Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 20, 1884, Page 2

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| | | | \é i) b : i I——————— TR e T LT FOM TITENTY YEAR! Fm.-\ ori Armers, urfmen’, I 1y Snanghng sock [T HUMPHREY ] 109 Fulton Street, New York. WMUUS DEBILITY ' Vital Weaknoss and Pros. vl Peen tn nee 3 years “ ¥ vial, or grfl?! i o fl'::-'?{fl’r«"éafim for LRy ot e g 2 o irive” Humphreys Horhen. Med. R BTt ER U8 Wi ion s . 266TH EDITI0N.PRICE $1.00 BY MAIL POSTPAID, KNOW THYSELF. A GREAT MEDICAL WORK ON MANHOOD Txhaustod Vitality, Norvo Promatu Tins in Man, untold mise oosson. and old and chronic d Bo found by ¢ r, whosn oxporic 1a a0h asprobbly nover beforo foll to t 7 physiclan 800 pages, bound in h muslin em 204 wcal Dabiliby Youth, en 11 tona or ox dlo-agod beionu’ for all asus which \d only $1.09 by mall, post Sond now in overy instanos. pald, Dlastrative sam modal awarded the aut Assoolation, to Gold A h he 2 sung for Instruo 18 will benofit mbor of soofoty b0 whom this hook will 0ot bo usefal, whathor youth, parent, guardian, tnstru yman, —ATgoniit, Addross thio Peahody Medical Institnte, or Dr. W. M. Parkez, No. 4 Bu Bost wmay bo consultod o oxpoionca, Chro baMed ths okill of ail othor phy olans & wpootaity. 'Saon troated st nHEthn. wi at an tnatsno — allare TYYCE] ‘E, CRICAGO SCALE 0 IMPORTANT ~T0~ Buyers ofall Glasses. CANNON BRO'S & CO., Have established themselses In Omaha to transact » general b Wo will buy all Inwwes of ud guaranteo oot m jon fn prlce \ by cheaper than youraclves. You can sos the advautage of hiy g your gonds honght by one who will work for ~our interest andnot trust to merchant who huy ‘omething ho i anxis Wo will alwo vo prompt attentior i ont bo ous, and gooks o nces —Omaha Nationsl Bank, McCague 4T Referer bro's Bauk. —WITH— 00 FALLS GRANITE. 1 ad your work is done for all time to time to come. WE CHALLENGE The World HOW 1HI CHINE A Nation that Has No Use the Sights on Thoeir IRifles—Why They Fire Low. French troops made their first and unsuccessful advance against Sontay, some importance was attached by the spe cial correspondents of the English papers to the circumstance that the Black Flags fired low, Tt was pointed out that most of the bullet wounds received by the Fronch soldiers were found in the legs and lower parts of their bodies. Of «course the practice of firing low is one strongly urged upon the troops, a_shower of bullets being much more effective if fired low, even if it strikes the ground in front of the ad- vancing hostile forces, than it would be if sent into the air over the heads of the approaching enemy. But we heard a rather interesting explanation of tha rea non why the Black Flags and their allies firo low expressed the other day by one who has had a great amonnt of experi- ence with Chinese troops. He said that the bulk of the Chinese had no idea of the use of the sights on the rifles, and it was almost useless to attempt to teach them the use of such contrivances. Thus, a Chinese soldier, armod with rifla, would never think of rai sight of his weapon whon ho was called upon to use it, especislly in the face of an enemy. Ho would fire at an object 600 yards off with the sight down, the consequence hoing that the muzzle of the rifle not receiving the necessary el mn to carry the bullet over a long distance, the ball would strike or descend very close to the ground before it reached its destination. Tt was also asserted that gome of the Chineso soldiers actually knocked the sights off their rifles as be ing entirely useless, We need hardly to any that the Chinese can never he e effective soldiers until they appre the value of sighting the rifles; and the circumstances we have narrated will g0 as further proof of the miserable condition of the Chinese forces; the supineness and incompotency of the officers, and the ill prepared state of Chinese armies to resist Kuropean troops. — sdy for Lung Dis. Whe! A Splendid ¥ ¥ and rostore valuablo modicine, always sald th to be conside but that it ought overy physician as a casen of Lnng disoases, 0 curs for Consnmption, and haa no equal for all pectoral complaints. iving 1o of this in \Camply testify, o 1 a remedy onght not tont medicine, ribed froaly by ly in al Kellingers Liniment, Wa desire ta 1 tho attention of the pub- lic to Kollincer's Liniment, one of the best 'Mh-n de ?