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THE DAILY BEE--TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1885 THE CHEAPEST PLACE IN OMAHA TO BUY Fol=ReN: I el Is AT DEWEY &STONES' Onse of the Best and Largest 8tocks in the United States to Select From. NO STAIRS TO CLIMB. ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATO JENRY T. CLARKE, Prost. and T JOHN T CLARKE, Secrotary, H. T. CLARKE DRUG COMPANY, SUCCEEDING LEIGHTON & CLARKE, WHOLEMALE DRUGLISTS ARGEST Johbing Drug house betwoon Chicag and 8an Francisco. CAVITAL STOCK. £200,000. W st the bttom of tao murket at all times. Will daplicats Chicago and St, Louls prices’ with adced. _Our specialty will by :'l wre Drugs. Paints, Oils and Window Glass Ea imatea given on piate glass. T those about to en lark in the ¢rug business will do well to consul L M. CLARKE, Vice Presid heir interest 1y calling on us or send for our price 1ist which will appcar ahout January bth, Mail orders olicited 1114 HARNEY 5UREET. e m— - Who have trifled away their vouthful vigor and power. Who wre suffering from terrible drains 1l losses, W I o are weak, IMPOTEN'T, and unfit for ¥ biallages, who find the MENpower:lmlv al ity, ner and SEX- U AL STRENGT! ] whether 1 Dt { CAN revcive a posit ing CURE, NOm lTong standi rour ¢ qted Myrtleain Tr At home, without exy time, and for L, lache, EMISSIONS dreams, def s nd many other symptoms , are promptly removed by He spirits and ambition, gloomy thoughts, dreadful Impotence, impediments to marriage, epileps; Ieading to' Consumption and Insan the MYRTLEAIN TREAT MENT, MARRIED MEN, AND MEN ABOUT TO MARRY, REMEMBER, PERFECT SEXUAL' ST TIL M 55 healthy and vigorous offspring, Jong i pect of a faithful wife. man should ever m who hs i etions, until he I :stored to I” FECT MANH ; pern y case undertake Send 2 npe for treatise with proofs and testimonials. Add The Climax Medical Co, St. Louis, Mo. HILL & YOUNG, {FORMERLY HILL & CO.,) Will Move March 24 —To— 1213 Farnan We will now sell FURNITURE, CARPE AND OV At the Lowess Cosh Prices to reduce stock before Glve us a call and ssve moaey. 115 NORTH 16th STRF We MoveMarch3d A. HOSPE Will Move March 3d, to 1513 DOUGLAS ST, BN BAVIS & 00, REAL NEERASKA LAKD ABENCY 255013 T0 DAV & SNYDER,) s ESTATE 0: F- NERAL DEALEKS IN 1505 FARNAM STREET, - - OMAHA, Street, CROCKERY Tave for &a'e 209,000 acres carefully selected lands In Xastern Va, a8 low price wiid on casy torms Improv ¢ sale in Doulas, Dodge, Colfax, Burt, Cuming, Sarpy, Washington, Morrick, nders, an ¢ Butler counting, axes patd In all parta of the stata, Monoy loar ed on improved ‘arms Notary Public always in office. ~Correspondence pojivited '3 OLD STAND, Commenciog Monday, we will sell Pictures, Frames, Pianos & Organs, Plush Goods, Ete., Ete., Regardless of cost to reduce stock before mov- | ing. Come and convinee yourself, Lvery- | thing goes. THE FASHION! RETAIL CICAR PARLOR The Finest in the City. (16 { 1SLAND & PACIFIC K'Y 1 of ita lino, connects th Graxn Casi Gier or 8500 15 Gorp 1505 Farnam St. » via Seneca and Kanky d between Richmons Attanooga, Atlanta, An Lexingtoh, Cinoinnatl, and Orvans, Minuosp= o points. ngers Travel on ¥ast Expreas all principal Ticket Ofoss ir d Canada, 8 Doors West from 15th Street. Traine. Tiokets for cal the United tate Jaggage checked through and rates of fare a'e Wz s as 10w 43 Compeiitors that offer loss advans b "FO¥ detatied tnformation,got the Maps and Foid- oo 0t ho CREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE ot Ticket Ofiice, or sddress T. JOHN, 1T, Gonl ThL & Pade. A VG AR Mendelssohn & Fisher, ARCHITECTS Rooms 25 and 29 Omaha Natl. Bank Block SUCGRSSORS TO Dufrene & Mendelssohn Geo. L. Fishor, fermery with W. L. F. Jenny Architect, Chicago. Jantdelm Hardy Nursery Stock! For priced catalogue of the POMONA NURSERIES addrees, M. ©. Ravwond, Box 200, Omaha, Neb Nursery grounds situsted immediately nonh of the % Tostitute for the Deaf and Dumb, Coutracts taken Mrs. Kate Coakly, Propriotoress. oF