Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 7, 1883, Page 2

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2 THE DAILY BEE --OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1883. A-GREAT-PROBLEM TAKE ALL THE Kidney & Liver Blood RHEUMATIC 'REMEDIES, Dyspepsia And Indigestion Cures, Ague, Fever, And Bilious Specifica) Brain & Nerve FORCE REVIVERS. Great Health RESTORERS) Tn ehort, take all jthe best ‘qualitiasof"all thess, and ho best qualitics of all tho best medioines in tho World and you will find that HOP BITTERS have tho ‘ostjourative qualities and powers of all concentra: 40d in them, and that they will cure when any or all of these, mngly or combinod, fall. A thorough trial will givo positivo proof thia. BURBEA I Have Found It ‘Wae the exclamation of & man when ho got & box of Eureka Pile Ointmont, which I8 a simplo and_sure curo for Pilen and all Bkin Diseasoa. Filty cents by The American Diarrhea Cure i Fas tood tho test for twenty yoars. Sure oure for A lvm Fulis. Diarrhaos, Uyventary, and Chole ! Deane's Pever and Axue Tonic & Cordial 141 Lmpossiblo to supply the rapld salo of the ssme BURE CUR WARRANTED For Fever and Aguo, and all Malarial troubles. PRICE, §1.00, W.J. WHITEHOUSE LABORATORY, 16TH 8T., OMAHA, NEB. For Sale by all Druggists Health is Wealth . | Leavitt, the founder of the American Ex- Tots of power n’elthor sox, Involuntary Losso Khor sos, ivolin Boctuaatorehaa osusd by "ovor. cxattions: of brain, solf-abuso or over- nl{nncn. Each talns one month's troatmon! §1.00 o box, or Dboxes for §6.00. Sent by mail propaid on recelph WE GUARANTEE BIX BOXES . GOODMAN D’ it Omahs Neb. DR, FELIX LE BRUN'S AND PREVENTIVE AND CURE. ' SOR EITHER SEX. Thia remedy belng Injected directly to tho seat Aho disease, roquiros uscous, aerourial o us oy olther sex, It Is el aro now very old men. WWRITTEN GUARANTEES ‘eaued by all suthorized agenta. Dr.FelixLeBrun&Co SOLE PROPRIETORS, C. F. Goodman, Druggist, Bole Agent, for Omala A m&o wly «|and beneficent, Sen ', MARBLE, OIl. CLOTHS, BATH W—‘:uh KITCHEN UTENSILS, RICH MEN OF NEW YORK. Some Very Wéalmy Women---A Few of the 400 Gotham Millionaires, The Men of Money and How They Accumulated It, One of the most romarkable features in tho motropolia is the 1mmense increase of personal wealth, says a Now York letter to the Troy Times. sw York had seen two centuries before it contained onemil- lionaire (John Jacob Astor), but at pres- ent the city contains nearly four hundred. A score of this number is worth from five millions to fifty, while a fow 1 higher, As this is the time for nials, it may be said that at the closo of the revolution York did not contain o single man of wealth. Everybody, in- deod, was thon poor. Capital was brought hither in smail sums by emigrants, and was also m a traflic, and 1n three yeoars after pedoee there was enough money to organizo abank. When tho first d tory was issued (1786) the richest man was Robert Lenox, who was worth about £20,- 000, Ho wasn young Scotchman, and had opened _tho importing businces in what 18 now Pearl stroct. Peter Goolet, the hardware dealer in Hawrover square, was next, Robert Brown, tho Quaker furrior, with whom John Jacob Astor first found employment, was a solid man, but was not rich.” Somo years afterward William Irving (brother of the author) who had beon for somo_years in the job- bing trado, met a friend on Now Year's day and made tho remark: 1 have reached a position which enables mo to do business safoly, 1 took account of stock yostorday and found myself worth 812,- 000.” In thoso days real estato did not mako men rich, for it had but little value. The largest real estate holders wore mar- ket gardenets in the Bowery, who wero struggling to mako a living. The Mur- rays, who had a farm on what is now the Fifth avenue, woro poor, for the soil was unproductive. Wall stroet was chietly devoted to dwellings, and even to infer- ior uses, for in tho first directory I find George Hason, tailor, No. 45 Wall street, and Francis Cofting, porter house, No. 26 Wall street. The first capitalist, as all know, was John Jacob Astor, who soon _brought a large amount of wealth hither by export ing furs. The next man that reached the dignity of a million was Stephen Whitney, and then camo the Lorillards and Davitt