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OMAHA DAILY BEE =K RIDA Y MAY 2, 1884 7 MRS. S. J . NORRIS, ompl:te Assortment of the Latest Novelties in MILLINERY AND NOTIONS JTUST RBOBIVED, Americ nrniture and appointments all new. IUSS Main Street, . - - - - COUNCIL BLUFFS. NEUMAYER'S HOTEL ON THE an Plan, Nos, 208 and 210 Broad way, Council Bluffs, H.H. HORNE & CO, WHOLESALE DEALERS 1 Fine Cigars We mako a specialty, at our EASTERN feotory, of FINE HAVANA and YARA CIGARS. All Cigars sold by us are of our own manufacture and warranted as represented. OPERA HOUSE CIGAR HOUSE, H. H. HORNE & CO., 562 Broadway, COUNCIL BLUFFS, - - IOWA, DEALER IN ALL THE WALL PAPER AND Interior De SILOAM MINERAL SPRINGS. We gua-antee the cure of the following named dis- rno pay: Rhoumatism, Sor.fu loers, a1 Blood and kin disea s, Dy pepala, Liver Complaint, Kidney and Bladder Diseases. Gout, Neu- ralgin and Asthma, Thes: Springs are the favorite resort of the tired and debilitatad, and are the FEEBLE LADI+S BEST FRIEND, Good hotel, livery and bathing accomodation both winter and summer. Locality highly picturesque and healthy. Accessiblo by Wabish railway, ¢ Evona,or C.,B. & Q., at Al\un{; Correspondenc solloited, HEV. M. M. THOMPSON, Managor. Albany, Siloam Springs, (Gentry Co., Mo, ANALYSIS. Specifio Gravit; lmflnn Carbonic Carbonate On'lum Carbonate Trua . Sulphate Mag: Sulphate Calci Chlorsio Sodiuni Billica. Alumi; A Organio ilo 469 Total solids per gallon 3 174 Wit & MERRILL, Chemists JACOR BINS. z E. P. CADWELL SIMS & CADWELL, Attorneys-at-Law, COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. Office, Main Street, Rooms 1 and Shugar & Mo. Jahon's Blook. Will practice in- State and ~ edevs! courl W.R. VAUCHAN. Justice of the Peace. Umana and Counvil Bluffe. 014 Fellow Real entate collec 1on agens ver savings bank, N. 8CHURZ. Justice of the Peace. OFFICE OVER AVERICAN EXPRESS. COUNCIL RLUFFS, I0WA. s, B J, Hill, X, D, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, 222 Middle Bras4w sy, Council Blufts, A.F. GROBS., Builder & Contractor CABINET WORK, BUCH A8 COUNTERS, BARS, ICE BOXES, LIBRARIES, aad al kinds of office work & specialty Call or ad dross 13)8 Jackson Street, Omsha, Neb, " H. PHILLIPS, NERGHANT TAILOR Has one of the largest and finest assortment of Spring w1d Sumuer Goods for Suitings nud Trowse - inge - All garms nts gun anteed to it and trimmed with the Best Teimmings. MY PRICE § ARE LOWER than auy Merchaot Tailor in t.e cley. 1004 Famam " OMAEA Stove Repair Works, Furnish Ropairs for al Stoves made in the UNITED STATES AND CANADA, o5 ropaired and remounted equal Lo new. Tele- ..xf«:::fi"};f"ar' o C. M. EATON, Frop. H. K, BURKET AN, IRECTOR AND EMBALME FUNERAL 0 11 North 10th ftreet Nmaha OHARLES RIEWE, UNDERTAKER, Wl G, ul, s, Shas, 1000 Farnam St., OMAHA, NEB lo orders prowptly afteaded 0. Corouer el e Pule’ hone No. L. "1, LOUIS PAPER WAREHOUSE. Graham Paper C 217 and 219 North Main 8t., 8t. Louls. WHOLESALE DEALKRS IN x% PAPERS, (Wl WRAPPING EWVELOPES, CARD BOARD AND PRINTER’S STOCK & Cav pald for Rage of CH Peter C. Miller, 13 S. Pearl Street and 20 N. Main Street, LATEST DESIGNS OF WINDOW SHADES corations. COUNCIL BLUFFS, R. Rice M. D. CHRONIC DISEASES ornts spcuty. Over thirty years practical axporience Office No 5 Poar] strect, Council Blufls aarConcultation trae J. P. FILBERT, 209 Upper Broaaway, the PIONEER CASH GROCERY Council Bluls, Notice our reduceda Price Lish We give 16 pounds Ertra 0 Sugar for 11 pounds Granulated Sugar.. . 