Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 21, 1885, Page 7

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TR R T T . BN T s e v THE DAILY BEE--WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1885. “’\‘l", Pr—— 7 — SENDXou=NAME AND ADDRRSS 0% A FOSTAL OARD T0 THR Hearthstone Publishing Comn'y.. PHILADELPHIA, PA , And you will recetve by retarn mail & SPECIMEN COPYI Of Tun Hrarristoxs, wich Is witnout excoption the whst 8 ory Paper published. Tus TlranT teen-page paper, tall miscelian paper. Fhoke who ratscrive durirg the next sixty days wil receive any APH, the bese fountaln pen LADIES ER; & very interasting D CHILD'A SET; A FI SPOONS, ATED L ATED TABL. ATED FORK ) BUTTE « K ATED W NDSOR All thesssilver plated goods are guatav of the best quaiity. Don't faltorend for & man copy of Tiie HRARTHSTONE, a1 will be induced to subscribe after Address TR RARTIS 968 & 270 8. OMAHA MEDICAL AND SURGICAL DISPENSARY BLOCK, 16th and Capltol Avento, troats all oases Orip pled or Deformed also discases of At Mervous 8ystem, Throat, Lungs and Urinary Organs Al cases of Curvature of the Bpine, Crookod Feed and_Arms, Disoasos of tho IHip, Knee, and ‘Ankio Joints. Ohronto affections ofsho Liver Rhoumatiam, Paralysls, Plles, Ulcors, Catarrh, Asth ma and Bronchitis are all trosted by now and suc- ‘oeestul methods. All dlseases of the Blood and Urin. ary Organs, Including those resulting from lnciscre. 400, or exposars, sro safely and muocoestally treated Young men, miadle aged, and old men suffering trom Weaknoss snd Nervous exhaustion andigestion, Palpltationof the Heart, D Dizxinoss, Loss of Memery,Yaick of Energy and Dbitlon, can be restored and vigor, If case 18 not & o long uegtected, The Surgeon in charge was prosident o! the Northwestern Surgical Insti- sute 'and Surgeon of the National Surgical Institute, It afflicted, call or write ! ull description of your case, and medidino may ho cent you, Consultaion fres. Addres Omshs Dispensary, Crounse Block, Omahs, Neb. Offico hours 10-13a. m.,1-3a 7-8p ™ Soniaye -10a m #4r Accommodations furniehed pstients rom th country. Send for Ciroular. TG T Ruming Domeste oy | Qu NewWoodwork ! RewAtlechments Warranted 5 Years. SOLD ON EASY PAYMENTS 1CVEIOY. eat Omaha, W. 8. “HOEMAKER, Atomey and Counstor AT LAW. 215 S, 13th §t. Omaha, Neb. Fourteen Years' Practice In Iows and Colorado. REFERENCES Towa~ Hon, J, Reed, Asociate Justice Su Court, residerioe, Ccuccil Blufls; Hon C. H, Lewis, District Judge, residence First National Bank ani Officer & Pu ¢ remo ogan, Har 0, Helr, Associa nce, Denver; Hon, ecidence, Buena V Park Co d SHORT HAND. X\ A machine ‘or short- S\ Band wtt 1z, welght CoLORADO—THOR. J. Send for clrculars, Stripe & Miller, Agents, 1617 Harney strect,Omahs, Neb. DR. HOR! a0 " | to twenty-threo QUEALY SQUEEZED. fhe Carbon - Miners Compel Bim to Haud in His Resigoati.n, About The Sirike Ended, Lhough the Men Belleved to bo ars Still Ont Wyoming Tribune, Wodnes morning scme 300 mo m- ployed in tho Carbon mines refuzed to go to work until Tom Qaesly, the pit boas, had handed in his resignstion, and the men he recently discharged be rein stated. This morning the entire force of men struok, and work in tho mines came to & stand-still. Superintendent Tisdell pasted through Rawlins last night, en route for tho scene of the rrouble and some time thls forenocon Mr., Quealy handed in hia resignation—probably by request. Thess faota ate learzed by some tratn men who came in from the east late this afternoon. The miners had not re turned to work when they passed there, tut as their demands have been acceded to 1t {a safe to sey that the trouble is over, The Tribune, last week. stated that trouble was brewing at Carbon which would probably result in a strike on the part of the coal miners, unless it was ad- justed at once. This prediction, it will be seen, has been verified. The fore- golng statement may be said to give the exact situstion of effairs at the hour of going to press; bat it does not give any information as to the cause of the strike, This information, however, we have been able to cbtain from a rerident of Carbov, who was in Rawlina the other day, and iv can be relied upon as beiry absolutely correct. The trouble dates back to the recent election. Thomas Quealy, a pit boss in the Carbon mine, was nominated