Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 18, 1885, Page 7

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> THE DAILY BEE--WEDN&SDAY, FEBRUARY , 1885" THE CHEAPEST PLACE IN OMAHA TO BUY Fell=feN: Is [l ol fet AT DEWEY &STONES One of the Best and Largest 8tocks in the United States to Select From. NO STAIRS TO CLIMB. ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR ¥V 1. CLARKE, Prest. amd T TOHN T. CLA H. T. CLARKE DRUG SUCCE LEIGHTON WHOLESALE ARGEST Jubbing Drug house hetwoen Chioa ar 4 shall 1y at the 1otom f tae mirket at wll times. freleht added. _Our spectalty will by { M.CLARKE, Vice President RUG COMPANY, & CLARKE, DRUGLISTS 1d San Francisco. CAVITAL STOCK, §200,000. W Will doplicats Chicgo and St, Louls prices’ with e Drugs, Paints, Oils and Window Glass t to it 1 plaie glass. To those abo niz on us or <end for our pric wmliark in the drug business will do well_to consul t which will apgear ahout January bth, Mail order 1114 HARNEY STREET. Loss and Gain, =5 1 waas taken sick a year 1go With Lilious fever.” “My doctor pronounced ma cured, but | got sick eua n, wlth tercble painsin my back aud sid-s, and got 80 bad | Could not move! | ehrank! From 228 lbs, to 12¢! 1 had beendoc- toring £or my liver, but it did me nogcod. I did not expect to live more than thres wontbs. 1 began to use Hop Bitters, Direc:ly appelite returned, my pains left e, 1y entire system seemed renewed a3 il my magic, and after usicy several bot- tles, I am not only aysound as a sovereign bat walght more than Idid bef.re. To Hop B.tters I o xe my life.” R. FirzraTrIOK, Dublin, Jane 6, 'SL. CHAPTER II, alden, Ma: Feb. 1, 1850. Gentlemen atferod w tacks of sick beadache,” Neuralg's, feamale trouble, for yearsin themot terrible and e xcruciating manner. Nc¢ medicine or doctor could give me rellef crcure, until [ used Hop Bitters. *‘The firat bottle Nearly cured me; The secord made me as well and etrong as when & child, «“And ] have been 80 to this day.” My husband was sn invalid for twenty ear~ with a sarious “Kidney, liver and urinary complalat, “‘Prcnounced by Boston's bett physi- clans— *‘Incurable!” ° Seven bottles of your Bltters curcd him and [ know cf the “Lives of elght persons” In my ncighborhood that have saved by your bitters, i And many moro are using them with great benefit. ““They almost Do miracles?” S T & —Mus. E. D, Slack. How 10 poseyonrself day and_night; cat t0o much without exercise; work too hard withcut rest; Coctor all the tiwe; take all the vile nostrums advertised,and then you will want to know how to get well, which is answered in th se words - Take Hop Bitters! Nooe genulne without a bunch of green Hops on the white Jabel. _Shun all the vile, poisonous stuff with “Hop" or **Hops” in thelr name. i sy D £ 1S 3. W. WUPPERMANY, GOLB AGENT, &1 BROADWAY. N. ¥. ‘;‘;‘é wll lt% By the nwe o Hostetter’s Stomach Bittera the ha gard appe rance of the ©BEBRATER red, b b d s substance I vesde § s ber, through the s of ’tris 1 edicine, Which ix also bene ial to persn « TR all Druglsts and Dy of fever and ague, For sale UMPHREY§’ OMEOPATNIc WH VETERLNATS For the Curo of all diseases of Horses, Cattle, Sheep DOGS, HOGS, POULTRY, Used successfully for 20 years by Fare mers, Stockbreeders, Horse R.R., &c. Endorsed & nsed by the U.S.Governm o Pamphlets & Charts sent free, HUMPHREYS' MEDICINE GU‘,‘ 109 Fulton St., New Yo Humphrt_ays_' Homeopatho Specific No.2# 00y Dt ekt Wa J. H.Warner, 2 R | poker 18 aphrodisiac, arous- 0 8 ActiviLy, positively newspapers made Wclic'ey what o is \:.‘,” ¥ loss | He is the chilld of patt, COUNCIL BLUFFS ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEWS HE COUNCIL, Several Important Ordinanc and Other Bu 8 passed ess Done, The sensatioval feature cf last night's council meeting was that every a'derman waa present. Col. Keatley proposed to compile the ordinances of the city for 8500 in general fund warrants, and to kave at least 500 copies printed for $1.50 a pege, Refer- red. An ordinance was presented providing for two jallers, one to terve days, the other nights, to reccive the same fay as the police. The ordinance provided that all prizoners should be sesrched in the presence of the jailer on duly, and the jatler to ts ke charge of all valuables end effects, thus eettling the old diepute be- the police and marehal's force. Ald. James rather objected because of the incraate of expense. The ordinancc was passed Ald. Keat- ing alone voted no. crilnarcs providing