Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 6, 1884, Page 7

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OMAHA DAILY BEE «TUESDAY., MAY 6, 1884, 4 MRS. S. J. NORRIS, omplete Assortment of the Latest Novelties in MILLINERY AND NOTIONS JTUST R REOBIVED, 1058 Main Street, - - NEUMAYER'S HOTEL COUNCIL BLUFFS. ON THE American Plan. Furniture and appointments all new. Nos. 208 and 210 Broadway, Council Bluffs, KNICKERBOCKER PHOTOGRAPH CALLERY ! 220 South Main Street, Countil Bluffs, lowa. ‘We quarantee our work as first-class in over manner and style at low prices. We maken specialty of Groupes, Families, and cspecially children, COME AND SEE US, wo take quicker than a wink. Al Kinds of Enginoering. Land Sur- voying,earth quan t1ti o8 caloulated, ote., oto. Civil B fii neex! ROOM 6, NEW OPERA HOUSE, COUNCIL BLUFFS, I0WA. All Orders by Mail Promptly Attended To. which SCHMIDT & RILEY, Proprietors. ™M etcalf Bros., ‘WHOLESALE DEALERS INt HATS,CAPS BUCK GLOVES, 842 and 344 Broadway, . COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA SILOAM MINERAL SPRINGS. We guarantee the oure of the following namod dis- sonses, orno_pay: Rheumatism, Scrofuls, Uloers, Catarrh, a'l Blood and kin diseares, Dyspopais, Liver Complaint, Kidney and Bladder Diseases. Go ralgia and Asthma, Thess the tavorite rosort of the tirod an. debilitatad re tho FEEBLE LADIES B Good hotel, livery and bathing sccomodation both winter and summer. Locality highly picturesque and healthy. Accessible b n%nh railway, ¢ Evona, or C., B. & Q. at o Somempondéne -wolicited, REV. M, M. THOMPSON, Managor. Albany, Siloam Springs, (Gentry Co., Mo, ANALYSIS. Carbonate Calolm Carbonate Tron . Sulphate Magnesi Sulphate Caloian Chloride Sodium Sillica... Alumina ..\ Organicand Vo' *ile matfer 4 loss. Total sclds pot xallon. Wi . E. P. CADWELU SIM3 & CADWELL, Attorneys-at-Law, COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA JACOB 5.3 Office, Main Stroet, Rooms 1 and Shugart & Mo. Rahon's Blook.~ Will practios in State and ~ eders! courts W.R. VAUGHAN. Justics of the Peace. Umaha and Counoil Blufie. 01d Fellow estate_collee 1on agens savings ban'e. N. S8CHURZ. Justice of the Peace. OFFICE OVER AMERICAN EXPRESS, COUNCIL BLUFFS, - IOWA. Mrs, H, J. Hilton, M. D,, PHYSICIAN & §URGEON, 2323 Middle Broedwsy, Councll Blufts, SE. LOUIS PAPER WAREHOUSE. Graham Paper Co, 217 and 219 North Main St., St. Louls. WHOLESALE DEALERS IN wws ) PAPERS, {Wikii ENVELOPES, CARD BOARD AND PRINTER’S STOCK £arCash oaid for Regs of * al* EUROPE!! COOK'S GRAND EXCURSIONS loave Now York in April, May and June, 1834, - PASSAGE TICKETS by ail ATLANTIC STEAMERS, Special facilities for securing GOOD BERTHS, TOURIST TICKETS for travelersin EUROPE, by a'l routes, at reduced rates. COOK’S EXCURSIONIST, with maps and full par- ticulars, by mail 10 cents. Address THOS. C19K & SON, \1 Broadway, N. Y. - Cta-wwhis W anted TO PURCHASE ‘Pound. Second Hand Clothing For Spot Cash. uall on or address Mr. or Mre. Stophen J. BRODERICK, 618 South 10th stroet., CHARLES RIEWE, UNDERTAKER, AND DEALER IN Metalic Cases, l}utflnfi“[’}asksts, Shronds. 1000 Farnam Sty - OMAHA, NEB Telographic orders promptly attended to, Coroner oTPhIe Cinco, "Telo’ hone No. 821. McOARTHY & BURKE, UNDERTAKERSI| 218 14TH STREET, BET, FARNAM AND DOUGLAS. A.F. GROBS., R. Rice M. D. GANGERS, or other tumors removed without the knifo or drawing ot blood. HRONIC DISEASES o cinds s spacuty. Over thirty years| practieal experienco Offioe No on- | 6 Pearl atreot, Council Blulls #ar Conoultation troo CASH TALKS ! At the well-known Istablishment or J. P. FILBERT, 209 Upper Broaaway, the PIONEER CASH GIROCERY Ot Council Blufis, Notice our reducea Price List. We givo 15 pounds Extra O Suzar for 11 pounds Granulated Sugar. 