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Home Ttoms vl you own talt Gk g oieee that mover—¥all «The weakest woman, smallest child, and sickestinvalid can use hop bitters with safety and great good. —0ld men tottering around from Rheumatism. kidney trouble or any weaknoss will be almost new by using hop bitters. —My wife and daughter were made healthy by the use of hop bitters and I recommended them to my people.—Meth- odist Clergyman, Ask any gosd dootor it hop Bittors are not the be:t family medicine On cacth, —Malarial fever, Ague and Bilious- ness, will leave every neighborhood as soon as hop bitters arrive. i —“My mother drove the paralysis and neuralgia all out of her system with hop bltters."—Ed. Oswego Sun, s —Keep the kidneys healthy with hop ‘bittors and you need not fear sickness. —1loo 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 biters! At the ehangro of life nothing equals Hop bitterato aliay all troubles incident Thereto.” —*The best periodical for Iadies to take monthly and from which they will receive the greatest benefit is hop bit- ters, —Mothers with sickly, frotful. nursing children, will cure the children and bene- fit themselves by taking hop bitters dai- ly. y—-’l’htmum‘h 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 Bitters wili keep o In robust health a ye —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, preventing rest and sleep, will dis- appear by using %l»p bitters. —Paralytic, nervous, tremuloys old Iadies are made perfectly quiet and sprightly by using hop bitters. James Modical Institubo Chartered by theStateof I1ll- nois for theexpress pus of giving immediate relietin 1l chronic, urinary and pri- vate discases. Gonorrhaea, GleetandSyphilis in all theif Elood promptly relieved and permanentlycured by reme. tedina. Ye AN T O N T KRR IR AN < i D i GAMBLING IN ARKANSAS. Varions Types of Sporting Men and the Manner of Their Life, Faro and Peco at Hot Springs—8ome Oharacteristic Aneccedotes of Senators, Legisiators and Drummers, Correspondence of the PRiladelphia Times. Hor Sruives, February 256.—Wh genuine fondness for cards the Texans and Arkansans have. Business men, bankers, merchants, lawyers, doctors, editors—all occasionally flirt with the “‘tiger” or eajoy a little quiet ‘‘draw” by themselves, “‘two and a half lim" or “‘twenty dollara’ table stakes” while in the next room may be reporters, medical students or store clerks trust their little hoard te the flickering fortunes of “'ten cent ante.” The reporters stake their “tips,” as do the bell boys. Yes, even Sambo, who shines your boots, acknowl- ges the receipt of a quarter wit Come jos' in time, boss; dat sassy nig- gah over at de udder baff house, Alabama Tom, done clean me out on a'ace full Ins’ night. Ye can’t win, boss, if ye don t hab de keards; Alabam,’ he sprung fo' jacks onto me."” Gon. Clayton, tho senator — Carpet- Bagger Clayton they used to call him, though they respected his courage—Dbef house and fl Little Rock, worth $14,- 000, on a single hand, and lost, *‘©n the make, as they all are,” was the com- ment of & prominent Arkansan, ‘‘but gamo as—." A whole party of legislators came do the other day from Little Rock to the Hot Springs on a poker excursien. An enormous round table, with a blanket nailed over it to deaden the sound of the chips, was wheeled into a private parlor. The solons were all stout, hearty, we fed looking men, and ‘‘whooped it up’ without intermission for the better part of 24 hours. They did not all play at a time, but some would relieve others who and cool off or at the French They never omitted to tell the hotel clerk how the game was going. “Lost sixty, Charlie,” or “*Old Ruxton’s in;” *Billy quit forty win- ner,” ete. The gentlemanly autocrat of the register received the news with avidi- ty, and when one of the law-makers drop- ped out **broke” and wanted to ‘‘strike the safe for fifty” it was handed over 1 | without a murmur. The drummers who flock here in spring and fall alternate business and ‘‘draw.” vs | Their ‘*houses” understand