Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 29, 1884, Page 2

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OMAHA DAILY BEE-~-WEDNESDAY. MAY 98 1884 OMAHA DAIL Y BEE-TITURSDAY MAY 29, 188 - 9 OF 100 ectric Oil TIME OUT Dr. Thomas' Ec Rhoumatism and Neuralgia, 99 TIMES OUT OF 100 Dr. Thomas’ Eclectric Oil CURES A Cold or a Hoarseness. 19 TIMES OUT OF 20 Dr. Thomas’ Eclectric Oil CURES Asthma and Diphtheria. 49 TIMES OUT O Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil CURES Croup and Affections of the Throat. 50 SOLD EVERYWHERE. VARICOCELE ki) 07 1 Elage ii&'r!’i SRRELAL doBiCT, 160 Fiiten 0 T——=THE MILD POWER CURES— HREYS’ OMEOPATHIC SPECIFICS. .—~Each number the pecial’ pro- i ominent phyaieinn ) only Kafeand Bure 108 f0F Lho D im.i or Pain| too Profuse Periods, h, Dieult B ot 105'Fuiton Sir DR.HORHE'S ELECTRIC BELT i D ELE i ,” ;i Dumb A e it i Tetiam tirouh thr Flant by the patien $1.000 Would Not Buv It. Da. Honxn—1 was affiloted with rheumatism and oured by using » belt. To any one affioted with $hat disoase, I would say, buy Horne's o Bolt, Any ono oan_confor with mo by writing calling b my store, 1420 Douglas streot, Omaha, Nob. WILLIAM LYONS, MAIN OFFICE—Opposite postofiice, room 4 Fron- ot blook. &ar¥or mle atC. F. Goodman's DrugStore’ 1110 Asmam St , O . Orders filled C. 0 D, HENNINGS A {8PROVED ELASTIC SECTION CORSET Is warranted to wear longer, fit A\ o"form nenter, and givo botr cure Nervousnos, arkot, or o0 pad led, ‘The Indorsements o1 Best physioinns, wocor: accol 'Postage ook, 0. Al o Bt JOHN H. F. LEHMANN & CO LGURE_FITS! on Taay curo L6 ot mean marew to stop thots, ime and thion have the i again, I aean & radi ) cure. 1 hiavo mado the TE, EPILEPS! C! 1 warrant my others have Durham tshistoric. 1t was neutral ground during the armistice between Sherman and Johnson. _Boldiers of both armies flled their pouches with tho tobaccostoredthe and, after the surrender, marched homo. ward. 80on orders camo from East, Weat, Northand South, for “moreof that elegan tobacco. Then, ten men ran an unknown factory. Now it employs 800 men, uses the pink and pick of the Golden Belt, and the Durham Bull i tho trade mark of Dbest tobacoo in the world. Blackwell's Durham Bmoking Tobaceo han tho largest nale of any smoking tobacco in the world. Why? Bimply because it ia the best. All dealers have it. Trade-mark of the Bull. 1t hd gone for e pack; f Blackwell'n Bull urham Smoking To- . s ho waa told. b ‘would Fed by o bl cornered ul mothers. Mothers' milk coutaius no starch. HORLICKS' FOOD FOR INFANTS (froe from starch) requires 1o cooking. ‘Tl best food in or sickness for INFANTS, The bost dict for DYSPEPTICS and INVALIDS. Highly ber 10 nursing mothers s a drink, Pricedo te, Book o .8, HOMEPATHIST. TELEPHONE NO. 161, Office Rooms 1 aud 2 Jacob'n Block, 15th 8t. and Ave, Ienidence, 2022 BL. Mary’s A i TEIE STECK PIAND HAS NO SUPERIOR. The Steck is a Durable Piano, THE STECK HAS SBINGING QUALITY OF TONg FOUND IN NO OTHER PIANO, SOLD ONLY BY WOODBRIDGE BROS., 215 OPERA HOUSE, OMAHA NEB, ik S A \ A s v The Losscs on the Atlantic in Forty [Years, From the London Telagraph. Human nature can be subjected to no more agonizing suspense than that en- dured by relatives and friends who anx- fously await the arrival of an overdue ship on board of which some one dear to them has taken passage from a distant port. On the 11th of March, 1841, the President, one of the finest passenger steamers of her time -left New York for Liverpool with many passengors on board, Threo or four days after her departure she encountered a terrific storm not far to the south of Cape Race, and was seen by a Fronch sailing vessel to enter a thick cloud or rain storm, which brooded upon the face of the deep and obscured the heavily laden vessel from view. In half an hour or so the cloud lifted but no President met the anxious eyes of the gazers who in the language of the French “interrogated the horizon” in search of the missing object. There was no possi- bility of her having run_into an iceberg or come into collision with another ship; but against her name in the underwriter's books