{a red border to 'em. T'HE DAILY BE Wh along tolera n reach ¢ ridin in th me street car wid master, de mills of d s am rindin’ away, an’ all of a sudden a drap an' am swept off de chec When you can't believe what a v 1 pint of o post r-bo'd says you have no furder use for him. ] gee bofo’ me to-night many pussons who am p obably liats, an [ ax ‘em as a friend to stop it. Speak de truf an’ mean what you sag. De man wid a reputashun fur candor an’ truthfulness can’t buy his postage stamps any cheaper dan de liar, but he gits a chance to sit on de jury twice as often, an’ am allus selected to pass de hat when a collekshun am tooken up. 1 sincerely hope dat ebery liar widin sound of my voice will at once resolve to speak de truf an’ nuffin’ but de truf frum dis night on. “One of de ovils of de present ginera shum am its proneness to squander an waste, It am only when we cum down to de las’' nickel dat we begin to query whether we haven't bin too extravagant. I doan’ keer fur de white folks, but 1 desiah to say to my fellow-citizens dat what a man_ airns doan’ count, It am what he saves, 1 see seberal watches among you. L seo dat some of you have on diamon’ pins, 1 has bin in some o’ your houses an’ found china shugar bowle an’ silver-plated knives an’ napkins wid Do you need sich things! Am you mo’ happy dan when de sugar was placed in a sasser an’ passed around,an’ you cut your meat wid a jack knife! Bewar' of what dey call stile stile fo'ces you to put a £30 carpet on de parlor 1! %o widont wood fur de kitchen sto Sule fo'ces your wife to put ona silk dress an lout 'nuff to ont. demands dat you put a £10 lumbrequin at one winder, an’ stuff’ an ole hat into de next. Stile fo'ces you to give a birthday party for your darter while your son has to go barefutted t make up for it. Take off dem diamond pins, an’ sell 'em for two doll: , an’ put do money in de bank fura t day. trade dem w bucks an’ buck Peol off dem sto cloze, an’ doan’ foar to let do world see you in duds mo’ appropriate to de yo'airn,” (o e— ion of Lazarus jon. No one thinks o times, though soms th's door have besn I'he Resu 2 mir: W, culos the dend the ratoly close to complotely restored by Burdock Llood Bitters to gonuing und lasting hoalth ezpr— The Party ot Pradition. Chicago Timee. or my part,” added that incredible democrat brother, *I find that this coun- try doos not stand still. I don’t believe we had better o ancient history for a olatform in 1834 From the ‘‘time- honored” standpo'nt (£ the sect of tradi- tion, this 1s flat neresy” When, in the whole course of ity history, haa that sect admitted, or shown any inclimation to tolerate, the iden that this country moves? proparations ever pat up for all gonoral pur poses for which o linimenc s used. ~ Applied to the head it relieves headacho and precents the hair from falling out. e —— Valne of Museum Curlosities. From the St. Lonis Globe-Democrat, An afidavit was filed yestorday in sup- port of a motion for a now trial in the case of H. M. Stone against Charles L. Hunt, in which a judgment was rendered for the plaintiff as compensation for damages to a collection of museum curi- osities. Charles Maxwell, the afliant, snid he was an old showman, and for soveral years occupied the position of lecturer in Stone's and other museums, If what he swore to is true, thero are a good many Annaniases in the museum business, aud curiosities can be obtained on short notico and at the most reason- ablo terms, He asserts that Stone pur- chased the old Fourth Street Museum from Hutchinson, with all its contents, for §2,000. Mr. Maxwoll in his aflidavit gives wsome information on the subject of musenm phenomena, and the' valuation he places on tho curiosi- ties i3 very much lower than that claimed by Mr, Stone. *“T'he 10 chained skeletons in the infernal regions,”’ Max woll declared were not worth $200 in bulk. The six wax figures in the theo- logical torrid zone were worth 60, aud tho afliant nover knew of a wax ligure in the infernal region that would roalize over 810 each. The mermaid was high at $10, He could duplicate tho eight plaster casts fizures which Stono alledgod were worth 10 for 