Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 18, 1884, Page 7

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| — ") At SILOAM MINERAL SPRINGS. We guarantee the cure of the following named dis | = y: Rheumatism, Sorofuls, Ulcers, 1 Blood and skin discases, Dyspepaia, Live Kidney and Bladder Diseases, Gout, Nou Mhess Springs are the favorite litatad, and are the LADIES BEST FRIEND, ry and bathing sccomodation both r. Tocality highly ploturesque Accessiblo by Wabash railway, & +B.& Q, st Albany. Correspondenc REV. M. M. THOMPSON. Manager. 9, Gentry Co., Mo. and healthy. Evona, or C. olicited, Albany, Siloam Spr 1.002 Bpecific Gravity Reaction . Noutra Carhonlo Acid Gas 20 i, por gallon C mate Calclum . h‘l:hl Carbonate Tron ........ Sulphato Magnosis. . Sulphate Caloium Chloride Sodium Sillioa. .. Alumina. ., . rganioand Volatile matter and loss. alolids per gallon... ... Waiaiir 83EARR N. 8CHURZ. Justice of the Peace. OFFICE OVER AMRRICAN EXPRESS, COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. Grain & Provisions, BOOGE'S SIOUX CITY HAMS. J. Y. FULLER, Commission Merchant No .89 Pearl Strect « Council Bluffs, Towa. A CARD. As there ato many So-Called Veterinary Surgeons In this city, who are practicing their quackery on our peoplo, T deem 1t but justice to eay that 1 defy any of them to produce a diploma, or credentinls, ndicating that they are graduates of any rinary nstitute, and I do hereby caution the publis agains such quacks, a8 | am the Only Known Graduat e IN WESTERN IOWA. Office & Pharmacy, 126 B'dway, AT BLUE BAEN. T.J. CADY, M.D,, V. 8. CASH TALKS ! At the well-known Establishment J. P. FILBERT, 209 Upper Broaaway, the PIONEER GASH G ROCERY Notico our reducea Price List. We g 16 pounds Extra C Sugar fo 12 pounds Granulated Sugar. 25 pounds Choice Oatmeal 26 pounds Navy Beans 20 pounds Best Bulk Starch . 12 pounds Carolina Rico 12 pounds Choico Prunc, 25 bars Buffalo Soap. Extra Lake Trout, per poun Lorrihard's Plug per ib. 1 dozen Mackerel ... Colorado Flour, Winter, per o 10 pounds Ginger Suaps 40 pounds h-mioy 67,174 Chemists 0t Council Bfufis. 10 8 pound cans St All kinds California Fruits. pound Lusk’s Standard 4 f T. . T. All grades, according to quality, 150 to 800 por und. PWo algo carry a full line of Mon's, Ladies' and Children’s fine Shoes and Men's Fino Boots at very Tow prices. Also full line of Tinwaro and general merchandise. Call on us and bo coavinced that you can save money ky dealing with us. Goods delivered part of the city. we ara bound to sell and challenge all audavle compotition fn this county. J. P. FILBERT' 209u . or,Broadway Nebraska Cornice —AND— Ornamental Works MANUFACTURERS OF GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES Dormer Windowsms, FINTALS, WINDOW CAPS, Til, IRON AND SLATE ROOFING, PATENT METALIC SKYLIGHT, iren Fencing! Ureetings, Baiugrrades, Verandas, Oficoand Bapk Rallings, Window and Cellar Guards, Eto. 00 0.ANDAth STREET, LINCOLN NEB, DISEASES OF THE EYE & EAR " J T. ARMSTRONG, M. D., Oculist !and Aurist. Until offices aro repalred from rosult of fire, offt with Dr. Parker, Room 6, Creighton Block 15th sud Dougnalstr eote, I. W. WAITE, M. D., Physician & Surgeon (Formerly of Mercy Hospltal, Chicago.) Nervous Digeases and Diseases of the Eye and Ear a Specialty. £r0ffice—0dd Fellows' Block, N, W. cor. 14th and Dodge streets, Omaha, Neb. Offico hours 10 128, m.2t04and 7t0 8 p. m. Bundays 1040 13 & m. All calls prom;ly attended. Be; H—i‘;e i’hotograph STUDIO, 213 North 16th Street. Remember that my Photographs sccted before being delivered aro inspeote pdellvered from the HIVE GRAPII STUDIO assuring every- body perfect satistaction. PHOTOGRAPHER || Finest rooms In the city. Centrally located and near Horse railway OMAHA, NEB. a8 per room , Proprictor, 1k15 Douglas St., - TERMS—$2 to $2.50 per day 0. C. CAMF DR, SWETNAM, fice 16th strect, first door north of am in Boyd's opera house. Farg orderfks at office or Saxe’s drug store. TciMephone 150, OMATIA DAILY BEE- - FRIDAY JULY 18, 1884. 7 COUNCIL BLUFFS. ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEWS, WORK FOR WOMEN, Two Malvern Ladics Start a Silk Manufactory, A novel enterpriso has been added to the interests of Malvern, two ladies, Mrs, L. T. Ball and her daughter, Mrs Lottie Gray, being the originators and proprietors. It may be properly called a silk manufactory, and the details of the business as given to a representative of the Malvern Leader by Mrs. (iray ¢annot but prove interesting, especially to the many ladies who read the Ber, Last spring tho ladies sent to Phila- delphia and obtained 120,000 silk worm eggs. They then fitted up three rooms in tho second story of their millinery building for a cocoonery. About the first of May, when osage leaves had started, the eggs hatched and the worms wore placed on trays covered with tarle- tizr, made for their accommodation. They had 240 trays, each about 2} feet square, The young worms were fed on osage leaves five times a day, the last feed béing given about 10 p. m. During the first six woeks of their existence they change their suits or cast their ekin four times, when they are ready for business, and begin to spin. They first spina web similar to a spider’s, except that it is of silk—and stretching themselves upon this they proceed to envelope them- selves in a silk cocoon, which whon com- pleted is about the sizs of a peanut. After commencing to spin they eat no- thing, and within three days have spun themselves away, completed their coon and ended their earthly career. A suffi- clent number of the firmest, most solid cocoons are melected for breoding pur- poses and laid away for hatching time, which will be next about the first of Au- gust. The cocoons intended for market are steamed about twenty min utes to kill the chrysallis inside, and then thoroughly dried. They are Worth in foreign markets, where Mrs. Gray in- formed us they would sell them, $1.2 ver pound. The color of the cocoons is cream, that being the highest priced and most sought after. Fach cocoon con- tains from 200 to 600 yards of thread silk. They are dropped ‘into hct water, which loosens the end of the silk, when itis reeled into a ball or on a spool and is ready for use. 1t keeps three boys busy gathering osage leaves for Mes. dames Buell and Gray's little army of silk workers., — Real Estate Transfers. The following transfers were filed for record in the office of the county clerk, July 15, 1884, and reported for Tue Ber by P. J. McMahon: Jonn F. Handley to John Roane, lot 7 and 8, block 23, Neola, $975.00. G. H. Hopkins to A. H. DeGroat, part ndnw}-13-74-44, £300.00. J. H. Burroughs, lot 5, block 1, Mec- Mahon, Cooper & Jefteri’s add. J. D. Edmundson to John D. Clark, lot 12, block 15, Burns’ add, $40.00. Total sales, $3,315.00. ———— COMMEROCIAL, OOUNCIL BLUFFS MARKET, Councir BLurrs, Towa, July 19, 1884, Wheat—No. 1 milling, 75@80; No, 3 65@ 70; rejected 50, Corn—Local purposes, 40@45. Oats—For local purposes, 35@40. Hay—810 00@12 00 per ton; baled, 50@60 Rye—40@45c. Corn Meal—1 30 per 100 pounds, Wood—Good supply; prices at yards, 6 00@ 700, Coal—Delivered, hard, 11 50 per ton; soft, 500 por ton Lard—Fairbank’s, wholesaling at 9jc, Flour—City flour, 160@3 30, Brooms—2 95@3 00 per doz, LIVE STOCK Cattlo—Butcher cows 3 5 in markst. @4 00, Butcher PEODUCE AND FRUITS, Quotations by J John & Co., com- mission merchants, Broadway. Poultry—Live old hens, 7e; spring chickens, 2 25@3 00 por doz.; live turkeys, Yc, bus, bex, 100, 00 per box. Lemons—6 00 pet box, Bananas—2 0u@3 00 per bunch. lfm.l,ur Creamery, 20¢; rolls, choice 9@10c. 4 por dozen. 150@2 00 per bbl; e per doz; eating 31 2hcooking 4 00 per bushel. apples, bel: beans; 150@ Lumber Prospects. From the American Architect, The New York Evening Post has con- tained of lato some timely editorials upon the waste now going on in the pine foreats of the northwest, which has in- creased 8o rapidly within the last two or three years that the predictions of speedy exhaustion of the supply, which wore almost laughed at two years ago, are now thought by many to have fallen short of the truth, One of the worst indi- cations of the future of pine timber is mnoted by the North- western Lumborman which says that the average proportion of lumber rated as first quality, which ten years ago was twelve per cent. of the product, is now only two per cent., and this in the face of an enormoas extension of lumbering operations, which now penetrate in overy direction districts that were untll within a few years thought to be far too remote from transportation to be profit- ably worked, As all ths new districts