale by all Druggists® Bure cure for ysentary, and Chole- BETTER uo GHEAPERun SOA FOR ALL ,House-Cleaning Purposes. ST WILL CLEAN PAINT, MARBLE, OIL CLOTHS, TUBS, CROCKERY, EKITCHEN UTEN WINDOWS, &c. 1T WILL POLISH COPPER AND STEEL WARES \TIN, BRASS, 4 MOF ALL EINDS, | from that port. ), BATH SEALSKIN. Facts Abont This Valuable Article of Commerce. An Account of the Place Where Seals are Found in Millions=~ Polygamous Habits of the Males, How They Rule the Harem With Military Discipline=~Habits of Fasting, They See Dr, Tanner's Forty Days and Raise Him Twenty—Cost of thelRaw;8kin, and the Labor in itsfPreparation for Market. Cincinnati Enquirer, “‘No, sir; T have had enough. One trip to Alaska satisfies the ordinary individual for a lifetime.” Mr, Louis Kimmel, ex-Mayor ot Lafayette, Ind., was the man who expressed the disinclination to go back to the Northwestern possessions of the Unised States. He was met a night or two since, and while discussing aglass of Pilsener, with its attendant saucer of schwartz brod and carraway noods, spoke to an Enquirer reportor long and_ interestingly of this country, from which he had only returned last month after a visit commencing in April, 1882, “What put it into my head to go to wich a God-forsaken place as that? 1 can hardly say. man whose experience has been varied has always a_longing to his stock of knowledge, so that when I was offered the position of government agent at tho Alaska sel fisheries I jump- ed at the chance, and set out in short order for San Francisco. 1 hadn't very long to wait before one of the Alaska Commercial cnm&mny'u steamers set sail t is the only line plying between the places, and has but two steamers. Rarely is it that they carry a passengor. The vessels would remain idle but for the cargoes of sealskins. 1 folt anything but cheerful ongoing aboard. The steamer was not clean, and on every hand arose nauseating smells of blubber, raw skins and offensive fur. If you ever go over the route, keep a patent clothes- pin on your nose might and day. It was a long, tiresome journey, 3,000 miles, and we did not pass a vessel during the 26 days required fer the voyage. We put in at Sitka first, latitude about 57, Iguess. Am I tiring youl” **No; go ahead.” ‘‘As the capital of a terrritory having an area of very nearly six hundred thousand square miles, Sitka 18 the worst place I ever saw. Outside of the tropics it is the rainiest place in the world, They have over two hundred days of it in a year, with a total precipitation of ninety inches of rain. This makes the summers unduly cold and miserable. ~ No, sir, I wouldn't recommend Alaska as a perma- nent residence to any one unless—areyou anything of a fisherman?” ‘I was at Put-in-Bayonce for tendays, and caught one fish.” ‘At this place you would have better luck. There are hundreds of whales, with cod,salmon, I\erring and halibut by the million, Then it is the resort of myriads of migratory birds. Geese, ducks, swans, ospreys and gulls arrive from the southern latitudes about May 1, and remain until early autumn, when they give way to the ptarmigan, white wk and arctic owl. It was in this ratire | country, you know, that the long sought, and hitherto unknown nests of the can- vas-back ducks were discovered. To get back to fishing again. That beer isgood, Isn': it? Thoserivers, would you believe it, so swarm with fish that they aresome- times thrown by the waves en the banks to a depth of three or four feet. About my voyage. Yes, its squalor and about one hundred log houses, and took off to the west,skirting along that attenuated string of Aleutian islands that project from Alaska toward Asia, more like "the trunk from an elephant’s head than anything else, and the foys, etorms and danger, [ can tell you, were not to be sneezed at, Finding the proper opening we went through into the Behring ska, and in due time arived at my destination, St, Paul's and St. George's islands, mere dots on sea's surface, They are fully four hun. dred miles from the main land, and though small—St. George's being ten miles long and say eight wide, and St. Paul's somewhat larger—they are the financial back-bone of the whole territory, a8 there occur theseal fisherios from which the government derives its reve- nues. The Alaska sompany pays annual- ly for thué)rivilegu of the fisherios $65,. 