by the democrats for sheriff. The superinten- dent of the mines assured the miners that they would be protected in votirg as they saw it. Quealy was defeated, ard, soon afterward, reinstated in his former position as pit boss. He openly boasted that he would have his revenge. Many men have been discharged, and the promised piotection has proven a delusion and a snare. Thero is a plea that these men_ave_dsschargod because they belong 1o the Knights of Labor organization, and while this may be true in one sense, yet the real cause is found in the fact that every one of them voted against The policy of the, coal depart- ment in reinstating him af er his defeat— and continuing him in his position after he had openly boasted that he would make use of his position to “down,” ‘or per- secute every man who voted against him —was an outrage upon_the people of Oarbon, and kas resulted in_the present trouble. The Knights of Labor tcok the matter in hand, and demanded the re- moval of Quesly, and the reinstatement of the men he had disckarged. It is aleo hinted that Mr. Meyer, the superintend- ent, comes in for anything but a compli- meatary mention, because he has per- mitted Quealy to c'rey things with so high s hand. There you have itin s nutshell. The Tribune takes a reasonable amount of ratisfaction in chronicling the removal of Mr, Quesly. The days of elavery are over, and under the existing stats of so- ciety all over the world, no petty tyrant can'crack tho lish of persecution about the ears of those who, In the pursuit of thelr daily bread, are compelled to work under his direction or in his em ploy. Qualey, in his own estimation, was monarch of all he surveyed, and his tmall mind conceived, and partially exe- cuted, the project of making the miners smart for presuming to vote against him. Heo has earced the contempt of every honorable man and sfeps down and out amid exclamations of joy from hundreds of houscholds in the lituie town wherein he might have been loved and honcred, liad ho only acted ths part of a man. The officers of the coal department have redecmed themsslves by demanding his removal. They have shown that they are not running the Carbon mines a3 a means of gratifying the personal splte of any one man, or set of men. Their prompt action in thls matter affords the presumption that Qealey would never have been re-engaged had they been coguizant of his real character as a man, and places {hem onos guors on an agree- able footing before thPpeople. FALLEN GKEATNESS, Liord Bacon's Touching Picture of His Own Despair and Wrerchednaes, Hougehold Words, In June, 1721, thediegraced lord chan- cellor retired to the stately houss, now in ruin, on Gorhambury patk, of which he was the owner. Ho hed pleaded guilty charges of bribery. In one case he had receivad from a euitor gold buttons worth £50; In athird, a dia- mond ring worth £500 or £600; in a fourtb, o sult of hangings worth £160 From tome London apothecazies he ac cepred ambergris and a gold taster, and he took from cerfain French merchants £1,000, The defense set up was that it was the custom at that time to make such presents to judges. In noarly overy case the presents were made after the suits were decided, and, in many the presents were recelved by Bacon's servants with- out his knowledge. The chancellor him- self always sdhered to this line of de- fonee, He wrote, on his fall, to hisroyal mas'er: “This {s my last sult I ehall make to your majesty in this business, prostrating myself upon the mexcy seat after fifteen years' servi:e, whereln I have served your majesty with my poor endeavors with an entire heart, and, as I presume to ssy to your majosty, am still a virgin in matters that concern your person or crown, and now craving that, after eight stops of honor, 1 be not precipitated alto- gether.” And Bacon says again In another let- ter: “‘For the briberies aund gifts, where- with Iam charged, when the lock of » | hearts shall be opened, I hope I shall not Lew (HAt nends Winter ls coming, the 80a80n of dhe year for aches snd palas. I view of this fach we say buy one of Dr. Horue's Bleokrio Belts. By so dolug you will avoid Rheumatiem, Kidney Troubles and otber flie thatfiosh s he'r to. Do Dot delay, bub owl st our offios and examine belte, No. 1423 Douglas stroet, or C.F Goodman's, 1110 Farnam