are, of course, virgin forest, the only ex- planation of the decline in the proportion of good lumber must be in the fact that overything, large and small, good and bad, is now taken;saplings, which twenty years hence would bring twenty times their present value, being cut down with the rest, and sold for the lowest price. The most discouraging part of the matter seems to be that the lumbermen, instead of growingcareful as thestock diminish get more and more reckless and destruc tive. The profits of the business are enormous, a single establishment some- times paying its owners not far from a million dollars a year; and the tempta- tion to kill the goose that lays the golden eggs by eawing up everything that can be sold seems to be too great to be resisted As the Evening Post suggests that the tariff, which imposes a duty of two dol larsa thousand feet, equivalent, proba bly, to thirty-five or forty per cent., per- haps does something to {ncrease thoe evil, both by encouraging the struction of mills, and through the feeling, which overy mill owner must have, that as the impost may be repealed at any time, it is important to sell us much lumber as pos siblo to secure the artificial profit while it laete, | 1 A GEORGIA WEDDING, Soclety and Life in the Backwoods Betsy Hamilton's Neighbors, Petsy Hamilton, in Atlantic Constitution, Tthad beon whispered around that Jack Loftis had flirted Malinda Jane Trotman, and was a hitchin’ of his ridin’ nag up at our house; but they didn’t know that when Jack's critter,was a chawin’ our fence, Malinda Jane was inginnerly in the house, The Trotmans is not the sort that sounds & horn and tells their business to everybody, and for that reason some folks trios to find out their affairs, Malinda Jane she kep' her sowin’ hid and never let none of the neighbor gals but me and Caledony soe it, and Jake he got 80 he taken the nigh cut, and gin old liss Freshours and old Arminty the dodgo when he went to seo her, and they sot it down that he had quit gwine, and that it was all busted up betwixt 'em, or, “‘Mebbe, " says old Arminty *‘atter all he hain’t never co'ted the gal.” But when the Trotmans let in to white- washin’ their house and fence, and then let in on the trees around the house, they knowed in reason it moant a wed- din’; but thar wasn’t nothin’ like findin’ out for sartin, So Arminty tuck it on hersef to go over thar and stay the live long day. She hinted and hinted, but all she gethered from Malindy Jane's maw was that the dock 'lowed lime was healthy. Caledony was a tellin’ it at our house, and she ’lowed that when granmammy Eve was a leavin' 8o much cu'osity to ole Arminty she never forgot ole Miss Trot- man, She left her sense enough to come ahoad of her. They didu't only white- wash, but they scoured and fix up tel they didn't skasely know their own place, but Malindy Jane was the onliest gal the old folks had and she didn't git married every day. To be sho if they'd had ther own sesso about it, they never would have picked out Jake Loftis; but who in all the land could they have picked out for a husband for ther gal, Malindy Jane! The day was sot, and she axed me and Caledony to wait on her. Cal she come over to our house, and we all went to- gother. She fetched yer yaller buff mus. lin, (mine's oft'n the same piece) and 'lowed me and her could fix and dress alike. So we wheeled in and starched our yaller buffs so stiff they'd stand alone and iroued 'em slick enough to see your face in em, and we tuck the artificial off'n our last summer hats and stuck 'em whar the overskirt was tucked up to one side, and we tacked a row of cedar all around the bottom of the frock and put a piece under our breastpins and a piece in our hair, and I wisht you could have saw us —T tell you we was fixt. Aunt Nancy “lowed: "““Gals, for all you do, doi’t out- shine the bride.” Buddy he hitched the steeis in the waggin, and we sot in the cheers, and we all went, even to maw. We went soon 80 aa to he’p Malindy Jane fix, and bless you when we got thar the house and yard was plum full. I won’t be sartin, but T think that everybody that come fetched a baby and a bench-legged fice and a flop- yeered hound. “We'uns allers fastens *+‘Old Scourge” and *‘Trip,” and never lets ’em foller. After I fixt the artificials in the fashion on Malinda Jane's