that the little game sometimes furthers “gimw inter- " and the item ‘‘poker” sometimes figures among the recognized expenses. fed- | As one of them remarked, **When Chaze DR.JAMES,No. 204Washington St. "Wb T. SINEOILD, MANUFACTURER OF GALVANIZED IRON, CORNICES, WINDOW CAPS, FINIALS, ETG. OMAHA, K. 16 13th Stroot, NEB! - GRANITE And your work is done for all time to time to come. WE CHALLENGE The World to produce a more durable material street pavement than the Sioux Falls Granite. ORDERS FORZANY AMOUNTZOF WM. MoBAIN & CO., Sionx Falls, Dakota DISEASES OF THE Jooks 5 wins, he's dot much ahet; when he lose, dot’s for de house.” ¥ These drummers sometimes run against a sharp, but he must be very sharp if he wishes to take Chake and his friends into camp, An old drammer went to the door during a game to speak to a friend, and when 'fw turned around found four queens in his hand, “Who dealt dem garts?” “‘Gu; genhelmer, ““Who gut dem garta?”’ “‘Steinau.” “1 peas.” A party of sports from Louisviile vic- timized some Jewish merchants from New Orleans last summer. They would buy cards at the cigar stand every night, mark them and use them in the game the next afternoon. They won several hundred dollars, but an old cotton broker finally caught on and quietly abstracted T’La presence of a small dot in they were the victims of a * In solemn procession, he: broker, they marched to the culprit’s 1vill not say you vas a id the old man at the end of his harangue, spreading the cards out, on the table, ‘‘dot vas too goot for you but I owe you dwenty-five tollars schtill, shaking his hand at the level of his chin, “Qib ity " PUBLIC GAMBLING HOUSES, Of publid gambling houses one can count five first-class ones within three blocks of the hotel. George Morgan and Frank Holman keep the one over Billy McTague’s, Dave Pruitt, now on trial for killing Johnny Flynn, presided at the Palace. £d, Smith oporates over the Arlington billard hall. ~ Oharley Watson and Tom Shannon, who had the shooting sorape with Mose Harris, editor of The Horse Shoe, a fow days sgo, keeps the Owl, and Greenwood, Flynn's old part- ner, rakes in chips at the office. All these places are on Central avenue, Peco is played at two smaller establishments fur. ther down the street. A iriend, a New Yorker, suggested that these social reefs and quicksands be surveyed, so we started on a voyage of discovery that evening at 11 o'clock, A description of the Arlington will do for all, A faro table, a roulet table—not much used, as that game doesn't seem to take much here-~two other tables de- voted to draw and one to stud poker. This latter x-mn is immensely 'po ular in Texas and Arkansas. Its pecul l\gfium that all the cards but one, the'oné *“‘in as the first card dealt is called, are oxposed. The holder may look at the card he has in _the Il:«hl' g‘: not the ! privilege to bar uny one out of me ther 100 Jucky,too ul or too tricky “Had to bar two won out yeste rietor, “‘They Lyn' just eat snd hung over the bear in mind ors M"Not‘:’bviflh id on the turn uniess the cases are right,” while over the “atud poker"” is the legend, more terse than tical Sraatonrs Brars Turess, The attaches 15th | twelve in number, from the gentlemanly- looki tor, whose bundant ovaley Liate hetaags bl b5 o seedy o n' havging around to ‘“‘make u stake. The oang meu visiting the i e o ! m“lfl' to kill time and dro; dealt. | tors have beon used by my fi e o e but rows do not often ocour. A row here is too serious a matter for that. PECO. At the Peco rooms the better classes are seldom seen, The game resembles keno, Fifty-two wooden balls, painted to resemble the cards are taken out one n seated in a sort of pul- the twenty tables where the players are seated. As the man at the urn takes out a ball he calls out its denomination in a sing-song voice, dwell- ing on the first lylAl»la‘)f the first word with drawling emphasis, and snapping the rest out like the crack of a whip: YK.ivi-di-ng—of diamonds.” * a-a-ck —of spades,” “W-u-u-u-n—little hea (the ace).” The men at the table have in