Leavitt. Whitnoy was par- simonious, and in somoe respects miserly. He came hither from Connecticut a poor boy, and died at four scoro, leaving 3,- 000,000. John Mason, the once famous vl;'y %‘oodn king, was one of tho rich men of ti roached a half million, He founded the Chemical bank, and was its first presi- dent. Robert Lenox, who died about 1840, was worth a half million, This included his farm, fivo miles out of town, which was thenvalued at $100,000. That vory form iffiow worth $3,000,000. Tho lawyers of that day wero poor, and 80 were tho editors, Tho first Now York lawyer who becamo a rich man was John I. Irving, brother of the author, who died in 1837 worth $3/0,000. The first editor who mo vich was tho senior DBennett Tho richest merchant fiftly years ago was David : started as a clork ! ostablishment. fimporter. at day, but his wealth hardly |} ful. In drygoods H. B. Claflin takes recedence, being estimated at $10,000,- 8. B. Chittenden, however, is & millionaire, and so are the Sterns, of Twenty-third street, James Constable, of the fashionable Broadway store, ia also among the millions, and so is William H. Libby, formerly of A. T. Stewart & Co. Libby is a large,fine-looking man of near- ly three score and ten, and finds sufiicient omployment in settling up _the business of the once colossal firm. Libby failed in his early effort in trade, and little im- agined he would ever reach such grand woalth. Solon Humphreys and John T. Torry, who_grew up with tho lato ox- Governor Morgan, are both millionaires, making money very fast. Being execu tors of Morgan's will, their fees will be not less than $160,000. Rufus Story is another millionoire merchant, He camo to this city as a poor boy, and in acheap grocery. He possessed great physical strength and energy, and endured the drudgery of his condition until he rose above it. He becamo a rotail grocer, and when his capital increased_ho opened*awholesale Eventually he becamoan Ho has been in tre than a half century, and is still ar business man, and occupics th store in which I served him as a clerk forty yearsago, My chief ambition thon was to make monoy, but I afterward thought differently, and at present, whilo thus mentioning our capitalists, am tho more impressed with Burns’ oft-quoted uttoranco: ‘A man’s a man for o’ that.” The Astors, of course, tako precedence among land owners, their possessions being reckoned not by building lots but by acres. Next come the Goelets, Roberts and Ogden, heirs of their father and their uncle Peter to tho ex- tent of twenty acres or more—all im- proved and yielding high rent. They own fifty-five lots (equal to nearly four acres) on Broadway. R. Eno owna a Jarge amount of highly valuable real ea- tate, including the Fifth Avenue hotel, which alone is worth £2 Ham- ilton Fish inherited perty, and is easily worth $1,000,000. John W. Hammersloy also a millionaire land hold, Among others of the same rank are the Hendricks, the Rhine lead- crn, tnd others whose names appear 8o froquently on the tax books. These land owners are accustomed to taking care of such property, and they continually in- cronse it by purchase, while bankers and railway owners prefor their own specialty. In this manner we have two distinct classes of capitalists—real estate men on tho one hand and personal on the other, Norvin Green, president of tho Western Union, has reached a millionaire's position by lucky speculations, John Hoey, pres- ilflmto the Adams express, is equally rich, and so is William Dinsmore, who i3 also oxtensively connected with the ex- ress business. Among fortunate Cal- ifornians who have brought their wealth hither James Mackoy and D. O. Mills are prominent, and the latter is worth £6,000,000 while the former is rated at thrice that sum, Charles Tiffany is the millionaire jeweler, and Delmonico is the millionaire caterer; Henry Villard is rated at §5,000,000. John H. Starin is the chief steamboat proprietor, and is probably worth $2,000,000. His Glon island alone has cost him 500,000, and is avery remuncrative investment. Such are somo of our capitalists, but there are others whom I have not space to mention. As a class they aroe all bus- iness men, and most of them have risen by th own nce no one change bank. He reached an advauced age, and left a half