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THE DAILY BEE-~TUE SDAY., MARCI 25, 1884, i st DeVOIL: & WRIGELT, Hardware, Culery, Timer's Stock, Ete, £ Spechil sbiention to orders try Ml COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. JACOR B OCEI, Merchant Tailoring, REPAIRING 805 South Main Street, TLY AND PROMPTLY DONE. COUNCIL BLUFFS. M. CALLACHER. G ROCERIE S. New Store, Fresh Goods, Low Prices and Polite Attendants. LOWER BROADWAY Council Bluffs. TEEY First Door east of Metropolitan Hotel, RESTAURANT AND CAFE, W.T. B R ATUIN COatoreox to Tho FPublio. 404 Broadway, { « " HARMAN KELLEY, MIENS & 34 N. MAIN ST., COUNCIL BLUFES. Peter C. Miller, DEALER IN ALL THE LATEST DESIGNS OF WALL PAPER AND WINDOW SHADES! Interior Decorations. 13 S. Pearl Street and 20 N. Main Street, COUNCIL BLUFFS, Ed. O lison Chet d'cuisine Mosls at all Hours, } Partios a Specialty. Kimball & Champ, (OPPOSITE COURT HOUSE.) NONEY T0 LOAN ON REAL ESTATE! Complete Abstracts of Title to all Lots and Lands in the County. IMAX MOEIIN. Proprietor, CRESTON HOUSE. ———EVERYTHING FIRSTCLASS,—— Nos. 217 and 219 S. Main St., COUNCIL BLUFFS. basl Talks |POTASH. Todide of Potassium i the strorgost of the At the well-known Establishment OF minerals used in med nd hay produced mu J. P. FILBERT, “uffering in the world. Taken for a loug time and in 209 Upper Broaaway, the , 1t drics up the gastric juices, impairs ho'stomach reufses food, ana the patient sl health aud weight, Porsons with Blood or Skin Disenses should be carcful how the theso imineral poisons, a8 in most instances th of them is to alinost premancntly imy tution. To take the place of these tand perman; Specific is enti you a fafe, sure, your troubles. Swift's ble preparation, and it merit., clief from y a vegeta- e you of its 1 have cured permanently Blood Taint in the third gencration by the use of Swift's Specific aftor I had most eignally failed with Mercury and Potash. F. A, ‘oomER, M. D., Perry, Ga, me tothank e of your S} 1. GROCERY Notice our reduced Price List. We give 16 pounds Eitra © Sugar cd S Of Council Blufis. u for hiscure vific after all for. A young man request; ' of Biood Poison by the other treatment had fal Jos_JAcons, Druggist, Athens, Ga. Our treatiso on Blood and Skin Diseases maiied troe w appiancs. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO. & Atlanta, Ga. raw N_V. Offie, 159 W.23d'St... hot h and Tth Ava Northeast Nebraska ALONG THE LINE OF THE{ Chicago, St Paul, * Minneapolis and OMAHA RAILWAY. The new extension of this line from Wakefleld up he GAN 52382228858 alo Soap Extra Lake Trout, p Choice Minco 1 dozen Mackerel 50 Colorado Flour, Winter, por cwt. T. T. All grades, according to quality, pound We alo carry a full line of Men's, Ladies' an Cn'ldren’s flue Shoes and Mer e Boots at ver; low pri ine o1 Tinware merchaue Call on us and be con' cun Have b 'y by dealing with us. free inan tof the city. Tu ® word, w2 ars hound to scll and challenge s & Laudaole competition in this county. J.op © 8 T. 15c to S per d ¥ 00ds delivered | ¢ BEAUTIFUL VALLEY of the through Concord and Coleridge TO XTARTINGTON, Reaches the best portion of the State, Special ex- tos for land teckers over this line to orfolk and Hartington, and via Blair to all pal points on the X CITY & PACIFIC RAILROAD over tht C., 8t. P. M. ay to Cov Sioux city, Ponca, Hartington, Wayne and LBERT " 203 upper B TJonncct at Blaitr For Fremont, Oakda e, and through to Val- £38 ¢ &arFor ratea and all intarmtion call on B E‘ g A Ticker can oo socured at dopot, Goruer 14th - 28 £ WO W ater Stisets « . 2 g £3 ST. LODIS PAPER WAREHOUSE. A H ek EEage Graham Paper Co., L E @ ! 217 and 219 North Main 8t., St. Louls, G EH ‘E: g WHOLESALE DEALERS IN R & “eEyis w, | PAPERS, Wikt EEER 2 %NVELOPES, CARD BOARD ARD Fiizi =& RINTER’S STOCK Cash gaid for Rags of all SCINURZ I JUstice of the Peace. OFFICE OVER AMERICAN EXPRESS, COUNCIL RLUFI'S, 10WA. Cure without med. icine. Patented Oo- box No. 1 will enre any casein four days or less No, |- 2 will curo the most obstinate case no matter of how Tong standing. Allan's Soluble Medicated Bougies No nauseons dosen ¢! al wood, tnat ara a- destroying the oatin Hold by a | druggists, For turther purticulars P O Box 1,683 ¥.C.ALLAN CO. &8 300 Street. Now v iy TIHOB, OF¥ICHR, . M, PUBKY, OFFICER & PUSEY BANKERS. Council Bluffs Estabiisnea a Forelgn end omestic 1 copabia, or oll of san: yepopsia by the stomach. “Prics $1.60 od co receipt of price for creular, 'CURE. THE DOOM OF THE UNSAVED ! *‘The wicked shall be turned into hell, and the nations that forget God, And the same shall drink of the wine of the wrath ef God, which s poured out with- out mixture into the cup of indignation, and he shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in the presence of the holy angels and in the presence ot the Lamb, Biere, "W.R.VAUCHAN. In 1856 ixchange +n wm ONILVY CORNER PEARL ST, AND FIFTH AVE,, COUNCIL BLUFES, ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEWS, Learn the Expressma Racket, Another confidence gamo is roported The victim Welshman, who had been Northwestern train, living somo- to Fort Collins. On the way he fell in with a very gentlemanly fellow, who chanced to be going to the same place. Soon after getting acquainted an expross agent came in, wanted $40 onsomegoods, and of course the gentlemanly fellow had nothing but a draft, and no currency The express agent had a badge on his hat, and seemed to be an official, and as he vouched for the gentlemanly fellow being all right the Wolverine Welshman et him have 840, Of course both gave him the slip at the depot. He had left only 2.50 and his ticket, and in conversation he declared that he had never read any account of such ewindles and knew nothing about them. He knows now. WS, — — IOWA N Owen Flynn, of Marshalltown, was killed by a free falling upon him, which he was cutting down in Father Murphy's dooryard, A Dubuque watchmaker has invented a watch movement which has no dial wheels, and is said will create a revolu- tion in watchmaking. The retiring mayor of Ottumwa, Major Waterman, was presented by the mem- bers of tho police force with an clegont gold badge, as n tostimonial of esteem for his four years’ faithful service, There were several narrow escapes from drowning from venturing on the honeycombed ice at Burlington recently One Tllinois farmer was loaded down with a jug of whisky which he donated to the thirsty old Miss. Two freight trains collided on the Chi- cago & Northwostern railway at Me- chanicaville on the 20th, one running into the rearof the other. The colli- ding engine was badly wrecked and four or five cars and the way car of the head train were ditched and badly damaged. The Masonic library building, to be erected this year in Cedar Rapids, will be 40 by 41 feet in size, two stories high. 1t will be srranged tor 25,000 volumes at present, the second floor to be used as an art gallery and museum until needed for library purposes. The building will be made fire-proof. A new swindle is now operated on the farmers in some sections by a nice old gentleman who pretends to be soliciting names to a petition for the reduction of salaries of public officers and the reduc- tion of taxes. The name is obtained, when the farmer finds out shortly that he has signed a promissory note. The heated air from the Sioux City academy of music, on_coming in contact with the cold air outside, formed a vapor which was mistaken for smoke; the fire alarm was sounded and a large crowd collected; and it was considerable time before the cause was discovered. The evening's entertainment was over and the hall empty, but had the alarm sounded a little sooner, a panic would have been unavoidable, A very pleasant incident occurred at Greenfield, Adair county, a few days ago., Mr. C. W. Buck, Sr., the veteran mail carrier, who at present carries on the route between that place and Stuart, was presented by his patrons with a fine Elgin watch. This was given to him on his 67th birthday. Mr. Buck has been on this route for nearly five years, and for nine years previous had routes equal- ly long in Adair and Guthrie counties. 1t is estimated that since he has been in the service he has wraveled 156,490 miles, a distance of over siz times around the world. The Tenderfoot Fool Who Goes West to Show. O, Bill Nye in Detroft p A young man with a plated watch-chain that would do to tie up a sacred elephant came into Denver the other day from the east on the Julesburg Short Line, and told the hotel clerk that he had just re- turned from Europe, and was on his way across tho continent with the inteution of publishing a book of international inform- ation. He handed an oilcloth grip across the counter, registered in a bold, bad way, and with a flourish that scat- tored the ink all over the