for three park commissioners was pissed., Ald. Keating voting nc. The orlidance giviry the telephone company the right of way In streets for wites and poles, with certain restrictions was passed. Several reports of the city attorney was received and those of them which could be made out, were read and placed on file, Amng those read wasone do- claring that the police rule making the chief the custodian of prisoners’ effocts wes vcid, it beirg ia conflict with ths crdioance making the marehal the cus- todian. The mayor and pelice commit- tee were inttructad to make a new rule. An appropriation of $200 was made fcr making a temporary fill on lower Ninth street. An ordinance axd resolution was adopt- ed jroviding for issulng $25,000 more sity improvement bonds to pey for paving intersections. The committec reported that the cost of paving the three streets was $1¢ and no more spccial assestiiont were needad. A SKI ) »onds PPING SNEAK. The Plunder Recovered But the Thiel Gets Away, Yorterdsy afternocn s scesk hief snatched & pair of overshoes at %, T. Lindsey's store, and startcd away with themon & run. Oneof the clerks got afier him, and chasad him across the creck, aud got the stolen goods back, but the thicf skipped on out of sight. Dapaty Marshal Bates :oon after reached the spot #111 made a search for him but it was too late thea. —— Another Jail Break, Last vight two prisoncrs inthe county jsil, Jobnscu and Berry, the former ar rested for stealing, the lst'er for baing drunk, succeeded In unlocking their cell door, and getting into the corridor began digglog a lole in the thick wall, by aid of Thsy wero discovered in time to prevent thelr escape, — Ofticar Wheeler yestereay afternoon ar rested Frank Johnaon for stealiug o har ness from Weatlierby's stable, He had the barncis with him when arrcsted. — woLs A PAILURE. A General Who Never Won a Battle or, Led a Great Army, New Yerk World. Whatever muybe the ultimats isswe of tlie war in Soudan, it cavnot bs denfed that General Wolseloy's campalgn is 4 tallure He was sent to reicae Gordon from the heordos of the Mahdiin Ktar. toum, acd while he uas been loiterivg cn the way, teadiry thea rical dispatches to the prince of Wales, Kharioum lias fallen and Gordon with it. The orowning blunder of 1he Gladstone ministry, in re Iation to 1he Soudan buslee:s, was in trastivg eo serlons an cut:vprise {0 Gen- eral Wolteloy, amin who has naver cvivoed any nlitary capacity. Had the conduct of the campa'gn be n committed to Reboris, the gal'unt Wit'e butober cf Cahal, it woald probably hava been end ed wicecssfully for the Engllsh fw months azo, Wolecley cojoys the uu- iijus disunction of being 1ho only general of reputation who never led great +rmics or won anv battles, His reputation ir owlry to the pen, 19t to the sword, The His first service way in what is styled [ the Burmah war, o 1552, This real'y no war at all, It conslated In the storm ing of a few bamboo huts and the slang} ter of a few timid Asiatics. Wolseley, who served in & subaltern ospacity showed some personal hravery by stand {ng on an improvised bridge in the fase of the enemy unt!l he was wounded. He next appeared In the Crimean war, where he wan so severely woanded and s fow years afterwards a* the seige of Lucknow and the defense of Alumbagh, in the Indlan rebe lion, He was then meds lieutenant.colonel, and for the first tims was enabled to displey something more than personal ecoursge, He next partl cipated in the Cbiny expediiion, in which he witneesed the gunners uniting the pleasures of the pienie to the horrors of the battle field by firing into the ranks of the half armed Chinese mob from the shelter of their tents while they sippad thetr lomonade. Thenext “war ' in which Woleely en goged was that known ayv thy Red River expedition, In 1870, This was simply a sort of military exploring party. The only glory attaching to it was that the expedition euce:eded after many months, in finding its way to Fort Garry without gotng lost In the woods. There was no fighting and nobody got hurt, For this Wolseley was cr.ated a knight ¢f Saintsa Michael and George. He was created adjuts oral in 1871, and in August, 1 appolnted t> the command of th peditlon agalnst King Coffer, of Ashan tee. The campaign vorslsted of o rather protracted hunt through the bush of a horde of nsked negroes srmed with pointed sticks, In this expedition Wolseley came within a hair's breath of rain by an over confidence in the super- iority