000 and 82 for each skin, which some- times run up to $100,000 in a year; and it has a twenty years' lease, which ex- pires in 1800, “How do 1 have the figures 80 pat! Because I was practically in soli- tary contnement, and had nothing else to do but to learn them, Then, bcuifieu pay- ing this sum, the company has to supply and maintain on each island a surgeon and teacher for children, and furnish them quarjers, subsistence and pay. Things looked very gloomy when | went ashore at St. George's. It was nothing but rock and dirt, not a vestige of vege- tation, Until the company took charge the natives lived in earth houses, and even now dislike the frame structuses that the company erected for them with timber brought from elsewhere They are a dilapidated looking lot, and on my Island they only numbered 113 souls, Aloutinm,{ndium,Eu]nimsux, Coleshians and Mongolians, *‘Mongolian “‘Yes. Not full-blooded you know. I don’t know how the thunder they got there, Further north,at Behring straits, it's only forty-eight miles across to Asia. They may have come that way years ago. The promiscuous association of these tribes has almost blotted out national characteristics, but every almond-eyed Mongolian can be ru?:ly picked out. The Island has a Greek Catholic church, and the priest is half Indian and half Russian. ~ They li eal meat, blub- ber and fish. Ordinarily a man is said to eat a peck of dirt ina lifetime. They eat a pock a day, I firmly believe, Apart from the human, there is no animal life on the place, not a dog, nor a cat, nor a rat—nothing.” “‘Any bats?” *Not a bat.’ “Well, well! Then, indeed, the place is impoverished, ' “You look worn out. Shall I stop?” “'No, go ahead. I've gone four days before now without & wink of sleep.” “I'll tell you something about the seals and then quit.” you live on?” beans, salt beef, canned Wo loft Sitka with |P meats, desicoated vegetables and ship- stores generally. The natives, who are not particular about their diet, are afflicted with scurvy and other cutane- ous disenses, to say nothing ot ills arising from a disregard of nature's laws, ““The neals are countless tens of thous- ands, having been but slightly diminished by the wholesale and indiscriminate slaughter of years past. Government interference, fbwever, Tias Hnd & good effect, and a revenue amounting to 150, 000 is now annually realized from St. George and St. Paul's. The entire re- mainder of the Alaskan possessions do not yield $10,000 in the same period, The seal rookeries, after being abandoned all winter, witness the first arrivals in the beginning of May, when the adult males put in an appearance or select their ground, or stake out their claims, so to speak, each male with his subsequent wives, for they are polygamous you know, but keop within lines which are understood even if no marked, Selecting a high point the males keep a lookont seaward. and when one of the gentler sex in discovered approaching the shore the two nearest go down to the shore and have a battle royal for posses- ion, while the coy damsel looks on with curious interest, as upon the outcome of the fray depends the question of which is to become gmr liege lord. The victorious mammal retives with his prize, and then resumes his outlook, as does also the dis- comfited, hoping for better results the next time. A second one appears, and the scene is re-enacted. It continues in this this way until each has cathered a harem of about twenty or twenty- five, There re males, of course, who, deficient in strength, are worsted oftener than victorious in these encounters, and, sore in body from bites and bruises, they withdraw to their little space with two or three wives, or perhaps none at all. They look as lone- some as & borrowed pup. The harem ruleis very rigid, no visits to the water being allowed under any pretext. Oc- cassionally one of the wives will cross over into an adjoining lot, perhaps for a little gossip with her neighbors or to di cuss the coming fashions, but that in- stant the head of the house gives pursuit and administers a whipping that puts a quictus on future expectations. The children are kept furthest inland, and to them only is ul}nwed the privilege of visit- ing the water. They go to it, using as a path the intervening space between terri- tories. Should they infringe the rules by going on the adjacent ground as they pass to and fro, they are punished in like man- ner. The bachelors have a dismal time of it, perched on solitary rocks, envying the domestic felicity which surrounds them. In this way the herds pass the summer, subsisting the moanwlu\a by the absorp- tion of their own fat, so thatin August, when they return to the water, they are in a very lean condition, and they can truly say, like frequenters of summer re- sorts: ‘I am half starved.’ **Before this the drive occurs. Getting between them and the water, the natives drive the herds inland toward the killing grounds with loud shouts and other noises, Bulls from two years to five years only are killed; the females are spared. The hides and such portions of the meat as are used for food are preserved. The skins are now salted, counted under the agent's eyo and done up iuto bales and sent on shipbeard. When the cargo 1s completed the hatches or doors of the lockers containing the pelts_are sealed, and not opened until San Francisco is reached, where another agent verifies the Alaska count and coliects the $2 royalty on each skin. They are then shipped to London, certain manufacturers there be- ing the only possessors of the secret for changing their naturally gray or dirt; cinnamon color to that beautiful darl bronze so much admired. The process of cleaning, dressing and dyeing is a very tiresome one, and lasts four months, each skin having to dyed from twelve to eighteen times, and han- dled altogether nearly two hundred times before it 1s in readiness for furriers’ use. The raw skin, originally valued at $12, is now worth $26 or more, the best ranging as high as 866. The fur when taken from the seal is somewhat curl{, and hag lenty of long hairs. These have to be plucked out. I made a little error awhile ago. There is one establishment in New York where dyeing 1s done, but is capa- city is limited. The best is in London, by firms who not only give it the magnificent luster, but impart to the fur its rich velvet quality. The seal—" ‘“‘Come gentlemen, I can’, keep the saloon cpen all night on two glasses of beer."” ““You were paid for them, weren't you?' ‘‘Yes, but not for the ten-dollar gas bill you've run up on me,” “Well, good night, Mr. Reporter; I'll —— Twenty-Four Hours to Live, om John Kuhn, Lafayette, Ind., who an- nces that he is now in “‘perfect health,” we have the following: *‘One year ago I was, to all appearsnce, in the last stages of Con- mption. Our best physicians gave my case up. 1 finally got so low that our doctor said that T could not live twenty-four hours, M nds then purchased a bottle of DR, WM, HALL'S BALSAM FOR THE LUNGS, which considerably benefitted I contin- ued until I took nine bottles. Iam new in 'T""’.‘.‘" health, having used no other medi- cino, —— fThe Ohio Judiciary Amendment, New York Herald, October 12. The judiciary amendment to the Consti- tution of Ohiv, which is reported to have been carried on Tuesday, has attracted littlo general attention, but its adoption will work an important change in the judiciary system of the State. The amendment abolishes the existing district Courts and establishes in their place Circuit Courts, which, like the di trict Courts, are intermediate appellato unals. Rut the most radical change hat relating to the Supreme Court. The Legislature is empowered to increase the number of Judges without limit, and to distribute the Court into divisions. Cases involving the constitutionality of an act of the Legislature or a Federal statute must becided by the entire Court. In other cases the decision of a division, if unanimous, is final; if not unanimous, it must go before the full Bench This plan of dividing the Court of last resort has not, we believe, been adopted inany other State. Representative Man- ning prop-sed to apply it to the Supreme Court of the United States, but the pro- position met with little favor, There are many and serious objections to it, and it may be doubted whethhr the Ohio judi- ciary has been improved by this feature of the amendment. | — Angostura Bitters, the world renowned appetizer and invigorator, Used now over the whole civilized world. Try it, but boware of imitations. Ask your grocer or druggist for the genuine article, prepared by Dr. J. G. B, Siegert & Sons, | — A Wise Tallor, Lowell Citizen. “Yes,” said the young man, “I made my tailor knock off five dollars on the price of the suit before I ordered it, thought it was better not to owe so much money, and I guess he finally came to look at it in a similar light. He doubt- less made up his mind that it would be better to lose 845 than 860, which was where his head was level.” — 1f you have failed to rteceive benefit from other preparations, try Hood's Sar saparilla ; it's tho strongest, the purest, the best, the cheapest. — CAVALRY ARGES, Custer,Farnsworth,Kilpatrick—S8ome Famous Federal Dashes—A Charge in Which a Boy Saved Custer's Life, Detroit Froe Press The chargo at Balaklava was immortal- ized in verse, and is remembered because of the blunder that led to it. The Amer- ican Civil War furnished at least a score of cavalry dashes fully as desperate, but in the roar of the greatest battles they passed almost unnoticed. Custer’s charge on the