k., Omaba, Neb. Or A fled 0 0. D M. R. RISDON, (Gen't [nsurance Agent R¥PRESENTS: Phanlx losursnce Co., London, Cssh Woman's Fuad, Us, it be found to have the troubled fountaln of a corrupt heart In a depraved habit of taking rewards to pervert justice, how- ever I may bo frail and partake of the abuses of the time " And he wrote to Buckingham, with all the b ldnees or innocence: “However, I have.acknowledged that the tentencs is just, and for reformation sake fit. I have becn s trusty and honest and Christ ing friend of your lord- ship, and the justest chancellor that hath peen in the five changes since my father's time " Fined £40,000, sent o the tower, though butfors short time, and de- prived of the great ), Bacon, exiled at Gorhawbury h i lings in that uchingly, 01, wesk, ruined, in want, “and very subject of pity.” He lings for York horss in the Gray's inn, whero he might have com piny, physicians, conference with his creditors and friends about his debts and the necessitles of his estate, and helps for his studies and writings. At St Albans he said he lived “‘upon the sword point of & sharp air, endsngered if 1 go abrond, dull if 1 stay with the molifary and comfortless, without company, ban ished from all opportunities to treat with and do myself good and to help out my wrecks, and that which ia one of gres criefs, my wife, that hath been no pa taker of my offending must be partaker of the misery of my restraint’ Bat time gradually made Gornsmbury lers of prison, Bacon expressed the resolve to atudy, *‘not to becomo an abbey lub- ber, s the old proverb was, but to yield some frult of my private life.” In the green shades he estudied and meditated with his chaplaln, Dr. Romley, his faith ful secretary Moan{ys,his wize amsnuen- sis Hobbs, and his Joving friend George Herbet, In October, 1625, the sutamn before he dled, he wrote to a friend: “Good Mr. Palmer, I thank God, by moans of tho eweot sit of the country, I have obtained some degree of health, and I would boe glad in the solitary time to hear a littlo more from you of how the world goes.” In his will he desired to bo buried In St. Michael’s church, near St, Albans, for, says the great philosopher: *‘There was my mother buried, it 18 the parish church of my mansion house in Gorham. bury and it is the only Christan church within the walls of old Verulam,” Ina niche formed by bricked-up window on the north side of the caurch, which is built of Roman tiles, is A marble statue of Lord Bacon, which was srected by his faithfal secretary, Sir Thomas Meaniys, who himself lies bencath an almost plain stone at the feet of his great Gamaliel I'ho statue, which represcnts Bacon seat- edin *‘deep, yot trarquil thought,” was the work of an Italian artist, and beneath it is an inecription from the pen of Bir Henry Wottan, the diplomatist, wit and poet.” “‘Sic sedebat” (“so he sat”) eaith the epitaph. Bacon is leaning back in a equare-backed elbow chair, his head rest- ing on his hand, Ho wears a long, stately, forred robe and voluminous trunk hose; a laced ruff, sash garter, and shoes adorned with large ribbon roses. His capacious brow {8 partly hidden by a low-crowned, broad-brimmed hat. So sat tho mighty Veralam. e — George Washington, Bill Nye. Now that working men are clearing away the scaffolding from the tallest monument in the world, we are led to in- quire, who was George Washington ¢ He was the father of his country for one thing. He gave this country a start that it has never fully recovered from. He was also first in peace, first in war, avd figrt in the hearts of his countrymen. He did not take position on account of the silary, At that time the pay was not la ge, yet George attended to the w well. "He would get up before daylisht and work t1l late into the night. He very seldom took & ho iday, and used to work right on through tho 22d of Feb- ruary as he did other days. George Washington was different from most of our mode n_stat:smen in msny respec's. He scoimed to enter a convention and grapp'e wi h the delegates all day. He did not scek to be president so hard as some have since done, He simply placed himself in the hands of hs friends and 1t nature take her course. The more I study the character of George Washington the more I regret his untimely deatb. We nesd him almost every dsy. Ifhe could see how