dozen millions, The first physician who reached wealth was Valentino Mott, who died about forty years ago, leaving & half million, The last thirty years have witnessed an immense increase in wealth, & large part of which is in railway and telegraph stock, a form of property so convenient for watering, The chief names in this spocialty are Jay Gould, Russell Sage, and the Vanderbilt family, consisting of William H. and his threo sons. Cyrus W. Field also holds several millions in railway stock, and Washington E. Con- nor (Gould’s partner) is a millionaire of the samo kind. Amm\% our rich law- 3:3“ are David Dudley Field and Samuel . Tilden, each worth three millions. 8. L. M. Barlow is also a millionaire lawyer, and Judge Hilton is worth a half dozon millions, The richest physician is Wil- lard Parker, and the richest clorgyman is Thomas E, Vermilyea, both of whom Tho tobacco kings are J, T. Agnew, D. H, McAlpin, and Peter and Jacob Lorillard, all mil lionaires, while the Havemeyors stand at the head of the sugar interests, being worth several millions, Bennet, Bonner, Ottendorf and Georgo Jonos are millionaires, and some add Dana, but though he is rich, he is hard- ly entitled to this rank. William H. leton and John W, Harper are the est of our publishers, and are no doubt each worth more than a million. \P] i August Bolmont stands at the head of | magoifi bankers, to which business he has closely adhered, until he is now estimated at $12,000,000. FMowever Pottor is a mil- lionaire, but his brother-in-law, James N. Brown is worth thrice as much. Mor- ris K.iJessup is one of the best bankors in the «city, and is estimated at 1,600,000 3 very liberal 8o !iss wivorge L. ho-has made $1,000,000 for hirm- self, ides onriching the is among the millions. He 13 also Presi his father-| aire, in railway operations, Josepl varro is equally rich, having nli\ innnense fortune out of the L. roads o ment houses in the city, whose agg value is at least a million and & ¥, $120,000, ¥, A. Palmer is a mi assist in any deserving cause, is not done yet. led to immense profit, IHis establish wost sido can A;:f], to thent the words of Shakes- are: R”i’hh h?“‘!,""‘“ made to handlo naught but d. Bp [ax rermihta? indaed Athey Nave, in many instances, grubbed their way through years of drudgery and conquered the worst difficulties by persevering ef- forts. Many others equally gifted have failed in the struggle for wealth, and, in- deed, one often sees that success isin many instances due to events beyond our control, Henco thero are those who ;nny claim our respect even in failure—as Y0) : “‘Honor and shame fzom no condition rise, Act woll thy part—there all tho merit lies,” Miss Harriet Lenox and Miss Kitt, Wolf are the richest spinsters, and eac is noted for her beneficence. One is an Episcopalian and the other a Presbyter- ian, but they seem to agreo in the nature of truo pioty. Miss Lenox inherits her wealth from her philanthropic brother, and continues his method of beneficence which is performed in the same private matter. Mrs, Cornelius Vanderbilt (widow of the commodore) is worth near- h [otropolitan bank, of which he is President. LeGrand B, Cannon, is also among the million + | men, and 80 ave Jim Keeno, Addie Cam- ¢| maok and William R, Travers, who are botter known in Wall street ‘than ' else- whore, “W. A, 0, Taylor (son of the lute Moses Taylor) inherited $3,000,000, and Porcy Pino, who married Taylor's sister, i dent of the City bank, having succeoded 1 w in this important office, Benjamin B, Bhermau is also & million- He was ot one timo a Front street grocer, and mado money faster than this class lgenam}ly and became President of the Mechanic's bank, from which office he recontly vetired. O, K. Garrison,who is now an old man, is estimated at £3,- 0 | 000,000, all .made sl\lnping and Na. made owns three of the best apart- gate u , and their annual rent will not be less than " naire banker, and is noted for his readiness to Ho has done a great deal of good, and his work The profits of tho soap trade place Bamuel Colgate among the millionaises, and B, T. Babbitt holds a similar rank, Babbitt began in a very emall way, but he has remarkable powers of calcula- tion, and this enabled hiw to adapt ma- chigery to the business in & manner that ment covers