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OMAHA —— DAILY BEE =FRIDA Y, MAY 9, 1884, JACOR SIMS. E. P. CADWELL 1 SIMS & CADWELL, Attorneys-at-Law, 1L BLUFFS, 10WA nd_ Shogars & Vo State and edevel YW. R. VAUCHAN. Justice of the Peace. Umaha and Counnil Bluffe, outate collen fon ageny 914 Fellow savings bank N. SCHURZ. Justice of the Peace, OFFICE OVER AMERICAN EXPRESS, COUNCIL BLUFI - IOWA. Mrs, B, J, Hilton, M, D,, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, 222 Middle Brasd-way, Counctl Blua, R. Rice M. D. OANUERS) P S aaarsd whiont e CHRONIC DISBASES o e oy Over thirty years: practical experience Offioe No & Pear stroct, Councll Llufla &4 Concultation troo .. CASH TALKS! OF J. P, FILBERT, 209 Upper Broaaway, the PIGNEER GASH GROCERY Of Conncil Blufis. Notice our reduced Price List. 15 pounds Extra € § 11 pounds 25 pounds Ch 25 pounds Navy Beans. 20 pounds Best Bulk; 12 [ hars Buffalo Soap. ra Lako T [t 10 4 16 Colorado Flour, Winter, 200 10 pounds Gincer S 100 40 pounds h mioy 100 b rallon keg Synip 170 ish, por kit §0 ! 1, verkit 85 Dates, per pound S 10 10 3 pound cans St ndard Tomate 100 nds Califo ults. ... ndl Tek's Statdard 4 f0F, 221000000000 160 T. T. All grades, according to quality, 169 to 800 por pound \ We also carry a full lino ies' and ) Ca'ldren’s fine Shoes and Hc low pric. merchundi ) can savo wor free inany vav | 1u & word, w faudaols compotition In this cou 3. P ROLLER SHATING IRIINEL. CORNER PEARL ST. ANDFIFTH'AVE, Open 10:00 a. m., 2:00 p. . and 7;30 p. m., earusic on Monday, Weduesday and Friday eve nings. ADMISSION 25 CENTE, No objectionablec aracters will be admitted. H. . MARTENS, PROPRIETOR. THOB. OPFIONR, B M. PUSKY, OFFICER & PUSEY BANKERS. Council Blufts . In. Establishea - - 1856 Dealers In Forelgn and omestle Exchango an Homa Semnrity rain & Provisions, BOOGE'S SIOUX CITY HAMS. J. Y. FULLER, Commission Merchant ©. 30 Pentl Strect Council Bluffs, Towa, WESTERN I0WA NORHAL INTIFIC AND— ¢ COMMERCIAL COLLEGE. COUNCIL BLUFF3 JUWA Will Open ~ THZ 23D of JUME, 1884. aplete coursa for teachers and those desiring 2aglish education, o full business course, o1 business practice and gener short hand, ornamental penan plendid rooms, rges very moder: corresp ship, ¢l At the well-known Establishment | nte, cost of living reaso ty good, experie enced teachers xor further particulars, inquire of BEARDILEY & PAULSON, ouncil Blufly, lowa. CANCER Ths developement of the trast Tent ot Craser with Swiit's so wonderful, that ail so affio ted snould write us CANCER FOR.14 YEARS. Spartanbirg, 8. C., March 14, 1884 Y have for 14 years boon sufforer from & imnning ro or y called & Cancer. Swift's S have b i cured me sound and weil! s anybedy's and my health 11 portectly re Itael Tike ‘orty yers had beon lif'ed off my Yours thanktally, ELIZA (INSLEY, Mr_ . F. Burns, Hope, Ark,, raye, under d.te of Jan. 92, 1584, 1 have taken tve hottles of Switt's Specific for a wore on my temple —eaid to ho & cancer. Thave beea wonderfully benefited and will soon be & woll man.” o My face 1§ a8 freo from 9, 1 Mr. W. R Robinan Davishoro Ga., writes, un dato Jan. 8, 1854° “Tam getting on finely, the uleer i9 gradually hoaline. 1 feel that Switt's Specific will clirg the horeible cancer which has been foeding on me for over 20 years.” Treatiso on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed tree. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC €O, Drawer 8, Atlanta, Ga. N V. Offoe, 150 St bet 6th and 7th ays SILOAM MINERAL SPRINGS. Wo guaranteo the cure of the following named dis seases, orno_pay: Rheumatism, Sorofula, Uloers, Catarrh, a'l Blood andskin disoares, Dyopopsia, Liver Complaint, Kidney and Bladder Disoases, Gout, Nen: ralgia and ‘Asthm csort of the @ood h winte d nd t) Q., &t Albany. Corre IKEV. M. M. THOM Managor. Albany, Siloam Springs, Gontry Co., Mo, Carbonato ¢ Carbonate Tron Organic il Total solids per gallon 3 WitoiT & Muni T, LOUIS PAPER WAREHOUSE, Graham Paper Co, 217 and 219 North Main St., St. ouls, WHOLESALE DEALERS IN BOOK, ). W PAPERS, {(Wilki KN VELOPES, CARD BOARD AND FRINTER'S STOCK 247 Cash pald for Ragsof al* " IMPORTANT —TO— Buyers ofall Glasses. A J RS Y, CANNON BR¥S:& CO., Havo established themselves in Omahn to_ transact brokerage and business, W ] of gooda at wholesale or retail, satisfaction in pelces, as we ca ) than yourselves. can so0 the advantage of huv- 13 hought by one who will work for our intorest andnot trust to a_morchant who has omething he is anxious to be ridof. Wo will also prompt *tentior i nd €00k 0 porfoo n your go to us will be carefully o> solicited. =¥ i0aal Bank,”McC h S DISEASES OF THE EYE & EAR J, T. ARMSTRONG, M. D., Oculist and [Auris Until offices are repalred from rosult of firo, o with Dr. Parker, Room §, Creighton Biock 15th ana Dougwsistr eets. H.B. HUDSON, Recently of Boston,) has opened an clogaut jnew stock of Men's Furnishings ! UNDER THE MILLARD HOTEL. ‘mls.»yiug W FINE ! UNDERWEAR < ; AND ™ HOSIERY, [t renr s m NEWEST AND LATEST DESIGNS IN R, WELLY. HANDKERCHIFS, BRACES, ETC. Coaching, Walkinfi, Street and Evening Gloves. INE WHITE & COLORED SHIRTS. English, Pique,and Full Dress Shrits. SHIRTS MADE TO MEASURE, NECKWE Pioneer vrug Store | B. K. COR, 13TH AND JONES STS, DR.F. 8. LEWIS, - Prop’r, AGENT "R Ohio Oil Co.’s West Virginla, Cylinder sud other Oilr conatantly on hand. — UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER ! Metalic Caskets and Woodin Coffins of all Kinds. ELEGRAPH ORDERS PROMTLY ATTENDED TO, OPEN DAY AND NIGH No. 14 IW. Main St., Oouncil Blufls Call and see them before buying elsewhere. JOHN EPENETER, COUNCIL BLUFES, GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES, Fine Mantels and Grates. LYMAN'S GASOLINE STOVES, Stoves and Tinware. 507 BROADWAY, o AT L WHY DONT YOU GET 8)ME OF FITCH BROTHERS’ No. 716 Fourth Street Perfoct Fittlog, Best and Cheapest GUSTUM HIR S?,lc is #aid that some of the orgies he and | ¥ §his friends indulged in were more horii { l Fine Lonen Collars and Cufls, Council Bluffs, Iowa. COUNCIL BLUFS. ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEWS, DEPARTING DENTISTS, The Closing of their Meeting and the Election of Ofticers, At the meeting of the state dental so- ciety yesterday two new members were electod, B. Showater, Waltenas and G. A. Vangha, of Eaglo Grove. Rosolutions presented by the president of the state board of examiners were pass. ed refusing to recognize any diplomes from the direct collega of Deloran Wis- consin, 1t being claimed that any one could get a diploma from that institution on payment of §10, The following wero elected ofticers for the ensuing year : President—Dr, 8. A, Garber, of Tip- ton, Vice President—Dr. L. E, Rogers, of Ottumwa, Secretary—Dr. J. B. Monfort, of Fair. field. Treasurer—Dr. J. 8. Kulp, Muscatine Des Moines was selected as tho place for holding the next meeting of the so- ciety, and it was also decided to hold every alternative meeting at Sioux City, making that a sort of permanent head- quarters, Somo interesting clinics wero given in the afternoon by Dr. Low, of Chicago, Dr. Darby, of St. Joseph, and Dr. Mctirow, of Mankota, Illinows, —em— J. W. Laixa has only six weeks longer to close out his stock. IOWA N IWS. Drinks are not now available in Ne- ola, A test vote goes to show that Polk county will issue no liquor license. They have Sabbath-breaking for breakfast in Marshalltown on day. Tho Hardin county grand jury has completely exonerated Fred Rice, now of Cedar Rapids, of any complicity in the Cowan defaleation and forger- ies. The forty-fifth annual meeting of