Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 7, 1884, Page 2

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THE DAILY BEE---OMAHA, FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 1884. — THE DEPARTMENT OF DAKOTA Rome Tteme, ATl you own b 11 you reman sick wher (et hop bitter that ner ~The weakest woman, smallest child, and sickest invalid can use hop bitters with safety and great good. 2 —0ld men tottering around from Rheumatism. kidney trouble or any weakness will be almost new by using hop bitters ~My wife and daughter were ma de healthy by the use of hop bitters and I recommended them to my people.- - Meth- odist Clergyman. Ask any gosd doctor It hop ‘aro not the be.t family medich its of History Thereanent, Both An- clent and Modern—The New Posts Built 8ince Gen, Terry Assumcd Command, St Paul Ploneer Press It is & trite saying that the military precedes the civil; the soldior is the fore- runner of the settler. The remark 1s especially true in the experience of the heople of the Northwest. 1In fact, it may Fe said to be an_epitome of our history. For, whenever in the effort to satisfy the earth hunger, which is almost insatiate, there has been an extension of the frontier; or when a new Eldorado, with its fabeled wealth, has tempted adven- turers to advance far into the wilderness, it has ever been the soldier’s part to drive back or hold at bay the savage Indian, and to repross the equally savage and lawless white man until the civil organi- zation has been effected and the life and property rendered secure. The erection of tg: military posts along the navigable straams or on interior lines of communi- cation has been the signal for settlement, and the period which has elapsed since the establishment of a fort and its aban- donment can in general be said to be a measure of the rate of progress. But apart from this view of the frontier post at an advance guard on civilization, there is hardly one of them which does not in its past history something of sufficient interest and importance to he worthy of mention. Sometimes it is the story of brave and manly endurance of hardship and suffering, of hair-breadth from the savage Indian, or of d which for true gallantry would not dscredit the knighta of old. Not infre- quently it is the history of noble self-sac- rifice and heroic death. ' Again it is some humorous rollicking story or a tale of love 80 full of romance and of thrilling adven- ture that it will prove a a mine of wealth to the future novelist. In giving a skotch of the military post in the Northwest, it will, of course, be impracticable, in the columns of a newspaper, to do more than touch upon these subjects briefly. Already many of these things have become mat- tors of tradition but they form part of the local history, and, as the country fills up, will be proper subjects for research and record on the part of various his- torical societies. THE CMENT IN SIXTY-SIX, But first a word of the department in general. At present the military posts in the northwest, east of the divide of the Rocky mountains, are included in what is known as the department of Daketa, which embraces within its limita the state of Minnesota and the territories of Dako- ta and Montana. It was created by order of the president Aug. 11, 1866, out of the departments of the Missouri and the Platte, and General Alfred H. Terry was assigned to the command. In an order dated from Omaha, Neb., Sep. 1866, Gen. Terry firmally assumed sharge of the department, and designated Fort Snelling as his headquarters; but in April followinghe transfered headquarters to 8t. Paul. There were but ten posts in the Zdepartment, v Forts Snelling, Ripley, Abercrombie, Wadsworth (now Sisseton) Randall, Sully, Rice, Thomp- son and Buford, which were garrisoned by about 4 000 men, consisting of the Tenth, Thirteenth, Twenty-second and Thirty-first regiments of infantry. There was not a single fort in Montana, Tho Indian frontier did not seem very remote from St. Paul; indeed the country be- tween the Red and Missouri rivers was a wilderness inhabited by the Ohippewas and Sioux, while beyond the Missouri was almost a terra incognita, whero even military t were infrequent, and the Indian roamed at will. Despite the suc- cess of tho then recent expeditions of Genorals Sibly and Sully, the I question was still unseltlod. Treaties h been made only to be broken, and the Indians had