Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 4, 1884, Page 2

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884, THE DAILY BEE---OMAHA, TUESDAY, MARCH 4,1 DR. FELIX Lt BRUN'S AND PREVENTIVE AND CURE, FOR EITHER SEX. The remeds being infected directly to the weat of the disease, requires no chiange of dict o nauseou, mercurial or poisonous medicines to be taken inter nally. When u-ed as a proventive by either sex, itis fmpossible t ) contract any private dfscasc; but in the ©onso of those already tnfortunately aficted wo guar to0 thoe boxos to cure, of wo will refund the mon . Price by mail, postage paid, §2. per box or three xos for §6. WRITTEN GUARANTEES esned by all authorized agents. Dr. Felix Le Brun&Co. SOLE PROPRIETORS. ©, F. Goodman, Drugght, Sole Agent, for Omak u D E. C, Wrse's NERvE AxD [ r SENT, n guarantood specifio for Hysteria, Dizzi aoss, Conynlsions, _ Fits, Nervous Neuralgia ha, Nervous Proatration caused by the use of aloohol or tobacco, Wakefalness, Mental Do- pression, Boftening of the Brain resulting in in sanity and lending to misery, decay and death Prematuro Old Age, Barronrices, Loss of powor in oither sox, Involintary Lossos und Spermat orrhaea caused by over-oxartion of tho brain, self- abuse or_oyer-indulgence, Kach box containe one month'a treatment. $1.00 a box, or six boxes Tor §5.00, sent by mail prepaidon recoipt of price WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cu case. With each order received byut for six boxos, nccompanied with 540, wo will @end the purchaser onr written guarantoo to re. fund the money if the treatment does not effect aoure, Guarantees issued onlyby ©. F, GOODMAN Solo A ent, Omal nvFIUM!MIJRPHK“flIE HABIT Nob. Dk 1. 1. K. Home, now -~ GRANITE. And your work is done for all time to time to come, WE CHALLENGE The World to produce a more durable material for street pavement than the Sioux Falls Granite. ORDERS IFORGANY AMOUNT OF b bl —OR— MACADAM! filled promptly. Samples sent and * estimates given upon application. WM. MoBAIN & CO.. Sionx Falls. Dakota A vietics of early imprade; Wflz‘v B8 :lchunn 4,. Now York - DR, WHITT( & 617 St. Charles St., St, Louis, Mo. REGULAR GRADUATE of two modioal colleges has in the treatment of show ‘Consultation 1w ‘When It ls lnconvenlent to visit the .M.ludldl-:h:-l!b Illlut’"nl wan. Curable cases ; where dou 1t ls trankly stated. . Norvous Prostration, Debility, Moutal and Physics and iroat’ may Ifiv.ul:o.-—uuu--l-n puum-; 81. LODIS PAPER WAREHOUSE. Graham Paper Co., 17 and 219 North Malo 8t 8t. Louls. WHOLESALE DEALERS IN 5% JPAPERS, (1% GEFEE ¢ 1ED ALIVE, Days and Nights in a Mining Shaft, Nine Helens Herald Feli, 25, It being announced that & man had been rescued from a living death, after being nine days and nights in one of the dangerous mining shafts that unperil the lives of our citizens, The Herald reporter this morning went to the scene of the \lmost miraculous escape from death and ibtained the following particulars: The subject of the distressing sccident isa citizen of Helena and a German of about 50 yoarsof age by the name of Reket Lereider. It appears that he took his meals aince about the 1st of Dacember at one of the restaurants and had a bed at e house of Mr. Jacob Hauck, who lives s little off from the the ten mile road and wnd a few hundred yards beyond the old Brooke mansion. Lereider was in the habit of coming regularly to his lodging house every night from 7 to 8 o’clock, walking from Helena across lots instead of keeping the public road, which is lined by telegraph poles. The house where Lercider slept 18 occupied by two familics, Mr. Jacob Hauck and 8. F. Mason. Mrs. Hauck and Mrs. Mason both aver that the un- fortunate man was regular in his habits and never missed coming home at an early hour, and _that he waa sobor, tem- perate. He was known to leave the houss ou Thursday morning, the 14th inst., and not coming to his lodgings that night the families supposed he had gone with some wood haulers to the mountains, The man says himself that he was walking out to his lodgings about 7 or 8 o'clock on St. Valentine's night pursuing his usual course in a direct line with the light which he saw in the window of Hauck's resid- ence, when he found himself being pre- cipitated to the bottom of a prospect hole, us he supposed, but which proves to be one of the many shafts sunk on the west side in