tree planting aniSdSwwl?t | garNewly and clogantly furnished, Good sample Before buying your lumber elsewhere | F20s o0 first floor, oall on Geo, A, Hoagland, Omaha National Bank, U. S. DEPOSITOLKY* J. H. MILLARD, WMEWALLAQGE, Prosident. Cashlor CAPITAL“'SURPLUS $600,000. Onaha Safe Deposit VAaAUoLTS. Fire and Burglar Proof Safes. For rent at from § 10 860 ver spnuw St. Charles Hotel, O STKEET, BET 7th and th, - + LINCOLN, NEB, wewbers of the lokislature, Boviolm we 4 [ TLORD WOLSELEY'S MISTAKE, Gen. Stone on the Campaign Against the Mahdi, New York Times. Gen, Stone sat last night in his luxur lous drawing rom at Flushing, Long Island, surrounded by all the comforta that render cold weather a pleasure, Oa the mantslpiece wasa handsome bronzs bust of the unfortunate Khedive, Is mail; on the wall hung an oll panticy of the same 1l' fated pereon, painted by a young Egyptian whom lsmail had sent to Italy to study the art. “‘What do you think will be the cffct of Gen. Gordon's death “Well,” said Gen. Stone, ““It is im possible t> tell what the effect will ba. The primary object of ths campaizn is lost. He way that clj Without know- iog *he plans of the Britlel ministry it is impoesible {0 conjecture what may occur. Ao far as the itdications go, from the thne of the English papers, it would seem that they lntend to make a new camprizn and punish the mahdi. That would re quire very heavy reinforcoments, and would hardly be safe without more than they seem to ind cate as intending to send “And a campalgn at the approachivg seaton of the yesr would be very ditticult, The Nile will tsll steadily from this time until May. The river will glve but little chance of transpcr atlon, aud ravigatton will be more dflicult day by day. And they have not provided what they should lave done inmy oplnion—a very gieat number of cymels to effest {hat trans portat on. Then the heat is also increas- ing at this time of the yesr. The Euro- pean troops even at the best s:asons will suffer greatly from debility and from the fevers of the country, It they take the uskim route to Berber to reinforce Gen. Lord Wo'scley they must either move in very emall bodies, and therefore subject themselves to constant attscks, or they must have at least three camels to eyery man to carry not only the men, but the 16 a1l the mora probable that this route of TOO MANY BILL JOVESES escapo would ccour to Gen Gordon, sup- posing his escape north t livve been cat 4 off, brcacss, 85 yoiu will remember, he | 10410 SheriMs and Ly nehers Confused had jost befcra his starting for the Sou. | by Their Namber. dan been appolnted the sgcnt «f the King | et of Belgium for the Coryo country, OF| The prescnse of six I3 11 Jotcses in this course, this is only 8upposti 1 o1 my | camp, writea an Aw i an Falls, ah pact, ard is glven, in the absence of defi- | correspocdent to the New York Sun, nite ivformation, for what it may ba | eaussd much trouble the cther dy 0ld worth.’ . Bill Jones has been heva ever sines ths e — 1 coun'ry was opencl to settlement. il Billousness is looked up t)everywhers, BEoerybedy Is vory provalent at (lisseseon, the | knowshim, and he knows cverybedy, Ho symptoms belng bitter taste, offansive | keeps a raloon, and rometimes deals§a breath, coated tongue, s'ck headache, [cad or two, ay wo'l as buys duss from drowsinets, d'zzlness, loss of appetite. [ strapped minecrs at o emall thave, Old 1f this condition is aliowed to continue, | Bul Jones hasn'c an enemy in the whole serfous consequences may f llow. By | termtory, and if he had he would naver promptly taking Hood’s Saireaparilla, @ | rest until he or the cnemy had quittd voided or It 1sa ¢ Sold by all dri fover may be d:a‘h prevented, for hullfousncas, premstnre | t-c world or the territory. One afcer cure | another five other Bill Joncies put in an 8. Appearance. For a long time every thing went well. They were all fine fel Lyws, evideutly, and no great trcuble was expericnced by them or anyhody else in