5 pounds Choioe Ot 25 pounds Navy B 2 pounds Best Rul 12 pounds Caroli 12 pounds Choics rrun 25 bars Buffal> Soap. Extra Iako Iron 1 o =22233855832888883 White Fish, per kis Mackerel, perkit. . Dates, per pound. .. T T. All grades, according to quality, 150 to 80¢ jper T. We algo carry a full Nino of Men's, Ladies’ and Children's fine Shoes and en's Fino Boots at very dow pricas. ~ Also a full line or Tinware and general merchaydise. - Call on us and be convinced thai you can save money by dealing with us. Goods delivered free inany vartof the city. Ta & word, we ara bound to sell and challenge all Inudaole competition in this county. J. P. FILRERT¢ 29 er Brosdway THOS. OPFIONR, H. M. PUSKY, OFFICER & PUSEY BANKERS Counll Blufts! . . In Establishea - - 1856 Dealers in Forelgn and omestio Exchange an Homa Remritt Grain & Provisions, BOOGE'S SIOUX CITY HAMS. J. Y. FULLER, Commission Merchant No. 83 Pearl Stroot - Council Bluffs, Iowa. ROLLER SKATING IRIINES. CORNER PEARL ST. ANDIFIFTH'AVE, | = Open 10:00 a. m., 2:00 p. m _and 7;80 p. m., arHusio on. Monsy, Wedosday and Friday eve ninge. ADMISSION 2 CENTS, No objectionable ¢ aracters will be admitted, H. H. MARTENS, - PROPRIETOR, IMPORTANT Buyers ofall Classes. OANNON BRO'SG& CO., Have established themselves in Omaha to tansact & general brokerageand business, We will buy all lasses of gooda a wholesale or rotail, and guarantee gartoos tatuction In priooe, as wo cin buy cheaper han yourselves. You can see the advantage of hiy- n_your goods bought by one who will work for our interest and not trust to & merchant who hay owething he is suxious to be ridof. We will also prompt “*ention to selling anything entrusted 0 us, and goons consigned to us will oked to. Correspondenos solicited, 4 teleronces —Omaha Nations! Bauk, Mo ro'sBank. Address 111 8. 15th St. H. K, BURKET couiqi_qwné. ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEWS, BAGGED A BURGLAR. Happy Jack mot so Happy fas He Might be. Shot at and Cripgled He s now Be- hind the Bars, Sunday night Frank Corbaly, living on Washington avenue, was aroused from slumber by hearing some one work- ing at tho front door of his residence. He watched and waited just inside the door until the burglar was just about forcing the door open whon Corbaley shot. Tho ball passed through the thick part of the door instead of the thinver panel, and was so nearly spent when it struck the burglar in tho breast that it inflicted no serious wound, Corbaly rushod out upon the fellow, pointed his revolver at him, made him throw up hie hands, and thus held him while Con- stable Fox, who lives in an adjacent house, came to arrcst the fellow, and take him to j He was brought before Justice Schurz yesterday, but refused to giveany other name than Happy . Ho was sent back to jail to await his ex- amination, which was set for Friday next. IOWA NEWS, Most of the Iowa cities now have a chain gang, Dubuque has ordered a tax levy of 850, 000 for the maintenance of her public schools during the next year. Citizens of Keokuk are disheartened over the non-building of the union depot which the railroad companies promised them long ago. There is sadness among Keokuk poker players becauso a meck-eyed stranger beat them out of about $2,000 the other night. Minnie Oleson, a 13-year-old girl, is missing from her home in Ottumwa, and there is doubt as to whether she is drowned or has absconded. There are in the state 55,000 old sol- diers, and of these 13,000 are members of the Grand Army of the Republic, 9,000 having joined last year. The shortages of Geo. H. Cargill, the absconded commefcial agency man at Des Moines, foots up nearly §5,000, and will probably exceed that amount. The friends of temperance in Sac coun- ty, who desire to see the prohibitory amendment enforced, and are willing to help in its enforcement, are to meet in convention at Sac City on the 14th. At Des Moines the other evening Gov. Sherman was publicly presented with a a fine crayon portrait of himself, = Sena- tor Rothert, of Keokuk, made the pre- sentation speech, to which the governor felicitously responded. The Chariton Patriot understands that the, Burlington company intends to lay a double track