were inscribed those melancholy words which, we are told, ought never to be employed in connection with a well- built and well-manned craft of any kind, “foundered at sea.” No trace of her oxistence was ever found except a fow apars and part of a boat believed to have belonged to her, which were washed ashore after some weeks upon the coast of North Wales, Among many other passengers of note whom she carried were included Tyrone Power, the well- known and universally popular Irish comedian, and Lord Fitzroy Charles George Lonnox, sccond son of the late and brother of the present Duke of Richmond. Lord Fitzroy Lennox was an officer in the Guards, and was on his way home from Canada in the expectation of passing his 21st birthday on tho follow- ing 11th of June with his attached pa- rents. He was his mother's favorite son, and was named after Fitzroy Somerset, subsequently Lord Baglan, who had been his father’s friendand fellow-soldier onthe Duke of Washington's stafl during the pensinsular war, Thero are many _stil living—and among them none tells the story with more feeling than the vener- able and much respected Earl of Strafford who well remember the long and pro- tracted agony athope and suspense which the late Duchess of Richmond was doomed to endure. Some of these, in- deed, who knew her best, and were ac- quainted with tho singular depth and warmth of her affections, held the opinion to her dying hour, the bereaved mother refused to give up all hope that she might once again be blessod with a sight of her lost son. That hope was not des- tined to be realized; gbut among the nourners who year after year awaited that “‘message from the sea” which was never to be received, the late duchess of Richmond will always occupy a foremost place. Steam voyages backward and forward across the Atlantic have latterly been performed with such marvelous safety, and, in some cases with such astonishing rapidity, that the present generation of residents in the old and new worlds are far less prepared than their predecessors for the loss of a passenger steamer at sea, Yet the records of that greatest highway of maritime nations, the North Atlantic Ocean, proclaim that during the first thirty years of steam navigation voyages down the avenuo overy afternoon ona tricyole especially prepared for the ac- comodation of his wooden leg, was speak- ing about the bicyele parade last night. A Republican reporter overheard the old victim of “‘shot and shell” talk in this wise: *‘I tell you, gentlemen, 'the recent bicycle display in this city has illustrated one thing. It has shown that in the wars of the future the two-wheel carrier will displace many cavalry horses. = Imagine a regiment of bicycle riflemen, mounted on fleet and noiseless machines, They would prove a holy terror to the cnemy. No forage would be necessary, and there would be no trampeling of hoofs—the wheeling soldiers would glide into the enemy's camp as silently of phantoms, 1 repeat, the bicycle in war will be a big thing, and you can wager that it will fig- ure largely in the next conflict.” e Horsford'sjjAcidfPhosphate, Invaluable as a Tonic. Dr, J. L. Pratt, Greenfield, 111., says: ‘It is all that it claims to be—invaluable a8 a tonic in any case where an acid tonic in indicated.” e A Milk Dict for Sixty Days, rork World, May 21, es, I'm going to live on nothing but milk for sixty days,” said Professor Westbrook, a medium sized man with an aurcole of gray whiskers around a red full moon face to a World renorter yester- day. “T'm not only going tolive on milk but travel on milk from here to Omaha and lecturo on milk in every town through which I pass.” “How will you take your milk, pro- femsor?” “Take my milki Through my mouth, ig “From a cup or a botilel” “I'm not an_infant, sir. 1 am a pro- fessor and shall take it from a jug. This is not a money-making scheme. I travel in the interests of science. We begin life with milk and whey, can we not continne it with the lacteal fluid? The food of na- ture is milk. If we can live on it for mixty days I will keep at it for 600 days. Perhaps 1 will keep at it all my life.” “I understand you occasionally dip in- to verse, professor!” “Dip in? I bathe in, sir! Though I am only a carpenter I have written some hundreds of poems, eir; hundreds of poems. I devote my leisure hours to pootry and science. 