25 pounds Choice Oatmeal 25 pounds Navy Beans, 20 pounds Best Bulk Starch 12 pounds Carolina Rice. 12 pounda Choice ¥ runs 25 bars Bufflo Soa Extra Lake Trout, per pound.. Choice Minca per pound., 1 dozen Mackcrel i Colorado Flour, Winter, per owt. 10 pounds Ginger S, ap 40po nis | 5 auily 8) White Fish, per kie Mackerel, perkit. . Dates, per pound. ili= 55882888288 283332 3% T. T. AL}I grades, acoording to quality, 150 to 80c [per oun, PWe atao carey & full line of Men's, Tadies' and Cn'ldren’s fino Shoes and Men's Fine Boots at very low pricos. ~ Alsoa full line of Tiuware and general merchaudise. Call on us and be convinced tha vou can gave woney by dealing with us. Goods deliversd freo inanv partof the city. 1u & word, w2 ara bound to sell and challenge all laudaole competition in this county. J. P. FILRERT 2090 or Broadway THOS. OFFICES, . M. PUSNT. OFFICER & PUSEY BANKERS. Council Blufts . 5 Is. Establishea 1856 Dealers In Forelgn and omestlo Exchange an Homa Ramnrity CASH TALKS ! At the well-known Establishment J. Y. FULLER, Commission Merchant No, 32 Paarl Streot Council Bluffs, Iowa, ROLLER SKATING RINIE. CORNER PEARL ST, AND FIFTH AVE. Open 10208 m, 250 p.m and 7,80 p. m. fariusic on Monday, Wodusedsy uid Eriday’ovo ninge. ADMISSION 2 CENTS, No objectionablea aracters will beadmitted. H. i MARTENS, - - - - . - PROPRIKTOR, W ante c; TO PURCHASE othing Second Hand C For Spot Cash. all ou or address Mr. or Mre, Stophen J. BRODERICK, 618 South 10th stroet. SCHMELING & BELSCHNER, DEALERS IN TIN, IRON & ZINCWARE 621 South 13th, betwoen Jackson and Jones Bts. Job Work In Roofizg, Guttarlug, Etc., promptly one. IMPORTANT Bayers of all Classes. CANNON BRO'S & CO., Have eatablushed themselves in Omaha to ¢ ansact & goneral brokerage and business. We will buy all lawson of £oods at wholvsalo o rotail, and gusrantse rloo. watisfaction in prioes, as we can buy ehrapor BRkily.urseivon. . You can soo t0e adveatage of hev: B your gods hoght by oue who will work for our [nterest audnot trust to & merchant who oasething he is auxious 1o be ridof. We will a'so + prompt “*tentio to selling suvthing entrusted © us, sud goons cousigaed to us will be carefully oked ta, Ourrespondeno: ited £4r Veleronces ~Omaha Natio w1 Bauk, MoCague rowBank Address 111 8. 16th 8t COUNCIL BLUFFS ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEV TIED IN A HARD NOT. The Council in Tronble over the Breaklog The Mayor Insists on His Say so. At the meeting of the council last night eleven of the most important men in the fire department resigned on ac- count of the election of Waltera as chief. Aldermen Mynster and Geis voted in favor of accepting their resignations. Alderme. Keating and Seidentopf voted again’ . The mayor insisted on the ric' vof casting the deciding vote in Cavor of their accoptance, a right which has not been exercised by any Mayor under the new charter. The mayor read an opinion signed by attorneys Mynster and Adams, N.j M. Pusey in support of his position. After some hot talk the matter was referred to the city attorney. That official de- manded time to examine authorities, It was finally decided thatthe chief of the fire department together with the com- missioner should have power to sppoint each man as thoy should deem necessary to meet tho existing emergency. Some of the men have already refused to do any more work whether their resigua tions are accepted or not, hence the do- partment is in a badly demoralizsd condi- tion to contest with the fire fiend. The council adjourned until two o’clock this afternoon, The following is the report of the au- ditor which will be presonted at the reg- ular meeting of the city council next Monday night. To the Honorablo Mayor and City Council of |, Council Blaffs— GENTLEM 1 herewith submit the following report of city warrants issued during the month of April, 1834; lalso the amount previourly issued from March 17 to April 1st, 1884, viz: On fund warrants for April $4,324.53, previously issued, $769 76. Total $4 494 29, Police fund warrants for April previously issued $288.00. To- 35.76. Totals for April $4272 28; previously issued $105 16. Grand total, $5,330.04. These warrants are exclusive of §1,886.00 issued for libraey tax. Bills were allowed by the council during the same time for the following purposes: For April _ Total- Police. $ 456,49, 744.50 Streets General fund prop: Fire departments. Damages and tig] Gas ligats and Tamps. Parks. Bridges . Printing .. Judgment, City engineer. Totals £1,418.31, Respectfully submitted. F. A. Burkg, City Auditor. The city clerk finds his health giving awsy under the immense rush of busi- ness, new ordinances, assessment certifi- cates and other matters, which added te the other important duties of his office, weigh him down so that he begins to look like an old man. The city business must be growing immensely. It was only two years or 50 ago when 'Squire Burke used to serve as police judge, city clerk, clerk of the court, auditor, ete., etc., und did this service for years. It now requires a $2,000 judge, a $1,000 auditor, a $1,200 clerk and the clerk has now got the coun- cil to give him an assistant, Will Patton, who has just returned from Colorado, being chosen. Will is husky enough to stand a good deal of the Flunt before he weakens, —— COMMEROIAL, O0UNOIL BLUFFS MARKET. Wheat—No, spring, 65c:No. 3, 550; rajected, 50c; good_demand. Corn - Cealors are paying 30 ¢, for old corn and 50 for new. Cats—1In good demand at 300, Hay—4 00 a6 00 per ton; 50c par bale, Rya—40@4bc. Corn Meal—1'25 per 100 pounds, Wood—Good supply; pricos at yards, 6 0@ 700, Coal—Delivered, hard, 11 50 per ton; soft, 500 per ton Lard—Fairbank's, wholesaling at 9o, Flowr—City flour, 1 60@3 30, Brooms—2 95@3 00 per doz, LIVE BTOOK. Cattlo—8 50@4 00; calves, 5 50@7 50, Hogs—Local packers are buying now and thereis & good demand for all grades; choice packing, 6 25; mixed, 5 25, FRODUCE AND FRUITH, Quotations by J, M. St. John & Co., com- mission merchants, 588 Broadway, Rutter— Cranmery, 78 @30c; ok~ice country rolls, In good demand, 16c, Igua—12o per dozon, Poultry —Ready salojchiokens,dreased, 12 live, Yc; turkoys, dressed, liye, Ducks, dressed, 1340; live, fo. Oranges—4 00@4 /0 per box. Lemons—3 50@4 00 per box. Bananas—2 50@8 50 per bunch Vogetables —Potatoes, 35@40; onlons, 70; cabbage, 4 cents per pound; applos, sale at 3 25@4 00 for prime @2 25 per bushal. L Spring Ts to many, the most_beautiful season of the year, but to_others it brings trouble in the shape of eruptions, blotches, ulcers, {tchings, ote. 'Wae offer to all such the only purely veg- etable, reliable, and safe remedy to force out all thix polsion, It is nature's remedy, pre- pved from tho raota of the foresta, aud noth- ing in its composition comes from the apothe- cary or chemist’s shop. Do not take Mercury and Potash mixtures for theso complaints, for “::IY are a8 bad or worse than the diseares, Swift's Specific roots out the poison aud elimi. natea it through the pores of the skin, Mr, B. W, Colller, Indian Springs, aanye: * Wor tan or twelve years T had ‘wn ugly ng sore on my face which has been entirely cured by Swit's Bpocifls, not even leaving a sear to mark the place.” Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed ree. h:lr"l.l,l‘fl.:ll"r Srecivic Co,, Drawer 3, Ate A Pat Definition, Teacher—*‘Mary, spell and define atom,” ‘‘Atom, a-t-0 m, atom; meansto go and fiight.” ““How is that, Mary 1" “Why, what they say vo dogs, you know—"‘at s —— The finest Mayonaise dressing for all kinds of salads, cold meats, raw toma- toes, pickled sslmon, cabbage, eto., is Dariee's Salad Dressing. 1t is, besides, more economical than home-made, KEEP NOTHING FROM MOTHER, They sat at e spionl ¢ together, And thiey spuin U o white thread One fuce was old wid thie other young-- A golden and silver héad At times the young volce broke In song That was wonderfully sweet And the mother's heart beat deep and calm, FOF her Joy Witk most conmpleta, There was many a holy lesson, Tnwoven with silent pra Taught to her gentle, s ehikd As they two sat spiuning there, *And of all that Tspeak, my darling, From my older iead and hieart, God giveth me one ISt thing to say, Aud with It thou shialt uot part “Thou wilt listen