become so insolent and the demands of the settlers were so urgent that prompt and energetic action was re- «}u‘u-od. he first step taken by Gen ‘Perry was to increase the number of post in vhe department, and orders were given for the erection of several during the sea- son of 1867. A post was established at Cheyenne river and ' Forts Ransom, Tot- ten, Stevenson, Shaw and Ellis were built. These forts, and others which have since been erected, were located either in the immediate vicinity of the In- dian agencies or at strategic points, the idea being to keep the Indians within the limits of the reservations and as far as possible to isolate the various tribes and prevent them from combining together or communicating with each other. Since 1867 the building of these outposts has kept pace with the progress of the coun- try. Malarial fever, Ague and Bilious- ness, will leave every neighborhood as soon as hop bitters arrive. s My mother drove the paralysis and neuralgia all out of her system with hop bltters, . Oswego Sun, —Keep the kidneys healthy with hop bitters and you need not fear sickness, —1Toe water is rendered harmless and more refreshing and reviving with hop bitters in each draught. —The vigor of youth for the aged and infirm in hop bitters! — At the change of lite nothing equals Hop bittorsto allay all troubles incident h reto.” —*'The best periodical for ladies to take monthly and from which they will receive the greatest benefit ia hop bit- — Mothers with sickly, fretful. nursing children, will cure the children and bene- fit themselves by taking hop bitters dai- ’—-Thouund. die annually from some form of kidney disease that might have been prevented by a timely use of hop bitters. —Indigestion, weak stomach, irregu- larities of the bowels, cannot exist when hop bitters are used. A timely . .. ure of hop Bitters wili keop a whole family Tn robust bealth & year a* & littlo cost. . —To produce real genuine sleep and child-like repose all night, take a little hop bitters on retiring. —That indigestion or stomach gas at night, pra\‘entmirut and sleep, will dis- appear by using hep bitters. —Paralytic, nervous, tremulous old Iadies are made porfectly quict and sprightly by using hop bitters. P AV IE —WITH— I FLS 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 [FORJANY AMOUNT,OF Piving WBlu IS MACADAM! filled promptly. Samples sent and estimates given upon application, WM. MoBAIN & CO. Sionx Falls. Dakor DISEASES OF THE EYE & EAR J, T. ARMSTRONG, M. D., Oculimt ‘and Aurist. Dt ofios arv repalred trom rosult of fire, off with Dr. Parker, 00 Doukias Streets Sy 81, LOUIS PAPER WAREHOUSE. Graham Paper C 217 and 219 North Maln 8t., 8t Louls, WHOLESALE DEALERS IN 1% JPAPERS, (%% . ENVELOPESZCARD BOARD AND PRINTER’S STOCK AW Casts oald for Rags of all A POSITIVE;: Rk THE DEPARTMENT OF TO-DAY, Of the ten original posts, five have been abandoned; but from time to time, a8 necessity has demanded, others have ‘that to-day the depart. including the station at Camp Poplar River, nincteen garrisoned posts. In the northeast is situated Fort Pembina; Fort Snelling is the most enst- erly; in the extreme south lies Fort Ran- d‘fl; while the southwestern frontier is guarded by Fort Meade. Near the western line of the department lies Fort Missoula, and in the extrome northwest and not far from the British boundary, is situated Fort Assinaboine. Since its creation in 1866, no fewer than three regiments of cavalry, and fourteen regi- ments of infantry, have at different periods seen service in the department, and its importance as a military com- mand can readily be estimated from the fact that for a long time fully one third of the available military force of the United States was on duty within its limits—nor has it been hol soldiering for these troops—until witl:fln the past year almost incessant warfare has been carried on with the Indians, either with single bands or, as in 1776, with the combined force of the Sioux nation. There has been campaigning through the if cold and throug| ng snows ‘box No. 1 will enre any case In four days or less No. | of winter, Besides this, the scouting, uflwmwuuwum E:m“:‘m,' fi":’““‘"&i‘"‘d Moo ” & usual routine of arrison, have Allan's Soluble Medicated Bougies | soniiied to make the lot of the oiicers 3 and men alike not altogether an enviable or happy one, A SUDDEN MOVE, As has been remarked, department headquarters were established