preserving their identity. But one day Iaet wesk 1ho sherift and four men ime in on horseback with a warrant for the arcest of Bill Jones. The Bill Jones ““What is the vital difforonce botween | atted | bad - muxdored a family the cducaticn fir the siage in Amorlea | Of emigrants over —In - Paradise and in Barope!” a vetoyan German actor | O}/'FO0; and the court had sent fir ? b him. As old Bil Joaes was the Bill How hiborktiog 1 Olcigo waNAVKked, - {iyiiiay vy e ah Armesionnt FANK and4 0 Tho great diffrence fa that here they pecple weat, ne was at once po.n‘ea out try to fi people for par s ia1raveling et piived + 4 Lt Titry | 88 the man, and the therlff's officers sompasioy, while crer in the old colutty | \unded him'up in grod style, Old Bill WALINO LA o SOPARY | brotesiod his innocense and would ave syaicn, and dhrefore actorsand actresecy | PRen oL be, gechss dad would s foceive a thoraugh stage tralning, enab-| .o rapesnent in majority of them had irg lhf‘T“;l to fill a vatiety of parts “l"““‘ susploion that theold man was caught at :ndy. m"”‘““ “”;P'f:_’::]" ”'g"k" ‘Q::’ lact, and coneciousneas of t1is fact broke paruialy in Kngand-—mikes M-y haart, Hewent off with his captors, chines out ¢f cur growing stago talent. ; Yrisss k XS protesting his innocence and sweirtog he I'hiese machines may work with wonder would get oven with somobody on his re fol precision and neatness, but they lack PvA the spar k of life, of frdividuality, It ts | 52 Hemanrt ouly exceptionsl talent of genius that "‘I;I'B‘h“d"(f“‘_czd:’}"’,'flr:‘f‘f"':‘:’ifi“ wh“‘b”‘f can iso to the top ordinarily under then | Ytished otr o T it (BEATEREYS 14 BABHED hostt's posse camo in from the west lem ances, unl Eilieas _h._IX alsoin (uest of Bill Joner. The firat sok the eprouling ambitionin which ease, | ;' tha came 1o land was tlie Bill Jonea TRAINING FORR THE STAGE, The Difi-rence Betweed the Educa tion for the Stage in America Euarope- " | been rare'y seen in any army.” 4@ Torma -§1.50 to §2 pex day, Special rates given | & provieione, the smmunition, and nearly all the water to be used. ““Iregard it as utterly impracticable,’ said Gen. ne elowly, “t> march European troops on foot over that route in the seatcn which is now coming. From the observation of my own officers, very cer. fully made, the heat will be at an average ot 100 to 105 degrees in the shade every afrernoon, If they fak tha Nile route to refuforce Lord Wolseley,” | wl aid Gen, Stone, spreading out a map of the country on his knees, ‘‘the march would be tmmeosely longer and much slowzr, unlees they usad vast numbers of comels. There 1s therefora little hope of Lord Wo's:ley recelving any larg, reinforcements before the middle of Apri Even that would require such activity, cnergy, and good administra‘icn as has bringing out and nursing to its fulljgrowth dramatic talent. Under it art de:erior- ates to mannerism; monetary succesa or ire beromes the eole criterfon by h to measore plays o8 well ay astcra,”’ **Now you'va dons your little share in berating the prevailing syetam here, tell me how it 1a over there. “‘Hasily dina. 1In all the larger towns in continenta! Enrope but more cspeclal- lyin Germany and France, there are thea- ters which have g o0d sized steck eompa- nies, in kome cos s 100 strong and more. It 5 easy to understand how in thess, with a ditfarent pluy fo perform every night, therc iy a chance not only forevery i mber of the company to learn, bu algo torise, to demonstrate ability, and to win gppiause and popaler.ty, which menue, of course, alzo money. Tke op- pertunity i3 eurs to come, sooner or later, Every member knows that, and thus, am: bition i3 fcssered, the desire to learn and twprove ls intencificd, and the occasion i3 given to every one to gain aknowled ze of his weak and strong peiats. Then these “Do you consider Lord Wolseley's sltuation critical.” ‘“‘He is in a country where it iy ex ceedivgly difficult to obtain supplies,” said the general. *‘He is between the deserts, haviog