to many voloes, And ah, woe it tiis The volce of praise,and And the volee of flu ust b voloo of lova, “But listen t [ shait fear, Let never a word to my love be suld Which hier mothier muy not hear, “No matter how trie, my darllug ons o Words may seem (o thee, y are not At for my ehild o hear they eannot be told to me." “IF thon'It ever keop thy young heart pure, And thy mother's lieart from fear, Tiring ll thi 18 told to thee by day AUt (0 thy mothier's car,” And thus they sat spluning together, And an angel bent o se The mother and ehild whoso lappy 1t Wenton 8o loviugly, And o record was made by hls golden pen, And this on s page he sald, That the mother who counseled hor clilld so well Need nover to feel afraid; For God would keep the lieart of the chll and four, mother's side at night Bhould kneel at h With lips to b Oplinions of' (he Press on Kissing. The subjoined “Opinions of the Press on Cissing'’ relate to the text which tells ne cob kissed Rachel, and then lifted oice and wept. If Rachel was a pretty girl and kepy lier fuce clean, we can’t see what Jacob hud to cry about.—Daily Telegraph. How do you Know but that she slapped faco jor him.—L. Y. M. C. Association hi of Jacol's weeping hel to allow him to kis nformist. It i ouropinion that Jacoh wept becanse e had not kissed Rachel hefore, and wept for the time lost.—National Reformer. The fellow wept hecause the girl did not kiss him.—Pall Mall Guzett Jaoob o it agai and he was afraid to.—Metho- dist Recorder. Jacob cried because she threatened to tell her mother. Vi Jacob w Rachel to He wept for joy because it tasted so good. Jewish Chronicle. We think Jacob cried because Rachel had seen eating onions.—Standard. A mistake. Not his eyes, but his mouth watered,—Chester Chronicle. Our opinion is that Jacob wept because 3 [he found it was not half what it was cracked up to be—Manchester Examiner and Times. Jacob thought it wasa fast color, and wept to find the paint come offi—Fine Art Gazette. Heo was a fool. He did not know what > | was good for him.—Saturday Review. Jacob thought she might havo a big brother.—Church Times, Because there was no time for another.— Sword and Trowel. ‘When Jacob Jifted up his voice and wept, he found that he could not get it as high as he expected.—Musical Notes. Weeping is not infrequently caused by extreme pleasure, joy, happiness; it might have been so in Jacoh's case.—Hardwick's Science Gossip. ‘We guess this weeping, like many other Scripture sayings, has to be tuken ina Pickwickian sense. L —— Unloss you use Pazzoni’s medicated com- plexion powder, which restores freshness to the skin, and imparts a durable softness equalled by none other, ———— Peculiar Deafness, / Mr. Cowles, of the Cleveland Leader, is afflicted with a peculinr kind of deafness. He described it to aninterviewer nsfollows : “My deafness is somewhat of the nature of color blindness, There are certain sounds I never hear. I have never heard the sound of the birds since I came into this svorld, and until I grew up to manhood I had always supposed the music of the hird was n poetic fiction. I never hear the his ing sound in the human voice, consequen ly not knowing of the existence of th sound, I grew up tomanhood without ever making it in my speech. A portion of the consonants I never hear, yet I can hear all the vowels. I never could distinguish the difference Dhetween the hard sound of the letter ‘s’ and the soft sound, consequently I frequently mix these sounds in asad manner. It is the same with the soft and hard sound of the letter ‘g’ It was only by accident, after my marriage, that I dis- covered the existence of the hissing sound in the human voice. T was then taught arbitrarily how to make it, but I never hear it in my own voice, conscquently I frequently miss making the sound in iny speech without knowing it. Owing to its having become second nature to me to omit the sound of the letter ‘s, when I do make it I labor in doing so, which in a grea gives my pronunciation the }x. uliarity it has, There are words which pronounce literally according to thespel ing, which gives an” additional peculiarity to my speech, For instance, T used to pro- nounce the word ‘parochial’ just as it is spelled until I was corrected, when I now pronounce it ‘parokial! I cannot hear the difference hetween the sounds ‘ch’ and 'k’ when embodied in & word. I have walked by the side of a policeman, going home at night, and seen him blow his whistle, and I never could hear it, although it could be heard by others half a mile away. I never hear the upper notes of a piano, violin and other musical instruments, although I heas all the lower notes,” 1t you nave talled to récetve beneht from other preparations, try Hood's Sar- saparilla ; it's the strongest, the purest, the best, the cheapest, ——— “ Borr BEDS.—Some peraons insist that soft beds are hurtful ; others argue to the contrary. ‘There are differences of opinion on this point that the Country Geatleman disposes of thus: “The difference between them s that the welght of a body on u soft hed presses on # larger surface than upon a hard hed, and uently more comfort is enjoyed. Hard beds should never be given to little children, and parents who suppose that such beds contribute to health by harden- ing and developing the constitution ure surely in error. Eminent physicians both here and in England, concur in this opin- ion, and state that hard heds have often g\joved injurious to the shape of infauts. irds and animals cover their oflspring with the softest materials they ean abtain, and also make soft heds for thicw ; aud the softuess of a bed is not evidence of its be- ing unwholesome, But if it is not kept sweet and clean by daily airings and fre- quent beatings, whether it is hard or soft, it i3 surely injurious to health.” e — The most efficaclouns stimulants to excite the appetite are Angostura Bitters, propared by Doctor J. G, B. §iegert & Sons, Beware of counterfeits. Ask your grocer or druggist for the ¢enuine article For Young Mon. . Ttobert Collyer says it is o groat mistake Ina young man to think that he can wait 1 long a8 he will before he begins to gather these things about him that 1 have tried to deseribe—a true wife, n good home and such a family w8 he can tind in his heart; and then, when he has made his fortune, and can keep a wife and family in A cerlain social station with all the luxur- ife, he has done his whole duty. If you ask him why he does this, he will tell you he eannot do any better—that ho cannot ask a woman to marry him out of a mansion, and go o live in a cahin; such & woman is not fit for a poor man'’ e But in time a man finds out ever so many secrets on this question, First, he finds out that she who is not fit to be & poor man's wife, ns a rale, is not fit to bo any man's wife, especially in a land like ours, where 1o man knows how soon he may be poor. But suppose ho waits until she is thirty and he is thirty-five, and then marrics the woman of his choice. One of the first things she tellshim is that she would have Jumped at him ten years ago if he had said the word; she wanted him to say so dreadfully ; and almost hroke her heart because he didn't. I think tho wisest thing I ever did was to marry on seventy= five cents a day and_ find myself, hefore T was twenty-four. Very sad is the fate of & man who hearsthe voice say in his Eden, at twenty-two: “Here is & woman I havem and replies, “I cannot take | s to come.”” is wasting life, Dr, Stark, ! Scotland, has shown from statistics that from the age of twenty to twenty-five twice as many hachelor as married men. T was appalled wl read this, at the risk I had run in staying single until T was tw four. The aver- age for single women is little better; but it ought to be, hecanso they are not the greatest sinners, for they cannot always do ™ they