left of the Cashtown road during the great Gettysburg fight was perhaps one of the most desperate undertakings of that brave commander. The Confed- erates had been driven through Hunters- town and beyond, and were in force on the highways leading to Gettysburg. Custer’s skirmishers had been held at bay for a considerable time by what seemed no greater force than twe or three compa- nies of infantry. Company A, of the Sixth Michigan was ordered te form and charge up the road, and other companies were dismounted and stationed in the fields to repulse a countercharge if made. All the companies in the First, Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Michigan Cavalry Reg- iments, then under Custer, were greatly reduced in strength. When Company A had been formed, Custer rode up and took his place with the captain at the front. The brigadier was about to lead a single company in | the charge. There was a yell of delight | from the compi heers from the en- tire command, and away went the little | [ band at a furious gallop. Custer holding the reins in his left hand and carrying his naked saber in his right, and charging straight down the middle of the road. What was supposed to be a force of perhaps 200 men turned out to be infan- try and cavalry to the number of 600 or niore. They filled the road for a quarter of a mile in almost solid mass, and they were prepared for the charge. Company A rode straight at the mass, and in an- other moment 600 men were shooting and slashing at sixty. Custer pressed on and was closely followed until he found two lines of dismounted men drawn across the road. Then the bugle sounded the recall. Company A did not return alone. It had the presence of at least 300 cay- alry, and every inch of the way was a running fight, and a desperate ene. Men slashed, and cut, and shot, and yelled, and those waiting down the road toward Hunterstown saw & mob bearing down upon them., Sabers flashed, streams of fire darted through the smoke, and horses fell and obstructed the way. When the mob reached the troops stationed in the fields, Company A shook itself out of the melee, and a fire wasopened which drove the Confedera es back. The Federal loss in killed and wcunded was about thirty men—one-half of the command. The Confederate loss was more than double. Some of the wounded on either side were slashed two and three times with sabres, and there was not a man in Company A who could not show a close call from a bullet. It was in_this charge that $ftig-Churchill, of the First Michigan, detached himself from his com- mand and charged with the company. Custer had his horse shot under him, and in the confusion a Confederate leveled a carbine within six feet of his head and was on the point of firing, when the young man shot him dead. The Captain was wounded and his horse received three bullets, but both got back te the Federal lines. Probably there was never another instance in modern warfare of a Briga- dier-General leading a single company into action, and the incident serves to show the make-up of the man. He shared in the personal dangers of his com- mand, and his men came to believe that he bore a charmed life. FARNSWORTH'S REPULSE, The 3d of July, during the terrible fighting at Gettysburg, Kilpatrick was spying around to locate Lee’s ammuni- tion train, When he found it he also discovered that it was protected by a heavy forco of cavalry, and hardly had skirmishing begun when a brigade or more of infantry was sent down to strengthen the cavalry. The Confederate bosition was terribiy strong. Along the ront was a ‘‘Quaker” fence—a strong wall three feet hugh, with a strong rail fence about the same hight, running along the top. Forty rods he rear of this was a second. The occupied ground being a farm, and all the fields being divided off, the Confederates had both flanks covered by other walls, and a look over the grounds was enough to convince one that any ordinary attack would meet with repulse. But Kilpatrick was play- ing for a big stake. Nothing A cripple Lee 8o much as the loss of his ammunition train. The troops detailed to charge the walls in front were composed of the First Ver- mont, First Virginia, a part of the Eighteenth Pennsylvania, ana a few squadrons of Wisconsin cavalry, Gen, Farnsworth put himself at the head of the Pennsylvanians, who were instructed to dismount at the wall and tear the fonce down, and away the entire body went. Up to tho moment the fence was down the Confederates stood firm and killed man after man with their musket resting on the wall. When the cavalry began to leap into the field tho gray lines fell back or broke up