in St. Paul in April, 1807, after having been located at Fort Snelling four or five months only. Here they remained with- out change until July, 1878, when there was 8 en hi to Fort Snelling in consequence of enactment of & law by congress req! :‘f military headquar- ters to be maintained at points where the government owna buildings or barracks, unless the secretary ¢f war shall by an order in writing otherwise direct, The quarters at the fort were, however, so poor and insuflicient that permissi a8 yranted to return to St. Paul until suit. | able buildings could be prepared. Two ! years were spent in the erection of the | uticers quarters and other buildings, | when the change was effected aod { permanent headquarters of the dopart- ment were announced at Fort Snelling. Since its establishment the department of Dakota_has had but two commanders. Gen. A. H. Terry was in charge from April 18, 18606, until May 18, 1869, when he was relieved by Maj. Gen. W. S. Haneock, who retained the command for little more than three yoars. On Dec. 3, 1872, Gen. Terry was a second time as wigaed as commander of the department, and still retains the position. — Letter from Dr, Terre, 18 Wesr 301 ST | New York, JUNE 1, 3§ 1 have been a sufferer in the past with Malaria, which finally became Chills and Fover. Treatment by my physician failed to help me. T used BraNDRETH'S Priis and was cured. Thirteen months have elapsed sinco then, and I have had no recurrence, Other members of my fami ly used them for the same trouble, with the same good result. 1 eheorrully endorse them for that ill- ness, and also as a pleasant laxative or purgative, according to the number taken. They are now a household remedy with me, and I am never without them. 1 would gladly give the details of the fore- going to any who might choose to call upon me for them. J. E. BERRE, Dentist. Stories of the H Communieata’, The steamers John J. Roe and Thomas E. Tutt were moored with their prows close together in front of General William T, Sherman's headquarter's at Young's Point, during the investment of Vicks- burg, The firemen, roustabouts, and deck hands congregated at night on the forecastlo of the Roe to rehearse their oxploits while working upon different steamers on the western rivers. Sitting upon the boiler deck of the Tutt one night the following colloquy was heard “Say, Pote,did you eher see de stemal Libberpool!” “No, sah, | nebbah seed her,” said Pete. “Well, sah,” she war’ jes a little de’ fasses stern wheel boat dat ebbah run de ribbah. One time we war gwine up de Arkansaw, an’ a nudder stemah got aftah her, an’ we poked in de wood, an’ de coal an’' de tah, an’ de rosum, an’a couple ob no count, lazy niggers, like you is, an’ jis made her sizzle. De ingunear pulled de frottle walb wide open an’ made dat’'wheel fly roun’ so fast dat it jumped out ob be boxes, an’ flew clar ober do harricane deck an’ lit slap dab on to de fo'cassle. Dat war de kine ob a dugout she war,” ““How did you finish de balance ob de trip?” said Pete. **Well, you see, she was undah such powfull headway dat she made twonty miles to Littlo Rock, wid a bobtail flush, in a roun hour by de watch. An’ we had to sling de anchor ober to keap her frum sootin’ pas de town. What's you darkey's laflin’ 'pout?” “‘Lookey heah, niggah,” said Sam; *‘1 spec dat you nebbah sead a steamboat on stilts, did yer!” “No, sah; I nebbah seed one ob dat kine." **Well, sah, when I fiahed on de bully Red Rober on de Hio ribbah, she had stilts fastened to her sides, an’ when we was a cummin’ to one ob dem riffles, o shaller places, we put on a full head ob steam, drapped the stilts and jump her obah.” “*What, jump her obah de rifile?” ““Yes, sah; an’ one time wo forgot to drap ’em, an’ she stuck her snout into n sanbar an’ turn a fus-class summersct an nebbah sturbed a single ting abode.” “Don’t you call me a liah. T tole you, its do reglar ole h.nded troof.” —— The * ‘Exposition U o do I'art Culi wuire” awarded the hignest honors to Angon tura Bitters as the most efficacious stimu lant to excite the appetite and to keep the di gestive organs in good order, Ak for the gen uine article, manufactured only by Dr, J. G B, Siegert & Sons, and boware of -imitations — Pattl's Sunday in Denver, Donyor Tribune, Patti arose late yesterday and break- fasted at 11:30. At 1 o'clock she ordered her carriage, and the afternoon was passed in sight-seeing by her and