would like. So, young man, if you have heen waiting show your grit, and go right away and pop the question, and this lecture will prove ado for thee, ¥ yet for ten the best sermon you ever heard in your lifs — “ROUGH ON RATS.” Clears out rats, mice, roaches, flies, ants, bedbugs, skunke, chipmunks, wophers, 16c. Drugaists e Paper Car Wheels. The paper is straw-board of rather fine texture, It is received in the ordinary broad sheets, differing in no particular from those used for straw-board hoxes or other similar work. These sheets as they come from the paper mill are square, and must be cut to a circular pattern. rapidly done on a large table with fo that is guided by a radial arm that swings freely over the surface of the table from a pivot at the center. A small disk is also cut from the center of the sheet to allow for theironhub. Being thus reduced to the required shape and dimensions, the paper must now be converted from a mass of loose shieets into a compact, dense body, capable of withstanding the tremendous crushing force to which it will be subjected in the wheels. This isaccomplished in the following manner : Ten sheets are pasted together, one upon the other, making a disk of about one-cighth of an inch thick. Enough of these disks having heen prepared to fill a powerful hydraulic press, they are subjected to a pressure of 1,850 pounds te the square inch. When removed the disks ure hung on poles in a steam-heated loft and left six days todry. Thicker disksare then made, each formed by pasting togeth- er two or three of those already finished. These are pressed and dried as hefore, and the process is repeated until a block is built four incl thick and of about the specific gravity of lignum-vite. After each pasting and pressing six days are allowed for dry- ing, and when the block is complete it is leftin a drying-room until thoroughly seasoned. The next operation is that of turning the paper blocks to fit the steel wires and iron hubs. This is done with as much accuracy and in exactly the same maunner as if the material worked on was iron or wood. The circumferenceis turned to a perfect circle of the preciso dinweter required, a bed or recess is worked out_for ‘he web of the tire to rest in, and the edges “urply defined. The block is then painted is ready for its place in the wheel. s For seven years Allens Brain Food has stood the strongest test as to its merits in curing Nervousness, Nervous Debility and restoring 1ost powers to the Generative System, and, in no instance has it ever failod; test it. $1;6 Jor 85,—At druggists. Cold Feet. The connection between the head and fect is well known. A hot head is ordi- narily relieved by a hot foot-bath. So cold ct tend to congest the brain and other in- ternal organs, We have known persons so accustomed to cold teet as to make no eflort to warm them. In such cases there is either an imperfect digestion, or a leeble action of Ahe heart, or a Jow physical state gencrally. ‘The whole system of such \eeds 20 be invigorated by careful exercise ‘n the open air, by o gencrous diet, by thorough {riction of the skin,and perhaps by n brief use of medicines helping the stomach and quickening the liver. Sometime cold feet come from over-ac= tion of the brain. In such a case the per- son must use his brain less and his legs more, not by “spurts,” but habitually. He should take at least two solid houxs from his study, his sanctum, his office, or his counting-room, and put them intosuch ex- ercise as will send the bloud at each heart- beat warm and strong to the tips of his toes; and that, too, without any violent exertion, Bometimes cold 'feet are cansed by tight Iacing or tight-fitting shoes. But it is as much a suicidal act to hasten death by compressing the lungs or the feet as by compressing the neck with a rope. The god of physiology is the final judge. Sometimes cold feet are caused by thin shoes—the owners