of his froops and a contempt f the ‘‘niggers.” The cnly tangible result of the expadition was the captors of King Coffee’s umbrells, which is to-day exhibitad in the London mussum, Oa his return to Krgland he was created chevaller commsnder of the bath, and was prezented by parliament with a rewsrl 25,000. In May, 1879, he went to the Cape, where he helped t) catch Cotewayo in the African jongle. Hiy crnduct of ths campaign aganst Arabi Pasha is atill fresh in the minds of readers This was the ouly campaign in whizh he parieipated that can be said to rise fo the diznity of war atall, Yetiicannot ke descibed as a battle ia the modern sers: Arabi's army conslsted of amob of ignorant, timld Egyptlan fcllahs, dragged from theic hats in chains, and who tell on their faces begging for mercy at the approach of the encmy. The on'y resistance offered was by two regiments of Sondanese blacks, who showed that if they only ¢qualled the British in numbers Wels: ley would have had no victory. There were a hundred skirmishes in our civil war unmentioned in nameless, in which more gene shown and more blood shed than in all Wolseley's expeditions put together. In the present campaign Wolse'cy blundered from the first to last Instead of making Suakim the base, and stiiking for Berber, 260 miles distant, which would have brought him within 220 miles of Khar toum, he choose the windings of the Nile, a march of nineteen hundred miles, He then divided his command into three ex- pedivions, without any apparent necessity, sent two of them ahead in different direc tions, and sat down Dinself at Korti to wait for news! AndSow, when the Brit- ish minfstry have given him full power to act as he may think best, instead of shoul dering the responsibility of blunder and endeavoring to retrieve his disaster, he pitchforks the blame back on the min's try, snd like the ostrich of the desert tri o hide his failure by sticking his head in the sand. Two Hostile Leg Chicago Herald, In states where the party majorities In leglslaturcs are large nobody pays much attention to the elect'on of United States senator. Such a thing as pop- ular inflaence Is almost unknown. The leglslators get together, and, by trades and bargalns of various kinde, fix up elates which not only Include the sena'or- ship, but most of the cffices to be filled for several years ahead. The man on whom the cheice for senator falls is ue- ually the one whose frievds and bsckers have the most money. It is part of the bargain that his weilth shall be used to Eelp others who ary of service to him when the time shall come to fit them out with their cflicial rewards, There ate three or four questlons of vital iaterast before tha people of Amer foa t)-day which candidates for senator cnght to be made to define thelr post- tions on, but not one in a dozen Is ever asked to do so. It makes no difference to tke legslaters what their at tltude is. 1f they are part'sans of their s'vipe and appear to have enough power to mika it worith whils to tie vp to them, that is cnough. DBeyond that ro one carcs, The senators thus elected ara al- mest invariably min whote sympathiis ave entirely with the corporations, 1o the scoate they wleld a power which is all but absolate on tho destinizs of the nation. In thls way the people who elect thelr repr.s:ntatives 1n congress wi I much care permit all thefr efforts to ke nulitied by a sanate made up of eer vile too's f worop ly. The hcute of siative Bodles. repreecntatives can acccuplish nothing in ths way of reform while the great cor porate ivtercsts of the country contlnue to chose the senate. A more striking example of legisliive crosi-purposes it would be difficult to rroduce, For ten years the houe cf representatives has besn cunnclpated from the lobby. When the Goalds and Hunt'ngtons found that they could pot not minipu ate tkat body they bezan to intrench themselves in the United States senate. The success tha: hes attended thetr effores is shown by the fact that while the ecoate is quick to indorss avy job that may origisate in the h-ousc and to send miny such schemes of its own tothe other chamber, it rarely fails t) efest any measure of refyrm or ro'rancl: ment propoecd by the lait v 1ts cipae ity for talking & populatbill to dearl; i great. Tts plgeon-holes are dark apd ep oloos. 