the search for the lost channel. An examination of the hole this morn- ing shows it to bo a shaft about 16 feor deep and 6 foot in diameter, with a pile of snow at the bottcm probably two feet deep. This no doubt prevented the fall from producing instant death, and served as water for the victim during the long and dreary imprisonment. He says that by the aid of a small pocket knife and a small piece of board he was ablo to taiasmle up to within five feet of the surface, only to fall back again to hie horrible situation. This he did some twenty times. During his imprisonment he kept up almost & continual calling for help, until ho was too weak to call except for a few minutes at a time. It appears that he took a great liking to Mr. Hauck’s little boy, Willie, where he was lodging. On Saturday morning last, as little Willie Hauck was playing at some dis- tanse from his house, he heard some one calling his name, and supposed the sound came from somge one in a woodpile at a distance, who wanted to tease him. He came home and told his father that some one was calling his name from the wood- pile. The father teld him not to mind a9 it was some fellow over there with a bottle. The shaft hole ia located about a hundred yards from the main public road, and to the rear of the old Brooke mansion, in a southwesterly direction and within the city limits. Near the shaft was a winter road, which had been used by the wood haulers since the thaw began, and it was through this circum- stance that thelife of the man was saved. Two men—Jacob Hauck and 8. ¥ Mason —were coming to town on Saturday evening with a load of wood, and passing along this winter road within five feet of the shaft, heard the moaning sound of distress, and looking down into the dark dud gloomy hole they discovered poor Lereider to all appearance in the last agonies of death, Hurrying back to the nouse to procuro a ladder, the poor man was raised to the surface, more dead than aliyp, and carried to Hauck’s house where he was kindly administered to vice Second Lieut. Hamilton Rowan, from Battery K to Battery H; Second Lieut. Wm. P, Stone from Battery E to Battery K, vice v‘econd Lieut. Edward H. Catlin, from Battery K to Battery E. Third Artillery—First Lieut. Henry R. Lomly from Battery A to Battery E; First Lieut. John R. Williama from Bat- terv E to Battery A, vice First Lieut Sedgwick Pratt, from Battery A to Bat- tery K; Second Lieut. C. A, Bennett from Battory K to Battery A, vice Second Lieut. Wm. W. Gibson, from Battery A to Battery E; Second Lieutenant Edward A. Miilar, from Battery G to Battery A, vice Second Lieutenant Wilbur Low eridge, from Battery A to Battery E. Fourth artillery First Lieutenant Mont- M. Macombe, from Battery E to Battery 1, vice Lieutenant Joseph Garrard, from Hattery I to Battery E; Second Liouten- ant Ormond M. Lissack from Battery [1 to Battery I, vice Second Lieutenant Frederick 8. Strong, from Battery I to Battery H; Second Lieutenant Adelbert Cronkhit, from Battery K to Battery I, vice, Second Lieutenant Clarence P, Townaley, from Battary 1 to Battery K. Fifth artillory—First Licutenant John McClellan, from Battery 1 to Battery O, vice, First Lieutenant Anthony W Vogdes, from Battery C to Battery I; Firat Lieutenant Thomas B. Adams from Battery A to Battery C, vice First Lieu- tenant Wm, B, McCollum, from Battery Cto Battery A; Second Lieutenant So- lon F. Massey, from Battery A to Bat- tery C, vice Second Lieutenant Wm. G. Galbraith, from Battery C to Battery A; Second Lieutenant Albert C. Blunt from Battery B to Battery C; vice Second Lieutenant J. Walker Bennett, from Bat- tery C to Battery B. The_officers of the new detail, except First Lieutenant Albert Todd, 1st artil- lery, and Second Lieutenant Armond M. Lissak, 4th artillery, will report for duty at Fort Monroe May 1, 1884, wben those tranaferred from the batteries serving at that station, who are not on detached service, will proceed to join their new batteries, Lieutenants Todd and Lissak will re- port for duty at *Fort Monroe as soon as practicable after July 1, 1884. The following named ofticers will be rolieved from duty at the Artillery school, Fort Monroe, Va., May 1, 1884, by the commanding officer of the school, and will join their proper stations within thirty days over and above the time ne- cessary to reach them in the ordinary course: Firat 1ieutenant Lisker H. Bliss, Iat