front of them one or more cards, divided like thia: Ace Nine ! i Sovin | Queon l o of ot Hearts | Clubs. | Clubs. [Diamonis Jack Two of of Spades. | Clubs. Ten of of Clubs, | Hearts. Four oarts, Nino o 1 Diamonds | Spades. |Diamonds Four Jnck of Hoarts, of of Spades. Spades The moment four numbers in a row a man’s card have been called out he is entitled to “‘the pot,” less ten per cent thas goes to “‘the house.” There are ten ways of accoraplishing this, as the rows count lengthwise, up and down,and diag- onally. The four cards in the center as the four corner cards also win, so that there aro twelve combinations possible. It requires close observation for a man to know when he has won. Ho very often wouldn't know it if the “gallery” were not always ready with advice and cos lation. The game is small, but the profits are large, as a few minutes decide it and runs day and night. Just above the peco games i what is known us the *‘dead line,” an imaginary line drawn from the Monarch saloon to the bath-house across the way. By a singular fatality nearly all the men killed at the Hot Springs, and they are not a few, met their death below this line. ? Bosides the white men’s games some sport in ‘‘hard luck” will now and then condescend to deal faro for the ‘‘inferior race,” or, as he expresses it, “‘open a snap for the coons.” e — Horseford’s Actd Phosphate Assists Prof. Avorrn Ore, New York, says of the Acid Phosphate: “I have been en- abled to devote myself to hard mental Iabor, trom shortly after breakfast till a late hour in the evening without experi- encing the slightest relaxation, and 1 would not now at any rate dispence with it.” ——— A Burglar's Experience, Peck's Sun. A gentleman was conversing with a burglar, who is serving time in one of the penitentiaries, not long ago, and dur- ing the conversation he asked the bur- glar if he was ever frightened when in a house on a burgling expedition. The burglar said he was frightened once so he was asweak asa cat. Said he bout seven or eight years ago I got into a house at » town on the Mississippi river, belonging to a man that 1 thought was up in the woods. I got in the cellar and went up stairs to the dinning rcom, and lit the gas, and opered a bed room door, and was going in, when I saw the man and his wife sitting up in bed, with a sewing machine cover between them, playing cards. The man was dealing, and the wite was keeping count, and they were ploying casino. They did not see me, but at first I thought they did, and that both had revolvers to shoot me. I backed out, and thought 1 weuld go through the rest of the house, but tgo fright I got took all the tuck out of me, and after thinking it over a minute, I went down the cellar and crawled out. ““The next day I was in the postoffice and heard a couple of men talking about playing cards, and oue said, ‘By gosh wy wife and me sat up in bed till two o'clock this morning playing cards,’ and then he looked at me and laughed, and 1 thought he knew me, and I went out of the postoffice and took the first train for Winona. And, do you know, that man haunts me. The other day the sheriff brought a prisoner here from a western county, and, blast my eyes, ii the sheriff wasn't the same man I saw sitting up in bed playing casino ej years ago, I tell you, fellows in our busi. ness have queer experiences.” e — Pneumonia Prevented. Ovsrer Bay, Queens County, New York, April 11, 1883, 1 believe I have been saved from a ter- rible illness by Arrcock’s Porous Pras. TER'S, . About a month ago I was attacked with a violent pain in my chest, accom- gu.niad by fever and great difficulty in roathing. I apprehended pheumoni which is 80 prevalent at present; I went to bed and applied one Allcock’s Plaster between my shoulder blades, and two on my chest. In an hour my breathing was much easier, in two hours the pain had left me, aud the next morning 1 awoke peafectly freo from fover. I went about my business as usual,” and§at the end of | | a woek took the plasters off.” For the last ton years Allcock's Plas- nily with