the general association of tho Con- gregational churches and ministers of Towa, will be held in Cedar Rapids June 4to8, McCabe & Co.’s store, at Malvern, was burglarized on the 2ith of March of about §200 worth of cutlery and revolv- ers. A portion of the stolen goods was found on the Gth inst. in Green's second- hand store. The traveling men stopping at the Morgan house in Des Moines had a match gamo of baso ball the other duy with tho colored employos of the house. As usual the traveling men got away with tha baggage. The News understands that the ssore stood 89 to 103, T'he assessed valuation of the real and personal property of Davenpert accord- ing to the assessment just made is §4,- 127.055, against avaluation of $4,463,610 in 1883, Abarn at Hawthorne, Montgomery county, belonging to John Schneibaker, was struck by lightning on the night of the 3d inst., and burned to the ground. Four horses perished in the flames. Loss, $1,500. Lumber prices in Des Moines are much higher than they ought to be, that several persons preparing to build are arranging to buy their lumber at Muscatine, Daven- port and Clinton, claiming that they can save at least twenty- five porcent, by buy- ing their lumber in those cities. James Clark, a jealous Des Moines hus- band, had his suspicio.s of one Edward Wilson. Clark undertook to persuade Wilson that his suspicions were not well founded, and the argument was con- cluded by Wilson knocking Clark down with a brickbat. When Clark recovered consciousness his wife, appearing on the scene between acts, said she thought he **had better get into the house and get his head sewed up.” s A Sensible ) vould Use, Kemp's Balsam for the Throat and Lungs. It is curing more cases of Conghs, Colds, As hma, Bronchitis, Croup, and all Thr Lune troubles, than a “he proprietor has cht, to refund fish Mon- tle, relio Prico ! For sale by Schosder & Bocht. —~—— WHY PHIL W, LY A Reminiscence of Gov. Sheridan in Assaulting a Sutler Paid by Cidzens, (~The Fin Leavenworth Cort St. Louis Republican, Yesterday, while looking oversome old legal papers, I happencd to run across an entry on a justice’s docket entitled, “The State of Kausas vs. Gen, P. H. Sheridan ot al:” and further on found where the justice had findd the general $100 for assault and battery. As this ease was made and tried in 1808, and lo- cal history of that date failing to give more than mere mention of it, I hunted up all the facts in ciso and now send them to you to shuw future generations how law was applied in that day in Kan- sar,but in order to dc] o wil have to start with Graut at Vicksburg, for it was at that point he first conceived a liking for the person who was subsequently the prosecuting witness in this case. In that locality above mentionoed Grant heard of some exploit of bravery per- formed by one M. L. Dunn, a private soldier, and, wishing to reward all such, made Dunn ‘an orderly sergeant on his staff, and as he paid strict attention to his dutics and was withal a good soldier, he recerved another promotion making him wagonmaster of that department, At the close of the war Dunn was dis- charged, and, with the endorsewment of General Grant, was made post sutler at Fort Leavenworth, This last promotion proved to b his ruination, It was flush times in Kansas; there was plenty of money among the soldi-rs and the sut- tler's store was a veritable bonanza to ite proprietor, Dunn coined money, and there was nothing too good or too rich for him, He drove the finest team, drank the best wine, and had the most fragrant brands of cigars that money could command, Other honors were thrust upon him, and he was made postuaster in addition to his other duties. As his honors increased, 80 did his appe- tite for forbidden things, and, not being that it was reported to