Signor Nicolini, During the afternoor she visited several friends resi i Denver, returning in time for The evening was spent in her room, When The Tribune reporter called she was found chatting with her parros. ‘The conversation was in Italian and was evidently of a pleasant nature, as Dr. Dittman, Signor Nicolini and Monsieur Franchi were laughing heartily at the bird's rej 10 madame, Patti isited Cherry creek dur ing the day and confessed that the beautiful dark bluo stream made her thing of. ““That starry night in June Upon the Danube river,"” ““;’l'lan will you leave Denver, ma- 0 tabouts, “‘Tuesday morning. Our car will be at tached to the regular Union Pacific train for Cheyenne. We will spend the day in that city?” *‘Will you sing there?" ““No. I will not sing until we arrive in San Francisco.” **Will you sing in Denver on your re- turn?"” “‘1f Colonel Maplesonmeets with success in California we may stay three weeks on tho slope. In that event we will not stop in this city on our return. If, how- ever, we return as scheduled, I will sing here on April 2" Dr. Dittman at this point drew from his pucket. A CABINET PHOTOGRAIH, which he hauded to the diva. “Oh, where did you get i she exclaimed. *‘The dear little thing,” and she began to rapturously Kiss the picture, and then pressed it to her b?l,om. *'Oh, doctor, where did you get it?" The doctor explained that he had re- ceived it by mail from a friend in New York, who had enlarged it from a small card, The rest of the party in the room had been looking at this scene with surprise and wonderment, Patti handed the card to the reporter. 1t was that of a young EM’ s mere child, with a pretty face, andsome eyes and dark hair, parted down over the forehead and drawn back in the fashion of twenty years since. The garments in which the little girl was clad were also of that date, and below the rather long dress the pantalettes were revealed. There was no mstaking the face: it was that of Patti—Pattiasa child. The card was passed to the other gentlo. men and returned to vhe diva. She held it from her and gased as it forsome time Then calling for pen and ink, sat down at the table and wrote across the face of the picture: *To my dear friend, Dr. Dittman, in remembrance of the ‘little mite,” Aperiya Parr,” ———T Beauty, that transitory newer, can only be hold by uing Poszouni's. medicated complex: on powder, TOM ORITTENDEN, The Grandson of Senator Oritterden Convicted of Murdering a Colored Man, and His Panishment Fived at Bight Year's Im- prisonment—The Scene in the Court-ltoom. £ Journal circuit court room was again crowd od yesterday, and the now famous trial of Thomas Crittenden, charged with the murder of Rose Museby, was continued Mr. Caldwall opened by a powerful speech for the defence, and was followed by Mr. Caruth in aspeech of exceeding force and eloquence, He concluded about noon, and the jury retired to the jury-room Hour after hour passed away and still the jury brought in no verdict, and the crowd lingered on. Bets were freely made that there would be a hung jury or an acquittal; and some even went 8o far as to name jurymen who werein favor of letting the young man off. The court- room was full of Crittenden's friends, all anxious for an acquittal. The dinner hour arrived, and the jury were taken over to the hotel. They returned, and there was still no verdict. Just at 4:30 o'clock the foreman of the jury rapped for a deputy sheriff, and the jury slowly and solemnly filled into court, “‘Are you agreed upon a verdict, gen- tleman?” **We are,” they responded. There was an instant hush in the court room, Nota whisper was heard. At one end of the counsel’s table sat young Tom Orittenden, a handsome, stal- wart, finely formed young fellow of 25 or thereabouts, with a wild looking eye and a red mustache which he was incessantly feeling. At his sido sat his mother, a well-preserved old lady, whose silvered hair and gentle face were objects of uni- versal pity, Noar by sat the boy's father, au honored and respected gentleman, with a strongly marked face and an eagl: vye. Close beside the prisoner sat his two aunts, The lawyers were grouped about The clerk slowly read the finding. We, of the jury, find the defendant guilty of voluntary manslaughter, and fix his punishment at eight yoars in the penitentiary. This was the finding after a few errors ha been stricken out of it. The effect of the verdict on the