artillery; First Lieutenant Adam Slaker, 1st artillery; Second Lieutenant David J. Rumbough, 3d artillery. The following transfers in the Thirtieth Artillery are ordered to take effect May 1, 1884: First Licutenant John B. Eaton, from Battery K to Battery E; Second Lieutenant George P. Seriven, from Battery B to Battery D. The leave of absence granted Captain Joshua L. Fowler, 2d cavalry, is extend- ed two montha. e First Revived and Then Cured. ““Was troubled for a year with torpid liver and indigestion, and after trying everything imaginable used Burdock Blood Bitters. Tho firat bottle relieved me and the second cured me entircly, J. 8. Williamson, Rochester, N. Y ——— SHOOTING THE FIRE. An Invention That Must Revolution- ize Our Fire Department, New York Star, February Under the supervision of Major A. T. S. Anderson, general agent, there was given in City Hall Park yesterday after- noon un_exhibition of the merits of the Harden Hand-Grenade as a fire-extin- guisher. There were present, beside members of the fire department of New York, representatives from the fire de- artments of Newark, Paterson and Brooklyn, An immense crowd thronged the City Hall esplanade and inclosure, who testified their realization of the suc- cgesive tests by vigorous applause. Thera wore erocted in front of the Qity until he was taken by Deputy Sherifl Conrad and given quarters in the cmmts jnil over nifi:fl. Horo he was y Dr. nursed and treated . R. F. Clark until yesterday morning, when he was taken to the county poor farm. It was discovered that Lereider was badly frozen on his forehead, ears, cheeks, and the bottom of his feet. How any one could endure the cold and exposure for nine days and nights, without focd, and no bed or covering except to sit and lean against tho cold, damp sides of this cavernous grave, seems more of a miracle than anything elsa. In his exertions to scramble up the perpendicular sides of the shaft he wove away the finger ni and the flesh from his hands, Eilin condi- tion was most pitiable indeed when he was resurrected, and besides being lite- rally a frosted corpse, tongue was swelled until his mouth was forced open two inches. . To.day he is (the doctor aays) in a fair way to be saved; he can articulate, and has told his name and how and when he went from the world above Hall 8vs fornildatls pyramids for bon- fires, Three of those were composed of largest size piano boxes and pine staves smeared with tar, and before the flames were lighted they were profusely soaked with kerosene, The first test of the effi- ciency, capacity and reliability of this novel device for the subjugation of fires was an_automatical one. Four of these hand-grenades, which are only half-pint vials, ocontaining a fluid which in the flames’ heat generates carbonic acid gas, in the presence of which combustion can- not continue, were suspended from nails on the walls of the pine pyramid. All preparations completed, a match was lpqlied and the pile of timber was instantly enveloped in a volume of blaze. One of the grenades exploded and the flames subsided, but soon burst forth again. Two of the other grenades ex- tinguished, the fourth grenade still hang- ing amid the charred fuel. Another fire was lighted, and whon the flames were high in tie two of the grenades in their midst A down into the snowy depths of what seemed his living tomb, o — Hoods Sarsaparilla Is designed to meet the wants of those who need a medicino to build them up, give them an appetite, purify their bl od and oil up the machinery of their bodie No other article takes hold of the system and hits exactly the spot like Hood's Barsaparilla, It works like magic, reach part of thehuman body through giving to all renewed life and $1 a bottle: six for 85, o — Army Orders. Special Dispatoh to the Globe-Demoerat. WasmiNaron, D, O,, Fobruary 20,— To-day's army orders were as follows ‘The superintendent general of the re- cruiting service will cause forty recruts to prepared and forwarded under proper charge to Fort D. A. Russell, Wyom ing eve the bloorfi energy. LD, territory, for assignment to the Nin‘g infantry; also, forty recruits .to Madison B B B Yol for ent , ‘The following transfers of Honhnl‘:{a of artillery to and from the batteries sta. tioned at Fort Monroe, Virginia, are ordered to take effect May 1, 1884: Firs ghllory. First Lioutenant Joseph 8, ster from Battery F to Battery G, vice | First Llaum "rA,lla Fir?