an acro, and is one of the minent features on the north I town, The drug millionaires are William H. Sheffelin, andpdm Jlnhx Me- partuer, D, . Robbins, g:"ufi-bt-m,m oldest in the trade and have been remarkably succoss- l{ a million. She attends the Church of the Strangers, and is of a liberal dis- rosition. Mrs. A, T. Stuart and Mrs, R, L. Stuart are the richest widows of the country, each being worth at least a half a dozen millions, each oc- cupies a Fifth avenue palace which cost a million, and which displays a degreo of internal elegance to correspond with the ificont exterior. Mrs.. A. T. Stew- art is an Episcopalian, whilo Mrs. R. L. Stuart isa Presbyterian, It is her pur- 80 to maintain the samo rich benevo- lenoo which characterized her husband, and the same method is pursued, The palace which she occupies was hardly fin- ishod when death removed Mr. Stowart to the house appointed for all living, and it is rare that so grand an establish- ment is so suddenly shadowed by mourn- ing. ‘hile -mentioning this array of wealth I would say to my readers: Do not send these people anybegging lotters, They are alr ‘:uuudnwfln hence R\x would onl; W AWAY your postage, ey have their own ways of doing good, and do not lack for prompting. It is, however, very sad to see such & tremend- ous contrast in social ranks as is found between rich and poor in a great city. Turning from the 400 millionaires to the masses wo find thousands of the latter living in misery, and while two Fifth avenuo widows each have a palace, there are multiudes who are glad to live in a garret. e — Horsford's Acid Phosphage. Bxcellent'Results. Dr. J. L. WiLus, Eliot, Me., says: *‘Horsford's Acid Phosphato gives most excellent results,” Too Old a Bird to be Caught, New York Lite, Miss Belle Fishor: *'I cannot tell you how eorry I am! I never suspocted for a moment that——" Young Jameson, from Indiana: “Oh! that's all right; don’t let that worry you. Wby, Miss Fisher, I have been refused by uine girls in one summer! I pop it to 'em bofore they are ready-— they, of course, say no, but gen rally in & way that might mean yes later Miss B, F.:© ““That is not the case this time, I assure you.” Young J.: *Oh, that's what they always say, and I pretend to take it au sorieux. Gives me time to think it over, you kuow. Isu't this & glorious afterncon?” o — . _Of the many remedios bofore the public for Nervous Debility and woakness of Nerve ll;':l,:ur‘;"‘dv: ;z;dum, thero is n»-mI; equal to Al w ' e v 1 o prowuly and perma. 81 phi., 0 for $5.— At drg; it never falls, : THE GOOD OLD TIMES, How Ounr Ferefathers Lived Forty Years Ago. years ago gentlomen shaved themselves and carried their apparatus for this purpose whiletraveling. Whiskers were worn from the ear half-way down the face, that being the military style of the period. Full beards and mustaches were deemed disreputable, 1 recollect hearing a gentloman of the “‘old school” argue seriously with a young man from the city on the propriety of shaving off his mustacMe, and another full-bearded in- dividua) just arrived in our villago caused by his appearance a howl of derision on the part of a small group of negro Iw{n. Joar Fort; 50 to £3 per we Bilk ere unknown. Ove shoes were made in South America of ‘vul‘ll rubber and in shape resembled oval hottomed soda-water bottles. The shoe of 1842 c ined enough rubber to make a half-dozen of the overshoes of to- day. Country farm wagons wero unpaint- ed, without springs, and on their sides grow the dry yellow moss of genera- tions, Saturday was market day in the country towns, Tho rural wives and daughters sat in the wagon on_straight-backed flag- bottomed chairs. Then, after bartering their eggs and butter, they drove off home. Tho head of the family sat bolt upright on the front seat, his “‘lash gad” shouldered like a musket on parade, and somatimes betraying an extra degree of stiffening in his attittude thtough the influence of a few drinks. Every country storekesper sold rum by the measure. i ic rum jug was an_institu to town regularly to be filled. CGiongs summoned tho guests to moals. There was a great parade and marshaling of thoe negro waitors, who, with military precision, removed the covers from tho ing dishos, and, returning in line, bore away the dishes also, while tha