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KNPELS Pl S RS R oL AR ew WEOARTLEY AN AF FTHE DAILY BEE--FRIDAY, MARCIH 14, 1884. AMGIT 4m 1004 COUNCIL BLUFFS ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEWS, HOME OF THE FRIENDLESS. Reports of Receipts and Expendiiares and Other Items of Business. A New I-‘llminrrlu.lAl'la-nl Adopted, . - At tho last regular monthly meeting of he Home of the Friendleas association, the manager, Rev. Lemen, pro sented the follv financial report of receipts and expenditures since January 16, 1884, the date of his last report: Received in merchandise January 16th to February 1st: A. Culver, 8; Hays & (Gleason, groceries, £3; John Evers, meat, 85; Jacob Appel, groceries, 83; A friend, wood, 87; Mrs. J. T. Siewart, furniture, 815, Total in January, Received in merchanduse, February 1st to March l1st: S, 8, Keller, provisions, $5; D. Moltby, groceries, £3: H. C. Ray- mond, vegetables, $7; Josiah Folsom, wood, $20; S, P. Hannan, books, $7; John Beno, merchandise, 8 50. Total in Fepruary, $45.50. Received in merchandise, March 1st tc March 12th: H. C. Raymond, vegotables, £10. Total, €10. Grand total in merchandise, §04.50, CASH RECKIPTS, Cash receipts,.January l(;l’l to February 1st: Balance on hand, as per last report, £4.37; J. D. Elmundson, 8; J. H. Bur roughs, Henry Liseman, $5; Howas Bowman, $5; Peregoy & Moors, $10; case in favor of the Home, through Scott & Stewart, attorneys, §200. Total for January, $2: . « Cash receipts, February 1st to March 1st; John C. Lee, $5; C. H. Ferson, $1; Mrs. Smith, $1; N. W. Williams, 85; S. Bonham, $5; net proceeds of the Mar- ion B. Baxter lecture, $4: Total for February, $60. Cash receipts March 1st to March 12¢h: Mrs. Smith, 81; G. A. King, Easex, Iowa, $1; C. H. Ferson, $1: C. Bosen, $1: Fritz Bernhardt, 81; Albert Palm, $81; Marshall Key, $2; boys at the Home cutting wood for differont parties, $4 40; Mrs. Cavenaugh, 83; Girls Aid society, $3.65. Total for March, $19.05. irand total of cash receipts, January \ South 18th Street, below Farnam, SOLE AGENTS FOR Kilby Place 50 NEW LOTS3 ] Just platted out in this addition at #3256 to $350. Per lot. First allotment all taken mainly by persons who will build desirable resideuces in the spring. This Addition runs from Dodge street to Daven: port street, the most healthful, sightly and desirable SUBURBAN PROPERTY IN OMAHA. 16th to March 12th, §313 42, . CONTRA: Near Cable, B"ll"i;‘l'e‘g Cuming streeb| 5., paid January 16 to February 1: Mra. Wright, 50 cents; Ochikovits, 9 cents; fare for poor man, 50 cents; to Mrs. Hough, moving, $3; Dr. Seybert in con- sultation, 5; groceries and dry goods, $25; total, $34 95. Bills paid February 1 to March 12; T, payment on house and lot purchased for home, J. E. Smith, carpenter work, Mrs. Hough, 50 conts, to Revere house for lodgings, when home was crowded, $250; Z. T. Lindsay, shoes, $2.25; Bushneil & Bracket, school books for boys of home, $4; to poor wo. wan, 81.15; Mrs. Rockafellow, matron, 318; Mrs. Hough, ticket to Davenport, of which the county paid $3.50, leavinga balance by me of 81 cash and hack fare, to Mrs, ); groceries and dry goods, $35 56; Mrs. . R. Brooks, sewing for home, $10; W. H. Wallace, 57 loads dirt, fitling up lot, $11.40; dis patches during mourh, $1.95; stationery and stamps, $4.80; to Mrs. C. matron, $11; to H. Wallace, dirt, 811; Mr. T. R Brooks, 815: R. Amv. total, $293.10, Graud toual of expenditures from Jan- uary 16 to March 12, 8328.05, This leaves the treasury overdrawn, $14 63, The above report was, on motion, re cei 7ed and referred to the standing com wittee. The committee reported as follows: Wae have carefully examined the above reporf, compared 1t with the receipts, and find it correct. J. P, FiLepxr, W. H. Fosrek, < Auditing Committee On motion, the report was approved and ordered published, together with the following statement: We have telen into the home during the tume covered by the report two boys, whom we found homeless here, besides two boys, sons of Sport Miller, loft home less by the death of their mother, W nre also for a woman who is very low with_throat. and lung troubles, and her two children, Our numbers vary, as temporary cases are disposed of. Al presuus we are caring for 21, We are very thankful for the libera! support received, and crave a continu ance thereof, as thus alone can we carry ou this work of maintaining an orphans’ home. Spasmodic subscriptions are not to be relied on, so we have decided to ssk the charitably inclined to subscribe to a list, agresing to give to the Home the sum of one dollar per month. If we can get a hundred and fifty or two hundred who will thus d), then we will have & solid basis to work upon, and larger subscrip- tions will come in to swell the amount and enable us to:buy more property and eularge. We are happy to sy thatuear- ly forty oitizens have already put their names to this list. All who subscribe are thereby members of the associatioe and entitled to vote in its councils, The following have been made life members during the month: Mr, Chas, Keith, De. A. J, Cook, Mr, F, M. Gault, Mr. H. O, Raymcnd and Mrs. Marion B, Baxter. W, C, GaArMAN, Becretary. e —— Young Men,Middle Aged Men and All Men who suffer from early indiscretions will find Allen’s Brain Food, themost powerful invig- orant ever introduced; once restored by st there is no relapse, Try it; it never fails, 1; 6 for $5.—A¢ druggiste. e — A CHILD SBHALL THEM, Sold Forty-One Lots in this addition in January. Call Will take you out and backin half an hour. o flice. A Desiratle Business Property on Farnam Street. Rented to good tenant. Pays ten per cent on in- vestment, net. One of the Best Business lots .on Tenth Street; 66x132, 810,500, services, hardware, $3.85; milk, $4; An Improved Farm, Near station in Douglas county, two good houses and frame barn—a first class farm in every respect. Will sell or exchange for city proper Desirable Lands in Boone, Madison and Nance coun- ties, in quantities te suit purchasers, $8.00 peracre. Will take less for # quantity. Fortv Acres cf flrst-class land, improved, good for gardens and small fruit, within three miles of postofice, §60 per acre., DESIRABLE RERIDENCE, full lot, two story house, metal of, 8 reoms. Must besold. Spe- cial terms at office. Cood Cottage, five rooms, new, one block from street cars, $1,600. Monthly pay- ments, Fine Residence, near Twentieth and Uass streets, Kasy paymeuts, Residence Propertv on 18th street. Large house, good barn, full lot, street cars, $3,500, Business Propertv. MISLEAD on Saunders street. A good invest- ment, Call for particulars, 8everal Cood Lots on very easy terms to those who will build. Property 8hown on Application, BALLOU BROS. Policeman Leq urd, Postmaster Ar- r Good Citizens Confidenced by a Boy, An old confidence game has been worked successfully for several evenings past. Officer Leonard was walking up Main street the other evening, wheu he came across a small boy who was orying lustily, and bis sympathy being excited he asked the lad what was the matter, The boy blubbered out that he had lost a | to go up town and get something with. There was a warm heart beneath the blue coat, and after getting a lantern and hunting in vain for the missing silver, he roplaced it by & quarter out of his own pocket, whereat the boy went on his way The same boy was afterwards seen further north on Main street. This time he had lost a half dollar, and was orying, of course, twice as energetically as_on his loss of & quartor. The attention of some passers-by was at teacted and one contributed 25 cents, half of the loss, The huy scomed satis- fied. The next evening or 8 Postmaster Armour had his heart touched by the sight of a sobbing boy ou Pearl street The postmaster was in an even happier frame of mind than usual, because that evening the first fast mail train had reached Council Blutfs, He heard the blubbering story of the boy who had lost the quarter, which his mother had 1 him with which to buy meat. The tears were dried by an application of silver from the hand o the postmas- master, and started out for some frosh victim, rejoicing. e A Splendid Remedy for Lung Dis- enses, r. Robt. Nowton. late Prosident of the ; Collego of the City of Now York, and formerly of Cincinuat Wi, HALL'S BALSAM very ¥ practice, as many of his patients, now living. and restored to health by the use of this - valuable medicine, can amply testify, He always said that 80 good a reniedy ought no to be coustdored merely as a patent medicine but that it ought to be prescribed froaly by every physician as a sovereign romedy cases of Lung 1508, It is a sure cure for Consumption,and has 1o equal for all poctoral cowplaints, Kellinger's Liniment, Wo desiro to call the attontion of the pub Jic to Kellin.er's Liniment, one of the best poscs