badly his orphan country needs him sometimes it seems as though he would almoest open the door of the Mount Vernon smoke house and come forth. A very curious incident ocourred in the life cf George Washington which now appears in_print for tho first time! It seems that George was givena small hatchet by his father when a boy, and in an ungarded mement the youth cut down a favorite cherry tree belonging to his father. On the return of the old gentle- man he discovered the act, and, calling his son to him, asked how it occurred, George did not know at first what to say, but finally he looked bravely up in his father's face and sald: “Father, I can- not tellalie. I did it with my little hatchet.” I have often wondered that an aneedo'e like this, concerning a great man, should have remained so long unknown. Iam indebted for the above f to friends of deceased. The monument to George Washington is o descrved tritute to a great man. It is no slouch of a job 10 be president the first time and pay off the help 1hat it takes to run euch a government as this, Let those who think it is casy to be presi- dent try to wiite an annual message once and see how their brain will theob, A pres dent must no% only shine in society and be able to stand on one leg and shake A WEARY TRAMY, A Russian Refugee's Flight the #nows of Siberia, Across San Francisco Call, The water front reporter was weary. He kad epent the greater part of tne afternoon in & valuable search for news, of which there was an alarming searcity. The virgin page of his note-book was as yot unsullied by a blur of a pencil. He had just come to the unsatisfactory con clusion that the day was an unpropitious one for inquisitive newapaper men, when he met an old friend in the person of Capt. Brown, the master of a whsling bark Iately retarned from & cruise in the nerihorn seas, After the usual greetings wero over, the ecribe requesied the cap tain to cetail some account of his Jast vojagze. “You must have had some startling ad- venture,” he said persuasively. “Well, shiver me, it would be a dull whaling scason if we didn t,” replied the in slowly, as he lit a pipe which he had been filling and took a seat upon the top of a pile; “‘but this seas m we had a very uncommon one. I wish we were aboard the bark, T've got the man there who could tell the story better than T can He's a Russian, but he palavers very good English, We left here las: Dec and, of course, headed for the north. you know the season just ¢l sed h an almighty light one. whales o sc 1t was well on toward Merch before we stiuck our first. In the latter part of March, and when we were about twenty miles to the northwest of the Fox Iglands, the incident I am about tell of occurred One night I was aroused from my sleep by my mate, who, as _soon as 1 came out, told me that the watch re- ported cries, evidently human, from the windward, The ciies had been 'several times repeated. I listened with the mate, and it was not lorg before I heard what soumded like a long-drawn ‘Hullo-o-0." How faraway it was we could not reckon, as the northern air is clear and very deceptive, slight sounds being heard for miles sometimes. I made a trumpet of my hands and returned the cries, ro- ceiving responses. Who or what the nnknown hailer was I could not imagine, as in the direction frem whence they came I knew was the open sea. Wa could see nothing as the visht was pitchy dark, Whoever it was [ knew that they could see our lights and would remain in the viclnity until morn- ing. All through the night the cries were heard at Intervals, In the gray of tho morning we saw a strange-looking boat about half & mile from us, and in it was o stlll stranger looking object, which stood upright, meklng motions, It look- ed like a ehaggy besr, and immediately put oft a boat. He was brought aboard, and op rexching the deck fell down and was urvable to move, being exhausted from cold and exposure. Wo removed his heavy fur covering and chafed his limbs, and after restoring the circulation and bringing him around gave him warm drinks, _Soon he was enabled to tell his story. He said his name was Timor Bouffosky; by birth he was a Russian, but had epent the last seven years in exfle in the mines of Siberia, having been sent there on sueplcion of being a nihilist. Driven to desperation by the inhuman treatment to which he had been subjected at the mines, he took advantage of the first opportunity offered to make himself scarce there. He spent nearly nine months, as near as he could reckon, in wanderlng over the bleak and barren country, subslsting on whatever he could find. Sometimes he met with hospitable tribes who treated him well. He was bent on reaching the seashore if possible, and there trustiog to luck to being able to get abeard some vessel. The hardships which he endured on this tramp were terrible. At last he reached the seashore in a half-starved condition, no food having passed his lips for two dsys. 