crowd was electrical. Without knowing why, nearly every man in the court-room was on his feet. Every one seemed to hold his bresth and watch the prisoner. Mrs. Crittenden threw her arms about her son’s neck ard laid her head on his shoul- der, hidding her face from sight. Her quivering form told of her emotions. The other ladies sought to comfort the stricken mother. Young Crittenden nervously pulled his moustache, while his face grew white. He was strongly affected. His father seemed broken-hearted by the verdiot. The sight was a sad but picturesque one. The court-room was just growing dusky, and the long rows of silent spocta- tors who looked more like statutes than men, the young man bringing to a felon’s coll one of the proudest names in Ken- tucky,and the grief of his mother and fath- or were truly affecting. It was an awe- stricken crowd, for hardly a man present believed the grandson of John J. Critten- den would ever be convicted. Jailer Ru bel took the young man back to jail after he had an aflecting parting with his mother. "The lawyer will at once apply for a new trial, and expeots to get one without much trouble. The case was managed by Maj. Kinney and that gentleman showed even more than his usual ability, He spared nothing in getting up facts and witnosses and to him is due in a great part the light verdict received The evidence was terrible in its directness, and the only wonder is that Crittenden did not get a lifo penalty. HOW THE JURY ST00D, When the jury went into their room at 12 o’clock the first thing they did was to take a ballot on the guilt or innocence of the accused. They were unanimously of the opinion that he was guilty. Then the next thing was to findout whatshould be his punishment. Two of the jury were for willful murder—Messrs. Kendall and Leathermann—punishment death, and ten were for manslaughter. Of these ten one was for two years, one for ten years, and the rest ranged all the way up to fifteen years. Capt. Jack Weatherford moved they ballot on giving him ten years. This was done, and after consid- erable argument the two wilful murde: wmen came down to twenty years and fif teen years, There was much talk and argument, but the jury hung at this, At length, after half a dozen ballots, they all agreed on eight years. A WILD BOY'S CAREER. “'point a moral.” Never did a young man have a more brilliant career open before him. He received as his inherit- ance an historic name that had never been dishonored till he bore it. His father is a man of power and influence and the hightest social and political circles in the state were open to him. But the boy began badly, After a wild college life he went to his native place, Frankfort, where his career was one long carouse, from the time he was old enough to drink until he left, He was not a dishonest lad nor a wicked one, but was of a boisterous and unruly tempera- the talk of the town and for weeks the pers were full of it. His history K:rn was one long succession ot brawls. Even after he killed Moseby he d d not discontinue his drinking. All the ar- rangements had been made to have him pardoned by (fov. Blackburn, when Crit- tenden and two others nearly killed a bar-keeper in a saloon fight. After that the governor refused to interfere, After all, it is no unfavorable comment on on Kentucky civili ation that a jury o Kentuckians sentenced the grandson of John J, Crittenden to a long term in the etate prison for killing a negro. — A Oase Not Be Dr. M. H. Hinsdale, K us of & remarkable cure of consumption, He mays: ‘A neighbour's wifo was attacked with violent lung disease, and pronounced beyond help from Quick Consupmtion. A« a Jast ro- sort the family was persnaded to try DR. WM. HALL'S BALSAM FOR THE LUNGS, To the astonishment of all, by the time she had used one half dozen bottles she was about the house doing her own work. I saw her at her worst and had no idea she conld recover.” Watson's Neuralgia King, This is one of the best remedies for Neural- gia over Invented, Itis not a liniment, hut is a modicine to be taken internally, and cures by going right to the root of the disease. A Iady who tried many other things, without re- liof, tried Neuralgia King, and was immedi- ately cured, We guarantee it in all cases when sed according to dirsctions. —— DRINKING STATISTICS, Grudual Reduction of Whisky-Drink- ing, Pluladelphia Pross. The consumption of spirits in the United States