83, Tho true value of the stereopticon was $50, not $150. Twenty-five dollars was & big valuation for the two-legged colt, which was no use outside of & musoum, and nohody wanted it. Stone placed his abbroviated quadruped at $200. Stone's crocodile, which he placed in the inventory of losses at 875, would fetch $20 or 25 in the cu- riosity, A roptile of this species 20 feet long and alive could be had for $30. Mr. Maxwell stated that he wasaccustomed to expatiate on the marvels in the museum, and was thereforo familiar with every- thing in the collection of curiosities, to produce a more durable material for street pavement than the Sioux Falls Granite, ORDERS WORYANY?AMOUNTJOF Pavinam_fll MACADAM) filled promptly. Samples sent and estimates given upon application. WM. MoBAIN & CO., Sionx Ralls, Dakota DISEASEs O THE EYE & EAR J, T. ARMSTRONG, M. D., Oouiimt ‘and Auri Until offioes aro repaired from result of firc witk D P am b, Creighton Bloc A0 Loug e sireets. "~ §1, LOUIS PAPER WAREHOUSE, Graham Paper Co, 217 snd 219 North Malu St., 8t. Louls. WHOLESALE DEALERS IN % |PAPERS, (il WEAFPING KN VELOPES, CABD BOARD AXD PRINTER'S STOCK 8 Caus pald for Bags of all — You Can Depend§on It “For severe toothacho and Neuralgia of the head I used Z'homas’ Eclectric Oil. "This is cer- tainly the best thing I ever knew for relief of pain of any kind. ‘I'he house is never without t." Mrs. A. M. Frank, 177 W. Tupper streot, Butfalo, N, Y. B i — A Lime-Kiln Olub Oration, Derolt Freo Pross. “ will now remark to dis club,” said Brother (iardner as he opened the meet- ing, ‘‘dat de Hon, Jawback vohnson, of Opelika, has arrove heah for do purpose o(‘.nwmimn‘ an’ instructin’ us on var'us points, He reached Detroit two daya ago on de roof of a freight car, an'ina somewhat carniverous condition, an’ as he knocked on de doah of my cabin at mid- night I looked frew de winder an’ put on apar o' brass knuckles afore I dared step out an’ ax his name an’ bizness, 1 has filled him up wid meat an’ tater, lent him a clean shirt dat buttons behind, an’ a suit of cloze, an’ I would furder remark dat he '\Mnr- to be & pusson of trauspar- ent intelligonce an’ resplendent polish. Let us listen to im wid anxus interest and careless observashun,” The committes on reseption then douned their white gloves and claw- hammer coats and_disappeared in search of the stranger., They found him shiver- ing with stage-fright in the ante-room, and it was only after Giveadam Jones had threatened to loosen the top of his head that he consented to enter the hall. Oace in he braced up, however, and after reaching the platform and swallowing three peppermint drops and a glass of water he seemed to recover all his native confidence and to forget that one end of Ius collar was loose and sawing away at his chin, My frens,” he begav, in"a voice so carefully apjusted that not a singlo lamp was upsot, **1 shall fuss spoke to you on de subjick of truth. De man who has truth on his side am armed with a shot. gun dat scatters all over & ten acre lot, an’ shoots toJkill. Up to de beginnin’ of do eighteenth century truth was held | ent ride which over occurredin the couu- | nashuns, butty. ur de las’ 200 y'ars de biggest liar has | midnight in getting his other half legally ifn great esteem 'mon Nover! = When, in any of its ectimeni cal councils, from the duy when it was sired by Jeflorson to that when it was damned Ly Jefforson Davis, and still onward after it was torn from an unhonored sepulcher upon the failure of that great leader, has the nect of tradition failed to reassort its ancient dogma that this country does not, can not, and never shall be suffered to move! Nover! Historically, it was born in the year 1708, and was baptized at its birth in the vame of the father(Jef- ferson) into a creed that denied the na- tion, and_assorted a federal union or leaguo of indopendent states, each & sov- orign political socioty, and, therefore, possessing the inherent right of judging and determining for itself its own pow- ors, “aud, of consequence, thowe dele- gated to tho federal agency.” That crecd was tho interpretation by the wet-nurses of the Bourbon infant of a stupid clause in the paper constitution asserting that “the powers not delegated” by words of that