1 have lately been studying the secret of long life.” “‘And the the secret is—" “Milk? Yes, sir, milk is the secret of long life. I shall keep a record of my weight, the changes of temperature and all physical changes, with such other data as may prove interesting to mankind. Why, sir, T know I am right. I have never used intoxicants, and I see myself today a man near 60 years of age, halo, hoarty and sound, while I look around at men who started in life at the same time I did, who are, if aliveatall, physicat wrecks.” ““‘When do you intend to start, profess- or?” “In a fow days. I shall take the Erie road, and lecture at such towns as Syra. cuse, Rochester uud Buffalo. I shall probably finish up each lecture with a fow poems which I have written on the virtues of milk.” ““If you succeed, professor?” *‘The butchers will have to go out of business, and the price of wheat in the Chicago market will tumble to nothing, for all mankind will drink milk,” The professor paused and gazed out of his window as he raised his bands in an Ne 8 were very far indeed from being as safe a8 is now the case. Thus we learn from the Nautical Gazotte, of New York, that from the beginning of 1841 to the end of 1873 no fewer than forty-eight Atlantic steamers perished ac sea, the President being the first and the Ville du Havre the last victim. During these three-and- thirty years the Cunard Company lost the Africa and the Tripoli, but in each case without the sacrifice of a life or letter; while between 1851 and 1873 the Inman Line lost six, the most melancholy case being that of the City of Boston, whose fate is atill a mystery. The Allan Line, again, which commenced in 1852, was so unfortunate as to lose seven vessels before 1874, The Collins Line, built and owned by the United States. ran four vessels between 1862 and 1867, of which they lost two. The Ger- man companies of Hamburg and Bremen, established in 1855, had lost four steam- ers before 1874; the National Line, one; the Guion, established in 1868, one, the Anchor, one, and the White Star Line, established in 1871, had also lost one, through the fault of her captain. Twelve steamers bolonging to smal! companies have likewise met their doom on the bois- terous Atlantic; while of the French com- panies the Mesagerivs Maritimos, with sixty steamers, had in 1874 lost fourteen vessels during its first twenty-one years of existence, and the Compagnie Trans- atlantique lost two, the Darien and the Ville du Havre, The Royal Mail, with which the Compagnio Transatlantique is in competition, lost fifteen ships during its first thirty-two years. *‘It has been oomputed,” adds, however, The Nautical Gazette of New York, ‘‘that upward of 16,000 voyages were made across the At- lantic between 1840 and 1874 by these steamship lines.” Among the disasters to which we have referrad none was more calamitous than those which overtook the Allen Liner, Hungarian, wrecked off’ the coast of Nova Scotia in the night of Feb- ruary 19 avd 20, 1860, with more than 200 souls on board, and the White Star steamer Atlantic, which struck a rock off| the same iron-bound coast on April 18, carrying at the time more than 1,000 souls, of whom 442, including Capt. Williams, were saved, and 565 were los Many of her hapless human freight, who had climbed into the rigging perished from cold and hunger, and the captain, upon whom the chief blame was laid, un- derwent a sentence of suspension for two years, have said enough to show that while steam navigation was still young, the Atlantic was far from being that easily crossed ‘‘Ferry” which Charles Dickens was invited to consider when he nnl‘l;‘IlH- first trip to the United States in . o —— He First Turned Hot and Then Cold. And now comos the drawing of the capital Erlu 01$25,000 in The Louisiana State]Lottery Jowpany, on April 8th, drawin leans, of which Iridor Tnaacs. of boen awardod 85,000 Mr, Tsaacs