only a narcow sirlp of coltivated land along the Nile. The rich country near Berber is in the hands of the cnemy snd has been already hedvily foraged by the large forces of the Mahdi, The rich country to the south- east Is in the hands of the Mahdi also. | larger etock companies ntain a uni- From them he can draw no supplics, He | form standard of excellence, snd are per- must get them etther by the Nile or they | nanent schcol af theatrieal trainiog. Of must be brought to him by a strong forcs | couree, a epocial aud ynrfessional educa- frcm Saukin after he shall have occupied |tion has to he imparted as well to all Berber.” those who aspire to the higher walks of Gen. Stone drew a sketch of the posi |there art. Kldcution, stage presence, tions of the various towns playlng roles | mak=up, stage li'siory and traditions, ¢ ¢ , In the campaign. *1f Lord Woiscley had |arc all taught to tho:c anxious to perfect intelligent men fcr enemies,” he said, | themsclves by o!d masters why hava fin- “‘he would be badly off. Ifthe Mahdi|ielied their hrief strat upon the stage, for were to send a force to Dabbi, through [scina reasen or other.” which all Lord Wolseley's supplies muat “How about sopport the public gives of necessity bo sent, the zama would ba | the theatersthers as compared withher:? up. He wouid simply go ln for a dee “‘There Is no country on earth where peratefight. The only things ho c.uld | theatres arc wnro liberally patronized by tali back upon would be his camels. He |the paople than in America, But there would have t) eat them.” is thig differenc Acrcss tho channel ““Do you think there was any particu- [ everybody recognizas the theatre as a s o b fhod 1081 ot waceh | who tends bar at tho Star saloon, and ho real stuft' in hiw, since he hasn't had the thorough training neceesary to give him experience and v.orsitility, Generally speaking, tho star system as practiced in this country is the worst conceivable for was accordingly telen in charge. He protested his ianocesca, likethe old man, but the peop! s were pretty ovenly divided onthe question of his gnile. Old Bill had been taken east, and this one was carcled CHAS. SHIVERICK, E'urmniture UPHOLSTERY AND DRAPERIES I'ASSENGER ELEVATOR TO ALL FLOORS. | 1208, 1208 And 1910 Far y S1,, Omahs, Ne Tn order to give ticipate in a real (i . Hamburg 1 vo some on hun o March 11,158 m after the drawings, 000, 70,000, 50,000, everyone to invest a off to the west. The next afternoon, while most o the ssttlers were discuesing the fate of tuc two men, aratils of hoofs was haard and a party of . rsomen ¢:yhed madly through the town, ttopping at one fo the salcons long enough to get a drink. The crowd rushed over to see what the troubls was and foand that the men had Bill Jones, a murderer, in charge, and were going to Jyach him upin the t 1ber. Justico of {1ie ’eace Fallon horo spoko up aud said there had been two Bill .Joneses taken out of the camp in the preceeding forty-sight hours and it might be that some honrible mistake was being made, Allhe wanted was to have the right man caught, and he would pull as hard on the rope as anybody; but until that point was gextled he tkought there should te no Iynching. Others made bold to express the same opinion, and tha lynchere, after conferring with one anothar, agreed, as whitky was good, to wait here a fow days with their prisoner and Investigate. Last Monday old Bill reds i1 with a brand-new rifls, two rovolvers and a bowle knifc and dared the whole tywn t) jump on him, He was the maddest man s3en in Ida%o sinco blg Ed Larrabee ran off with Tom Belden's bride, at Tom's housewaraivg, when Tom whipp:d all the guests and shot two of their horecs, Nobody wanted to fight old Bill and the town kept in the houses while Bill gal- loped up and down the etreet, yelling and awes Aiter a whily he began to ehoot in tne windows, and then the justice was sent out as a peace cifer- ing. Old Bill came very ncar 1id- ing him down, hut at last he sobered