between that place and Lu- cas. The new track will start from near the poor farm and run around the hill, coming into Lucas from the south, Larry Powers, an employe of the Towa City glucose works, was caught in the shafting on the 29th and whirled around several times and dashed violent- ly against the floor. His entiro body was bruised and the skin lacerated, while his left knee was broken and ankle crushed. The Dubuque Telegraph has informa- tion that Judge Sylvester Bagg, so long on the bench in that jucicial aistrict, has about decided to leave Minneapolis and return to his old home at Waterloo, that state. The judge has not found the law business in Minneapolis as prosperous as he expected to, and he has been in ill- health ever since he has been there. ——— A GIRLISH ESCAPADE, Miss Evelin Hoey Spofts the Trousers But is Detected and Taken Home, New Havey, Conn., April 28, 1884, —Miss Evelyn Hoey, who has created such a profund sensation here by her girlsh freak of masquerading in her brother’s clothes, was returned here to- day from Palmer, Mass,, where she was arrested Saturday night. She is scarcely sovonteen years of age, and is a pretty, plumb, little black eyed girl, intelligent and gracious, Her father, Fred L. Hoey, is a Grand street harness mnufacturer. She laughs at the ideas people entertamned about her escapade being a love affair, or a crazy fit, or the result of reading too much light litera- ure. She wag, she says, anxious to see more of the world than is exhibited to feminine eyes in dull old New Haven, and she has been debating upon making the trip for some time, She was particularly desirous of seeing the great cify of Boston, with its Bunker Hill Monument, and the ides of conceal- ing her identity in boy’s clothes she thought a particularly bright one, as she was to travel alone. After reaching Hart. ford by irain from here, on Saturday morning, she went to Springfield; and then running out of money she tried 1o “*deadhead it” to Boston; but a keen-eyed passenger revealed his opinion to the con- ductor that she was a woman in men’s olothes. That official placed her in the hands of the polioe at Palmer, and yes- terday morning her father took a new spring suit, that had just been completed carcfully | 8] Builder & Gontractor OABINET WORK, SUCH A8 COUNTERS, BARS, ICE BOXES, LIBRARIES, dal kinds of office work & specialty Call or ad B e1208 Jacksap Birect, Omaha, Neb. H. PHILLIPS, NERGHANT TAILOR Has one of the largost and finest assortment of Sprivg snd Summer Goods for Sultings and Trowse:- fugs. All garments goatsoteed to fit and trimmed with the Best Trimminga. MY PRICES ARE LOWER 1504 Faroam 11 North 16th Strest Omaba F.SCHEUERMANNM D REJULAR GERMA Homeopathic Physician. SPECIALIST OF WOMEN, OHILDREN & CHRONIO DISEASES, 10 8. ., aud after § ad 106 8. 16th St., Room 7, from 10 8. m., $0 8 p. m. than any Merchant Tailor in toe city. N Btroet. danyer, 1a tlme of from 2 to 8 bours, Hours—At Besldence, No. 1443 8. 10th Strees, till . m. _Hours—At office, No. 1(8 .—The Tape Worm wlll be removed, w thout for the freakish girl, and going to Palmer lannfhiugly upbraided her for her prank, badg her put it on. The girl looked very awkwardly in the masculine clothes, which were much too large,and made her act clumeily. She seoms surprised at the sensation her trip has ated, and to- night says she is sorry she put on the trousers, *‘The next time I take a jour- ney,” she said, ““I will wear my own clothes, but I had a real splendid exciting time, and it's all come out good."” L ——— Amending the Lord's Prayer, Arkansaw Traveller, Old man Sam Kalleton was doubtless one of the most ardent legislators known to the hi.tux? of Arkansaw. Every bill introduced by a well dressed man ho looked on with suspicion,and never failed to suggest an amendment. One morning, after a night's carousal, he entered the legislative hall just as the chaplain was asking divine aid, The old mau took a chew of tobacco and listened