the best effect in colds, coughs, and paiu in the side and back, E. B. SHERWOOD, Bo sure to obtain *“Allock's” Porous Plaster, as all others are worthless imi- Boaver Falls Globe, Miss Kathloen O'Shaughnessy is fifteen years of age and quite intelligent, with a special faculty for music, but the most extraordinary thing about her is the fact that she is without the usual style of ears bestowed on the human race. Instead, she has two horn like tubes about three inches in length, at the ends of which are holes large enough to admit the point of the little finges Auy noise, such as singing, whistle of a train or music of any kind, causes the holes to expand to almost double their normal size, the tubes always inclining in the direction from whence the sound comes. Oa the occasion of & l::: noise, the tubes enlargy very rapidly, and, in one instance when M, ,fi_ Ne sang *‘Dear Liu Shawrock,” the openings enlarged gradu ally. Beveral offors have been wade by showmen, but the parents would r&:hur have their daughter at home with . Angostura Bitters is a_household word all over the world. For over 50 {nr- it has advertised itself by its merits, 1t is now vertised to warn J.. public agai: feits. The uive article by Dr, J, G.'B, Bicvert & Sons, THE GOLDEN PIRATE. (onld the Second Richest Man of the United States, Fitty Millions in the Wizard's Little Box—The Jay Bird in His Gaildea Palace, Mr. Jay Gould, the second richest man of the United States, is credite: being the possessor of wealth estimated all the way from ,000,000 to 875,000, 000. The former sum is very nearly correct. Were his railaoad stocks worth their par value he would be an hundred- millionaire: yachting trip to the Span carefully inventoried his property, placec thairs in good shape and added a to his will. In round numbers the permanont in stment stocks appearing on Mr. Gould's schedule were three hundred and eighty thousand shares of Western Union telograph, one hundred and ten thousand shares of Missouri Pacific, one hundred and forty thousand shares of Wabash common and sixty thousand ares of the preferred, fifty thousand ares of Kansas and Texas, torty ti and shares of Texas Pacific and seven thousand shares of Erie. There w a large number of small lots of various stocks apparently only incidentally held. No mention of Union Pacitic is made, and a friend of Mr. Gould states that instead of holdingany he 1s short some nine thousand shares on which he ex- pects to make a profit. Fifteen thousand shares are registered on the company's books in his name. On the Vanderbilt stocks, New York Central, Lake Shore and Northwest, he is said to be short in all twenty thousand shares. Besides hisrailroad shares Mr.Gould has five and half millions of Wabash general bonds. At yesterday’s prices the value of these securities is $49,495,000 Wes- tern Union and Missouri Pacific pay divi- dends, the other stocks domnot. The bonds also bear interest. Between them they yield him four million one hundred and forty thousand dollars a year. His terest in the Union Trust company and his loans are profitable to him. The World building, nominally owned by the Western Union company, was built with his money. In real estate, loans and mortgs 0 has five million dollars and three millions more in floating invest- o | some gotd suit witheutaway cont. His collar is of the turn-down variety and his #ie of plain black. His silk hat is often alinost shab- by. Once in & while he appears in a telt hat. Theu the strest looks out for a tempest. Always well made and correct- 1y fitting, Mr, Gould may be :aid to te well dressed,” Cooper was fors ly his tailor, but Iately he has favore artists, He usually has five or six suits of elothes on hand, all very similar and hardly distinguishable. A former outfit- ter of the financier says that he is very careless about the details of his apparel, but sometimes grumbled at the cost of fabrics which he would say was more than ho could afford. Generally he would send over his order by a servant with di- rections to make *him a suit