for which a linimenc is used. 2 © the head it ralievas headache and ) the hair from falling ont. Edgar 1., Davenport, of New York, is at Bechtela's, & C. 8. Davis, of Dittsburg, is one of Bech. tele's guests, Tom McC'ie, one of the best known young men in the city, has gone to Massillon, Ohio, to enter the shops of the Russell manufactur ing company. J. M. Wolf, of Chicago, arrived at the Og. den yesterday. Onn Leonard, represented Rock Island at the Odon yesterday, Alton Clabaugh, of Altoona, Pa., isat the Ogden. Simon Eiseman has returned from the east, whare he has boen after goods. John E. Selleck, of Onawa, is at the Pa- cifie, Dr. W. F. Whittemoro, of Percioville, is stopping at the Pacific. F. H. Orcatt, of Casady, Oreutt & French, has returned from the east, where he has made extensive purchases for that ostablish- ment. E. K. Johnson and Fremont Young, of At- lantic, wero at ths Pacitic yesterday. S. H. Lusselle and wife, of Panora, Iowa, visited the Bluffs yesterday. W. R. Mason, of Fradericksburg, Va., roached the Ogden yesterday. Phil. Best, formerly of the Rescuo team, who has been spending the winter in Minne- sota aud the far north, is hore and being greatad by tho boys. ain greeting Chris. Schwenger is rapidly recoveriug from his illness, Justice Schurz has not fully recoverod yet, but is able o be at his cffice attending to nec- essary business. —— Are you Billious! Trythe remedy that cured Mrs. Clement of Franklyn, N, H— Hood’s Sarsaparilla, made” in Lowell Mass. A WASTE OF WIND, Avoca's Attempt to Enjoin the Couns ty Board Amounts to Nothing, Avoca has been greatly excited over the injunction served on the county board preventing the count of soveral townships, aad is trying 1o get seme sort of redress or revenge. With the vote of these townskips cast out, the court house and jail propositions were really carried, This caused alarm, and Attorneys Led- wick and Benjamin, at the instance of their fellow citizens at Avoca, applied to Judge Liofbourow for au_injungtion re- straluing the county boarl from issuing bouds for the new court houseand jail. Phe judge rofused the peution on the ground that sowe tine wmust be set for the hearing of the application, The move is of ro aceount either way, for no one who kuows the members of the pros- ent county board would believe for .a moment that they would issue kny Fouds under the circumstance or take any action wward building & court house and jail until the courts have passed wpon the action ulready taken. COMMERCIAL, COUNCIL BLUFFS MARKET, «uarter which his mother had given hiwm | he Wheat—No, 2 spring, 70c; No, 8, " gl v L ) 609 o Corn —Lsealers are paying 81c for.old corn and 28 for nevr, i){nu an demand at 22¢, sy @6 00 per ton; Hlo pee bale, Ryo—40@dr. il i Corn Meal -1'25 per 100 pounds, Wood—Good eupply; prices at yards, 6 00@ 00, Coal—Delivered, hard, 1150 per ton; soft, S sbauks, wholesal ard — s, Wl i c Flour—City Hour, 1 60@3 3«‘.‘“ Ll Brooms—2 95@8 00 per doz, LIVE 8TOCK, Oattlo—3 50@4.00; calves, 5 5 3 Hogu-—Local puckers e emand are buying uew and Sherala s bl for all radess packing, 0 25: wixed, § 25, i dholes FPROLOUCE, Quotations by J, M. Bt. Joha & Co,, com- mission merchunte, 538 Beoad way, Butter—Plenty and in f: gaovtiar=Fla 3£m n fair demand st 15@ Egys 15 per duzon, "Puiltfy - Roudy saloschilcke wlty -~ Ready sale;chickens, dressed, 124¢; ive, oi turkeys, dressed, 10cs, liys, Llo; cks, dressed, 1%po; liver go, 0 Hlre Le; FROITS, Oranges—4 00@4 25 per box, Lomne 4,00 per box. Sananas—3 50@4 00 per buncl \\sxuhbb: .l'uuv;-,l«;; L ol aale age, none in t t; %) tv{glWl-::o|:v“|v‘v':v-:hv-"](’,pl~' Ay, als ———— The graduating cluss at the Washing- ton hl‘h schocl commencement the other evening numbered twenty-five, and only one boy in the whole lot. The Prenssays 'he losked as lonely as a fly in & jar of oney.” Prospect of lower THE QUAKER CITY. The Old and the New Spiril of tie (ity of Homes. Devout Ancestors Worship a Test of Eoglightment, Philadelphia fs a peculiar city in more than one respect, writes a correspondent of Tao Cincinnati Knquirer, Its citizens are proud of the title of “The City of Homes,” and in_former letters 1 have shown how much claim it hasto the name, which its cheap rents, houschold conveniences, ease of acquiring proporty, and its great pleasure ground containing wbout four and three quarter square m les of diversitied surface. Its yast extent allows a