was in S Francisco yosterduy, and said that there was uliar ciroumstance in relation to his secur- [ the lucky ticket. d be, “1 ent to San_Francisco for w ticket in the The Louisiana State Lottery. I receiy od o unswor touny loter, and so wrote again, requesting hiu io send another o refund my wmonoy. He sent the ticket. No, 08,208, for April Sth drawing-the lucky one—for it 'was only o little while before T received a dispatch that 1 had won a 85, 1 folt about us auy poor man does who'sudden- ly comes into jon of money like that. 1 first turned hot and then cold.” J. Boas cush- ed the check for the lucky man, who left the city for Modesto in highglee. Mr. Luanos is & elothing-store keaper in Modesto, and hias seen some pretty hard struggles. San Francisco, Cal., Chronicle, April L — The Cavalry of The Future, Natiousl Republican: A one-legged veteran, who rides noiselessly up and “In’ the first place,” 6. Well, T guess | ¥' ecstacy and exclaimed, ‘‘Yes! Milk will change the face of the earth. We will enter the Bibical land overflowing with milk without the honey.” A Olergyman's Testimony. W. E. Gifford, Pastor, M. E, Churcn, Both- well, Ont., was for two years & sufferer with Dyspepsia in its worst form, until as he says, “lifo bocame an actual burden.” Throo bottles ot Burdock Blood Bitters cured him, and he tells us in a rocent lotter that he considers it tho best family modicine now beforo tho coun- try for dyspepsin and liver complaint, | ——— ‘Where Vanderbilt's Millions Are, John Swinton. I stood the other day in the vault of the formidable fortress of iron and ma- sonary on Forty-second street. where last year the richest nabob in the world locked up his $200,000;000 in stocks, bonds, and other securities. 1t is one of the most redoubtable works of defense onthe American continent, though you may not be entirely certain of that by surveying the building from the outside. Its foundations were blasted out of the rock; the front walls is five feet in thick- ness, and the side and rear wall are three foot, the materials used being pressed brick and brown stone trimmings. The beams, girders and main pilliars are iron, incaged 1n fire-proot material. The doors, window frames, and minor partitions are iron, marble and glass. No wood is to be found in the structure, The great vault is 36x42 feet of wrought iron, steel, and Franklinite iron, is imposing in strength and proportions, and is_ situated on the ground floor. Its four outer doors weigh 8,200 pounds each, and have every effective and known improvement. A de. fensive wall of masonry surrounds the iron-work. The vault, which is burglar, firo and water-proof, constitutes s distinct building = in itself. Tho armed watchmen who guard the building day and night are under the strictest discipline, their hourly move- ments being recorded by an electric clock connected with varlpus points on each floor of the structure, and there are also wires running to police headquar- ters and the office of the district tele- raph. In one corner of this great vault fiehlnd the heavy iron bars, are the Beet Culture and Beet Sugar, This country expends one million of dollars annually in the purchase of for- eign sugar. Thoe money which now goes abroad on this account might be kept at home by a proper development of our own resources. It is an undoubted fact that the United States is capable of pro- ducing enough sugar to supply the home demand and a surplue for export. France, CGiermany, Austro-Hungary, Russia Po. Iand, Belgium, and Holland are great producers of beet root sugar, and thgre is no reason why the United States may not engage in this industry with profit, Professor Wylie, of the Agricultural De- partment, points out that the whole of New FEegland, Northern New York, Northern Ohio, Northern Indiana, and Illinois, all of Wisconsin and Miunesota,a part of Dakota,the western part of Wash ington Territory, Oregon and California, are especially adapted to the growth of the sugar beet. The extent to which beet sugar is manufactured abroad is set forth in a recent communication to our State Department by the United States Counsul