attentively until the chaplain closed his petition s with an effective recitation of the Lord's prayer, “'Mr. Speaker,” said the old man, aris- ing, *“I move to strike out the words ‘daily breud’ and insert ‘as much bread as may be found necessary for twenty Wa have already done enough for daye. the flood sufforers.” What We are € San Feancisco Chronicle, 1t may help Now York real estate in the lower part of the city to have ,( 00,000 put into huge office buildings by English capitalists, but the principle ‘is not a g To, * BLACK FACE KILLED HIM. ‘ . Desperate Encounter With a Buf- falo atthe Fair Grounds. A True Representation of Life on the Plains, good one, any more than is the purchase - by foreign syndicates of vast cattle ranges and wheat farms in Colorado, Dakota and Texas, 1t tends to establish here a systom like thatin voguo in Ireland great landed estatos which the owners visit once or twice a year, spending the revenues from them in Londsn or on the Continent, What with the purchase of square miles of territory by wealthy for- eigners and the admission to citizenship of paupers from the Old World, there soon promises to be no place for the na- tive American in this country. e — His First Offonse, Toxas Siftings. “Guilty or not guilty?” asked an Austin justice of the peace of a colored culprit, who was accused of stealing a whole line full of linen. “Dat ar 'pends on you, Jedge. for you to say.” “You must either plead guilty or not guilty; I have nothing to do with it.” “Yos, you has. 1t you is gwinoter lot me off with nuffin but a reprimand, like you did las’ time—" “Well, supvose T do let you reprimand, as 1 did last time?” “In dat case I pleads guilty to six shirts, fosh pilly slips, and about a dozen udder pieces.” “But I'm not going to let you off so easy.” “‘Den ef you is gwineter sock it to me, I'll gib a liar one ob de shirts, and we will try dis case by a fury." “All right. I'll enter a plea of not guilty.” This did not seem _to suit the culprit very well, for he spoke up: 1 say, boss, 1don't keer to put de court and de sheriff to troublo on my ac- count. Jess lemmesoff ag'in wid a repriman,’ as youdid las’ week, on ac- count ob hit being my fust offence, and 1 plead guilty ter five chickens I pulled las’ week, an’ & hog 1 stole last win- ter, an’ a pair of shoes from de store, and a woodpile I'se gwineter haul off to-night.” The justice thought that ‘‘de fust offence’’ plea was worn out, and the of- fender is now in the Texas penitentiary. It does not pay to bo guilty of the firet offence more than halfa dozen times in Texas, unless the first offence is shooting a man, Hit's off with & ANrERe T 4 CONVINCING, Lhe proof >t the pudding 1s not in chewing the string, but in having an opportunity to test the article direct. Schroter & Becht, the Druegists, have a free trial bottle of Dr. Bo- sanko's Cough and Lung Syrup for each and every one who is aftiicted with Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Consumption or any Lung Affection. — A Tartle With a Moral, Ceylon Letter in Chicago Times. Not far from Bonair, where Arabi re- sides, there is a huge and ancient turtle, owned by a Singalese gentleman, who re- ceived it as an heir-loom. The turtle is is about four feet long and nearly three wide, and its owner told me that the most aged persons around never remembered it smailer. It is vaguely said to be 100 or 200 years old. It bellows like a bull whea thirsty. Its happiness is to have its flabby neck scratched by its keeper. It is %00 old to snap at anything and is totally blind. Children used to ride on it, and a hole is bored through the shell, through which they were wont to spur their steed when he became torpid, Poor old crea- ture, were atnotbetter to be put to a cos- mic use in the form of soup than to totter about in this way, blind and heavy laden with the shell that was your stronghold! The aged turtle shaped himself in my eyes to a symbol of the low, earthbound unprogressive systems of