large range of choice in solecting a place of residence, and its varied manu factures give employment to all class of mechanics. But it is sometimes rather dull to one raised in the more liberal west. The old Quaker meeting houses and burial grounds, are all surrounded by brick walls ten feet high, seem to typify the spirit of the city in a measure in shutting out the influence of modern democracy, & democracy which, like the founder of Christianity himself, can not see why one day of tho week should be any more sacred than another. The Sabbatarianism of this city died hard. There was a time when chains were draw across tho stroets in the vicinity of churches during servicos to prevent carriages driving past. A few weoks ago the park commissioners adopt- od & rule forbidding professional or amateur photographers taking pictures in the park on Sunday, although one member, the well known George H. Baker, earnestly protested agamst it. I'he drug stores in the center of the city lave signs i their windows roading thus: **Open for business only. The wartars over the running of street cars on Sunday has been forgotten, and the Sib- bath association, in petitioning railroad companies to cut _down their business to a minimum on Sunday, condescends to temporal argument, and urges this step for the reason that the omployes will get more rest and be better servants therefor, Che newspapers long resisted the modern mnovation of Sunday 1ssues, and the re- sult was a swarm of papers published ex- clusively on Sundays, and more or less weak in the matter of news. The moro vigorous dailies finally progressed to the point of issuing on Sunday, but a relic of the old idea remains in the habit of treat- ing tho Sunday issue as a separato paper, a8 I found when I subscribed for two of these papers, and yet found myself on Sunday morning with nothing to read. The Sunday edition is twice the price of that of the secular days. The progress of modern 1deas, whether it be for good or evil, is irresistible, and slowly the Quaker city yiolds to the current. The Quaker element, which, though the supreme vower was broken in the revolution, yet colored every department of local life until after the war, is still powerful enough to check the growth of liberalism. It is not powerful by force of numbers, but by force of wealth and social power and tradition, It is a purist element, refining upon moral peints to insubstan- tiality, and as narrow and restricted in its views as are the meeting-houses, the schools, and the church-yards it is so fond of inclosing in those high walls of black glazed brick. ‘I'his is the ultra respectable,the Knick- erbocker, the governing element. Yot the city, with its more than eight hun- dred thousand of people in the last cen- sus, is largely made up of persons of for- eign birth and parentage. There are Germans enough here to make a large city, and Irishmen enough to carry every German out of town and yet leave enough sous of the Emerald Isle to found a new colony, and there are of Italians alone ten thousand souls, Even Arabia and Syria have contributed to the population ot this city. Yet the circles of society open tardily and with much grating of hinges to the man wno has not had a grandfather. I question whether wealth itgelf would be a good passport to social consideration among the old families to the man who can or dees not care to boast of his grandfather. 1 am sure that brains and culture would not be, although I mever tried it for lack of a good tnple article of either. . I am not refer- ring to Judge Towgee, who took his Continent to New York in a pat and de- clared that a man of brains could not live in Philadelphia; then came back one day to address a laige audience at the Acade- my of Music, and after scolding a while at things in general in his heavy way, with much lumbering attempt at wit, procoeded finully to execute a savage dance on all the sorest corns Philadelphia posseases. Judge Tourgee should have tried the experiment by inducing a man of brains to move to Philacelphia and observing the result. The subject should not have been taken from New York, for the Gothamite wears » Conklingish sneer when he talks of any other town on the sesbomd, and, busides, it is a breach of good manners to mention New York with commendation i & circle of Philudel- phians, There is a certain firm of bankers which make a specinlty of dealing with the old ‘‘Knickerbocker” Philudelphians, and it keeps the deposits of a great num-. ber of old people of respectable ante- cedents, whose ancestors were 80 oblig- ing as to come over to this country be- fore the reign of the Weorges., 1 have forgotten the nameef the firm at this writing, but it is not & material point. [n the office of the firm may' be found a spry old man who seems to have no par- ticular business. Lot one of the old customers of the firm come in when the teller or cashier kave no time to attend to his or her particular wants immediate- y, The old servitor may be seen to sit own by that aged customer, and s cl beguiles the time, 60 that the ng de- positor takes no note of 1ts| He s talking to the depesitor of the latter’s grandfather and granduncles and their counections, and their courses through which the family of that partioular aeposi- tor became related o some other great family. That's his business; he is paid for kis knowledge of the old familes of this city, and his ability to serve it eut in proper shape and doses, 1t is calculated that his knowledge is worth theusands annually to the firm that employs him. "his story was told me by a trustworthy business man who complained to me that he often bad business in the counting- room of @ newspaper which relies upon its popularity among the old-time Phila- delphiaus, aud the case with which it olimnates such words as ““cack-fight” from its lo rather than its enterprise o secure its circulation and that he al- most invariably had to wait while the head of the establisment finished a con- versation on somebdoy's grandfather, snd whom that grandfather married, before he could sacure an audience. [ am not pointing to any particular newspaper, for the story applies to several of thew, | TOWA ITEMS, There are 414 conviots in the state prison at Fort Madion, Dibugie now has thirty-three and one-half miles of improved streets and alle Mrs. Nocr, a prominent Iady of Ana moss, auicided by taking poison last Sunday night, Oskaloosa s enjoying revival undor the lead of “John Henry Douglas, the Quaker ovangelist”, ‘I'ne Burlington Hawkeye suggosts that on case Pottawattamie county 1s divided, that the name be divided also. In the Congregational church at Grin- nell, & pew has been named for Wendoll Phillips, and is set apart for colored peo- le. James Hughes, who shot and wounded Oftiser Welch in Clinton last October, has been sentenced to ten years in the penitentiary. Mr. Wm, Webber, the Gorman editor of The Davenport Democrat, has recently inherited 87,800 from the estate of his uneloin Germany. Twenty-four counties have petitioned the state legislature to authorizo teaching in the school of the physiological bad effocts of the use of aicohol. A mammoth roller skating rink is to be built at Des M« by 220 feet in area. It will be constructed to likewise accommodate large state, musical and other conventions, A Lake City clergyman, upon one of the coldest days of the last week in Feb ruary, walked four and one-half miles northeasterly to marry a couple, and did not get a penny for it, not even thanks, Dubuque saloon-keopers take difforent views of the probable effect of the prohib. itory law. One has sold his ico bex under the impression that he will be driven out of business, and another is enlarging his ica box under the impression that his usiness will be largor than ever. The news has been received of the death at Atlanta, Georgia, March bth, of Rev. T. R. Robert, formerly of the fac- ulty of the Burlington college. The de- ceased has been president of the Atlanta Baptist sominary for a number of yenrs. FIta eEAK1 N 9T 5o REGRTEG Dayton, O., for burial, » J. R* Pates, who was convioted in the district court of Green county, May term, 1883, of grand larceny, and gave bond for an appeal, and then skipped for parts unknown to his bondsmen, was brought back to Jefferson a few days ago by Dep- uty Sheriff Day, who had captured him in Indian territory. From The Hawkeye: It is absolutely unsafo for moneyed men to venture out upon the streets of Burlington until after dark. They come in contact with a church soliciting committee on every corner. They are largely composed of ladies who never accept a nogative reply in response to their appeals for aid, for their tena cious qualities are unequaled. A dispatch to a Chicago paper says Mrs. Florence Miller, secretary of the lowa W. C. T\ U., says that while