head and lent her my neck ribbon, (it's good luck to marry in sump’n borrid) why I taked a peep in the settin’ room to see who all was thar, and behold the e sot the Simmonses big as who but they, and I know in reason that they was neither axed nor wanted; and who should be piked upon a bench all in arow but them tore down Freshours’ chillun grand as you please, and still for the first time in they lives, and their faces was raily so clean I didn’t skasely know ’em. They had shorely been put to soak the night before. Their skin was as shiny and slick as a peoled injun, and thar har plastered down tight with saff soap, and they looked plum satisfied. Over in the corner sot the three old maids, Miss Bunch Beasley, Miss Pa- tience Potter and old Arminta Pender- gress, Miss Bunchis as broad as she 18 long, and as good as she’s broad. Miss Pationce is as long as abean pole, and as good as she is long, and is funny enough to make a dog kill hisself a lauf- fi’, She wearsa short frock to try to make her loek short, and alf the colors of the rainbow to make her look young. Pap 'lows she looks like Joseph’s coat, Ole Arminty was a settin’ right side of m. Now there was three old maids ag different as the elephant and the monkey and the tiger. So folks needn't say olo maids is all alike. And widders lacks a heap of bein’ all alike too, The widder Comings was thar, and you wouldn't have knowed she was a widder. But the wid- der MeAlister played fishin’ for love, and | putona sight of airs, She took keer to lot everybody know she picked tho tur- koy and baked tho tater custards and half moon | Jake ho was the last ono to como, He | had his head drippin’ with lard and scentod with cinnamon draps, and his now shoes were so tight that ha couldn’t skasely walk. 1 wonder if a feller over got married without having on tight boots or shoes! Someltown boys was out in "tho entry agiglin’, Cal ’lowed if she'd a been Malindy Jane they shouldn’t er been axed, one of 'em in pertickler, I disre- member his name. She 'lowed he thought kase he lived in town that was all he needed, He had the enshorance to laugh at the country boys with their home made jeans and all he was fittlen fur was to wear fine Sunday clothes that wasn't paid for. He strutted around mighty bigoty, and smoked and chawed terbacker and took his sweetened dram, tied his cravat in the fashion, pulled his moustache and played with his watch chain, and when he laughed at them boys he laughed at hls betters, One good, honest, hardworking country boy like Iky Roberson, Cap Dewberry or Jake Loftis 1s worth enough of his sort to build a fence from here to town. Yes, everybody knowed when Jake got thar by the cinnamon draps, Bro- ther Cole was axed to marry 'om, and as many couples as he has jotned ho don't know his plece; he had to read it, and tdey helt a candle and dript the taller a inch thick on the po’ old mau's coat sleeve, and then after all he come nigh marryin’ ’em by the wrong names, Caledony and tky Roberson stood to- gother, and 1 and Cap Dewberry, and whon we tuck our stands, Malindy Jane she got on tother side of Jake, and Bro- ther Colo he wiped his specks and sot in to readin and spellin’ out his words, “The couple which now stands afore us for the occasion and benefit of being jined in wedlack, will pleass to jine thoy right hauds. 0Old Miss Patience Potter squeaked out in a loud whisper udy Jane you alr on the wrong sido of Jak Then Brother Cole helt up his paper and read on N **Will you, John Loftig—" “Jacob, not John,” says Miss Pa- tience. Well, theon, we'll procoed to contiu Will you, Jacob Loftis, take this ued. ‘oman, Malissy Ann— “Ma-lin-dy Jane,” says Miss Patience, alittlo londer. Then in & loud whisper “For the land's sake don't git 'em mar- ried wrong.” ““Well," says he, *“fling on a plece of light-"ood or hold me a torch, for 1 can't soe. Some of 'em grabbed a torch and helt it high. Then jist as fast as ono word could follow tother, without stoppin’ to git his breath, he went on: “I pronounce you man and wifo fur botter or fur wusser salute your bride and if any present has any re-joctions lot ‘om speak now or forever attorward hold thar tongue you're dismissed amen ar.’’ Then old man Trotman stept out and ‘lowed: *‘Git your pardners and go into ther house to supper; the old 'oman's got a bite to eat in thar, and sich as it is you're welcome to it.” 8o we locked arms and marched in to supper. The table was plum full, nothin’ wasn't skace nor skimpy. The bride's cake was sot in a block of wood that was kivered over with letter paper cut in fringe to hang all around the aige of it. It had a thin white. wash over it, and was dressed off with littlo sprigs of cedar stuckin a row all around, and a long stick of pep- pormint candy stuck right up in the mid. dle, and I tell you it sot the table off powerful. They hada taller candlo at each eend of the table and a pine light in the fireplace. After supper wo sot to plagin’ kissin’ games, Ole brother Colo had done all he could—he had jined 'em in wodlock and he had et his supper. The games was gwine on, and all was a laughin’ and havin’ fun, some playin’ “Willjam with a trimbling too,” “Clap in and clap out,” “All around the mul- berry bush,” and some was ‘‘Fishin’ for love,” when Brother Colo knocked for silence. “Brothering and sistering,” says he, “Jt us unite in pra’r and be diswist ar.” Atter he was gone Aunt Nancy 'lowed: ““There air a timo fur all things, and that ar prayer was very on-timely. Brother Hagin wouldn't have done sich a on- timoly thing as that,” . But they soon got in playin’ and laugh in’ louder'n ever and havin' a power of fun, and all looked happy 'cept Miss Trotman. In cose she was feelin’ bad about Malindy Jane a marryin. The women folks all had sump'n to say to her about it. Ole Arminty 'lowed in a religi- ous tone: “‘Ah! I tell you, Miss Trot- man, I hain't never married, and all of ’om can marry that's a mind to. but mar- ryin’ air a mighty solemn thing.” *‘Yos,” says Miss Trotman, with tears in her eyes, “‘it's a solemn thing to mar- ‘‘Yes,” says Caledony, ‘“‘but it's a heap solemner not to marry.” “I bound for Cal.” says pap. Aud that sot ‘em all to lauhin’. ——— SNAKE CATCHL A 'Professor” Whé Holds the Ven- omous Reptilesin Contempt The New York Dial, In a ramshackle dwelling like a bush- man’s cabin in the secondary stages of decay lives John Snelling, John claims to be the son of a baronet, and follows the occupation of snake catching. He is tall, somewhat gaunt, very round-shoul- dered, and ageing into the sixties, Snell- ing talks through his nose, like a Yan- kee, interlarding his speech with many of the slang phrases peculiar to the in- habitants of the great reoublic. “You have had many narrow escapes, probably?” ‘‘Yes legons. I've been fanged eigh- teen times—seven by pizeners —but ap- plied remedies and pulled through. “How do you act with a snake biie?” “Tie a ligature between the wournd and the heart to prevent the poison being taken into the circulation. Once it gets into the blood there's not much hope. Next suck the wound; keep sucking for at least two hours, or as long as the patient can bear it. = Apply a poultice of bruised onion, and, if possible, tie an- other ligature a little further from the wound, releasing the one first used. In most cases this will cure. 1f faintness comes on give a glass of brandy and then call the nearest doctor.” “Can you tell by the appearance of a wound whother it was inflicted by a ven- omous or innocuous reptile!” ““Yas; poisonous snakes invariably leave vwo marks, harmless snakes four or six marks. - This is worth knowing, as most persons when bitter. imagine the wound fatal and become demoralized, and in some cases dying of sheer fright.” “You don’t kill your snakes?” “Not if I can’ belp; you see, T want *em alive for specimens, and here's where the difliculty lios; I have to only stun the reptile and while stunned make it a pris- onor. Killing snakes outright is mere child’s play.” “How do you proceed?” «“Well, T hit the snake a rap with my stick; if it's coiled it will straighten out, and when uncoiled 1t cannot strike. While stunned I hold it firmly by the back of the head with my cane, then slip a wooled cloth like & hood over its head, and tie it securely, The snake is then harmless, although it genorally does a powerful sight of squirming and strikes viclouely.” **After that!” ‘I chuck the critter into a box with a front of plate glags, where it usually whips around in & terrific stato of excitement for several hours, then calms down and takes its imprigonment philosophically,” *‘When are snakes most venomous]” “In