rur guests of the houso were deeply improase with all this pomp and circumstances of dinner. Many householders had under their roofs the family flint-lock musket, bay- oriot and cartridge-box ready for the sum- mons which once a year required them to appear’*‘armed and equipped as the law directs,” to bo reviewed and inspocted by a gorgeous militia General with a glitter- ing etafi. A gencration exists to-day who never saw a country ‘“‘general training,” so replete with awkwardness, rusty guns, muskets that went off with last year's charges when the “‘inspector” snapped their locks, root beer, rum, negroes, run- away horses unused to warlike sights and sounds, gay plumes and epaulets attached to ataft officers pitched over equine heads and describing in the air glittering para- bolas with drawn sworde. But the pre- sent, with all its boasting and self-con- gratulation, has not the monopely of all the good things of this life. Cannon were then ‘‘touched off” with *‘port fires.” Percussion caps had just made their ap- pearanca Evory oldman haa seen **ticneral Wash- ington” or ‘‘came near it.” Patriotism ran largely to an intense desire to *‘lick the Bntish.” Every murder made a sensation and it was usually expected thatsome one would hang for it. Carrying arms sccrectly about the person was deemed not many deg short of murder itself. ‘‘Pistol pocks were unknown. The revelver was a curiosity. The derringer had never spoken. Nothing akin to the present cheap, easy and expeditious methods for stopping human existence had been de- vised. Whale oil was much used for lighting. Tt was the terror of housewives and played havoc with table-cloths and parlor carpots. Numerous recipes were given, but none were infallible for removing the stain. The candlestick and snuffers were in every house, The “district school” of the period was unwholesomely crowded in winter. It commenced in the morning with a long prayer and generally ended at night with a succession of cowhidings. Most of the teachers were from 'Connecticut and gonerally dyspeptic or consumptive. A “box-stove,” burning wood, heated the apartment, all aglow at one moment and cold the next. Water for drinking wag brought in at intervals in a pail, passed around and drunk out of a tin dipper. The unpainted desks were cut, hacked and ink-stained from the arduous efforts of generations of school-boys. Dried “*spit balls” were flattened on the walls. The big boys chewed tobacco and the marks of missiles of this description might also be seen prominent on the ceiling. The odor of a country school in full blast seomed compcunded of ink and un- washed juveniles. Thoro was no system or gradation of toxt-books, save at the will of the teacher, and school-book publishers had not learned the art of making fortunes through an innumer- able acrics of readors and wntting books. One duty of the master was to make 6r mond tho quill pens for the whole school, a work of no small propor- tions. School was dismissed with an uproar. It was like the bursting of a huge bomb filled with boys. They scrambled over desks und benches without discipline Half an hour the weary master had flog- ged the three worst boys, ‘‘kopt after school,” he ‘emerged from tho scene of educational toture, went to his boarding house and recieved what nutriment he could from the thin 6 o'clock tea of the riod, 3 In the conntry astcam engine wasa great curiosity. Tho roral mind most wondered at the reaciness with which it was stopped, deeming Lhnt.uuch & coneen- tration of power must requiae many min- utes to run down. Country graveyards wero ofton unfenc. od, neglected and uncared for. Cattlo ran freely in them, knocked over and shattered the tombstones, The grounds were overgrown with weeds and wild shrub! Flowers and other tokens of remembrance common to-day were seldom seen in them. The burying ground was then a place shunned and feared, The grave filled up, relativos and friends riod away and might never visit the place again until the next burial. 