at Brussels. In the countries aluded toan aggregate of two million acres is given to the culture of the roots, and the sugar is manufactured at home, Germany has 341 refineries producing 576,000 tons of sugar annually. France, with 500 refineries, turns out 385,000 tons; Hungary has a yearly product of 425,000 tons, and Balgium 100,000 tons, Thus will be seen thatin these four countries alone there is an annual sugar product of 1,485,000 tons. An attempt has been made to manufacture beet sugar in California, and last year several tons were made by way of a beginning, The Department ~ of Agriculture has mani- fested consicorablo interest in the pro- duction of sugar from sorghum, but ac- cording to Professor Wylie it has been found that we cannot successfully grow and manufacture sugar from sorghum further north than a line streatching from Baltimore to Cincinnati, St. Louis, and on west, The plant may be raised further north but it encounters frost be- fore reaching maturity. 1t is with pleas- ure that we now learn ot the intention «f the department to make a careful stuo, of the possibilities of produciag beet rovt sugar in this country to advantage. The State Agricultural Associations of Cali- fornia and Oregon, acting on the belief that all the Western coast, from San the foot of the ladder and work our way up again. Do you know, Algernon, that I sometimes find myself rejoicing over our misfortunes. It takes me back to our early life to think of living once more in & cottage, and being all alone by ourselves. Let them take everything, and we will be happy yet.’ “You evidently are a little off your balance, Maria,” said the bankrupt mer- chant, removing a three-for-a-dollar cigar from his mouth. I bought in_your name only this morning a 40,000 house on the boulevard, and I have in the safe with the family plate about £100,000 in government bonds, which are yours, do you understand? 1 have conveyed some other property to my friend Jenkins, whom I once helped out of a similar scrape, and we are all ship-shape, I am glad tosay. We are busted in business, but mnot in s>ciety. Oh, no: we may come to want in time, but not this sum- mer. This giving up everything and going to live in a flat is what you read about, It isn't the style in this town." “You're an angel man,” replied the fair one. “‘I think I'm catching on.” e— Threw Away His Crutches. “Suffored from rheumatism so badly had to uso crutchos, but threw them away after ap- plying Thomaa Eelectric Oil to my limbs.I now feel better than I have for years.” F. L. Gibbs, 300 Elm stroet, Buffalo, N. Y. e Standing Place For Liberty. New York Sun: The foundation for the pedestal and statue of Liberty is com- pleted, and rises twenty feet above the old ramparts on Bedloe's Island, 1t was formally inspected yesterday [the 19th] by officers and members of the Executive Committee, under the guidance of Gen, Charles P. Stone, engineer in charge. The foundation stands in the middle of tho old fort, Gen. Stone says it will last longer than the Pyramids. It is sunk fifteen feet and eight inches below the surface of the ground, and rises fifty-two feet and ten inches above. It is ninety- one feet dquare at the bottom and sixty- seven at the top. From the top the mountains of Pennsylvania can be seen. The pedestal is torise 117 feet above this, and the statute (157 feet) is to cap the mass, making a height from low-water to the top of the torch of 332 feet. ““The great problem,” said Gen. Srone, “ig to guard against thejwhole mass, with 4,000 square feot of sucface, toppling Francisco north, can be devoted to the beet sugar bueiness, have invited the at- tention of the depsrtment to this work. The business can undoubtedly be made as productive and profitable hore as aboroad, and with the expenditure of proper care and energy the time will come when this country will enjoy free- dom from tho importation of foreign sugar and possess an industry capa- ble of adding one hundred and fifty mil- lions or more, annually, to the national wealth. ——— Want of Faith. If Schroder & Becht,the druggists, do not suc coed it is not fer the want