ofl alit:le, and stened to what Fallon hed to szy. The justice explaincimaitara th best way he could, and told how Bill, the barterder, had Deen carrled cff and Bill, tha cowboy, was held a captive up at the lar error in this campalgn? neoessity, as an important factor in the “‘L dislike verv much to criticiss,” said | education as well a8 in the amusement cf G:n, Stone. “Itell youl think taat un- | the people. In Engiand and still more der all the circumstances Lord Wolseley | in this country a nos inconsld:rable por- chose the best reute t> accomplish the [ vion of the population dsems the theatre declared porpcses of the government |eomething wickad and to be frowned up- But he chose the wr 1z s of tranc-|on. In conformity with this divergency portatioa. Ho held to bis idea of small | of opinion is the fact that in the capitals bosts, whera I fhink he should bave de- |and cven Intome of the larger provincial pended almo:t entirely upon camele. | town+ of Earope the theaters are siubsi- Had he assembled 2% Wady Halfay 130,000 { dized by the nation, provincial or muni- or more cymels 1 think his concentration | cipal government. In some cases the on the Upper Nile would have been much | snms thus expended are very large. In more rapia. L think he coald have con- | Paris several milllons of francs are annualy centrated in less tban haif the time. |spent In this fashion, and in Berlin and Chat was a great fault Vienna the cise is similar. In Drosien “*What do you think of a second cam- | the leading theater derives a not incon pafan’’ sidcrable portion ¢f its roceipts from the, “The qusstion fs,” said Gen. Stone, | orivate treasury of {the king of Saxony “‘can he make a secord campalgn and be | Many theaters hava cost millons of dol successful, Of course 1t can be made. |lara, Everybody knows wka: an im- Is thers any oflica of corrasponding lnter- | mente amcunt thie grand oper house in est now to the cne which astusted this| Paris 098t aud the new court theat:r in campaign? That is fcr Beltleh etatesmen | Dresden, just finished, and tho weend to declde. Do you know that 1 always [opera house in Vieans, built several suppesed that Gen. Gordon would hold | yeatsag) sw.llowed up between $10,000- out to the very last with a few men, and | 000 and $16,000,000 each, Nchody ex- if ke found at last that that things were | pects those theaters to pay anydividends ot tlelr worat blow Limself and his men | Thoy are 115t run as a monoey-miking i up rather than surcender, That was al-|astitutione, n> more than are churchss ways my feen. 1 never thought Gen.|here. They are malntained as temples Gordon would ke raken alive.” And|of art,in which the ame of perfection Gien, Stone s'ghed 78 he glanced at the |is simed at, if not always reached, The portrait barging on the wall, n‘erence is obvicus,” Col. C. C. Loug, why wus Gan. Gor — —————— don’s chief of etaff from 1874 to 18 YOUNGMEN!—LREAD THIS, while the latter commanded the Egyptan| Tug Vourae Ber Co., of Marshall, Mich,, forces at Khartoum, said last night that |offer to eend their colebrated BrecTRo-VOL- he r.girded the news of Gen, Gcrdon's|Tare Belr and other ELECTRIO APPLIANCES on death as lackiag confirmation, and that if [ trial for thirty days, o (young or uld) afflicted with nervous debility, loss of vitality the L-ndon papas had not accepled it a8 | 1ng manhood, and all kindred troubles, Also true, he ehould ba inelined to disbelieve t [ for rhoumatism, neuralgia, paralyels, “and it altogether, He cculd on'y belleve it | many other diseases, Complete restoration to on the supp iou that Gen, Gerden hed | health, vigor and manhood guaranteed. No lost his hiad, snd frcm his intimate ac risk 18 incurred as thirty days trial is allowed, quaintance with him he did not think that | ¥ 1ite thew at onco for” illustrated pamphlet probable. “‘Gen, G.rdon,” continued| ————— Col. Long, ‘“‘being an able soldier, and A Blizzard of Melody, thoroughly acqualuted with the people | Hartford