document “to the United nor prohibited by it to the states o sorved to tho states respe or to tho people.” When, from that day to this, have the defenders of the faith’delivered to the saints lost an opportunity to reassert that corner stone of tho immutable Bourbon church! Nover! Within a week the country has seen,at tho eapital, 124 Bourbon representatives, in a group of 473, recording their voices against the diseases-of-cattle bill, not be- cause any one of their number denied that tho exigencies of tho country de- manded the mensure, but because they prowounced it incompatible with the Bourbon dogma of 1798, and therefore ““unconstitutional from head to heel.” What had the sect of Bourbon to do with exigencies of the country? To admit that an omergency had arisen that could only be met by a general law on that subject would be equivalent to admitting that this country had moved,had grown some- what, since the unchangeablo dogma of the Bourbon church had been emitted T'hat admission no orthodox member of that sect could make. It would be the same thing as cutting the concern looae from its 1mmutable anchorage in tradi- £ LA Ty, to him, but whether which was called into service will ever be vood for anything ag [ R The Secret of Livin Rheumatism, Whits Swelling Conwsumption, Bronchitis, Malaria, and pure condition of th The werits of this valuable proparation aro w0 well known that a passi ice in hut nec ossary to romind tho rea journal of the necessity of alwi ng abottle of VILL's BLoon AND LIVER Syier among their st ck of family necessities. Certificates can be_presented from leading Phyeicians, Ministers, and_ he: familics throughout the land, endorsing it in the highest terms. We are constantly in re cel of certificates of cures from the most reliable sources, and we do not hesitate to rec. ommend it as the best known remedy for the cure of the above diseases, ———— A CURE, y 1s of Benefit of an Experienced Man's Knowledge of the Diseasc. fort SNeLLING, Minn,, March 15.— |Editor of The Tribune.|-Having had great experience in Englaud with the foot and mouth disease, allow me to make a 1 smarks. If the outbreak is only local it is not dangerous, as, with proper care, cattle seldom die with the disease that ie, where the herd is small so that they can telooked after. If I were fat tening stock to-day, I should not mind my exttle having it, as they always i prove after it mcre rapidly. j th st ity h two ck holm tar; mix with each (quantity of common s those wn the crack ¢ 1 the nose of h a position that he can to put it well in bety hoof; also put animal in sy lick 1t off; do this four or five times a day. 1f tho animal is very bad, a half pound of Ipsom salts will do no harm, being careful not to use the same stick on the afliictes the sound ones, and not an attend to both, If the farmers have no signs of the disease will take the trouble to do this they need not bother about the foot and mouth diseaze. Should it show in the mouth, let them rub the tongue and roof of the mouth with common salt two or three times a day, feeding them directly after, but only in small quantities, taking care to destroy what the animal leaves 1 should be very happy (o give any one any. information they require. | am not & “vet,” but I have had at least 3,000 animals through my hands that have been afilicted with the disease in all its stages. Should any far- mer got the pleuro-pnenmonia in his herd, I cannot cure those who have it, but I can prevent it spreading, and guarantee to save the rest of the herd from having it, and it shall not cost five conts. I should be most happy to an- swer any question you wish to ask, but 1 could explain it better than I can write on paper, Yours raspactfully, Winriay Cu — ren 1 Feeling, A lady tells us *‘the first bottle has done my daughter a great deal of good, her food does not distress her now, nor does she suffer from that extreme tired feeling which she did before taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla.” A sccond bottle offected a cure. No other pre contains such a enriching, purifying propertios as Hood's ncentration of vits and e Rosewater's Nebraska Some of the journals of Nebraska have taken exceptions to the positioh of Rose- water as set forth in