the world,which believe that the pivot of the earth rests upontheir back and care only to fortify themselves against those of their kind that have climbed to winge. While I was mentally applying the turtle to one and another of the systems and institu- tions which deserve the name of ‘‘sur- vivals”—in the bad sense of things,which outgrowing their utility, insist on being used instead of studied trasmuted—I came upon *‘Whist Bungalow,” which Hieckel has now made made famous everywhere except in Ceylon, The pleas- ant Germans who entertained him are no longer there—one is dead, the others have removed, andsome of Arabi's Egyp- tian friends are residing there. Dhose Complaining of Sore Throat or Hoarseness should use BrowN's BRONCHIAL ‘Trovnes, The effect is extraordinary, partic- ularly whon used by singers and speakers for clearing the voice, Remarkable C Wilmington N. C. News, One of our country friends is the jubi- lant owner of a calf that throws four- legged chickens and such other curosities into the obscurity of a dim and distant shade, and gives a backset to almost any- thing in the monstrosity line that we have yet heard of. On the 27th of March acow, the property of L. A. Hipp, who lives about six miles north of this city and near the Arlington gold mine, gave birth to & large male calf which is entirely destitute of hair. Itaskin has a feathery appearance and somewhat resembles that oi an ele phant, and although now more toan two weeks old, shows no indication of produc- the usual hisute covering, As to color and marking it closely resembles its mother, the skin being red on its back and sides, while its head aud legs wre white, An: other peculiarity is that its head, legs and feet are those of u sheep, and about three inches of its tail is adoraed with white wool, How About the Doses Many people before purchasing a medicine naturally inquire the size of tho dose and the strength of it, In uslng Burdock Blood Bit- ters teaspoonful for tho Jittle ones and two tawspoonfuls for grown folks ara all that is necoasary ot ono time. This magnificent me- dicino is not only economical but very plea- sant to the taste, Do We Want Mexico? “Do we want Mexico?” asks a news- paper correspondent just returned from the land of the Montezumas. *'We do not. There is nothing we do not need more, 1f we'could take Mexico with only its aborigines, without the Spaniards or & drop of Spruish blood, 1t might be worth considering, but, as the situation is now, we do not want it. 1 have never met any people so lazy, conceited, cruel, vicious and arrogant as the ruling class in Mexico. They are so conceited and arrogant generally that they look, act and speak as if there were nobody else on the planet worthy of consideration; they are so cruel that every town has its bulf.fignu, dog-fights; they are so vain and 80 lazy that they regard work as dis- graceful, and if there is one st of people who, above all othors, have mo business Iumong progressive Americans it is those who are afraid to work."” 8t. Louis Repubican May 2d. With no spectators to witness their reckless performance Dr. Carver's band of cow-boys and Indians undertook to sub. due and train a large wild butfalo in the amphitheatre at the fair ground yester- day morning. Instead of getting the beast in shape for use at their future ex- hibitions, however, they mortally wound- od him and came near losing onv of their bravest Indian riders. A fow days ago Dr.’ Carver asked for the loan of two of the buffalos at the Zoological gerdens, saying he desirod to train them for performances he intended to give during his exhibitions in the am- phitheatre at the fair ground, He thought he could easily train them, supposing, perhaps, they had become partially tame during their captivity. It was finally ar- ranged that the attempt to train the ani- mals should be made yestorday morning. Accordingly, at daybreak they were turn- ed into the amphitheatre to roam until 11 o'clock, The buffalos were both fine specimens, Ono was large fomalo and the other a tine male, the former possess- ing a savage and combative disposition, and giving no indication that she had boen improved by imprisonment. At 11 o'clock, the time appointed for the open- ing of the contest between the animals and their would-be conquerors, Dr. Car- ver and his cowboy aids entered the arena through the south gate, while Chief Oconomowoc and his band of savages, with a war whoop, entered through the north gate. Kach party charged simultancously at thebuffalos, discharging their carbines, which were loaded with blank cartridges, as thoy didso. This extraordinary proceeding appeared to daze the animals momentarily, as they camo to a halt and stood motionless for a short time, Driving spurs into his horse's flanks, Black Face, one of the Indians, made a wicked lunge at tho large fomale buffalo. The animal stood at bay until the reckless savage came within two feet of her, and, pawing the ground and throwing her tail in the air, sho began to fight most furiously. Dash- ing headlong toward Black Face's horse the charged against the poor animal so quickly that the result of the combat could not be ascertamned until the cloud of dust enveloping the combatants had passed away. In the collision between the horse and buffalo both of the animals and Black Face were knocked prostrate to the ground. They rolled about a few seconds in the dust in a most ridiculous maaner, but the situation was considered anything but funny by Black Face. He was the tirst to regainhis feet. Believing it to be the better part of valor to leave the buffalo and horse to finish the encounter he escaped from the arena through the nearest gate. Unable to climb over the gate, and not willing to have anything more to do with the buffalo, the riderless horse ran at the top of his speed around the arens. So badly frightened was the poor horse that he fairly trembled when he came to a halt at a point in the arena as far from the buffalo as he could get. As soon as she recovered her feet, the buffalo charged right and left at the cow- boys and Indians, and behaved in such a way that Dr. Oarver aent one of his men for a loaded carbine with which to kill her if the emergency compelled him to resort to desperate measures. With great presence of mind Dr. Carver then ex- changed his horse for one of the fleotest in the arena, and, with a lasso, started in pursuit of the buffalo, which the Indians near tho north gate were dodging with great dexterity. Riding alongside of tho beast before his approach was detected by her, he swung the lasso in the air with such precicion that the noose entwined her front legs and threw her to the ground. Without losing 8 moment the cow-boys and Indians dismounted and quickly bound her limbs with strong ropes before she could extricate herself from her unhappy position. Shebellowed and kicked, but finally submitted, after exhausting her strength, to the iuevita- ble. When she ceased her struggle for liberty tho men tied & rope 100 feet in length to each of her horns, placed an Indian on her back, and then released her. Standing on either eide of the buf- falo at a distance of 100 feet, thc savages and cowboys were able to drag her about until they tired her out. Then they sub- dued her completely. They succeeded to all appearances in carrying out their pur- pose, but they were mistaken, as the |~ buffalo in her conflict with Black Face susthined mortal injuries that de- prvied her of her strength mstead of al- tering her savage nature. She was taken to her cage whereshe died about b o'clock last nght from the injuries she received whilo passing through her terriblo ordeal in the arena, 'The battle was far more exciting than the men imagiued it would be, and they are not very anxious to un- dortake another similiar performance. Dr. Carver, however, says the is deter- mined to train a large buftalo for his show notwithstanding the dangers the under- taking will