'The seashore was even more barren and bleak than the country through which he had traveled. The iagged rocks among which he searched for shell-fish cut his clcthing in a horrible manner. His clothing now consisted of fure, with which he had been supplied by anomsdic tiibe into whose clutches he had fallen. He lived on fish and roots for many days, all the time orawling along the coast in search of a habitation. Whether he was going north or south he knew not and cared little. At night he slept in clefis of rocke. C(ne morning he was awaked by a series of strange voices, On opening his eyes he saw a dozen or more dark faces pecring over the rocka at him. They were nativee, clad, like hixssif in skins. He saw they were inclined to be friendly, and wade signs to show that he was hungry by pointing toward his mouth They grinned and motioned for bim to follow them, After s long walk they came to an encampment of about been 1 never saw hands with every ten-cent official in the Union, but ho tust be quict and gentle- manly’ in his home life and & good provider in his houschold, ~Added £0 all this he must be able a* a glance to distin- gush between a flotilla and a recip ocity. Hemust know how to spell a sight and be ablo to tign his name 80 that to will lock like a bird’s eye view of a stroke of par- alysis, He must be firm with foreign powers, and still he must govern bis tem- perand avold the unnecessary shedding of other people’s blood. He should be & good business man, & good statesman, a gentleman and a scholar, Weo can read— ily see that that a successfal prestdeat cannot be picked up on every street. Of course he has a good deal of lelp, but he alona is responsible. George Wash. ington was all that was great, but the most succaesfol thing he did was to quit at tha right time and to die before he slopped over. This ie a powerful lesson to some of cur public men not to overdo the matter of longevity. Long life is all right In other walks of life, bat in politica it msy be overdone. George Wathington attracted a great deal of notice, even in his time, by tell- iog the truth. Thiok what a ocuriosity he would be now. And yet truth s within the reach of all. We may accus- tom ourselves to almost anything if we begln gradually and work our way up to it. George Washington to day would no donbt pe regarded as a freak of nature, sud yet he told the trath without effort and without his notes. He used to ¢n- tertalu his frlends through the long winter evenings by al'owing them to fie his hands and feet and then blindfold him and on top of all this he would tell the truth for hours at & time, He was what we called in ecience an anomaly, But he had to give up at last and finally he yielded to the unequal straln and death ensued. People who contemplate @ political career with more or less truth in it should scc that they have strong consti utions to begin with. —— Of the 275 students at Johvs Hopkins university 140 are ' graduate stuaents” from nearly eigh'y different institutions. — General Sherman is a heavy eater, and ocaslonally the guest who comes in after tracd, or (him fieds the ple all out, thirty tents, spread on the shore on the very brink of the suif. The natives treated him well. They gave him alarge bowl of warm drink made out of willow leaves and saxifrage. He was a'so glad enough to put himself outeide of & huge piece of walrus flesh. There were soveral of the natives or Esquimnux, as 1 guess they were, who could patter a faw words of broken Koglish, which they had learned from the whalers and other Kuropeans with whom they had come in contact during their tradirg excar. siong, Well, to make a long story short, as the faying is, he stopped with