is discussed by the Rev. Dr. D. Dorchester in a recent issue of The New York Independent with the con- clusion that the average per capita con- sumption was five gallons a head sixty years ago and not over two gallons a head now. Temperanco advocates, with more sentinient tRnn sense, will probably be amazed at this conclusion, but no intelli- gent student of the progress made in the last sixty yeara in restricting the avils of whisky-drinking will be surprisel at this assertion, agreeing, as it does, with all that is known on the subject of Ameri- can dram-drinking. In the last sixty years the production of spirits has not grown as rapidly as our population, the use of alcohol in the arts has increased enormously, and the consumption per adult for drinking purposes is probably much less than half what it was two gen- erations ago. Dr. Dorchester rests his case chiefly on the records of New England towns, whose consumption of rum at the open- ing of the temperance campai was something frightful, and is probably not to be equaled to-day in the worst slums of our worst cities. Fitchburg, Mass,, consumed three and one-half gallons to a person; Dudley, in 1826, six; Shrews- bury five, and Wilbraham four, In Connecticut every family in Salsbury made away with twenty-nine and one- half gallons of rum in & year, and Fair- field in 1813 disposed of six and one- third gallons to a person. These places were small villages of 1,400 to 2,000 in- habitants, but the cities were no better off. Troy, with a population of 10,000, consumed 73,959 gallons in 1829, and Boston and New YorkZ had, relatively, wmore places where liquor is sold than to- day. Temperance advocates are never very safe authorities as to the total consump- tion of spirits. The census of 1840 puts the production of distilled liquors at about 60,000,000 gallons, At this early period nearly all spirits were drunk. Nearly half is to-day used in the arts, and, with a population three times that of 1840, the total production in taxable gallons was only 75,266,576, of which 17,204 gallons were made up of high- wines and neutral or cologne spirits and 10,718,700 of alcohol. The proportion of spirits for drinking purposes was, it is true, relatively less last year because of the overproduction in this direction for three years before; but the average for the last ten years is nearer the figures of 1883 than of 1881. The simple lesson of these facts is that with three times the population, the United States probably rinks no more spirits than in 1840, nor to observe this decrease is it necessary to 20 back forty years. Our population has advanced 30 per cent since 1870; distilled spirits withdrawn for consumption in 1870, 177, 368 gallons, was larger than any year since. If the average of con- sumption for the three years—1870-1-2, 67,417,000 gallons—be compared with the average for the last three years—71,224,. 000 gallons—the advance is barely i per cent, instead of six times this, as the growth of population demands. The cause of this decrease is probably due in not unequal shares to the nflu- ence of the temperance agitation and the The story of Tom Crittenden is cne to | P! rogress of beer-drinking, but whatever its cause, incalculable misery has been saved by the change in the habits of the American people-—a change whose paral- lel may be soughtin vain the world over, and which stands a significant proof of the self-control fostered by free institu- tions, £ | — Redding’s Russia Salve, best family salve in the world, and excellent for stable ase, 25cts — Car Conductor Attachments. Chicago News. Brooklyn car conductors are now oblig- ed to wear watches set into the fare-re- ment, delighting in fights and hand-to- hand encounters, His inseparable com- panion was James Arnold, the son of & preacher. Many in this city remember “Jim Arnold,” = A braver, Kandsomer, gallanter young fellow never breathed; tall and straight, with the form of Apollo and the face of a school-gitl. Jim Arnold sober wss the joy of his friends, and Jim Arnold drunk was the terror of all whom he met. Many a fierce carousal did . these two young men have in the quiet little town of Frankfort. The gossips of the town love to tell to this day of their wild pranks; how oneday they both stripped naked nd ran around the square, in the broad y light of day, insanely drunk and shouting like Indians, how they entered a barber shop and strung up and