department head- qnarters and the following_order issurd Fort LeAvENwoRTH, Kan., July 20, 1868 —Major General Albert Gibbs con manding, Fort Leavenworth, Kan General The major general command ing directs that Mre. M. L. Dunn bo re moved from the reservation and that he ba forbidden to return until further or dors from these headquarters Veryarespecfully, CuavNey MoK enver, Assigtant Adjutant General A copy of theorder was sent to Dunn and he left the reservation, but returned on the 25th and shortly after entering the postoflice, asorgeant with a filo of men waited upon him and ho was informed that it was their duty to escort him ofl of the reservation. Dunn objocted, but the order was imperative, and rather than stand a siege he concluded to go out west, but with his going thero was a reg istered oath that he would get even with his removers, and going bofore a justice of the peace, swore out a warrant of which the following is & copy “M. L. Duon vs. P, H. Sheridan, Alfred Gibbs, Chauncay McKeever, Po ter Leary, and Richard T. Lee. Chargo Aesault and battery with sabres, taking postage stamps, postal envelopes, United States troasury notes, and postal cur- rency to tho value of $2,000—all on July 25th, about noon. When the case was called for trial all the charges but the one for nssault and battery were withdrawn. The case occu- pied tvo days, and among the witne the defenco were some of tho brig and best officors that our country ever knew There wero the gallant Castor, with his long auburn locks: the little fighting Irishmen, Lieut. Leary, and the brave Licut, Moylan, but the character of witnesses availed the defenso nothing, and the jury brought in a verdict of guil- ty against tven. Sheridan and Corp. Lee, the former having issued the order and the latter executed it. After the verdict had been rendered Justice of the Peace Tholen assessed a fine of §1 against all the parties with the exception of Sheri- dan, waom he fined $100 and costs, When Sheridan left the court room it is said that he actually swcre. Infact, ho damned Levenworth, her justico, her juries, and damned the man that didn't, but the justico would not relent and the fino staid, but tho majority of the citizens believed that Tholen had shown a petty spite in fining Sheridan so excessively in comparison with tho others thai a purse was made up and the fine paid, so that Sheridan only lost his time and trouble, but his ruffled temper was not mollified, and to this very day he never mentions Leavenworth without giving her a benediction that turns the air blue. An order was soon afterwards issued from department headquarters revoking the one that ordered Dunn from the post, but his turbulent and wild lifo haa commenced to tell on him, and he sold out his eflects and went to Colorado, and laid out or jumped & miner’s claim near Pogasa Springs. There were no courts or jurors to act as mediator in this case, and when Dunnn and the miner met there was but one resort, and that was the re- volver and knife. Dunn came cut of the aflray fatally injured, he having no less than nine knife-holes in his body. He lived for two days, and his remains were laid away in a pilgrim’s grave be- neath tho snow-capped peaks and the low moaning pines of the Rocky Moun- tains, o ——— Overdoing the Thing, Burlington Hawkeye. “‘Do you love me as dearly gs men have ever loved women?” said Mabel, finding an easy anchorage for her check about the latitude of his upper vest pocket and the longitude of his left suspender. *‘More,” said George, with waning en- thusiasm, for this was about tho twenty- fourth encore to which he had responded since 8 o'clock. ‘‘More, far more dearly. Oh, ever so much more.” “‘Would you,” she went on, and there was a tremulous impressiveness in her voice that warned the young man that the star was going to leave her lines and spring something new on the house! “‘would you be willing vo work and wait for me, as Rachel waited at the well, seven long yeara?”’ “‘Seven!” he cried in a burst of genuine devotion. “*Seven! Aye, gladly! Yes, and moro! Even untilsoventy times seven' Lot’s make it soventy, anyhow, and prove my devotion.” Somehow or other he was alone when he left the parlor a fow minutes later, and it looks now as thcugh he would have to wait about 700 years before he saves fuel by toasting his shins at the low down grate in that parlor again. There are men, my son, who always overdo the thing; they want to be mecker than Moses, stronger than Samson, and ten times more particular than Job, the printer; that is, he i:n’t; but he used to be. —— A Nebraska Town on Whe Chicago Herald, ““A freight car docsn’t appear to bo a big thing, but you haveno idea what it will hold until you come to crowd it once,” remarked a passenger aswe passed **boarding car” for track hands. — *‘I'll tell you what I saw once out in Ne- braska. At a station called Sutton "on the extension of the Burlington road, the whole town for about a month was one freight car, Yes, sir, just ono freight car run out on n couple of old rails by tho side of the track. It contained the frieght oftice, ticket office, telegraph oftice. wait- ing room, express oflico, post office, and a real estate oflice, a grocery with wet goods attachment, asmall stock of dry goods, and the agricultural implement mau had his stock scattered all around, and his office in the car. The railroad agent's family lived in the car, too, and his wife took in boarders. Nor that ain't all. The last day | was there I saw a sign on that car, “Furnished Rooms to Rent,” but I afterwards learned that it meant & bunk iu the tent on the roof. I wouldn't exaggerate about this freight car just to got in a little joke like that.” o —— The Favorite Organ, Washington Hatchet, ‘“Is your wife a musician!” said Me. Grimes to Mr, Greatheart last week. I am proud to say she is & musician of great power,” was the reply. hat is her favorite instrument” The organ,” ““Indeed; what make does she prefer?” “Hor preference is the nasal organ.” “Pho nasal organ! Why, what do you mean?"’ “Jusuwhat T say. You can satisfy yoursell of the truth of my statement any night after 11 o'clock by placing yourself within reasonablo, distance of our kleeping room,"” —— content with those onumerated above, added women to the list and he was lost. ying than that the Were i bacchavalian foast To such an extent musing; women were indulged was this carried on Too Much Flour for the Whisky. Idaho Cour d’Alene Eagle. A train of sixtoen mules, fifteen lohded A COLISEUM FOR CHICAGU. gantic Ar men! Bnter. Dan Costello's Schome, New and pri Chicago News, A stock company of New York and Chi cago capitalists, representing £500,000, has boen organized to erect the Chicago Roman coliseum, which will be like Mad 1son Square garden, in New York, though on a much largoer scalo. Dan Costello, the colobrated New York showman and “ininer,” is one of the leading spirits of the enterbrise. “'They want a change in amnsoments,’ ho said yesterday. “Ihey have boen ‘showed’ out, ‘sung' out, ‘played, out, and gonerally wearied of the presont sys. tem of entertainment., Did you ever think how many women aud children there were in this city who had no place of amusement until the cheap museums opencd! This now enterprise will bo a show for evorybody, butit will be dif- ferent from the museums, A lease of ten years, with tho privilege of twenty, has been obtained of the vacant block at Wabash avenue and Cengress streot. Architects are at work on the plsns now and will give them to me soon, may be to-morrow. Thoe building will cost £500,- 