that organization will hardly resort to the methods of the crusade to enforce the new prohibitory law, there will be an active, continuous effort to keep it vital. The union has its machinery ready, and while the members will not be informers themselves, they will strive to keep other temperanco organizations enthusi- astic to enforce the law. Mrs, Miller says the ladies of the union will see to it that ample funds shall be provided to re- munerate_additionsl attorneys well for their services. The New York Mirror tells how the guileless theatrical agent fooled a Dos Moines theater manager named Moore, as to Lillian Spencer. It will be remem- from the company bearing her name on account of illness, and Miss Edith Hous. ton was substituted. The Den Moines wan wsisted that Miss Spencer should play, and so Miss Houston feigned ill- uess and was brought before him in seemingly weak state, being introduced as Miss Spencer. Sho submitted to be play, and the astute man- ager opened his house with the assurance that the “‘airy, fairy Lillian” was herself on his boards. My baby six months ald broke out with romo kini af wkin himor, and aftor bewg treaed five monthy by my famil was given up to de. The o " Y, and theeffe 00n get woll, an nois an fat 03 & i J.J. Kirkland, % Mindon, Rusk Couty Texas. 1 tave suffered for many yes tog, uften vor, lar. e and painful, which time 118! almost ovirything L0 effeet a curo, but in vain 1 took Swi'tw spectlio by advice of a frie short time was <ured wouna and well. Edwin J. Miller, Beau; , and in & , Texas. 1 have hoen aflictod with Serofula for tw wnd nave hid Korew on 10 as lrge as & man's hand for that length of timo Lust wonmer | was o il T hadd s € huin red, but all to no purposo. and had infured mye wrd Pobush, ¥our Swift's Specif and poruiniently, wud Chopo overy liko i with M reury ured mo promptly ror wiil take it g Lal , Ark, Our treatine on Blood and 8kin Diseases malled 1600 83 my " THESWIFT SPECIFIC 00, THE CHEAPEST PLACE 1IN OMAHA T0 BUY Fol= el =R Iis AT DEWEY & STONE'S, One of the Best and largest 8tocks in the United States to select from, NO STAIRS TO CLIMB. ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR, RICHARDS & CLARKE, l Proprietors. W. A. CLARKE, Superintendne Omaha Iron Works U. P, RAILWAY, - - - 17TH & 18TH STREETS bered it was necessary to drop that lady |* 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 OCloth STEAM PUMPS, STEAM®' WATER AND{GAS PIPE. 5 BRASS GOODS AND PIPE FITTINGS, ARCHITECTURAL AND BRIDGE IRON. ODELL ROLLER MILL. TIIN d3TI0H TTIAO We are prepared o furnish plans and estimates, and will contract for the erection of Flouring Mills and Grain Elevators, or for changing Fhmring Mills, fremStone to the Roller System. 35~ Kepecial attention given to furnisning Power Plants for any pur- pose, and elutiumtdesi made for same. General machinery repairs attended o promptly. Address + RICHARDS & CLARKE, Omaha, Nob. The Executrix OF THE ESTATE OF Drawor 8, Atlanta Ga. Y Tho use of the torm ** 8hoi Liue" in connection with th conveys an idea of ust what roquired by the traveliug pul; ' tions—all of which are furr (z0aco, MjrLwAUKEY And 8t. Paul. V. Office, 160 W.23d 81.. hetween fth and 7th Ave lio—s Bhort Line, Quick i shed by tho greatest railway in America, 1 owns Northorn and oporates over 4,600 milos of filinols, Wisconsin, Minncaota, lows Dakots; and as 48 main lines, brauches aud oonnec: tious roach all the great busincss contros of the Northwost aad ¥ar Wost, 1t naturaiy anawors ths dy of Bhort Line, and Best Routo between 0, Milwaukeo, 8t. Paul and Minneapolis. koo, La Cromse aud Winona, ausay and Morill Chioago, Milwaukee, Beaver Dam and Oshkosh. Ohloago, Milwaukeo, Waukesha and Oconomowos. , Milwaukoe, Madison and Prairie du Chies Chicago, Milwaukee, Owatonns aud Fairibaukt. Ghloago, Bloit Junavito aud Mincral Folok n, Rockford and Dubugue. « Island and Cedar Rapids. d, Dubeqie, St. Faul aud Minn Davenport, Ualiar, 5t. Poul and Mioneapol Pullian Hlespers aad thy Fiacet Dinlng Oars (n world are rut, g "'3'"".‘"7‘";3".‘;{% 16848 MIEWAUKEE & 8T\ Ak by~ coune ous employes of the company. 8 8, MERATLL, A V.0 CARrETES R Gy . HEAFFOND, :MORPHINE HABIT oGl Ao addres York Gige Carpets ! 18 SELLING L CLOTH, LINOLEUMS THESE GOODS Mats and Mattings, AT PRICES TO MAKE THEM CURTAINS, GO UPHOLSTERY GOODS! TO CLOSE UP THE BUSINESS. WINDOW SHADES FARNAM STREET. 1818 JNO.B.DETWI'LER Garpets |