the Bena few 8 since, wherein he stated he would sup- y | port a republican for president, and gave | ; his reasons, which were clear and co- gent. DBut he also gave notice that this declaration should 1ot bind him to sup- _port state nominations. Whatever the motives may be that prompt these avow- als, the fact is that no true republican can afford, nor will he under any cireum stances endorse public corruption. Must he approve the overriding the expressed will of the people by a state convention m:mipulah-,is by scheming demagogues? Must he be compelled by his vo vote to continue men in e of important trusts who have be- trayed them by participating in ¥ or winking at capital steals, or by refus- ing to raiso railroad assessments to a lével with those of individuals, and ap- point railroad cappers to fill officers in overy case where 1t was possible, and too. against the well-known wishes of the people of the state! Must he approve such oxhibitions of moral turpitude as these and which threaten the very cita- del of our liberties, in order to be known as a republican’ We can tell the men who are trying to stitle the voice of our commonwealth while they can prolong tion, from a platform unchangeable and eternally fixed in ancient history. As the barnacle separated from its attach- ment to the ancient plank by the hand of progress perishes, so the sect of Bourbon, torn from its primitive fastenings in an- tiquity by an admission that this country moves, would be ne longer itself. ————— Horetord's Acid Phosphate, Valuable Medicine, Dr, W. H. Parmeree, Toledo, O., says: *‘I nave prescribed tho ‘acid in a large varioty of diseases, and have been amply satisfied that it is a valuable ad- dition to our list of medical agents.” A Bridegroom's Tribulations, Lyndou (V&) Unfon, Probably the most aunoying and impa- tient journey ever made in Caledonia county was made on Thursday by George Richardson, in his second trip from Dan- villo to Upper Waterford, = Genrge had engagea to enter into a copartnership of warriage with & Danvillo young lady. Ho left home in Waterford in good season and drove to Danville, expecting to'get his certificate, but learned that the min ister required a certificate from the Waterford town clerk, He called on his charmer, promised not to be long absent, and then put the brad to his horse on his way to Waterford, 15 miles distant, Obtaining his certificate, he returned in due baste, got the mmister, and pre- pared for the splicing. Befor the anx ious couple stood up together, the| mimster read the certificate, and called | (ieorge's attention to the fact that it was | 1o good because the town olerk had ney. locted to sign it It was at this point that George's eloquence was brought into full play in attempting to persuade the diving to perform the service and wait for the signature, which certainly should be obtained. Neather tears nor eloguence could prevail, and it was this second ride to Waterford which we have booked as probably the most distressing and impati- e succeeded before However, Geol their term of office to further pluuder the treasury in the name of republican- ism, the hand-writing is on the wall, which they can read if they are mnot totally blind, their days of political bsosism are numbered and they must go. We realize the monied power of corporations and rings who back them, but the indignation of an outraged people will pursue them till they triumph by the ballot. Democrats may submit to corrupt leaders and blindly follow them to the end lot that be what it may, but republi- cans have not been trained in that kind of a school. The republican voter will be true to principle when the principle is just, as his history proves, and just as ready to rebuke corruption even if found within his own household which he will proceed to do the coming fall and that sharply; unloss the worst enemies of the republican party, now claiming to be members of that party, step down and retreat to the rear, —— ARE YOU GOING TO EUROPE? 