of faith. They have such faith in Dr. Bosanko's Cough and Lung syrup as a romedy for Colds, Conswmption, and Lung affectons, that they will give a bottle free to each and every one who is in need of a medicine of this kind — A Dog Fight, After Victor Hugo. Stockton Mail, CHAPTER I, What is a bull-dog? 1t is a monster that transforms itself into a machine. It isa battering-ram. It is the entrance of matter into liberty. It is a mad mass with the bound of a tiger, the stealthiness of a mouse, the obstinacy of g ox, the unexpectedness ot the surge; $he rapidity of lightning,the deafness of the tomb. It weighs forty or fifty pounds, yet it reboundslike a child’s ball. Its attack is a wild whirl abruptly cut at right angles. The tempest ceases, the cyclone passes, the wind falls, the broken mast is re- placed, the leak is stopped, the fire dies out, but the bull dog never lets go. He has more tenacity than a Stocton bill collector. CHAPTER I You can make a mastiff hear reason, astound the bull, fascicate the boa, fright- en the tiger, soften the lion, but there is no way of Christianizing a bull-dog. You cannot kill him. He 1s dead, and at the same time he lives. He lives with a sinister life bestowed on him by infinity. CHAPTER III, The dogs were lot loose. Loose? They were let fast. . Thero was a cloud of saw- dust, and a muffled roar, and Grip had Tag by the throat. Two dozen shouted “Brayo!” One of the canaille recklessly threw his hat into the air and exclaimed: *Long live the republic?” He was seized upon and thrown down stairs, The unfortunate man had committed two offenses. He had broken the peace of a dog-fight aud had insulted the demo- crats, But still the dog held on. Grip tugged at Tug, and Tug gripped at Grip. The red blood dampened the sawdust amd smoked aggressively. CHAPTER 1V, “Do you believe in the devil, cheva- lier?” asked Mike McCarthey of Mike Mulooney. “Yes. No. Sometimes.” “In a tempest?’ “In a dog fight?” “Yes, in a moment like Jhis.” ““Then only the devil can save Tug."” Tug writhed in the cast-iron grip likea soul in despair. A soul! Strange thing! You would not have thought that a bull dog had onc—a soul full of hatred, and that there was cunning in that smoking, bristling, steaming mass of dog flesh. heavier iron doors of the works contain- ing the Vanderbilt securities, which can be opened only by skeleton keys held by the owner alone, I suppose that a hun- dred men in this building, with Gatling guns, could easily defend it against a mob of 100,000 assailants; it could be reduced by nothing less than the continued play of heavy artillery. S —— To make a good salad in the ordinary way good condiments, plenty of time and no little skill are essential. Durkee's Salid dressing supplies all these requis- ites. Sold everywhere, — He Wasn't the Kid, Detroit I'ree Press, “Boy?" he called as he snapped his fin- geraat a post office boot-black, *‘are you the lad I handed a dollar bill to yesterday to get changed, and you beat me out of thirteen cents!” *No, sir.” *Look out! ain't?” “Cause; do I look like a boy who'd beat ou out off shilling whan I could walk off with the dollar! Stranger, you must havo got hold of some poor leetle kid who's just begun business?” How do you kndw you — Mrs, Langtry, And all other famovs women have won & rep- utation for facial beauty. A fine complexion niakes one handsowme, even though the face is not @ perfect mould, Burdock HBlood Bitters ot directly upon the cireulation, and so give tho skin clearnces and smoothuess otherwise unattatasble. Neither would let go. Suddenly a mnoise was heard at the door. Two commissioners of police en- tered with drawn clubs and cloves on their breath, The crowd fled panic-stricken, before the majesty of the law. CHAPTER V., A pebble may stopa log, a tree branch over into_the harbor before the strong winds. Four large iron bars will be co: mented into the base and pedestal, and will connect with the steel works which are to support the statue. It will be as immovable as the hills.” Two anchorages pass through the base of the foundation at right angles, and a shaft for the stair ways run_through the pedestal and the statue. Holes through tho foundations have been left for light- ning conductors, Work will be immedi- ately begun on the pedestal. - —— B. H. Douglas & Sons’ Capsicum Cough Drops are manufactured by themselves, and are the result of over forty years’ experienceiu compounding cough medicines.