into squads, and the fight continued. In charging at the second wall the Fed- eral received a fire from in front as well as on both flanks, and for five minutes ranks were broken and veteran trospers were confused and bewildered. Then all of asudden a blast of the bugle restored order and sent the whole body at and over the fence. Here men were hacked with sabres and prodded with bayonets, and the fight meant kill. Farnsworth lost his horse, but not his cool spirit. A mile and a half away he could see the white covers of the train he was after. To retreat was torun the gauntlet of that terrible cross fire. To advance was to meet the Confederate army, but the bugles b.ew *‘Forward!" Squadron and company and regiment ushed for the train, A fire of musketry ollowed, and musketry and artillery opened from right and left and ahead. The rush from the second fence to the| _ train was one of the mest desperatethings ever attempted by cavalry. 1t was too desperate to be successful. The concen- trated fire broke up all formations, and the command separated into small bodies each to look out for itself. Some of these squads pushed through the train and be- i:;"d the rear of Lee's army,while others re to the right or left and circled back. 1| Farusworth was killed—his body fairly riddled, and the loss in men and horses, considering numerical strength, was ap- palling. The First Vermont lost about one man out of every five, and out of the whecle command not more than twenty horses came out without a wound. Some ot the men had five bullet holes in their clothing, and one had four in his hat alone. THE CHARGE OF THE FIRST MICHIGAN CAV- ALRY AT GETTYSBURG. While Kilpatrick was holding one {m- sition Custer was holding another on his left, which covered the York and Oxferd highways. Soon after noon. the con- federates began pushing forward on both roads, driving in Custer’s pickets, and at 1 o'clock the advancing lines were in sight. Col. Alger's Fifth Michigan was dismounted, pushed to the front, and, having the shelter of stone walls and natural rifle-pits, this one depleted regi- ment held at least 3,000 men in check until the men had fired their last cart- ridge and were obliged to fall back., Be- ing armed with the Spencer seven-shot car ine, the firing of this regiment was so rapid and well sustained as to create the belief that a large force of infantry was posted behind the walls. When Alger fell back he was followed by both infantry and _cavalry, and now Col, Mann's Seventh Michigan was or- dered to form and charge. With a yell and a hurrah the Seventh rodedown upon four times their number. The hichway was the only clear route. Those advanc- ing over the fields were obstructed by ditches, fences, hedges, and walls, and the line was sometimes almost a triangle. Mann pushed on untila heavy stone wall flanked by *‘stake and rider,” fences bar red his way, and here his regiment halted and fought the Confederates on the other side. It was a conflict at such close range that almost every man shot was burned by the flame of the powder. The S enth had to fall back from the position upon the support of the Fifth, and while those two had their hands full an ofticer in the First, which regiment was then in reserve, suddenly cried out: “Gireat heavens! we will all be swal- lowed up!” Just coming over the ridge in their front wasa whole brigade of cavalry formed in column regiments. To meet this new force Custer had a single battery and the one regiment. The old First did not number over 500 men, and when ordered up for the charge and formed in column of batalions it seemed as if every man was riding to his death. As the First advanced ata trot with drawn sabers they were greeted with shouts of derision. Then the little com- mand closed up the horses passed from a trot to a galop ,and as it hurled itself against five to one it opened a wide lane through the entire , force. There were five minutes of smoke,and flash and fury, and lo! when the smoke lifted the Old First held the field and the Confederates had been driven. Custer said of this charge in his official report: T cannot find language to express my high appreciation of the gallantry and daring displayed by the officers and men of the First Michigan. They advanced to the charge of a vastly superior force with as much order and precision as if going upon a dress parade, and I chal- lenge the annals of warfare to produce a more brilliant or successful charge of cav- alry.” PRiig rritens upon military affairshave scouted the idea of sabre-cuts and caval- ry charges. Let such men hunt up the Gettysburg fight and see how they read. Over