Post, with whem he hed to deal, would va‘ur-| There is oftsntimes a serlous differcnce ally be on his guard aainst traachery and | of opinion in matters of cultura in (he prepared 1o clrcamvent it. With|family. The head cf the house is too four stenmers st his command, | practical and the first lieutenant too which he had after s:nding the others | sthetio down the river to meet Gen. Stewart, it “Ir:lly thivk that Mabel ought to was easy enough for him to oacape from [havea piano; don't! She is seven years Khartoum. The White Nile opposite |old, and the sooner slic begins the eooner Khartoum is & bold, rapid river, from a | she will be able to mastcr the intricacics wile aad a quarter to a mile and a half | of Liszt."” wide, but just below the junction of 1t “‘Liext be blowed, and the plano too, with the Blae Nile the river becomes ex- | Waen the girls legs can reach the pedals oeedingly rarrow, and its banks are lofty | we'll talk piano.” ssnd hl's, from which the enemy| “Then it will bs too late, perhaps.” could command its passage, This fact| *‘Gosherd;buy a plano for her, 8 would ccount for Gordon's mot|cornet for Uim and & drum for Sack attempting to eecape north and mest the [ Le't have a blizzard of melody while we advancing Bridsh fo-c.s, On the other | are about it,” hand there woold Le nothing to pravent e — his escape scuth by ascending the White Poor fuvand Picked Up. Nile in his stesmare. “I was & poor invalid,” writes Mr. S, **By the way, this may be the meaning | T. Thornton, of Oxford, N, C. *‘I used of a s'atement | have r¢ad In one of the|Brown's Iron Bitters and | think it a fine e1s that Col. Wilson reported having |tonie. It kas had such a wonderful ef scen on hls appreash to Khartoum three | fect on me that Lam now able to w.lk steamers golng up the White Nile. Helabiut wih the graatest ease Tois was could prosced” up the White Ni'e in Fisia c:s9 of dreadful debility. Other people steamers 1,600 milcsto Gondokoro, whare | who sra troubled as Mr,” Thorntn was he would encounter friendly teiber, and }are reminded tha: any deageise wil! sell thence, with the atsistance of K nz Mtesi, [ them Browa's Iron Bitters st a dollar a croes ‘he grest Lakes and desccnd the lbot le, and they might as well recover Congo to the Earopean sctilemente, It |their nealth and strepyth, other end cf the town by a partyof lynch- tra, Tlis moiiitied the old man to some extent, snd, after a momen’s reflection, he declared that if the boys would iielp him rescue the Cawhoy “Bill and then rourd up all the Bill Jonesas in the vi- cinity he would find no more fault. All decided 5 do as old Bl desired. After a littlc preparation a party of de- termined men 11ade o raid on the lyrch ere, capturcd Cowboy Bill and drove the lynchers out of tovn, Then old Bill commanded that a'l the other Joneses be brought before him. This took eomo little ttme, but the next day the five oth- cr Jonoses were in confereuce with old Bill at the Ophie salorm, when the sherifl wlo had arrested old B 1l came in with a stranger, who eaid his name way Bill Jones. Noone had ever scea him in these paris befor>, and he wasthe off' nd- or whom all the oflizers aud lynchers Lad been after for a week previcus., 1o wes all that the old man could ¢o to keop the other Joneses from lsying violent hands on him. When he and his keepers had passed on old Bl made {a speech some- thing like this: ‘Thera’s too many Bill Joneses In this 1p for comfert, and :omething's got t id to keep thing a’ain right. Now, I'm here fieat, and L'm the oldest man in the camp for money, ard my nameis Bill Jonee. As an henor b e title, to be used by you beys or not jert 18 you please. you can call me Ol4 Bill Jores if yonwant to, but Bil! Jones plain snd simple is my name, You, now, Bill Jones (referring to the bartender), I'm going to chrlsten you Bill Jones Ale-oho', and that's your nane from this tinie forward. You, Bill Jones [to tha cowboy], y ur name is to be Bill Jones Puucher. Ycu, Bill Jones [to & blacksmith who once hiad expreseed a wish to travel in South America), your name is Bill Jones Patagonis. You, Bill Jones [to a laborer In themines whooame from the coast], your name is Bill Jones Sscramento, and you, Blll Jones [t> a prospector and whisy-drinker not over four feet tall], your name 18 Bill Jones Short, The tirst voe cf you that goes back on thete names has got me to fight, and I want the camp touunderstandit too, All hands agreed that the christening was proper; that they understood it ell perfectly, and that there would ba no further irouble, Tha olb msn Is now haviog paiated for his salcon asign bear ng the mecrlptlon In red lett:rs thrze feet high: “0ld Bill Jones,” o —— Mrs, E. Selbert, 71 N. Broadway, Ba' tlmore, Maryland, eaysshe was very moch aunoyed with a ocugh and cold, and could et no relfef, Fivally Red Star Cough Cure was rccommended, A few dokcs cured her, o —— The Expressago of a Newspaper, *‘1 would be oblidged to you,” said a close-fitted old fellow to a country editor, *Uf you will express my thaoks, thr.u.h your excel cat paper, to the many citi- zaus whos timely aid last night saved ny house from biing destroyed by, fira ' “*Certainly,” replicd tho editor, ‘1 will cxpress your thar ks, but it will b necestary for you to advance about a do'- office order or draft Brunswick and Saxc 1409 and (411 Dodee St. 1 ment, weoffer five whole orignal tickets which we have Jotie T yoars i existence; numbers which is oy give 16 different numberz, that every catistied with the result, 14 i Catalougoa Furnished on application G Ul P.Jqeisy IAGE FACTORY } Omaha Ne r offered to try your luck » the public in general the advant: rman Money Lottery, guaranteed mad, n club plays and sell same for the e - tickets are good for ths last thron prix and terminate cu May 18, 1885, one half the actual amount of ticketa, the Original L ickot holder, on re 30,000, etc . the smalleat beivg 145 mark, s s00n as possible before the tickets are all sold, and tickets will zo forward at once, on, constantly on hand, ipt of the winning lists The capital prices are mark 500,000, 500,000, 200,000, 100, TRY YOUR. LUCK! And Don’t Lose This Chance. F'or this Y ear Onlvy. The best opportunity ever o these hard timies, with a small sum of money, to par- nd sanctioned by the Gorman goyorn. into 16 different numbers of the 1 sum of 85 25 aa long na we privcipal drawings which com This Lottery has be has one hundred thousand tickets and fifty thousand 500 winning Each holder of tickets receives, Ho prize if won. n for over 143 Wo hope, as we ill be 90, It 1s of mterest to each and Remit oithor by Post Original tickets of the Hamburg & C. F. SCHMIDT & CO,, % (2 Congrese Street, Detroit, Mich, Cumi ngs GERMAN D. WYATT. Lumber Merchant and 20th Sts., - Omaha, Neb. EFRED. W. GRA Y. (SUCCESSUR TO FOSTER & GRAY). LIME AND CERMENT, LU IVERIEEF, Richards Machi Omaha ENGINE GOVE) HEATERS AND FILTERS, ROLLER WILLS, “BOLTING 'GLOTH. s CENTRIFUGAL REELS, EANORS,: IATER-WHEEL: GOVNORS s CALBING ‘REELS LEATHER & RUB'R BELT'G & Glarke IROVGHT & CAST. JRON; EPAIRS OF ALL KINDS, BRASS. CASTINGS, ) WEIGHTS, WELL AUGERS, "BRICK: YARD. CASTINGS, | SHAFTING ‘PULLEYS'-HANGERS 4 BOXES HAIMEYER & BRO. PIANOS, ——AND—— O G- AINS actol EASY Send for and pricel chasing el MAX MEYER & BRO. LEADING HAVANA Prices, TERMS. ourcatalogue istbefore pur- sewhere. JEWELERS And Sole Importers of Fine Diamonds, Watches, Silver- ware, Rich Jewelry, Wholesale and Retail. MAX MEYER & GO SOLE IMPORTERS —0oF CIGARS ——AND- = Meerschaum Goods, IN OMAHA, AND—— e Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Guns, Anmamunition, Sporting Goods Notions and Smokers’ Articles, {3tatiomery, Cutlery, Druggists’ And Fancy Gocde, Full and complete line and BOTTOM PRICES Max Mever & Co. Cor. 11th and Farnam Sts. | 1020 to1024 Farnam Sts., Omaha Sundries lar and a Lalf to prepay the expreswge.’ 1013 Jones Btieet WHOLESALE BY Orange Blossom Flour L A STEWART & CO, } asivonmmooross. { OMAHA NEB