clerk’s white shirt front. ment. thing, he oiled his hair and strolled intc people’s business, cenversation with the cattle inan. and_acquired infor:mation in a foreign land, At first the cattle man showed some grew quiet and didn't seem to enjoy it. the waiters around in a majestic way to impress people with his greatness, tipped ate a slice of boiled egg out of another man's salad, Casually, a tall Kansasjman strolled in, was doing in Lenver, The cattle man, six times, and 1s as much at home in matter, and learncd that the fresh French chicken ranch in Kansas for six years, and had never seen blue water. He then took a few personal friends to the dinix room door and they watched the all traveler. He had just taken a long re neighbor on the left and was at that mo- Justice of the Peace. |, 1L ADMISSION, CE No objectionable characters will be aduiitted Umaha and Cooueil Blutfy Real wiate collee 219 Fala v Dror ) ks biak CHAFMAN & MALIENS, - with the wrong end of the tongs. There are & good many fools who drift {times are burned and made into a blao « + P4ORRIEIO B8 |arcund through the world aud dodge the ' powder, which is used for paiuting,” as having been played on the incoming was o time 1n Michigan, and who was en route He was assigned to a quiet room on the fifth floor that had been damaged by water a fow wesks before by the fire depart- After an hour or two spentin riding up and down the elevator and ringing for things that aidn't cost any- the dining-room with a severo air and sat down opposite a big cattle man who never oiled his hair or struck his nose into other The European traveler entered into He told him all about Puris and the contin- ent, meanwhila polishing his hands on the table-cloth and eating everything within reach. While he ate another man’s dessert he chatted on gayly about Cologne and pitied the cattle man who had to stay out on the bleak plains and watch the cows while others paddled around Venice intorest in Europe, but after awhile he Later on the European tourist, with soiled cuffs and auburn mane, ordered over the vinegar cruet into the salt and and asked the European tourist what he who, by the way, had been abroad five or Paris as he is in Omaha, investigated the tourist had been herding heus on a freshing drink from the finger bow! of his authoritios, but the most disastrous nss that I know is the man who goes weat with two dollars and forty cents in his | pocket, without brains enough to soil the | most delicate cambric handkerchief and [ tries to play himeelf for a savant with so TURNING A TRICK, much knowledge that he has to shed in . formation all the time to keep his abnor A Michigan Welshman Pays $10 to [mal knowledge from hurting him, C— THE PRIDE OF THE BALLET, Who Will Support the Precty Actress, New York Another pretty actress, in the Essox Markot polico court yosterday, was com plainant againat her husband, Charles £ Miller, for abandonment. Her stage name is Nellic Douglass. Her huband is a hatter by trade, and works in his brother’s hat factory at No. 67 Prince street. According to the lady story she was married to Miller on the 16th of Novem- ber last. In December he deserted her, leaving her without means. At the time Miller left his wife she was acting in Niblo's. She held a position in the front row of tho corps de ballet. While singing a love song in the Oates Opera company, at San Francisc, she produced such an impression o Edward Henry Moore that he sent a beautifully written note, on scented papor, request- ing an interview with her Both fell violently in love. They were married at Unklmn{ in 1881. Mrs, Miller says that Moore’s name was Hen: Withers, and that soon after the wedding she was vistted by a closely veiled woman who claimed to be his wife, having been mar- ried to him while he bore the name of Withers. Hearing this Mrs. Miller left Moore, came east and married Miller, “By the way,” interrupted Mr, Millor's counsel, ‘‘have you seen your first hus- band since you left him?"” ‘*Yes, once,” answered Mrs. Miller. After hearing this extraordinary story Justice Patterson dismissed the case. “Who will support me now?" asked Mrs. Miller roproachfully of the judge. I am sure 1 don't know,” replied his honor. “I don't care,” she said, *who supporta me, as long as | am supported.” Turning to her husband's counsel with a laugh Mrs, Miller said: “Will you support me?" “No! The lawyers business is very dull just now, and 1 can’t support myself,” answered the lawyer. Mrs. Miller left ccurt with her lawyer, chatting vivaciously. Journal ARE YOU GOING TO EUROPE? 