‘ ron, from Battery i t Lieutenant Albert Todd from Battery F' to Battery }:‘. vice First léhuunl:t John P. Wisser, from Battery H to Battery (i, vice Becond , | Lieut. Wm, . Rafforty, from Battery G -1 0. Ri to Battery H. Becond Artillery—Firat Lieut. Geo. 8. Grim s from Battery H to Battery K, vice First. Lieut. Ephraim T. ichmond, irom Battery K to Batf Alexander D, Schen C to Battery K, vice first ut. W, A, Simpson, trom Battery K O; Second Lieut. George F., Battery H to Battery K, : | volume of smoke rolled away and only charred cinders remained. The three other fires were lighted at the same time, The great pile of pine lumber appeared a formidable fire, and under ordinary circumstquees would have called out more thait one engine of the fire depart ment. Four hand grenades were hurled against it, breaking from their concus alon with the structure, The flames were extinguished almost instantly, Two hogsheads, with their inflamable fuel, were blazing near-by with a furious heat. Into eachof these a couple of the grenades were tossed. ln less time than it takes to write it, a great cloud of smoke rolled into the air and the fire was extinot. The shout of applause betokened the honestly won triumph. The grenades are so simple that they can be used by a child, the only require- ment to render them efficient being thau they ahall break in the flames, Tho, burst automatically in the fames within ten or twelve seconds. without danger to flesh or fabric, “They will resiat cold fifteen degrees below zero and can bo used in any climate. The ent declared that thrown in a flaming il tank they will subdue the flames at once, Yesterday's test would seem to justify his assertion, for the material gnited was & mass of tar and kerosene. These ea are already used on all the cars that run west from Chi- cago. Fullman has them everywhere in his car works. A night watchman with a few of these glass bottles in his posses- sion could control any incipient fire that might break out. The cost of tne gren- wdes is $0 per dozen for half-pint and $10 per dozen for pint vials, e —— A Dakota Blizzard, A Dakota ives the following de- scription of .P:;B'mh of the recent blizzard: “Until about 4:156 p. m., the day was sunny, pleasant, and with a tem perature as mild a8 spring, The streets were filled with people, and ladies were promenading in the enjoyment of the e e ekt ncain . i3 Al out the sli wi ) & wi wall of frost and snow appeared in the will heat They are northwest. It seemed as though the bluffs in that direction had ruddenly shot upward to a height of one thousand feet, #0 solid and compact did this icy wall ap- pear. In a second of time the storm burst with a;palling fury, and the win- dows which had by the mildness of the stmosphore become clear of frost, were heavily coated with clinging snow on the outside and heavy frosted particles on the inside. The air grew terribly cold, and was darkened by flying frost and snow. The high walls of the hotel directly oppo- site were not to be seen. All objects were hidden by the flying and rapidly driven snow. Pesple on the streets sought shelter, and the stores were tem- porarily used for protection from the fierceness of the howling blast. Darker grew the atmosphere, to such an extent that business in.the office was stopped until lights were procured.” C— A Vine Hit. When the proprictors of Burdock Blood Bitters put this renowned medicine on the market they hit it exactly, They hit dyspep- sin, indigestion, and liver and kiduey com plaints n hard blow, from which they will never recover — A MARQUIS FROM MONTANA, The Gentleman Who Cowboys at Lattle Mission, Fought the New York Sun. The Marquis de Mores came to New York in August, 1882, After a short time he was attracted by the stories of the new territory along the Northern Pacific railroad, and he finally deter- mined to see it for himself. In looking over the business prospects of the region he learned that the people were doing a very peculiar thing in the way of supply- ing themselves with a necessary article of diet. Ranchmen and stock-breeders were raising cattle which they sold to drovers. The drovers shipped the cattle to Chicago slaughter-houses, The people of the cities along the line of the road (there were no_villages, though some of the cities contai ed only three houses) were sending to