summer, when they shed their sking; you know they air biind then and fearfully sensitive, Whatever comes within striking distance av that time is suro to get nipped, Even s horse's fet- lock is not allowed ter pass, though as a rule all serpents, excebt boas, have & hor- ror of anything hairy.” “So I've heard.” “{t’s fact. When I was prospecting in Arizona, whar snakes literally swarm, we always laid & hair rope 'round the camp, The snakes would crawl all 'round it but would never cross it, The hair seems to fret their skins, I reckon, about the same as nettles do ours; anyhow, they always koep on the outside of the lariat.” “Queer!” ““Yas; but snakes air queer. In win- ter they hibernate—lay up In their re. treats almost without life, and, of course, are comparatively harmless, In the spring they come out and startin for nino months’ ekirmishing, From this time out they are pretly sassy, especially when they are looking for partuers, In December, when they cast off their old coats, they are foarfully touchy. Being blind, they curl up anywhere, and know- ing their tender condition air on the lockout to protect thomselves, biting at everything within reach. That is why 80 mANy persous are bitten at that sea- son *Do enakes ever chase peoplel” *Never. They are cowardly varmints, and when disturbed make for their holes. If & person happen to be between the snake aud its hole, it will run that way, consequently the person will fancy the critter chased him, whereas it was only making for cover, badly scart.” A LifeJSaved by a Oigar, San Francisco Post, Bob Ingersoll tells—in private, though a good story at his own expense, but one which we see no reason should notbe enjoyed by the world at large. It seems that while Ingersoll was in Cleveland, soon after his successful fight for the star routers, & sort of anti-tobacco crusade had been started in that city and a well- known Boston scientist was delivering nightly lectures against the use ot the soothing weed. Tho speaker invited others to argue the qustion with him, but although the smokers wero largely in the majority, the Boston man invariably proved too clever for the debaters brought against him, Avatling themselves of Tngorsoll's presence some of his friends begged the groat orator to take up the cudgel in be- half of the tobacco users, which he con descended to do, more as a joke than for any serious reason. That evening the hall was jammed, and, when the prohibitionist requested an an- swor to his arguments, Bob solemnly arose and said he would reply to the state- ment of his eloquent friend by the rela- tion of a simple incldent; He said: 1 was once attending to a mining caso in one of the wildest and most lawles re- gions of Utah, A murder had recently been committed by a most notorious thief and a committeo of local vigilantes were watching for him at every cross-road. Just after nightfall I was riding back to the town from the mine mounted on a white horse, The vigilantes had received information that the desperado in q'uenuon would pass the very road the samo evening, also ridin on a white horse. The posse had ambushed themselves in some chaparral, and as 1 rame down the bridle path they got ready to firo altogether—for they waste no time on trials in_that section. Entirely unconscious that half a dozen shot guns wero sighting my shirt front, 1 stopped my horse, struck a match, and proceeded to light my cigar. Thinking that the light would give them a atill better mark #o shoot at, the concealed party held their firo fora second, In that second the blaze of the match re- flocted on my features, revealing they were not those of the man they awaited, and stepping out on tho road, they con- gratulated me on my narrow escape. And so, ladies and gentlemen, if 1 hadn’t had the good fortune to bea smoker I wouldn’t be here now.” “And you call that fortune?” grimly asked the anti-tobacco lecturer, after the applause had subsided, “Wasn't it?” inquired Bob, with a plaintiff smile. “T don’t see It,” thundered his oppo- nent. ‘‘Ifit hadn’t been for that misor- able cigar, there would have been enc less lawyer in the world.” DOCTOR WHITTIER 617 St. Charles St., St. L salclinin Bt. Louls, Nervo . Debiiity, Mental and Physical Weakness ; Mercurial and other Affece tions of Throat, Skin or Bones, Blood Poisoning, sease