of about the sume style and material as his last and from the same measure, In the matter of jewelry Mr. Gould is still more modest. He carries a hand- watch of Swiss make. The chased hunting-case is somewhat worn. A small gold chain is attached to it. Al though he hasa pair of costly diamond studs they are rarely seon, In conversation the great man speaks with careful deliberation, weighing each word before it is uttered. His language is well chosen and choice, and he dis plays a knowledge on subjects trivial as well as abstruse, which surprises his auditors, He is thoroughly well-posted on everything which can in any way con- ¢ him. He is a practical railroad wan, & tinancier and in his way a philos- opher., 1t is worthy of note that in 1873, when fortunes were melting like snow and dis- aster was sapping the roots of overy financial institution, Mr. Gould’s affairs were in such a shape that, while convers- ing at his residence on business matters with & well-known broker, he fainted away from emotion, THE P/ What the Departy t Needs—Curious Names Culled from the Ap- plications for Patents, National Ropublican. g No burenu of the government oxceeds in importance the United ;States patent office. From the start it has been self- subtaining, and now has an unexpended balance to its credii of about 82,500,000. This money is the result of fees pa‘d by inventors to securo the patents which protect their inventions. ‘The business of the patent office has increased with each year of its existence, and yet the generosity of the law-makers has not ments, two residences represent another million, and his yacht three hun- dred thousand dollars.” His wealt! as nearly as he can figure it is 868,795,413, and his income $4,640,011. Thus his fortune earns him $12,888.88 every day and $8.95 each minute. T» this he ex- gecu to add a great many millions a year y speculation. The king of Wall street resides, when in the city, at No. 579 Fifth avenue, a plain brown stone mansion on the oppo- te side of Forty-seventh street from Windsor hotel. He paid three hundred thousand dollars for the property, and spent as much more in furnishing and or- namenting its interior. The visitor on entering finds himself a large hall adorned with valuable paintings and a few articles of bric-a-bra: To' the left are spacious parlors richly furnished, the pre vailing color being a warm brown. Throughout the house modest good taste prevails. There is no sign of extravagance or display of great wealth, Here Mr, Gould rgsides during the winter, On the approach of summer he flies to his country seat, near Irvington. This his favorite home. An old Knicker- bocker mansion surmounted by a tower, he has taxed his ingenutiy to make it beautiful, Improving and draining the grounds have been his hobby. The whole eighty acres bloom like a garden. A wide drive leads through them to the house. The doors open into & large reception room with mosaic floor. This is hung with rare paintings and fragrant with flowers. The parlors are models of grace- ful clegance, having cost over one hun- dred thousand dollats to furnish. But the owner’s chief pride are the conservatories. When they were burned wome years ago they were rebuilt in grander style, and are now the largest in the covntry, and amony the largest pri vate conservatories in the world. Tropi- al flowers and fruits blcom and bear throughout the year. Peaches, oranges, , and strawberries can be all without There are 12,000 va of plants and more varities of orchids than any other place in the world. The superinteudent of the conservatory is an Italian enthu siast. Mr. Gould spends hours walking among thi luxuriant vegetation and knows the peculiaritios of nearly all of his treasures. Hore he receives many visitors, Ex-Governor Tilden a fre- quent caller at the summer residence of the wizard. The Atlanta, the yacht in which he is now traveling in southern seas,is too well known for description, It is the fastest and most elegant steam-yacht owned in America and represents an outlay of nearly $4 