obnox- ious apprentice overa transom till he was nearly dead; how they met a notori- ous courtezan walking across the Frank- fore bridge, and, stripping her naked, flogged her for her crimes and made her promise that she would leave town; they used to dash through the whooning like wild Indisns; and number- less other evidences of their daredevil recklessnoss, None were 8o quick with the use of the pistol as they, and nobody doubted their sourage. Poor Jim Amold! He died out west with his boots on, shot through the heact, facing the man who killed him, and de- fying him to the last. the strength of a young bull, and no excess seomed to hurt him He vame t this city to take & position under his father, who was then United States marshal, and signalized his coming b fighting a sensatioual prize fight itk Policeman Hugh Bell. = The fight was Crittenden had | & cording apparatus swung from their |, necks. The faces of these are bigand plain, covered only with thick glass. By these the passengers can tell the time readily. The conductors complain that sometimes passengers catch hold of and turn them around, like as if they were wooden men, in order to see what time itis. They also begin to think that the public will not consider a man fit to run a car unless he has got a calendar stitched on the back of his hat, a thermometer hanging from one buttonhole, and a city dlr_ec‘tory hooked to a strap around his wrist. 18 UNFAILING AND_INFALLIBLE 1x_ cuniNg Epileptic Fits, u l Bickness, Convul- slons, Bt. Vitus Dance, Alcobolism, Optum Eating, Seminal Weakness, Im- potency, 8yphilis, Scrofula, and all Nervous and Blood Diseases. ‘0 Clergymen, Lawyers, Literary Mej Merchants, Bankers, Lad a‘all whoss sedentary employment causes Nervous Pros- tration, Trregulanitics of the blood, stomach, bowels or kidneys, or who require a nerve tonle, appetizes o1 ithuloat, Sanaritan Ner- vine ls invaluabie, st ICAL CO., Sole Pro- CRUUERUR 4 + AnG AFCUIATE Sena samn. (1) Lord, Stoutcuburgh & Co., Ageuts, Chicago 1l TheDR. . A. RICHMOND PASSENGER ELEVATOR 1024 North Eighteenth SIMPSON, T 1106 Farnam Street, Ofiica rorres Has the Laroest Stook in Omaha and Malces the Lowest Prices. Furniture! DRAPERIES ANE MIRRORS, CEAMBER SETS! Just received an assortment far surpassing anything in this market, comprising the latest and most tasty designs manufactured for this spring’s trade and covering a range of prices from the Cheapest to the most Expensive. Parlor Coods Draperies. Now ready for the inspection of cys-] Complete stock of all the latest tomers, the newest rovelti s in styles in Turcoman, Madras and Suits and Odd Pieces, Lace Curtains, Bte., Ete. B GATE LONER AR — OMAHA, NEB, Street, Omaha, on Street Car Line. E. W. DIXOIN, WHOLESALE AND RETAIT, Lumber, Lime, Lath, Doors, Windows, Etc. Grades and prices as good and low as any " the city. P'3ase trv me. | G 0 DarSTgelsa E LEADING CARRIAGE FACT Ia‘ undgc st.. { Catalogues furnished } on Application RY 1408 OMAHA. NEB Henley, Haynes & Van Arsdel, WHOLESALE— NOTIONS, HOSIERY, GENIS' FURNISHING —AND— Fancy Goods, OMAHA, NEB. Dr. CONNAUCHTON, 103 BRADY ST., DAVENPORT, IOWA, U. 8. A. Established 1878—Catarrh, Deafness, Lung and Nervous Diseases Speedily and Permanently Cured. Patient: Cured at Home. Write for ‘“Tue MepicaL-MissioNary,” for the People, Free. Tousultation and Correspondence Gratis. P. O. Box 292. Telephone No. 226 HON. EDWARD RUSSELL, Postmaster, Davenport, says: *‘Physician of nea apluvy ana Marked Success.” CONGRESSMAN MURPHY, Davenport, writan: **An tonorable Man, Fine Success. Wonderful Cures.” —Honrs. R 0 § A. K. DAIILEY, MANUFACTURER OF FINE Buggiss Carriaoes and Soring Wagons My, Bapository onsantly filled with & soloctlstook. Bost Workmansbip guarantesd. v W. Carner 16th and Lonr*s! Awanus Qwmabo Neb MANUFACTURER OF OF STRIOTLY FIRST-OLASS Carrianes, Buogies, Road Wagon AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. 1810 and 1320 Harnoy Street and 408 8. 18th Stroel, } JMAHA, NEB. llustrated Catalogue furnished free upon appliostion PERFECTION Heating and Baking Is only attained by nsing ===>0HARTER OAK B Btoves and Ranges, pr WITH WIRE GAUZE OVER DOORS & l ,A— Fer sale by % MILTON ROGERS & SON8 IWMAHA N 0. M. LEIGHTON. H, T. CLARKF, LEIGHTON & CLARKE, SUCCESSORS TO KENNARD BROS, & C0.) holesale Druggists! —DEALERS IN— Oils. Brusnes. Giasz. PRy Paints. OMAHA

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