ing Exposure or Indulgen Telbwing efcct: nery n. Excess, Ce, which produce sme of tho X of ght rendering Mo permaneatly cure aled envelop ‘or by mall fre i Written Guarantee "MARRIAGE CUIDE! Codtaius ail the urious, Snow. A" Book of Ereut fuice. Tappiness aro prowoivd Ly In Positive G TN G WV X2 PRINCIPAL LINE CHECAGO, PEORIA &ST.LOUIS, Y WAY OF OMAHA AND LINCOLN T0 DE EAMNSAS CITY AND ATCHIEON to DENVER SAIN FRANCISCO Andall points in the Great West GCGOING EAST. Comnceting In Grand Union Dopot at Chicugo with through trains for NEW YORK, BOSTON, And ull Bastbrn Citios. At Peoria with through trains for Indianng. atl, Columbus, and il points i S AU SL Louis with' through 1 points South, At IS I L ant D g Chuirs (scats 1V ing Chadrs, I and the faniou rom Chicng neil Blutms St Joseph e, O ownLruing between und Chicigo, hrough curs Council Blutrs, via P’c KO, Kinsag 1 AND 50U nt bay (e Solld Traing of Pullmnn Palac Curd e run duily 1o i om_ St in; vin Hannibal; Quincy icuk, Buriington, Cedar Rupids and Al 1o ST Fiul dnd M inneapolis; Parlor th Reciining Chairs to and from st. Le and Poorin, Only one change of 8t. Louls and Des Moines, 1owa, Dbruska, and Denver, It is also the only lorado hrough Line beiween 6T, LOUIS, MINNEAPOLIS and 8T, PAUL, It 1% know as the great THROUGH CAR iea, and 15 universully adinit Finest Equlpfsd Raflroad in the World for all classes of Travel, Through Tickeis via this line for sale ot e ‘l( [‘(‘ coupon tickes oftices in the United Stato 1. J. POTTER, PERCEVAL LOW ¥ VicoPrea & Gon. Mesacer. GenPass bt H, PHILLIRS, NERCHANT TAILOR iy THE CHEAPEST PLACE IN UMAHA TO BUY Foll= et TeU=fe 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, SOUTH OMAHA, ITIS THE NAME OF THE TOWN WHERE Fine Healthy Homes. FOR ALL ARE FOUND! Where They Can Enjoy Pure Air & Water! BEAUTIFUL SCENERY And all of the good and pleasant things that go to make up a com- plete and happy existence. The town of South Omaha is sitvated south of the city of Omaha on the line of the U. P. Railway. and it is less than 24 miles from the Omuha post office to the north line of the town site. South Omaha is nearly 14 miles north and south by 24 east and west, and covers an area of nearly four square miles, The stock yards are at the extreme scuthern limit. Nearly 150 lots have been gold aad the demand is on the increase The yards are being rapidly pushed to completion. The $60,000 beef packing house is progressing finely. The $30,000 Water Works are keeping pace with the other im provements, and the Hotel and Exchange Building will be erected at once The B. & M. and Belt Line Railways have a large force of menat work and will, in connection with the U. P. Rm!way, have a union depot near the park at the northend of the town. Svitable grounds will be furnished for Church and School purposes. Now is the time to buy lots in this growing city. be cheaper than they are to-day. They wlll never p==7Apply atthe Company’s office, cor. of 13th and Douglas ‘streets over the Omaha;Saving'’s Bank. M. A. UPTON, Agsistant Secretary, OMAHA NATIONAL BANK U, S. DEPOSITORY. J. H. MILLARD, President. WM. WALLACE Cashier. Capital and Surplus, $500.000. OMAHA SAFE DEPOSIT VAULTS Fire and Burglar Proof Safes for Rent at fromJ85 to850 per annum, ‘2 HERRY LEHMANN JUOBBER OF Wall Paper and Window b 1118 FARNAM STREET, EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED OMAHA, NEB Double and Single Acting Power ano Hand PUMPS, STEAM PUMPY Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fittings, team Packing at_wholosale and retail, HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS, Corner 10th Farnam 8t., Omaha Neb. <TINEW MARKHAM HOTEL The Palace Hotel of Denver, Oor, Seventeenth and Lawrence Sts Rooms 76¢ to §2.00 per day. Special Rates by the Month, THE FINEST TABLE IN THE WEST, (onducted on the American and European Plans, Toard $7 per week. 8. CONDON, PROPR IETO ' C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist AND DEALER IN Has ono of the largest and hnest assortment “of § Spring and Sutmer Goods {or Buitings snd Trowse ings. Al garments gasrantord to it wod trimmed with the MY PRICES ARE LOWEL than any Merchaub Tollor in the clty. 1604 Farnan trcet, i Paiuts, Oils, Varnishes and Window Glass CMAHS, NEBRISKA

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