—me-16-3t. e ——— Nothing Too Good for Them, Philad elphia Call, Uninstructed delegates to Chicago will occupy the parlor floor. GRAY'S SPECIFIC MEDICIN YRADE MARK 1 GRRAT Exu-§ mndE MARK L1811 RRMRDY. An unfailing cure for Seminal Weak. 1" ness, Spermatorr- hea, Tmpotency, and " all Discasos that follow 8 & sequence of Self- £35S O\ Abuse; as loss of e Momory, Univer- ~-~ORE TAKING,salLassitude, Pain AFTER TAKING, in tho Back, Dimness of Vision, Prema d Ago and .nany other diseases that lead toInsanity or Con- sumption and a Premature Grave. BEWARB of advertisements to refund money, when druggusta from whorm the medicine is bought do not refund, but refer you to the manufacturers, and the requirementa aro such that they aro seldom, if ever, complied with. Seo theirwritten guaranteo. A trial of one singlo package of Gray's Specific will convinoe the most skeptical of its real merits. On aocount of countex/eiters, wo have adopted tho Yollw Wrapper; tho only gentine. £arull particulars [n our pamphlet, which, wsdo- free by mail to every one. £&The Spo- Siflo Modi ine 15 sold by ail druggists at 81 per pack- ago, or six packssgos for 6, or will bo sent free by mail on tho receipt of the money, by addressing THE GRAY MEDICINE CO., suffalo, N, Y. §0ld n Omaha) * ~ ~edman, Jy 19m& TO CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. Proposals will be received for the erection of & brick bank bu'lding. for the 1st National Bank of xeter Neb. Plaos and specifications to be seen at the bk, Builoing to be 65x22 ft Bids for same to be s stories and basement, shiorof said bank be- Building Committe PROPOSALS FOR INDIAN SUP- PLIES AND TRANSPORTATION, EPARTM OF THE ERIOR, Office. of I fan Affairs, Washivgton, April 23, 1884, Sealed proposals, inilorsed *Proposals for Beef” (vids for beef must Lo subu Bacon, Flour, Clothing, or Transportation, & the caso may be,)and dirccted to the Comnissiner of Indisn Aifairs Nos. 65 and 67 Wooster street, New York, will be received until 1r. x. of Tuesda; 27, 1884, for furnishing for the indian_ servi 520,000 pounds Bacon, 35,000,000 pounds Be hoof, £00,000 pounds Beans, 45,000 i Powder, 780,000 pounds ¢ 0, 7,600,000 pounds Flour, v n' s Hard Bread, 43,000 pound nounds Lard. 700 barrels mess pork, 150,00 poin tico, 7,600 poands Tes, £00 Fpounds 20,000 pounds Salt, 150,000 poundsSoap, 8,000 pounds oda, 850,000 pouiids Bugar, and 40,000 pouuds ed i scparate envelopes,) (s 15 Coffee, . 105,000 ds Hom iy, 15,000 ds part. of Tick “Wad (3 i Drilling, eo trom a1l siAng, 80,000 yard: yards; Olugham, 190,000 yards; Kentucky 'Jeans, 28,000 yards; Cheviot, 4,00 yards; Brown Shecting 175,000 yards; Bleached Shecting, Hickory ~Shirting, 10,000 yards; ~Cali Winsey, 1,600° yards;) Clothing, Gro: plics, School lous 'articles, ~iton Good Notlons Hardware, Medical Supy a long Lis¢_of miscellan! ows, Rakes, Forks, about 475 Wagons required for the service. delivered at Chicago, Kausas City, and Sjoux City. ‘Also for_such Wagons as may be required, adaptod to the climate of the o Coast, with Califoruia Brakes, delivered at San Francisco. "Also, trausportation for such of tho articles, goods, and supplies 1 hat mawnot be contracted for' to be delivered at the Agencies. HIDS MUST UK MADE OUT ON GOVERNMENT BLANKS. Schedules showing the kinds and —qualities of subsistence supplies required for each Agency, and whe ki ‘Quantitios in groes, of all other goods ‘and articles, tozether with blank proposaly, conditions %0 be observed by bidders, time and place of delivery forme of contract and nayment, transportation rout es g} othr meoessexy nstructions wil be furished such a8 may turn the avalanche, and the police can stop a dog tight. The pigmy%uu taken the thunderbolt prisoner, McCarthy approached the first officer, “Sir you saved my dog's life.’ The oid man had resumed his impassi- ble attiude, and did not reply. — NoExperiment, With nml{urlt of pwple it is no experi. ment that Dr, nko's Cough and Lung Syrup 1s a cure for Coughs, Colds, Paius in the T.ungs, Soreness in the Chest, ete., but for those who doubt, ask your neighbors who haye used It or get a free samplo bottle of Schroter & Becht, the di st Al Regular size 50 conts and $1,00, Sold tolthe trade by O, ¥, Goodman. — Not Too Bad After All Chicago Herald, “Now that the drop in wheat has swept away our fortune,” said a sympa- thetic and sentimental Chicago wife to her bankrupt husband, ‘‘we must, of course, give up everything. Our house, our horees, carriages, servants, diamonds, and all must go, and we must begin at upon application to th Indian Office in W . W holesale B N VYV Vv ARCHITECTURAL IRON WORK. Oolumns, Pilasters, Lintels, Fencing, Cresting, Ral\ g, Btc. 5 Cast, and Wrought Iron Beams. 7 Agents for T 4 YATT PRISMATIC LIG 'S THE MURRAY IRON WORKS 0., Burlington, lowa. | THE LARGEST IRON WORKING ESTABLISHMENT IN THE STATE. EI‘ECIAL 7N()TICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Ground Oil Cake. and be in good marketable nordition in the spring. I Dairymen, as well as others, who use it can e its merite, Try (b and judgs for yourselves, Price #26.00 ver tos 0 obarze (o' eacls, Address WOODMAN LI ED OIL COMPANY, Omaha Nob e W HOLES A IR TEE NEW HOUSE OF i GCARRABRANT:COLE Fine Havans, Key West and Domestic Cigars. All Standard Brands Tobaccos. Trial Orders Soiicited. Satisfaction Guaranted, { 1sor rarnam . P. BOYER & CO.. DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFES, VAULTY, LOCKS, &. AORO ¥Fary m Streot. Omah J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lumber, LA, Singles , Pi SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C. STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Unron Pacific Depot, Omaha, Neb, STEELE, JOHNSON& CO,, Grocers H. B. LOCKWOOD (formerly of Lockwood & Draper) Chicago, Man- ager of the Tea, Cigar and Tobacco Departments. “A full line of all grades of above; also pipes and smokers’ articles carried in stock. Prices and samples furnished on application. Open orders intrusted to us shall receive our careful attention Satisfaction Guaranteed. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER CO PERFECTION . Heating and Baking Tn only attained by using ,éyicHAR TER OAK Stoves and Ranges, @b VAT WRE TAVIE OVER D00 Fo sle by MILTON ROGERS & B0N8 OMAHA (SUCCESSOR TO FOSTER & GRAY.) LUNMIBEER, LIME AND CEMENT. Office and Yard, 6thand Douglas 1. (Imaha . Neb. . John L. Wilkie, PROPRIETOR OMAHA PAPER BOX FACTORY, 218 South 1ith Street, Omaha, Nebraska, “Correspondence Solicited.” 0. M. LEIGHTON, H, T, OLARKE, LEIGHTON & CLARKE, SUCCESSORS TO KENNARD BROS. & C0.) Wholesale Drugpists ! —DEALERS IN-— or Noa, U0 and 07 Wooster Sireat New Yo 1! Lyon, No, 458 Bro , New York; o Ehasmwort Paints. Oils. Brushes. Class. P o, and_Yaakton 3 : Bhoux Gy a the Postmasters at the following | OMyHA, - - - . 4 NEBRASKA named sas: Arkansas City, Rurlington, hliwel, *Dodgo Gity, Emporin, Euek, | Groal Bend, Howard, Hutenin Marion, Medicisie Lovge, N Sterling, Topeks, Wellington, W Bids wi'l Lo opened at the hour and day stated, aud bidders are invited to be prosen openin, CERTIVIND CHECKS. Al bids must be accompanied by certified checks upon tome Unitod States Depository or the First lational Bank af Los Angeles, Cal., for at leass five per ceut of he amount of tuo posal. £ Commissioner, THIS BELTor Regenra-o tor is made expressly for the cure of derangements of the generative OFYADS, There is no mistake about TRICITY b the parta must ros e to hnaithy otion v ot confound this with o curo Al s f 10 hoad ©0 toe. I is for the ONE spec- \fio purpose For circulars giviog full information, address Cheover Electrio Belt Co., 108 Washington Bt Chicago Ll pormeating I 'Wholesale T, AGIER FFANZ FALK BREWING G0 Milwaukee, Wis. GUNTHER & CO., Sole Bottlers. M. HELLMAN & CO., Ulothiers! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREE1 COR. 15Th OMAUA,

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