1t was an ago less gentle and humane in its tendencies than ours. More fathers lashod their sons unmerecifully for small oftenses. No Berg had been developed. There was little restriction on cruelty to animals in any locality. There was no more honesty than to-day—posaibly less People drove hard _and sharp bargains with each other. Provid more often made responsible for the spirit of covotousness, groed and undue accumala- tion, The phrase ran that ‘‘it was our duty to care for the goeds committed to our trust.” ‘This was a good broad door for the entrance and excuso of a multi- tudo of gins. Inhumanity and neglect often prevailed at the town poorhouses, There was no ‘‘reporter’ to Jerret out such abuses. No press to expose W Chaptersyon chapters of such misery are r be written or known. Buch out and were burried in pauper graves, The town poorhouses were some- times farmed out for the year to the low- ent bidder, who did not aaa rule repre- went the culture of the community. Some people are always regretting the “good old times” and wishing they were back. Possibly, if thoso times were back, the grumblers might wish them still fur- ther back. et Josiah Davis's Trouble, Josiah Davi 0. Middletown, Ky. write: 1 am now o a hox of your CARBOLIC SALVE upon an ulcor, which, for the ten days, has given me great his salve is the only remedy I have that has given mo any ease, My ulcor o veius, and was pro noed incurable Ly my medical doctors, I 1, however, that HENRY'S CARBOLIC SALVE ja THY Cramu g an Englishman With In- ormation About Sca San Francisso Post, A well-know fellow-citizen now prowl- ing—not to say growling—through Ku- rope, writes us the following touching ex- perience: I had been for about half an hour, he says, sitting on the deck of ono of the miserable littlo *‘packets” that ply be- tween Dover and Calais and exasprating my follow-passengers by rofusiug to join in the carnival of sea-sickness going on around me, when a ruddy-faced, white- whiskered, bluff-looking individual who had been eyi for somo time stepped up and “Beg pardon, I'm sure; butare you really the American?”’ “‘The American!” I replied; “‘thero are sev Americans, I believe.” “Oh, of course, to be sure. I the one on Yoard. 1 saw ‘George B. Blank, San Francisco, California, U. 8., painted on some of tho baggage, and 1 picked you out right away as the owner.” And the stranger inspected me from head to foot with as vivid a curiosity as if I'd been a wild man of the woods. “Well,” I finally exclaimed, ““I am an American, W] n I do for you!” ‘Why-er —nothing—that is—no of- fonse, I hope, and you are a Californian, too?’ he said, rubbing his hands as though he had indeed met a rara avis. “‘Ever scalped by ihe Indians?” I thik not,” T replied. **You've scalped some of them, though haven,t you?”’ persisted my inquisitor. Concluding that inasmuch as I was in for being made a sideshow of I m’ght as well indulge in some of the circus-poster sort of thing, 1 looked my questioner calinly in the face and replied: ‘‘Some twenty-six or seven, I forget which, 1 have the tally nicked in the handle of my scalping knife. I carry only ono bowie in this country. So seldom one runs across any fun over here, you know.” Killed many white men?” asked the stranger, who appeared to be actually quivering with excitement and curiosity. “Only eight or ten,” I replied care- lessly. “‘You see, in California there is a sort of close season now for shooting white men. ’'Tain’t like the good old man-for-breakfast times. A man isonly allowed to gun around promiscuous like four months in the year. Soit’s hard to keep one’s hand in, don't you see.” “Well, T declare!” said tho apparently stupefied man with tho chop whiskors. “How about, ( hinamen?” *Oh, we kil Chinamen all the year round—when they're fat,” I explained. “‘But there is lately some sort of an ordihance making it a misdgmeanor to shoot 2 pigtail unless ho is on the suany side of the sticet or gots in your way. Folks are getting too infernally particu- lar over that, for a fact.” “‘Kver beon divorced]” finally said the stranger, whose eyes wero now sticking out like pegs ¢n & hat rack. ‘**Nine times, I think,” T eaid ‘In fact, I intended to have been again when I passed Chicago on my way over, but the train only stopped eleven minutes and there wasn't time enough to rush it through—takes twenty-two minutes, you kriow."” I thought this had knocked him out, but after a few minutes bewildered cogi tation he returned to the charge once more. “Ts it really true that all Americans wear chest protectors and eat nothing but