seventy men in the Michigan regi- ments engaged during a single day are reported, ‘‘Sabre-cut on the head.” In the cavalry fights or that eventful week 1,000 men, and the troopers’ pistols may be credited withasmany more., Custer's loss in one brigade in this action was 542, being as great a number as any single regiment contained. The Sixth was sup- porting the flanks and the battery, and though making no charge, its loss was severe, and Col. Gray received espec- 1al mention 1n official reperts. M. Quap. e ——— Horsford's Acld £hosphate Very Satisfactory in Prostration. Dr. P. P. Gruyaxriy, Detroit, Mich., says: “1 have found it very satisfactory in its effects, notably in the prostration attendant upon alcoholism.” e An Electric Cooking Stove. In the recent electric exhibition in Vienna there was shown a thermo-elec- tric steve. It consists of thirty super- posed concentric rings of thirty-two ele- ments each, therings beinginsulated from one another by means of asbestos. The elements consists of an alloy of two elec- trically opposed metals, (the patent not being completed the inventor would not tell me the *exact composition), which fuses at 600 degrees centigrade; on heat- ing this alloy an electric current is gener- ated. The combustion stove is placed in the center, and a considerable space separates the stove from the concentric rings, 8o that the heating of the alloy is not effected direct, and the temperature to which the alloy is heated does not ex- ceed 300 to 400 degrees centigrade. Each concentric ring has its own terminal scrow, 5o that the whole or part of the current can be used. The current has an elagtro motive force of twenty volts and twelve ohms resistance, but (and this is an important point) if the stove, as is the caso in winter, is kept burning all day, suflicient current power can be obtained to charge a number of accumulators suffi- cient for domestic lightning purposes, or to drive a small motor for domestic work, without any extra expense. A SPECIFIC FOR Epilepsy, Spasms, Couyul- slons, Falling Sickness, St. Vitus Dance, Alcohol- ism, Opium Eat- g, Syphilis, Scrofula, Kings Euil, Ugly Blood } m Dlw:m‘uy Dyspep- sia, Nervousness, Nervous Weakness, Brain W , Blood Sons, Billousness, Costitenass, Nervous Prostrationy Kidney Troules and Irreqularitit, $1.50. ample Teatimoutnin, “Samaritan Nervino s dojng wonders." Dr. J. 0. McLemoin, Alexander City, Ala, “Iteel iy duty to recdimmend It r. 1. F. Laogblin, Clyde, Kansas, “It cured where physicians falled. Rev. J. A. Edic, Beaver, Pa. B Correspoudence frecly answered. 68 ¥ or testiwontals and circulars send stamp. The (v Richmond Med. Co., St. Joseph, Mo, Sold by all Diagwists. an a Electric Ll o Cur all 1} 0 tow I in fe irion ‘e Clicae FOrCirmars @i g st tofon vhrie Fult Cor. 1 Wastin, reports of company commanders after the | & CHARLES SHIVERICK, Furniture! nTroc., Have just received a large quantity of new CEE.AMBEIR 'SUITS, AND AM OFFERING THEM AT VERY LOW PRICES rassenezr sLevaror |[HAS, SHIVERICK, 1206, 1208 and 1210 Farnam St To All Floors. _OMAHA, NEB. C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN Paints, 0ils, Varnishes and Window Glass OMAHA, NEBRASKA. A. K. DAILFEFEY, MANUFACTURER OF FINE Bugoies Carriages and Spring Wagons My Repository ls constantly filled with a selectjstook. Best Workmanship guaranteed. Office and Foctory S. W. Corner 16th and Capitol Avesue, Qmak Granite Ironware. FOR BOILING, PRESERVING, [S LIgHT, RANDSOME, WHOLESOME, DURABLE. The Best Ware Made for the Kitchen. MANUFACTURED ONLY BY THE S ST. LOUIS STAMPING COMPANY, ST. LOUIS. Tor Sale ho all Stove. Fartware and Honsefarnishing Niealers. Eta'blis!:l.ed in 18358. A J. Smpson, THE LEADING iCarriage Factory 1409 and 1411 Dodge Street, the sabre killed and wounded at loast | NEBRASKA. PERFECTION IN Heating and Baking Is only attained by using CHARTER OAK Stov es and Ranges, WITH WIRE GAUZE OVER DO0RS For sale by MILTON ROGERS & SONS; OMAHA. J. A. WAKEFIELD, PWHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lmber, Lah, Shingles, P SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, OMAHA, NEB j Anheuser-Busch ., BREWING ASSOCIATION CELEBRATED Keg and Bottled Beer This Excellent Beer speaks for itselt, i Wiy T S StR Buggip ; STLOUIS,M0. 0~ Promptly Shipped. : ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE TO THESTANDARD OfourG-uarantee. F. SCHLIEF, Sole Agent for Omaha and the West, ’ART OF THR y» ORDERS FROM ANY 'IRE WEST, STATE OR THE EN Cor. 9th Street and Capitol Avenue. M. HELLMAN & CO, Wholesale Clothiers! 41301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET COR. 13TH, NEBRASE OMAHA,