Chicago for beef, which was shipped to them in refrigerator cars. The two transportations brought up the rice of steaks to a figure which even New York marketmen would call hand- made_inquiry con- nts of cattle. He found thata certain partof Montana shipped an average of 4,600 cattle a month, and imported five carloads of thirty beeves cach per day. Tho oppor- tunity offered for the slanghtering busi- ness in Montana was good. = The marquis embraced it. OF this the public knew nothing, but i June last, soon after his determination to go into_the business, a very thrilling account of his cncounter with cowboys near Little Mission, was telegraphed to the New York newspapers. Some men had tried to run the marquis out of the country. The attempt gave the mar- quis an opportunity to win tho respect of his western neighbors, and the cowboys an opportunity to get hurt. One of them died suddenly during the encounter, They were nts for eastern land owners and had at first tried to force the marquis into a bargain which he did not think a good one, After this encounter the Marquis was allowed to pursue his own devices. He pursued them mostly on horsebaok, with a sombrero on his head, ared shirt on his back, and corduroy trousers tucked into very long-legged boots. His jewelry had silver-mounted handles and were hung to a‘heavy leather belt. He finally decided that the railroad bridge over the Little Missouri river overlooked the land he wished to buy. He purchased six square miles of the land, and started in to build acityas wellasa new industry. His first building in the new city was a tent, which he pitched unaided, on April 1, 1883. When the last peg was driven, ho named thecity Medora, Medora tsalsothe name of the Marquis's wife, who is the Major Anderson broke He stands his shoulders back,” He has very dark daughter of Mr. L. Von Hoffman, the Yall street banker, Six hundred par- sons aro now on the spot engaged in helping the growth of the city. The Badlands Cowdoy, of which Mr. G. Packard, u former Chicago reporter, is the editor, tells each of the six hundred what the rest have been doing during the week, and to the public at large details the many natural and acquired advant- ages of the new city as a place of busi ness and residence. It has done this since February 4, a day that will there- foro long bo remembered in Modora, In the meantime the Marquis had not neglected his original intention of sup- g:ying the Montana cities with their own ef without the intervention of the Chi- cago butchers. He began by calling nis enterprise the Northern Pacific Refriger- ating company. It was a cold day among the slaughter-houses in Chicago when he began. Then he purchased some cattlo aud sheep to stock his land with, The wire fonces of the south and the catting thereof did not trouble him. Nature had provided him with natural fences in the high, steep banks of the little creeks that flow into the Little Missouri rizer. A single line over the “divide” from creek to creek inclosed the pusture, Then ghter-houses, all on one plan, were built at the larger places from St. Paul west. les City and Vedalles the people united in buying two hundred acres ot land, which they presented to him in consideration of his establishing the new industry of beof making. At St. Paul he built a large refrigerator house. When ready he bought all the cattle that the ranchmen had to sell alon the line of the road, He slaughte: them at convenient houses, and dis- tributed the beef in refrigerator cars under a contract with the North- ern Pacific, When tho supply dropped he drew from his own herds. He kills about two hundred head of cattle a day now. His private herds at present num- ber six thousand head. He employs in all about 150 men. Near Bismarck he hought twenty thou- sand acres of wheat lauds. To induce farmers to settle around that land he gives to each new comer the use of forty acres of broken land one year froe, which gives the man a crop the xnt year he is there. . When tho beef businees was firmly on its hoofs he gave more attention to the growth of the new city of Medors. He imported, in all, over one million feet of lumber for building. He had observed that the divide on the top of the ridge between the Liwtle Missouri and the Missouri rivers was almost a natural roadway that led directly toward Dead- wood. "He gave this nutural ‘roadway needed artificial