000, It will be 110 by 326 feot, facing on the avenue, The stage will bo the largest in the world, 60 by 110 feet. The scats and stage will bo 80 constructed that they can be raised, leaving an area 60 by 2 foet, which can be used as a rink or for tournaments, Thoe seats will face a sort "|of court, which will bo surrounded by a 20-foot driving track, one.cighth of a milo in length, to be used for chario® ra- ces and the like, The lowest seats will be about five feet above this track, so that no accident can happen to the spectators, On the inside of tho track there will be a sort of rostrum which the jndges can use. When the stage is set it will be con- nected with a pavilion, Gu by 85 feet, in in which a procession can form and march directly on and off the stago. There is a London theater built atter thissmanner, aud 1t is very convenient. Back of the stage there will be a 60-foot court, which can bo opened te the view of the audience by making virtually u stage of 170 feet depth, and wsll afford great facilities for panoramic views. The building is to be 86 feet high. The third story will be an open promenade; above it aid supported by heavy pillars will bo a flower garden. Iu the center of all the upper floors thers will bo n well-hole cov- ered with wire, which will permit the quests above to look down onto the amusoments 1 the ring. The main tower at the corner feot high. The building will easily accom- modate 15,000, the seating capacity of the theater being 6,000. The standrd prico of aduwsion will bo £0_cents, whether the amusement be grand opera or something else. We expect to break ground soon and to open the building by thankegiving day. The Moral of the Walking Match, Philadelphia Record, If has been said that a w is moro brutal than a prize fig is an exhibition of the lowest animal quality of which tho human raco is pos- sessed, viz, enduranco, and sinco its evil effects upon the systom are s> much greater. This may be 80, yot results arc worth something, The cash result to Fitzgerald is said to be $12,600; to Row- ell, $5,000; to Panchett, §2, to Nore- mac, $1,750; to Horty, $1,260; to Vint, $1,000, and to Elson, $750. These six wero all that were loft outof fourteen whostarted on the six-day race. Lot us, in imagination, substitute years for days, and replace the fourteen pedes- trians by fourteen young men of 20 years of age, each of whom has for the previous three or four years been straining every nerve to qualify himself for a profession the pulpit, law, physic, painting, archi- tecture—any learned or artistic pursuit. Let us reckon up the oarnings of these young men during the six years, and, de- ducting therefrom what it has cost them to live, let us see if thay are likely to have in their possession at the ond of six years the sum of twenty five thousand dellars. During that time the chances are that worry and want of work will have killed two or three, and that worry andoverwork will haveinjured threeor four others; so that the only ones that will in u few moro years bo left to achiove substantial success will be, ruling out cases of exceptional good tortune, those who are possessed of the greatest staying power, the most enduraace. So long as the public subscrbe amounts like this for the privilege of seeing men walk, so long will thero bo walkers, Tho degra- dation, if there is any, rests with the spectators, while the foolishness is about equally divided botween them and those who enter upon the race without pesses- sing the essentwl qualifications, —— Ik, kY o Horald, 7 “Ilow much are you going to tax me to-day, conductor!” inquired s passengcr who got on the train without a ticket, “Whoro aro you going!’ “Chicago.” “Tyo.forty.” “That's too darn high, conductor. You chaps on this road tax a fellera good deal more than they do over on the Central.” “Pwa-forty, please.” The money was paid over and quictly transferred to the conductor'’s pocket, but no memorandum thereof made on the conductor’s note book, “1t beats all how this tariff reform idea is spreading,” remarked an observing passenger, aftor tho conductor had passed to the other end of the car. “What makes you think so.” “Why even the railroad men are get- ting 8o they believe in taxos for revenuo only.” — © to Business. Wall Streot Nows, A Brooklyn man who hit wheat for a fow thousand last week rushed around and rented a brown stone front, and then sought the sorvices of a furniture mover, “1')] take it by the job and do the fair thing by you,” replied the mover. “Wall, how fair{” 111 say §60 for the two.” “What two?” 3 | “‘Why, the moving this week into the brown stone front, and the moving in about a month, from that into a cheap, frame house in the suburbs! I always job the two moves together in the case of a grain speculator.” e — CAUTION, No. 219 Graxn STREET, Jersey Crry, N, J b. 28, 1883, Two months ago I sullered with a very bad cough,which kept me awake all night. I was recommended to put on my chest two Allcock’s Porous Plasters. Unfor- tunately my druggist persuaded me to try somo other so-called porous plaster, 1 lost my maney, for they wero worthless and not of the slightest benefit. 1 then procured Alloock’s Porous Plasters, and they completely cured me. J. F. McGINNISS, with whisky and one with flour, arrived drunk and all the revels of ajat Kigle a fow days ugo, and a man from {advertised and offered for sale. in. ) Montans wanted to kuow what wero going to do with all that flour. they Imitation Porous Plasters are being of them, **Alcock's” is the only gen- uine, of the streets is to be 128 = THE CHEAPEST PLACE 1N OMAHA TO BUY FoU=RNef=Tol=fek Is AT DEWEY & STONE'S, One of the Best and{largest Stocks in the United States to_select from. NO STAIRS TO CLIMB. ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR. HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF all Pamer and Window Shadss. EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED 11 FARNAM STREE . ‘ OMAHA NEB. PERFECTION Heating and Baking Tn only attained by using CHARTER OA¥ Stoves and Ranges, WAIT WIRE GAUZE OVER DOOR Fer salo by MILTON ROGERS & 80N (SUCCESSOR TO FOSTER & GRAY.) ILUONIBEIR, LIME AND CEMERNT. Office and Yard, 6th and Douglas Sts., umaha Neb, ™MLo diste, 14 Main 8treet, - - COUNCIL BLUIFS, IOWA HALLET AND DAVIS CO'S PIANO [ENDORSED BY FRANZ LISZT.] EMEIRSON PILANOS, BOSTON, March Lst, 1851, EMEIUION PIANO 00.—Gryries—Your Instruments, Grand, Squaro and Upright, aro roully noble :::::r'x:;,:xbnm and unrivalled for boauty of tono and fnish. ~Aflow o to’congratulate you ot {‘?\n!{_rm:nn. EIMBALI: ORGAN RECOMMENDS ITSELF. AL FLOSTPTEHL 610 voigo bist, Omse, Xeb A L SIMPSON ELEADING CARRIAGE FACTORY an 1411 Dodge St.. 1 “Swamisdn }7 l'lMA}HAA. NE an Avolioation, o =] c i Willimentie Spool Cotton is entirely tha product of Home Industry, and is prnlmlnlct't{ by experts to be the best sewing machine thread in the world, F'ULL Abn()l’c‘[‘Ml‘]NT CONSTANTLY ON HAND, an for eala by HENLEY, HAYNES & VAN ARSDEL, mé&e CGrerman ID. Wvyvatt LUMBER MERCHANE. Omuha, Neb, [ Sy > ~ ::E Bl W [ =) ) w m & ~ = : e 8 5 4 E <5 8 2 4 8 d S 80 & O E = .E FE R E-—‘gwamwg-—-‘_fi?é’ CUMINGS AND 20TH 8T., OMAHA, NEB, G. H WO00D & CO, BUCCESSORS TO WESTERN STEAM HEATING €O, PLUOUMBHRS, STEAM AND GAS FITTERS, 216 North 16th Street, bet. Capitol Ave, and Bt ’ Darevport Street, Telophono No. 49, OMAHA, NEB OMAHA NATIONAL BANK U, 5. DEPOSITORY. J. H. MILLARD, President. WM. WALLACE. Cashier, Capital and Surplus, $450.000. v\ OMAHA SAFE DEPGSIT VAULTSI ' Firo and Burelar Proof Safes for Rent at from 85 to $50 per annumn