The great habits and ncier is domestic in his imple in his tastes. He nor smokes, although his lus contain good store of choice wines. He does not care for horses. His box at the opera sees him occasionally, but generally he spends his evenings at wome with his family. Every day at about 10 o'clock a carriage drives up to the Western Union building, at No. 195 Broadway. From it alights the little black bearded man. There he leaves his negro valet aud enters his office. The heads of his principal enterprises, the Western Union, Wabash and Missouri Pacific companies, report to him, He examines carefully overy new detail of importance, When this 1s done he leaves the bailding and walks quickly down the right hand side of the street {0 his Wall street office, where at No, 71 Broadway the plain sign *‘W., E. Gonnor & Co.,’ \p Es_u-. It is noon when he reaches it. is private office, behind the formidable barriers of waluut and ground glass, within, on the Broadway side. It previously chalked the dates of the im- Pportant meetings which he must watch or attend complete the furnishing of the room. Connor, Morosini and his son eorge consult with him, At 3 o'clock his carriage awaits him at the door. “In no way ll. Mr. Gould’s mode of peusive, It cost him, until he pur. chased acht, uuder one humrnsd thousand dollars & year to live, This {ur he calculates that it will cost him half as much more, He seldom entertains a wvfl in the eity and gives no receptions hilo he does ot stint his household, his bucler iy held accountable for overy outlay aud must keep the cost of his de- | partment within limit, § In dress the fifty-millionaire is unpre- ! ntious. Winter aud sumuner he wears | or blue-black diagonal business | kept pace with the needs of the office. As Commissioner Butterworth said the other day, ‘‘the inventors of the ccuntry, who come here either in person or by at- terney and pay their money to have their claims investigated and properly deter- mined,are entitled to have their business transacted with reasonable dispatch. This can not be done when we are cramp- ed for room and are running on a re- duced fcrce, as at present.” “Don’t you think congress will be more liberal this year?” asked The Re- publican. *‘1 certainly think so. I have talked with & number of members, and they seemed disposed to do the fair thing and give us what is necessary.” The pressurre of work and the dimin- ished force has brought the work be- hindhand. Insome divisions, of course, it is further in arrears than in others, for the inventive genius seems to follow the publicneed or public interest. For instance, when the new standard of time was agitated there was at oncea large number of applications filled for improved watch and clock dials. The trouble with the grip on the Brooklyn bridge are already bearing fruit in the Patent office records. Every week brings forth one or more patent grips, and the backwoods are not yet heard from. Should the winter prove severe enough to suspend outdoor labor in the rural districts, the spring will usher in an array of patent grips that will leave car couplers, electric lamps and check rowers entirely in the back- ground, When anything happens to keep a portion of our population inside doors its effects are immediately apparent in the Patent office records. One would hardly think where every- thing is 80 thoroughly matter of fact as the patent office, that there could be any- thing that would excite a small extract from its records. The inventor is a sober, thoughtful man, and he brings _his apyli: cations and models to the office, where they are received and investigated by a staid and critical examiner; and one might s s0on expect to get a comic song out of an oyster as to look for funny things from the cranke and cogs of the models. An examination of the appli tions, however, reveals some curiosities in the way of namesand the patents ap- plied for that are quite amusing. Marc Anthony applies for a patent on a fruit ean, T, Allwood, for a barrel platform; J. Brown, for a refuse