improvements, and ll«u'ted‘ the Deadwood and Medora stage ne. This is now diverting the Dead- wood trade to Medora, to the great ad- vantage of both places. The road will Lr“ up stock farms along the Little ssourl, It is not impossible that Me- dora may bo the torminus of a Deadwood railway. The marquis is twenty-six years old. He is tall, and probab, weighs uot far from one hundred seveuty pounds, | squarely on his heels, witl hair, gray oyes, a vory dark mustache, and regular featares; in all, the Marquis is a fine looking man. His dress yester- day was dark and of very fashionable cut. A silk hat replaced the sombrero of the plains. Any one would pick him out for & successful broker, but none would suspect him to be the manager of the va- various intorests he has in charge along the line of the Northern Pacific Railroad. me— DAKOTA INTERESTS, Interview With Secretary Teller— Opening of the Sioux iteser va- thon ~Divisic Likely ~AS8 to the Gov- ernorship. , March 1, Hon. J. H. Teller, secretary of Dakota, and now, during the absence of Governor Ordway, the acting governor, was in the city yesterday on his way home to Yank- ton from a visit to Washington, He had been called there, as a member of the Sioux treaty commission, to counsel about the proposed opening of the reser- vation. The train from the east came in late, and 8o the reporter had but a fow minutes’ talk with the secretary as he was waiting in the Milwaukee train to go out to Yankton. The first conun- drum propounded was about the probabi- Sloux City Jou lity of the Sioux reservation being epened. ““L think the reservation will be opened to settlement,” said the secro- tary, “‘but just in what way cannot be stated. To give the Sioux the cattle and other things provided in the treaiy, a good deal of money is required, and there is a disposition, on tho part of dem- ocratic members, especially, to cut down appropriations, The law under which the treaty was made contemplates open- ing the lands to homestead settlement only, and that would give no money for the lands, A modification of the home- stead idea is talked of for the reserva- tion lands, whereby the settler, at the end of his two years residence, will pay twenty cents per acre for his land. This will give a fund, and for the ready money needed to carry out the treaty it is planned to anticipate the income from this sourco. The Sioux are entitled under the treaty of 1808 to a school for every thirty children, and have not had this. To compensate for these schools it is sug- gested that the estimated amount to which they were entitled, and did not get, be now expended for their benefit. Ono of the senate committee that visited the agencies last summer is absent from Washington on an_investigating com- mittee, and this delays final action. But in some form, I think, the reservation will be :.npened to settlement the present session. Will Dakota get anything else from the present congress? “I think not. Admission is out of the question. Some of the democratic members talk favorably of division, but if the question comes up the course of the democrats is likely to be fixed in caucus, and not by Individual preference. Besides, a bill introduced now, in its regular course, could not be reached this session.” Bismarck? *‘That stands no chance. The capital question will be left to be settled by the courts. The Bismarck people proposed to the southern Dakotians that if the capi- tal suit was_dropped they would join in pushing a bill for the division of the ter- ritory. The proposition was declined, for there was no certainty that even were all the factions to unite division could be secured.” Is Gov. Ordway a candidate for reap- pointment? *‘He was a candidate but is not now, 1 think. He is backed by Chandler. It may be that he is not out of the field yet, forone of his friends said that possibly we would be surprised to see him appoint- ed yet. My nams was mentioned,as you remember, 1 told them that T would not tako the office if I could get it. Ex-Post- mester General Tyner is favorbly men- ticned for the governorship, and has a good chauce of getting the place.” Just at this interesting point the train started Dakotaward and the reporter jumped off, —— An Explanation, _ No one medicine will cure everything, but it is an incontestible fuct that Zhomas fclectric il will cure a sprain or a bruise, & bite, or an ache, and is also an_active and pronounced cure for neuralgia aud rheumatism. e — THE SWINE COMMISSION, ‘fhe President Recommends its Views and Conclusions, ‘WasniNaroy, March 2..