noeessarily involve, He paid the Iair association for the animal he killed and negotiated with them for the purchase of another fine specimen which arrived at the oelogicsl gardens from Central Park, New York, last night. This buffalo is a large bull, and according to report, he has a very mean disposition, e — Satisfaction Universal, “In the past three months I bave sold one hundred and six bottles of Thomas' Eclectric 0il. Never saw & medicine in my life that gove such universal satisfaction. = Cured an \oerated throat for me in twenty-four hours; never fuiled to relieve my children of croup,” C. R, Hall, Drugvist, Grayville, 11l e — Why he Didn't. Detroit Free Fross, “Did you notice what a boor that man was who sat next to you!"asked ons lady of another as the pair stepped off & Woodward avenue car the other day, “How!" — THE CHEAPEST PE,ACE 1IN OMAfiA TO BUY iss A DEWEY & STONE'S, One of the Best and largest Stocks in the United States to, select from. “Why he refused to paes the fare for NO STAIRS-TO CLIMB. ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR. JOBBER OF Wall Paper and Window Shades. EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED 11 FARNAM STREE . OMAHA NEB. PERFECTION Heating and Baking Tn only attained by using —3 CHARTER OAK Stoves and Ranges, WHIT WIRE GAUZE OVER DOOR G Fer sale by ‘3 MILTON ROGERS & SONS OMAHA i (SUCCESSOR TO FOSTER & GRAY.) TL.UMBER, LIME AND CEMENT. Office and Yard, 6th and Douglas Sts., flmaha Ngh. OMAHA NATIONAL BANK U, S, DEPOSITORY. J. H. MILLARD, President. WM. WALLACE. Cashier. 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.] EVMEIRSON PIANOS, BOSTON, March 1st, 1851 EMER3ON PIANO CO.—Guxrumsi—Your Instruments, Grand, Square and Upright, are really noble Instruments and unrivalled for besuty of tono and finish. Allow me'to congratulate you on your sterling progross. GUSTAVE SATTER, EKIMBALIL ORG.AN RECOMMENDS ITSELF. A. HOSPH, Grerman D. CWvyvatt, LUMBER MERCHANT SOLE AGENT, 1619 Dodge Street, Omaha, Neb g E Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Sash, Doors, Blinds, Moulding s, Lime, Plaster, Cement, Ete. CUMINGS AND 20TH ST., OMAHA, NEB. G. H W00OD & CO, SUCCESSORS TO WESTERN STEAM HEATING CO., PLUOMBERS, ¢ STEAM AND GAS FITTERS, 215 North 16th Street, bet. Capitol Ave, Darenvort Street. Telephone No, 405, o) OMAHA, NEB FAU CLARE LUMBER YARD: 1024 North Eighteenth Street, Omaha, ‘on Street Car Line, E. W. DIXOXN.: WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Lumber Lims, Lath, Doors, Windows, Eic. (rades and prices as zood and low as any in the city. Please try me. The Largest Stock in Omaha and Makes the Lowest Prices Furniture® Foll=RfieTo=Ref the lady in lavendar silk.” 3 40 well; you see they were divorced only two weeks ago, and it couldn’t be expected that he would recover his com- posure this soon. It is s mean trick in any divorced woman to expect her ex- husband to pass alimony money up to the fare-box, DRAPERIES AN MIRRORS, CEAMBIER SEIE Just received an assortment far surpassing anything in this market, comprising the latest and most nlx designs manufactured for this spriyg's trade and covering e e e @ range of prices from the Cheapest to the most Expensive, Some Doubt the Bible And the motives of its authors, but none who have used them doubt the efficacy of Burdock IHood Batters, 'This splendid blood tonic is without a peer, T — All in the Family, Norristown Herald, Mrs, Pawbe Towle, of Newark, N. J., will be 103 years old if she lives until the 4th day of July next, The Towle [amily are remarkable for their longevity. mm - Look st the printing oftice towel, for o TR * "} 1206, 1208 and 1210 Farnom Parlor Coods Draperies. Now ready for theinspection of cus-| Complete stock of all the latest. tomers, the newest roveltics in stylesin Tureoman, Madras Suits and Odd Pieces, Luce Curtuins, Kte., Ete, Elezant Passongen-dblewator to all Floors. VERICK,, . . - . OMAHA, NEB e

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