1n another column will be found the an- ouncement of Mossrs. THOS, COOK & SON, ourist Agonts, 201 Broadway, New York, relative to the very ocomplets arrangements they have made for tours coming Spring and Summer, sionist,” containing maps and fuil particulars, will be mailed to any address on receipt of 10 centa e ————— THE HEAVIEST HOGS ON RECORD in Tons of Fresh Pork Represented by Only Twenty-rour Fat Porkers, New York Star Twenty-four dressed hogs, weighing in the aggregate 20,454 pounds, reached this city yesterday, via tho Pennsylvania railroad, from Wrightstown, Burlington county, N.J. They were fattened on the farm of D. Taylor Deviney, and were consigned to Robe Brothers of No. 266 West Thirty-third street. The largest of the hogs, dressed ready for the market, weighs 1,050 pounds, and the next in sizn is 1,015 pounds. 'The other weights 018, 8ob, 832, 830, 830, 847, 860, 874, 816G, 800, 781, 841, 727, 743, 740, 735, 710, (80, 765 and 660, Allow- ing 20 per cent for tho waste in dressing these hogs, tho biggest of the lot must have weighed 1,200 pounds when he was killed. The competition in Burlington County, N. J., in hog raising and fattening has been increasing year by year, and now there are many farmers in that region who devote themselves almost exclusively to that pursuit. The process of fattening hogs is to keep them apart in separato stalls, and to feed them constantly on cracked corn and cornmeal balls. They are nover allowed to move out of their pens, and being fed and watered five or six times a day have nothing to do but to get fat. They are washed and attended tons carefully as babies, and never by any chance are called upon $o exert them- selves. When a hog weighs about 550 pounds his legs begin to weaken; and when he reaches 600 pounds he lies down and takes life easier than ever. He never moves except to swallow his food, and every mouthful that goes into him makes him fatter. 1¢ is no exaggeration to say that the heaviest of the hogs in this collection of monsters did not stand up during the last six months of their lives. The hogs will be on exhibition to-day and to-morrow. Then they will be cut up and packed for the market. Pork of this kind is in great demandgat hotels and restaurants for larding, but for ordinary use hogs that are not 8o abnor- wally fattened are better, Mr. Deviney is the winner of a gold medal offered by John Taylor of Tren- ton, N. J., for the heaviest pen of hogs raised in the state. He says ho has a hog on hand now that will dress next winter at 1,200 pounds. He sold his hogs for $0.18 per hundred weight, or £1,877.04, | —— Fewer Corks Than Formerly New York Sun, *Nothing to-day,” the barkeeper of an east side bar room rung out to an old man who trust his head in through the doorway. **Maybe I'll have some at the end of the week,"” “‘What does he want!” a cross-eyed LIFE IN A FLAT, Moral of the Recent Honse Tragedy in Now York. New York Cor. Philadelphia Record Some of the mysteries as well as mise- vies of lifo in a fashionable apartment house have been made pudic in the story of the binding and gagging of Muwes Harvey in the Sloane flats, at Broadway and Thirty-second street. The testimony of her negro assailant, to the effect that ho had been domiciled in the servants rooms for three days, rocalls similar reve lations by Zola in reference to the stylish apartment-houses of Paris, and lends poculiar emphasis to the imported title applied to the New York tenement-houses of a fashionable grade, via.: French tlata, Apartment-house life in Now York is & modorn method of living,and its peculiar- ities would surprise the people of other cities who have not yet been orowded into such a way of living. In tho first place, it banishes tho idea of home, As in the French language thero is no word significant of home in its English sense, 80 in the Fronch flat there is no need or room for such a word Peoplo only eat and sloop there, and, indeed, do not always eat where they sleep. Thoy ocoupy a corner of an immense caravansary, quite as public as a hotel, but cheaper and less oxacting in the matter of perpotual dressing for meals, They neither know nor care who may bo living under the same roof and in contiguous rooms. Money is the broad