ejector; J. Barnhill, for a planter; J. Christ, for a torpedo; Isaac Cook, for a cookstove; Crofut & Knapp, for felt hats; and Car Carpenter, for a car heater. Oune Freserved Fish has invented a mast for vessels,and Laza- rus Fried has a patent for toy watches. F. F. Foot appropriately _applied for a patent for boots and shoes; H. Goodenough, for a horse-shoe; C. J, Glover, of Gloversville, N. Y., for a glove fastoner; T. January, for a fluting-ma- chine; C. Lightsinger, for a harmonica, and W. Legg, for & boot upper. F. Million has patented a gas engine; Modest Merke, a fly-trap; J. D. Miracle, valve; D. A Moon, a grain measurs; Manlove & Green, a corn harvester; K B. Meatyard, an nx-bow; J. E. Mustard, a papper cruet; A. North, a refrigerator; Perry Prettyman, of Paradise, S ring gur:x. Oregon, a lamp burner; g D. 'eck, & measure—probably a peck meas- ure; D T. Trueblcod, a 1Xadi£ins BpOOL; E. B. Turnipseed, a bee-hive; J. White. car, an oyster dredger, and Wall Work, acar s , Of other peculiar names there ave W. B Argue, W, Allchin and Gallup & Hurry, who are attorneys; Candy Johu, A Colderhead, T. Curbsetter, 8. Corn field, O. Drinkwater, Ludovic Charles Adam Joseph Guyot D'Arlincourt, A Doll, Cook Darling, V.C. A, P.D G, Comte e Ay.f)rnck. Leo Louis Aime Elio Picot de la Peyrouse, P. T. Early- has | wine, D. Goodwillie, F, W. Goss ling, W. H. Goodehild, Sampson Goliah, 5 0. Holylana, O. X. Harmony, Jackson Mariin Van Burren llgentritz, E, Kiss. M. J. Laughter, F. 8. Laughlinghouse, Mustapha pha, of Zagazig, Kaypt; Return Jonathan May, Church & Chap- lin, Rob Roy McGregor, A Morning. star, Return Jonathan Meggs Ouly, C. E Plugge, L. Soarback, B. Slopoy, J. R. Scattergood, W. 8 Sharpneck, D, Short. sleeve, Liberty Walkup, Pleasant Witt and Twentyman Wood —— The skin is of that delicate nature upon which the most imp ement can bo made snd by the use of Pozzo Medicated Complexion Powder all roughness, sallowness ang i can bo over come leaving the ukin d white, soft and smooth. ~ This preparation 4. # world wide reputation, s no fear needbes vatertained of the result. Sold by all druggists The Largest Stock in Omaha, and Makes the Lowest Prices, Furniture! DRAPERIES ANEC MIRRORS, Just received an assortment far nurp»nin];z1 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 in«pection of cus-| Complete stock of all the latest tomers, the newest rovelti s in stylesin Turcoman, Madras and Suits and Odd Pieces. Lace Curtains, Ete,, B .'Eilemnt Paséen;er Elovator to all Fi;oié. CHARLES SHIVERICK, 1206, 1208 and 1210 Farnam Street, - - - - OMAHA, NEB. (SUCCESSOR TO FOSTER & GRAY.) LUMBER, LIME AND CEMENT. Offico and Yard, 6th and Douglas Sts.. (Jmaha Neh, ’:efiiey; I-iéyries & Van er&él,fi NOTIONS, HOSIERY, GENTS FURNISHL: Fancy Goods, 1106 Farnam Street, - - - - - - OMAHA, NEB. ; rnnrzngnow” Heating and Baking I only attained by using —p CHARTER OAK Stoves and Ranges, NITH WIRE GAUIE OVER DOORS Fcr sale by MILTON ROGERS & SONS, OMAHA M. HELLMAN & CO., Wholesale Clothiers! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREE1 COR. 13Th OMAHA. 3 MANUFACTURER OF OF STRIOTLYFIRST-CLASS Garriages, Bunoies Road Wagons AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. 810 and 1520 Harnoy Stroot and 03 8, 15th Sirest. ) Yy AHA. NEB. 1 Illustrated Catalogue furnishad {rae qnon anolication EAU CLARE LUMBER YARD. 1024 North Eighteenth Street, Omaha, on Street Car Line. E. W. DIXOIN, WHOLESALE AND RETAIT, Lumber, Lime, Lath, Doars, Windows, Efc. (irades and prices as gond and low as anv "n the city. P’a1se trv ma, A.F. . DAILIEY ., MANUFACTURER OF FINE Buogies Carriaces and Soring Wazons ®y_Hepository onstantly filled with & seleoh stook. Best Workwanship guarsnive rorree W Cornor 16th and Cansie! Auanus (Gmahe Neb Office P. BOYER & CO.. DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFED, VAULTS, LOCKS, & 1020 Farnam Streect. Omah 0. M. LEIGHTON, H, T, CLARKE, LEIGHTON & CLARKE, BUCCESSORS TO KENNARD BROS, & 00.) Wholesale Druggists ! —DEALERS IN— Oils, Brusnes, Ciasx. ‘42704057 A Paints. OMAiKA f