these natives for a long time, He does not remember exactly how long, as he lost all track of time. He learned their gutteral language, and finally married one of the women of a sub-chief, or & sort of half lord, who owned a good many dogs and reindeer. He was also set up in life by his father in law presentiug him with a drove of*dogs and a couple of sleighs. With these he accompanied the natives into the interior on_their trading excur- sions with other tribes. He became an expert seal fisher. Their fishing nets wera made of fine cut strips of seal hide, netted with a three-inch mesh, One day a misfortune occurred which cast him again adrift. The women of the tribe, he said, were in the habit of goirg out along the beach and gathering shellfish, and marking any colony of seals or wal russes which lm«{cwaped the notice ofethe men, From one of these excursions Timor's wife failed to return, though he did, from a filhing trip down the coast Search was made and his wife was found lying dead on the shore, with a spear, such as they use, through her heatt. When Timor came back, he was seized and accused by his father-in-law of the murder, he denied it, but it was of no use, and the nallver, after holding o meeting, dotermined to turn him away, sswuring him that he got off lucky with his Uife. They placed him in a skin-boat with @ small quantity of rancid wslrus AQeeh and some dried willow leaves, and set him afloat, threstening him that if he returned he would be killed. He drifted on the open ses, at the mercy of the elements, for very nearly twenty days. His provisions ran out and sterse- on stared lh)im Inthe face, when be vighted the light of oorship. A more - grateful man, when we brought him around, 1 never saw."” “‘On what part of the Siberian cost do you think he wae,Captain?” askod the ro porter. “Well, 1 think it must have Leen somewhere between Cape Shelazskel and the southern part of Behring's Straits. 1| think the name of the native tribe there 1s Tchukichls,” A regular jaw-bresker,” ssid tho re- porter, “Yes,” laughed the captain, “‘but 1 wish you would come to my bark snd sce Timor. He could, no doubt, give you teresting story.” ““What Ia he going todof” O, ho awears he'll remain by me as asailcr, and as ho has proved to be a good oae, 1 think I'll keep him.” — Towa State Board of Agriculture, At the annual moeting of the state board o, agriculture held fn Des Moines Mciues the 14th, some seven!y-five of the agricultarel socicties in the ssate were represented, and the meeting throughout showed a widely-growing intorest in ag- ricultural affairs, President W. G. Smith, of Oskalooss, gave a very encour- aging addrese, m which le emphasized the necessily of retsining in azricultural putauita the best, most capable young men the country contalns, and of having them #o trained in agriculture that they can skillfally manage theso vas interests committed to them, He de- clared that financial failures are s arcely known ameng farmers, He noted many improvements in faie arrangements, and said that i is destined to havé the best state fair in the United States; her re- sources are gieater aud ler central. The report of Secreta of Fai field, showed an increase in the production of corn, wheat, flax, rye, bar— ley ad hay, and an unp ecedented pro- duction of sorghum. There is a de rease in potatoes and oats, but a marked in- crease in the number of stock. How- ever, diseases among stock have increased, exoept that no sheep diseases have been reported, Ho reported a widely awaken- ing in county fai's. The secretary recom mended a spirit of mutual concession with the ralroads and some de- cisive action to exterminate the English sparrow. Theproposition of the Greenwood Park Association was sccepted and the state falr for 1885 located at Des Moines. Later action fixed the date September 4th to 11th. In the election of cofficers, the entire number of thoso in dffice during the clos- ing term were, without a dissenting voice, chosen for the coming term, scms. thing heretofore unprecedented In the history of the mocioty. Tho officers are: President, W. T. Smith, Oskaloosa; vice- president, H, C. Wheeler, Odebolt; sec- retary, J. R. Schaffer, Fairfield; treas- urer, Geo. H. Mareh, Des Moines. The five directors and financ> committee were also re-elected. The committee on