of which must be left to die as the fool dieth. Bometimes they come from carelessness in the matter of overshoes and wet feet, a carelessness for which, in the case of children, mothers are largely responsible, It is the duty of the latter to train their girls to ri‘(ht. ideas, in- culcated from early childhood. If the rising generation will keep their feet warm there will be a marked diminu- tion in the general death-rate. e —— LETTER FROM ASSEMBLYMAN HOAG, Brareor New YORK, ASSEMBLY CHAMBER AvLpany, April 18, 1883, During my temporary residence here the past winter,I cantracted a severe cold, which for a time confined me to my room and rendered me unfit to attend to my duties. I not only suffered all the incon- veniences which usually attend a heavy cold, but was afflicted with a tightness in the chest, accompanied with a severe | pain, which made breathing difficult, and rest impossible, I tried thu usual reme- dies—ocough drops, cough cordials, &e., but received no substantial relief until 1 applied Anicock’s PorousjPLasrens, on wmy back uxd chest. These I put on when retiring, and was delighted to tind myself much better the next morning, 1o two days 1 was well, Thi the experience I have had with in my family, has con- vinced me that for coughs, colds, sprains, bruises, rheumatism and local pains, All- ocock's Porous Plasters are the gnickes! and wast effoctive remedy extant. OHN HOAG, THE CHEAPEST PLACE 1IN OMAHA TO BUY FoU=fieteleTeU=Ret Is am DEWEY & STONE'S, One of the Best and largest Stocks in the United States to select from. NO STAIRS TO CLIMB, ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR. John L. Willsie., PROPRIETOR OMARA PAPER BOX FACTORY, 100 and 108 South 14th Street, Omaha, Nebraska. “Correspondence Sollolted.” HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF Wall Pamer and Window Shades ¢ EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED 11 FARNAM STREE OMAHA VQ PERFECTION Heating and Baking Tn only attained by using Stoves and Ranges, @z WHIT WIRE GAUZE OVER DOOR Fct sale by MILTON ROGERS & SONS > WA OMAHA NATIONAL BANK U, S. DEPOSITORY. J. H. MILLARD, President, WM. WALLACE Cashiev. Capital and Surplus, $450.000. OMAHA SAFE DEPOSIT VAULTSI Fire and Burglar Proof Safes for Rent at from 85 to $50 per annum. HALLET AND DAVIS CO'S PIANOS [ENDORSED BY FRANZ LISZT.] HMERSON PIANOS, BOSTON, March 1st, 181 EMERSON PIANO C0.—GryTExkN—Your Instruments, Grand, Square and Upright, are really noble Instraminta and unrivalled for beauty of tone and finish. Aflow wme'to congratulata you on your sterliag progress, GUSTAVE SATTER, EKIMBALL ORGAN RECOMMENDS ITSELF. WAHHTLIAAAMNITID THE BEST THREAD ror SEWING MACHINES WILLIIVIRINIIU Willimantic SJmol Cotton is entlre]{ the product of Home Industry, e and is pronounced by experts to be the best sewinimucmnfi thread in the world. FULL ASSORTMENT CONSTANTLY ON HAND, and for sale by HENLEY, HAYNES & VAN ARSDEL, mé&e Omuha. Neh. EAU CLAE LUMBER YARD. 1024 North Eighteenth Street, Omaha, on Street Car Liue. E. W. DIXOXN.. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Lumber Lime, Lath, Doors, Windows, Ete. (irades and prices as good and low as any in the city. Please try me. A.E. DAIL.EFY . MANUFACTUKKR OF FINE Bugoies Garriaces and Spring Wacons By Hepostior ls metantly flled with & select Wiook, Best Workmanship gusrenboed. Office and Factory S, W. Cor. 16th and Capital Avenue, Omaha,Neb, Grerman D. Wvyatt, (JLUMBER MERCHANT Dr. CONNAUCHTON 103 BRADY ST., DAVENPORT, IOWA, U, 8, A, Established 187! Deafness, Lung and Nervous Diseases Speedily and Permunently Cured, Pationt) ured at Home. Write for **Tax MEpIoAL-MissioNary,” [or the People, Free. nsultation and Correspondence Gratis. P, O, Box £92. Telephone No, 286 HON, EDWARD RUSSELL, Postmaster, Davenport, m 3. 84 iwea aoluvy ana Marked Success.” CONGRESSMAN MURPHY, Davenpo ] norahle Wan, Fine Sucoess. Wonderful Cores.”~-Hours, 8 10