certificate of respect- ability which opens the front doors of the “palatial apartment-house” to its “guosts,” and money is omnipotont. Clergymion, gamblors, brokers, grass widows, adventurers of all sorts—all may find sheltor there if they can pay in ad- vance for rooms and keep up the payments promptly. People who have money and want to enjoy life secure apartments in a fashionable quarter, board their horses at a livery, dine at a restaurant, and proceed to enjoy life without its troubles. Porhaps they do enjoy divesting themselves of the cares a8 woll as the comforts of a home, but it is a sad thing for their childroen, if thoy have any. The young people grow up without the restraints as well as tho tender, loving atmosphere of a home; they make all sorts of acquaintances in the halls and on the stairways of the vast nest that enroofs twenty or thirty fami- lies, and thoy understand the mysteries of life before their parents realize that they have fairly outgrown the limits of the nursery and school. That possibilities of vice and crime may be presented to their eyes is soen in the story of apart- mont-life tragedy with which the nows- papers have boen ringing this week. A dear price is paid for the hole-in-the- corner pretense of a home. Tenement- house rooms—or, rather, suites of rooms —rent for $40 a month down; French flats range from $40 to $60; apartment- house suites range from $1,000 to 86,000 or $7,000 a year, according to the style of the structare and proximity to a fash- ionable avenue. The cheapest garret in one of these fashionable dens will bring 8100 a month—and people will pay it and go half hungry rather than remove out of society’s limit, It is a wretched sort of life for all concerned, and society realizes it by finding that the dollar is mighty beyond family lineage, reputation or brilliancy of intellect. — The ) ricycle machine is_propelled by steam, and y two people twenty miles in an hour, tis quite an invention but does not e ith Burdock Blood Bitters, which will carry the invalid along the road to health t boat all, This vill MEDIUMIS e — 0 MURMURERY, Henry O, Gordon, of Spiritist Notoriety Exposed at Philadelphia by Two Reporters, Philad Iphia pecial o the Inter Ocear. Honry C. Gordon, one of the best known materializing mediuma of this country, was captured to-night in tho midat of his manifestation by reporters of The Philadelphia Press. (lnréun has been carrying on quito a thriving busi- noss of lato in the manufacture of spirits, who, he claims, are those of persons presont at his scance. He has many dupes, wko have firmly believed that the figures represented by Gordon are thote of departed friends and relatives. Ove of the reporters got into his confidence soveral weeks ago, and has beon playing the detective ever aince. A warrant was sworn out by him beforo a magistrate to- day, charging Gordon and his assistant, Hugh Kerr, with obtaining money under false and fraudulent representations, with intent to cheat and defraud and con- sviracy. In company with two fellow journalists the warrant was served. Gor don was caught whils personating Ksthor Hazard,the deceased daughter of Thomas R. Hazard, who owns a fine country seat outside of Newport, R. L, and who is spending the winter in Philadelphia, Gordon was dressed in white draperies, and was in his stocking feet, Underneath the outside drapery he wore a nightgown over his trowsers and shirt, Underneath his robes, and wound around his legs was a red knit shawl, which he had previous- ly woven for his father, and dematerial- ized before the audience, In the capinet were found wigs, beards, silk robes, head dresses, mosuito netting, which he had used for lace, shawls, ribbons, spirit jew- elry, satin slippers, and other parapher- nalia enough to set up a first class spirit- ualist in the business. Several in the au- dience, who had previously recognized departed friends, acknowledgea that they had been duped, and thanked the nows- paper men for the benefit they had ren- man who had just ordered a whiskey sour asked. “‘Corks,” the bar-tender replied, “‘He's a landmark around here. Guess its full 16 years ago since I first saw him, He didn’t look a day older than he does now- The boys used to like him, and they'd save the corks. I've wold him many a barrelful. Nowadays the poor old fellow don’t buy more than & few at a time, a don't seem to have a great deal of capital to invest in his business.” “*Is there much traffic in old coaks?"’ “All the old corks are bought up, but there is not the trade in them that there used to be, | remember when I used to save a barrel a week, but now I don't get together a barrel of them in three weeks,” “Don't people drink as much as for- merly " “Oh, yos. In old times the beer bot- tles used to have corks. Now they are closed with patent stoppers, which can be used over and over again. Imported ale and porter are about the only kinds of malt liquors for which corks are used. Wo don't sell enough champagne to have many coaks, and we depend almost entirely on soda water, ginger alo and sarsaparilla for nearly all that we have,” What is done with the old corks{” “*Little ones are cut out of the big ones, and the scraps left over and broken corks are used, 1 am told, for many purposes went trying to scoop up a lump of sugar | Sometimes they are cut into small pieces and used for stufling cushions, and some- dered the community. Hazard said that he saw the face of his daugter gradually change into that of Gordon, and claimed that the spirit had taken possession of the medium, He could not explain the cloth ing however,which Gordon said the spirit had brought up from the store below. The prisoner will be arraigned before a magistrate, | Pasting Fanry, A short time ago Miss Fanny Daven- port weighed one hundred and uightr pounds of artistic loveliness. Although the public was entirely satisfied she, however, was unhappy until she had suc- coeded, after a trip to Italy and a course of vigorous exercise, in bringing her fair proportions down to one hundred and thirty-three pounds avoirdupois. This is a direct loss to the stage of nearly fifty pounds, As thero aro great many thin poople who want to get fat and, like Miss Davenport, a great many fat people who want to vet thin, her recipe is of some of interest. She walked twelves miles a day, ate no candy, eschewed sugar, vege- tables of all kinds except tomatoes, and never touched brea Clarot was her steady drink, and 1o! the result. The question is, should not the Allsuypuumm-u of fifty pounds of Davenport beauty be followed by & corresponding reduetion in in the prices of admission to her per- formances. S i’ medicated complexion ly harmless wnd non-explos ud wakos # good roport, Apartmenrts THE CHEAPEST PLACE IN OMAHA TO BUY | Fol=Rpef= o U=t IS AT DEWEY & STONE'S, One of the Best andjlargest Stocks inthe United States to select from. NO STAIRS TO CLIMB, ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR. WANUFACTURER OF OF BTRIOTLY"FIRST-CLASS UalTiages, Buggies Ruad Wagons 1810 an; Tllustrated Catalowue fu AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. 190 Harnoy treot and 408 8, 1hisireot, | JMATA, NEB. THEL 1409 14" Dodge St. hed frea unon avplication EFACTORY OMAHA. NEB Cataloguon furnishod n Avolloation { ~ LOUIS BRADFORD, DEALER{IN umbe, Sast Doors Blinds Slingles Lath and (e §ETO.; LOW PRIOCES AND GOOD GRADES t my Prices before buy g elsewhere. Yards. zorner $th w3 Dannisg Slen ¥ and Danolus Dr. [Cured at Ho y “A 103 BRADY ST., DAVENPORT, IOWA, U. S. A. Established 1878—Oatarrh, Deafness, Lung and Nervous Diseases Speedily and Permanently Cured. Patients| Consultation and Correspondence Gratis, P. Q. Box 292. Telephone No. 226. HON. EDWARD RUSSELL, Postmaster, Davenport, says: CONNAUCHTON me. Write for *“Tur MepioaL-MissioNary,” for the People, Free. “‘Physician of ana Marked Success,” CONGRESSMAN MURPHY, Davenport, n rionorable Man, Fine Buccess. Wonderful Cures.”—Honrs. 8 t0 B W HOLESALE GIGARS & TOBACGO, THE NEW HOUSE OF GARRABRANT:COLE Fine Havan Trial Orders MAX MEYER & CO., i, Koy West and Domestic Cigars. All Standard Brands Tobaccos, Soicited, Satisfaction Guaranteed, { asor ramwam st., omama. IMPORTERS OF HAVANA CIGARS! CIGARS, CELEBRATED BRANDS: Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Bizes from $6 Paints- OMAWA 0. M. LEIGHTON, AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIO TOBACCOS, PIPES: SMOKERS' ARTICLES PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING to $120 per 1000. AND (HE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and Brigands. WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES GUNS TIN NG'GOOD H, T, COLARKE, LEIGHTON & CLARKE, SUCCESSORS TO KENNARD BROS, & €0.) Wholesale Druggists! —DRALERS;IN-— Qils. Class. [EEYFIS IS Brushes, . RN Hhoe