1u another column will ba found the au- ouncement of Messrs, THOS, COOK & SON, ourlst Agents, 261 Broadway, New York, relative to the very complote goments they have made for tours urcya b coming Spring and Summer, s Fxou 8, will b m ceuts aining maps and fuli p iled to any address on receipt of 10 e New York's Rich Editors, Many years ago George Jones wasa humble keeper of an Albany news srand, it is now the rich proprietor of the New rk Times, By the way, it is said up in Vermont that Mr. Jores is going 1o build a fine country house in his native town of Ply- mouth, in that state, the coming season. Mr. Oswald Ottendorfer of the Staats- Zeitung became the proprietor of this valuable newspaper property by marri- age, aud a marble building has almost eclipsed the memory of the modest habit- ation he formerly cecupied beside a liquor | saloon. Not fifty years ago Mr. James Gordon that show 10 8 stick with | his invention would do away with the use a pioce of any woolen article, and put the | of gunpowder, The jus parts of Mr. tar and salt all over the hoof, taking care | Chrmberlain’s bullet are three m number. d | once get o good hold. e T T A T e R e B A S S e e Mr. Dana and The but very little until they joined their iesucs, some fiftee arsago. It has been said that his present annual income is away shove $100.000. Private Juseph Pulitzer, now editor of the World, was without a knowledze of our language or a trade when he was dis- charged from a volunteer regiment at the close of the war, in which he had enlisted 1Y | immediately upon his arrival in the coun- try. Sixteen years ago he was a gentle- man's coachman in St. Louis, and now some one says his St. Louis Post Dispatch alone pays him §120,000 yeaily. All poigonous matter is carried off from the system by Samaritan Nervine, £1.50. “For 9 years my daughter had epilep- tic fits,” writes J. N. Marshall, of Granby, Mo., ““Samaritan Nervine cured her.” At Druggists, e DBULLETS WITH LOADING AL AnInvention Intended as a Substitute ¥or Gunpewder. Aftor fourteon yeurs of experimenting Mr. T. Chamberlain, of Norwhich, Conn., says The New York Sun, has produced what lie calls a “‘perfected air gun.” The term is o misnomer, as the invention does not relate to guns but to projectiles. Mr. Chamberlain does not load a gun with air, but he loads the builet, and he thinks exterior of the projectile is a hollow hell. Part two is a stecl end-piece, which screws into the shell, 1 ] chamber above the end-piece to be cha ed with air. The end-pieco is except at the upper end, and has four equidistant air holes at a point on its stem. A steel pin tits exactly into the hollow of the end piece, the end of the pin being flush with the bottem of the bullet when it is ready for uee. 1t is held in place, when the bullet is charged, by a delieate wire penetrating the rim of the end piece. In charging the bullet with air the end pices isscrewed in tight, and air 18 forced mto the chamber by an air engine invented by Mr. Chamberiain, ‘Phe pin is then gent in and the wire is fastened. The bullet may be fired in any breech-loading gun of the right bore. The fall of the gun bammer breaks the wire holding the steel pin, and drives the pin past the air holes, the air charge rushes out around the smaller end of the pin against the gun breech, and the bullet is hurled from the gun. The report of the air discharge is, correspondingly, louder than that of powder. By adaptation of the same principles a vatridge is made for throwing shot. The air-charged bullet, Mr. Chamber- Isin says, may be made to fit the smallest riflo or the largest cannon. The velocity with which it is thrown depends, of course, entirely on the pressure of air, with which it is loaded. Mr. Chamberlain has fired a ritle bullet, loaded with a hundred pounds of air pressure, half a mile accurately. The shells will stand, he eays, 1000 pounds of pressure. Ho proposes to make cannon balls that may be fired thirteen or fourteen miles, the long-range possibilities of the projectile being limited only by the cohesive power of the steel. He avers that his charged projectiles are ready for use after any lapse of time, and that there is no d ger of the bursting of the piece, as over pressurc of air mevely starts a seam in the metal, instead of shivering 1t. For riflo or musket shooting a leaden bullet is used. 1r. Chamberlain has alse invented an nite rocket. Dynamite mber, near the joint of 1 is fired out of a piece of gas-pipe that may be set up in the ground or inclined