—The president has trausmitted to the house the report of the commiseion on the condition of the s=ine products of this country. He rccommends the views and conclusions of the commission as worthy of the most eareful consideration of congress with a view, if it can be done legitimately, to the removal of restrictions on exports now existing. He also commends the public spirit of the members of the commission and recommends an appropriation to reimburse them for expenses incurred and remunerate them for the time spent. - He likewise recommends a provision forspecial efforts in the direction of investigation into the origin, propagation and means of extir- pation of trichinm, The secretary of stato also transmits a communication on the subject. He says the report shows conclusively that hog cholera is not pres- ent in meat packed for human food, and in no event is disease communicable to human beings. As to trichinosis, the re- rt is less conclusive, because less is nown about the transmission of living trichinm and germs, He advises further investigation, H® asserts, however, that the process of packing and time between slaughter and consumption abroad so dim- inish tho vitality and reprductive power of trichine as to prevent their de- velopment in the human body, Nota single instance, based on scientific testi- mony, can be adduced of trichinosis in Europe as arising from the use of Amer- ican packed awine products. In ever single case in Germany it has been fou that the diseage was traceable to the con- sumption of freshly killed hogs, and that ite virulence diminishes with the lapse of time, I(ill;n .i.)ld consumption, In speaking of the objection to the inspec thon of moat products, the socrotary says: If home wspection, with due certifica. tion, will open foreign markets for our swine products, it will certainly pay the American exporter to submit to such in speotion,” | — Let Truth Prevail, Lot the facts bo kmown, Let us under- stand thata boil, or an uloar, or & carbuucle, or any eruption or blomish of the skin is sure to wear away and disappear when Burdock Plood Bitters »re employed. This wonderful h | wediciue acts directiy upon the circulation and the reasons for its use are therefore ob- vious, About a bill for fixing the capital at —— Has the Laroest Stook in Omaha and itakes the Lowest Prices. CHARLES SHIVERICK, Furniture! BEDDING AND MIRRORS, Purchasers should avail themselves of the opportunity now offered to buy at Low Pric:s by taking advantage of the great inducements set out by PASSENGER ELEVATOR EHASl SHWEHIEK 1206, 1208 nd 1210 F' 8 To All Floors. * OMAHA, NEB. A.E. DAIIL.EKEY. MANUFACTURER OF FINE Bugaies Carriaces and Suring Wagons My Repository onstautly el with aselcct otook. Besh Workmanahip guarantoed. Ommce ractory S, W. Larner 16th and Copria’ dvenus Omaha Neb BAU CLAIRE LONBER YARD. E. W. DIX O, WHOLESALE AND RETAIT, Limber, Lime, Lath, Doors, Windows, Ete. Grades and prices as good and low as any " the city. P'2ase trv me. RICHARDS & CLARKE, Proprietors, l Car Line. W. A. CLARKE, Superintendne Omaha Iron Works U. P. RATuWAY. 179TH & 18TH STREETS MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS |IN SteamEngines, 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 ANDEGAS PIPE. ! BRASS GOODS AND PIPE FITTINGS, ARCHITECTURAL AND BRIDGE IRON. ODELL ROLLER MILL. TIIN Y4770 TTIGO We are prepared to furnish plans and estimates, and will contract for the erection of Flouring Mills and Grain Elevators, or for changing Flouring Mills, fremStoue to the Roller System. g™ Kirpecial attention given to furnisning Power Plants for any pur- se, and estimates made for same. General machinery repairs attended to promptly. Address RICHARDS & CLARKE, Omaha, Noh. LOUIS BRADFORD, imber. Sash Doors Blinds Shingles Lath §BTO0.; LOW PRICES AND GOOD GRADR¥, 4! gud Get my Frices before baviag elsewbere. Yards, corner Stb avnd Donalus, Ales e and Nonalos Y o J* O, PRES COT” N. ¥ OURTICE. J. 0 PRESCOIT & CO,, IWholesale and Fletail PIANOS & ORGANS! Music, Musical Instruments of all Descriptions, CEEAPEST AND MOST RELIABLE HOUSE n thhe State. QALL 17 FXAM ¥¥® OUR STOCK OR SEN B PRICES,

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