pres- ident’s report congratulated the president and soclety on encouraging improve- ments and gave their sanction to the ap- pointment of expert judges in future faira, ete. Thecommitteeon the secretary’s roport gave congratulstions and eacou- aged astion on the English sparrow trouble. The treasurer’s report, showing some $13,000 on hand, was duly accepted. During the passage of resolutions it was given as the sense of the society, that in order to supplant the schemes of western land monopolists, the public domain should be leased only in accordance with the homes' ead law, and hat fences around public lands shou'd be removed; also, and acknowledgement of reductions lately made on railroads in lowa for grain transportatlon, and another “‘live and let live" resolution in regardto these corpora— tions was passed. Another, strongly ad- vising fanners to to kee their young stock till ma ure, was carcied, Tt was voted to hold a two days session hereafter—thoggirst day being largely for discussion. Arrangements for topics were made. The members were given a banquet in the evening, and there, after much in- terest d considerable discussion at times, ¢'osed an interesting and profitable annual session. v Comfortabl ¢ Horon He. via Sencca and Kank od between ichimon tia0ookn, Atlunta, At 16100, Cinoidnati o1 nd Omans, Minbeap: ai Hiediate Ponts. Fough Passcugers Aravel on Fast Expross 'joiiets for sale at all prineipal Ticket Offloes i thio Dkitod Btats and Cabada. - o ‘ Hageage checked through and rates of fare »'« Wayh b 10W &4 GGIPOIILOTS LAt OGF Loss Gavan: T, “For aetaiied information, get the Maps and ¥old- ore o1 he CGREAT ROCK ISLAXD ROUTE &% your nearcst Tickot Oftice, or nddress 2. /. CA E. BT. JOHN, e mgr, Gon i Thi. & Fad, b LI AR MANHO0D! 18 aphrodisiac, arous- AL €CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. o8 wotivity, positively cu Wamers Vigor:::: ity all woakness ofg enerative sy s *1,by mail J, H.Warner,2107 1 R ELEVATOS TO ALL FLOORS. | PN RA. S 1204, 1208 and 1210 Parnam SH., Omahs, LING & BOLTE, ~WAHUFACTURERS OF = ONAMENTAL GALVANIZED IRON CORNICE TFintals, Window Onno, Iron Orestings, Metallie Bky.iighte, ¢, ar. 410 Ronkn 154h Biredt Omahs Nebrasks, in, Tren’and 818 T GERMAN D. WYA LUMBER MERCHANT. fi 1 ] @ k) =1 x ~ d B A w MOULDINGS, 8 AND 20TH T8 | o1 OMAHA, ! s L CUMING j G, Ul Pigelss CTORY } Omaha Neb Dr. CONNAUGHTON 103 BRADY 8T., DAVENPORT, IOWA, U. 8. A, Ratablished lBIB—On‘An!, Deafnens, Liung and Nervous Discnava Specdily snd Permanently Oured. Patlex ta ur ed at Home, Wrlite for “T'az Mznicat-Missroxany,” for the People. Jonsultation and Uorrorpondence @ratis, P. O. Box £93. Telephone No. 26 HON, EDWARD RUSSELL, Postmaster, Davonport, says: ** Physclan of tten Abllty snd Marked Buccess.” COONGRESSMAN MURPHY, Davenport ovites: *‘An pionorable Man, Fine Success, Wonderful Curee.”—Hours 8 to b, The Steret Eow (o Gel Ri 98th Ducal Brunswick, Lueneburgh, Lottery, Germany. 100,000 TICKETS and 50,000 PRIZES Capital Prize, mark, 500,000, 300,000, 200,000, 100,000 80,000 60,000, 50,000, 40,000 down to150. Drawing Commences the 9th and 10th of February, 1885. Whsl Tick- ets 818 ; Ealf, $9.00; Quarter, 4.50. 1 CHAS. F. SCHMID'T & CO., 62 W. Congress St., Detroit, Mich. To prevent Joss it Is urgently requestsd to make all remittances by postal note, monoy order choek In registered letters or be exvress. EFA Catalouges Farnished on application 1409 and 1411 Dodee St. 1 W. . CLARKE, - Superiveuiden Works “TH & 18TH STREETS RICHARDS & CLARKE, Proprietors. ' Omaha U. P. RAILWAY, iron MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS IN Steam Engines, Boilers WATER WHEELS. ROLLER MILLS, Mill and Grain Elevator Machinerv! MILL FURNISHINGS O ALL KINDS, INCLUDING THE Celobratod Anchor Erand Dufour Bolting Clotk BTEAM PUMPS STEAM WATER AND GA8 PIPE. BRASS GOODS AND PIPE FITTINGS ARCHITECTURAL AND BRIDGE TR ¥27708 TIIAO We sre.prepnred‘ to {urnish plans a :d estimates, and will ccntract fer erestion of KFlour ng Mills and drain Elevators, or for changing Flouring Millg, from §'ona to the Ro'ler System, B2 Especial attent’on given to fu nishing Powder Plants for any pu po e, aad estimates m: de for some @ ineral machinery repairs attende promp:ly. Aadress RICHARD & OLARKE Omaiha Neb R

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