pie?” “Well, you sce, the fact is that Amer- icans are, as you know, such a frightful busy people that they haven’t time to sit down and eat a square meal, like you English, They must have something portable—somothing they can cury about with them and nibble on the sly. 1 tell you sir, it looks like business when you see forty or fifty men all hanging on the straps of a street car with one hand and eating pie with the other."” I should rather think so,” murmured the stranger, “As for tho chest proctectors,” I con- tinued, “‘they are really nothing more than pockets suspended around the neck and large enough to carry a whole pie, which it keeps warm at the same time. A good:hot piestowed away in thismanner not only imparts a gentle and grateful warmth to the entire system, but keops a whole day's rations n{wlyn within reach of the wearer. Grand idea, isn't it?" “Well, I'm blessed!” said my fairly paralyzed interrogator, gazing at my childlike and ingenuous face with pro- found awe, ‘‘Would—er—would you oblige me with one of you cards,” he said, “I want to show it tomy family, mean never, Thanks—here’s mine, As I stepped chuckling into my own compartment I glanced at the card of the strang r, It read: ‘‘Julius J, Judkins, San KFrancisco, Cal. X havo spent about eight hours a day looking for the man ever since, S — 1t you haves Sero Throat, & Cough, oF Cold, try B . Dourlass & Sony’ Capsioum Cough Drops, they are leannt o the tasto, pefectly farciiaes sad yu chroniody #ia and Mver m.y plalnt wid in chronie constipation wn d other obetinate dis- HOSTEITERS Stomach Bittors beyond all compari: %00 tho best remedy that can b taken. Ay & moans of restoring tho strength and vi- tal energy of porsons who are aluking un. der the debilitating nful dis- orders, thisstandard vegetablo invigorant i confessadly va oquelled. ¥or sale by all Druggists avd Dea) wen Bl*$ERs EME CREATIENGI Y ERVOUS Cures puiSiciss Debill o) GraTaL LOSS Bl OF MANLY VIGOR, Spormatorr. I hea, ote., when all other reme &y ) [ A oure guaranieed. #1.50 & bottle, largo bottle, four Umes the quantity, 8. By ex. press to any addross. Sold b All druggists. KNGLISH M CAL INNTTTUTE, Propriotors, 718 Olive Skroot, 84 ouis, , Mo . /1 have eald Bir Astloy Cooper's Vil or they'll nover believe a word of this— [ GHARLES SHIVERICK, Furniture! =TC., Have just received a large quantity of new CEAMBER 'SUILTS, AND AM OFFERING THEM AT VERY LOW PRICES PASSENGER ELEVATOR “:HAS, SHIVERICK, To All Floors. | 1206, 1208 and 1210 Farnam =t — OMAHA, NEB. W. A. CLARKE, Superintend Omaha Iron Works, U. . RAILWAY, 19TH & 18TH STREETS RICHARDS & CLARKE, i Proprietors. . MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS IN Steam Engines, Boilers WATER WHEELS, ROLLER MILLS, Mill and Grain Elevator Machinery ! MILL FURNISHINGS OF ALL KINDS, INCLUDING THE Celebrated 'Anchor Brand Dufour Bolting Cloth. STEAM PUMPS, STEAM, WATER AND GAS RIPE. BRASS GOODS AND PIPE FITTINGS, ARCHITECTURAL AND BRIDGE IRON. ODELL ROLLER MILL. =) =] & B [ o = E £ B = = b 54 e We are preparc to furnish plans aua estinates, and will contrs the erection of Flouring Milly and Grain Elevators, or for chan Flouring Mills from Stone to the Roller system. -7~ Kspecial attention given to furnishing Power Plants for any pu:- pose, and estimates made for same. General machinery repairs attended to promptly. Address RICHARDS & CLARKE, Omaha, Neb, 'Anheuser-Busch o, BREWING ASSOCIATION CELEBRATED tal Restorative or yoars. Every oustomer spoaks bighiy of it ) uwabmlll‘l‘c;m: true merlt WP AX, “ Owmaba Feb, 1 1838 V1E mée-codly Keg and Bottled Beer " his Excellent Boer speaks £t itselt. J‘ ORDERS FROM ANY PART OF THR STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, < STIOUISMO -+ Promptly Shipped. * ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE T0 THESTANDARD OoOfOour G-uarantee. F. SCHLIEF, o gikSolo Agent for Omahaand]the Werts & Cor. 9th Street and Capitol Avonue® Booth’s anl’ Brand FRESH FISH AT WHOLESALE. .48 Flour Is made at Salem, Richardson Cor, Nehraska, 1 Use € EXCLURIVE #alo of ous ficur (0 one frm iu & pisde. We hato Write for Prices. Addross elttior iaod Rollor Stone Systew. W d & beasich st 1613 Copibol kot WTALBENTINE « AEPPY, Helem or Omaha, Mela . ] Fow,

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