against a fence, It may be thrown, he avers, two or three miles, and will explode at the end of its flight, holle “Grunt It Out” The above is an old saw as savage as it is sonseloss, You can't *'grant out’ dyspepiia, nor livor complaint, nor nervousness it thoy They don't romove thomsslves in that way. Tho taking a few doses of Burdock Llowd Bitters is better than Sgrunting it out " What we can cure let’s not onduro. ) The Denver & New Orleans railroad, is the white elephant of Colorado, espe- cé:nlly to the unfortunate stockholders in It is hedged in by the Trunk lines, a kind of railroad orphan without a pool fo wallow in. The late decision of the supreme court, adverse to the company, was a severe blow to the hopes of the managers, who seo only way to reach a paying basis—building on to the metropolis of the gulf. Various rumors are floating around Denver con- cerning the plans of the company. The most reasonable of these is that the road will be built to a connection with (iould Texas system at the Canadian river. The Fort Worth & Denver City railroad is built to Worsham, Texas, on the South Fork of the Red river, but the charter 1s for a road to_Lathrop on the Canadian river. The Denver & New Orleans char- ter is for a road to Lathrop. It is said that the road will he constructed from Pueblo to Trinidad within thirty days. Trinidad will bo located on & branch leav- ing the wain line at Butte City. The Denver & New Orleans officers admit that negotiations are nearly completed for the proposed extension. They expect matters will be settled next week and then work begin, They also disclaim any knowledge of Gould’s “alleged purchase, or of any changes in the management being contemplated, 5‘“".@""'4hf A NERVNE (XTHE GRERTY) the concern. “Samaritay br, . O, Me T The Largest Stock i n Omaha, and Makes the Lowest Prices Furniture' DRAPERIES ANIC MIRRORY, CEHANMBEIES SE TS ! 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. I feel ity Dr. I w1t cured where § Gorrespmad, ¥ or testiuy The Or. 5.4, Rich s treely answered. g carculars bend sing. nond Wed. Co. St. Joseph, Mo, v all Dy ugwists. @y Deunett's father was pawning his watoh | Lor), Btoutenburgh & Co., Agents, Chicago il Parlor Coods Draperies. Now ready for theinspection of cus-| Complete stock of all the latest tomers, the newest roveltics in styles in Turcoman, Madras and Suits and Odd Pieces. Lace Curtains, Ete., Ete. Ete. o El;énf Passex{ge':; Eievator to all fioors. CHARLES SHIVERICK, 1206, 1208 and 1210 Farnam Street, = - - - OMAHA, NEB. e e v d [ T Ioaies, Rnal Wagons TWO WHEEL CARTS. : 8. 1hfrest, 3 JRTANA. NEB, RzEx Dr. CONNAUCHTON, 103 BRADY ST., DAVENPORT, IOWA, U. S. A. Established 1878—Catarrh, Deafness, Lung and Nervous Diseases Speedily and Permanently Cured. Patients Cured at Home. Write for “Trx Muproar-Misstoxary,” for the People, Free. Consultation and Correspondence Gratis. P. 0. Box 292, Telephono No. 226, HON. EDWARD RUSSELL, Postmaster, Davenport, says: _*‘Physician of ea apiitty ana Marked Success.” CONGRESSMAN MURPHY, Davenport, —~iton: A onorablo Mlan. Fine Success. Wonderful Cures.”—Hours. 8 tn 5 RICHARDS & CLARKE, T W. A. CLARKE, Proprietors. I Superintendne Omabha Iron Works U. P. RATuWAY, - - - 17TH & 18TH STREETS i MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS IN Steam Engines, Boilers WATER WHEELS, ROLLER MILLS, Mill and Grain (Elevator Machinery MILL FURNISHINGS OF ALL KINDS, INCLUDING THE Celebrated ‘Anchor Brand Dufour Bolting Cloth! STEAM PUMPS, STEAM? WATER AND GAS PIPE. PRI BRASS GOODS AND PIPE FITTINGS, ARCHITECTURAL AND BRIDGE IRON. ODELL ROLLER MILL. g -«re We are prepared to furnish plar d estimates, and will contract for the erection of Flouring Mills ] Grain Elevators, or for changing Flouring Mills, fremStoue to the Rolier System. 4 Wirpecial attention giv rnisning Power T'lants for any pur- nd il machin 1y repairs attended stimates made for Om Va, Nab BAD CLAME LUMBER YARD RIQ1'¥I\F‘.DS & CLAREE. 1024 North Eighteenth Street, Omaha, on Street XD, VA7 .. DT ZZCOINT, WHOLFSALE AND RETAIT, Lumber, Lime, Lath, Doors, Windows, Bte. Grades and prices as good and low 43 any "u the city, P'93se try me, Car Line, e s . 7 SN S Sy R |} —

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