1ts deslgning corperation lawy v, are quick with amendmints ard subit tutcs to desivy & hill uneati f their employers, 1f they pas bill that bas merit they do 8o ina way that leaves it no nearct comple «1 legia. la ion than it was before they saw it, for their capacity to cmasculate such nisas- ures is infinits, It Is & diswal view to take, but we do not believe that the country can be rid of the incabus of monopoly which now vp presaes it until the senate of the Unlted States has been re‘ormed. It iy now iothe hands of men elec'cd 1o preseat cform, Hannthal Hamlin says bo sometimes thinks of writing a bk, *I have read no politieal his'ory of my owu times,” he asys, “in which I could not supply 111y deficiencics and make many cor. cotions, e THE BRAIN, Bill Nye Emits Some Interes Hegarding Our Though tacture, Mann. This artlole, weites Bill Nye t) the San Francisco Argenaut, iy desicoed mcr eapecially for those veriebrates who srs are able t> keepand use the v owa baalne, It is not intended for the pirasal of thoe who simply have a ganglion or nerve ceator whch they can aftord to brain, Man is more highly endowed with prain than any other animal. Still nearly all animal creation has a trace ¢f this organ— decreating, of corss, in laters ty down. ward, from man to the lower mammale, birds, reptiles, ba'rachia, and fiehas till finally all traces of the brain (lisappoar in the amphi>xus and dude, The elephant bas the heavicst braln of any animal, It cften wheighs as high as nine or ten poands. The whale comes next, with a brain that weighs, perhaps. five pounds, S gre mental sirength is the resu't of qualiy more than quan- tity in ths matter of brain tssuc, The brain of an adult man weighs, on an average, forty-elght ouncas, while that of the average adult woman weighs for- ty-four ouncee, and yet womn is far superlor to man mentally. 1 have ob- taned this information from a lady frlend f mine who 1s thoroughly trust worthy, The brain is inclosed ina bovy sphere called thoskull This bony envelope is air tight. The brain dces not have to be wirad if it isin & normal conditlon. It should be kept inside the skull constant lyand io as compact form as poesibla, for whien it 1 otherwise great inconvexience may en3ue. The parts of the encaphalon, we are told, ae the cerebrun, carebellum, medulia oblongate, pos varoli, obligato, pian‘ssimo, Apyone would thiok 1liat & brain with all these things in it would not feel well, but euch is not thecase. The Erain basbeen found, upon mizroscople investign‘lon afier death, to contain not only the fora'gn microhes and things named above, but also a cinerit yus substance, crania! nerves, motor ocali, corpus coltosum, corpors seriata, thalmi, tuberoula quadregimine, stucea o, atbor vit, crura eirabrl, and other feraagn eubstavess which muse hisve wade life & burden, and yoi death did not result for many years, Nothing, however is so dest:ustiva to brain tissue as daylght, Many have died elmost instantly after light and fresh air were freely admittel into the brain. The triin is one of the most use- fal of sll organs, and, therefore, we siiovid use every preciudcn to retain for, like the self-cocking revolver, a ma may stropgle alopg tor years, without having o:casion to use it, and yet when he does want to.c is he wants it very- We mioht get along in eoclety for a long time without being cilled upon for any meatnl demens'raticn: but tome day, withcutany notice whatever, we might be requested by cur host to express an idea, and we would feel very much cut up to admit that we bad left our thinker at home on the piano. Physicians who have ever hud much expericnce with the brein, never hav- ing had a case of it In th ic own families not studled its hablts in other re ple, frequently make an erroncous {sgnoals whera a patient eufiiring from brain trouble. I once knew a young doctor, who has slnce resigned kas lucra- tive practice in order to accept a highly retponsible position as chambermaid 1n a large livery :table, to make a mistake of this kind, Ths patient was a German, who wai unconscious at the time the doctor was called, The latter felt the pulse, examiced the tongus, wrote out three presciiptins on dilferent drag ttores for medicine to encourage zeal on the part of the liver and went away. The coroner was £o expert in casee of thia kind, hat he went at it on the theory that the braln hal Lbeen affected and fraced vp the symptoms ti'l he showed the jury that it wes & cass of qulck couplipg pin on the brain, It seems that the paticat had been exposed at a salcon on A strest, and this was fol'owed in (quick succession by coma, semi-cclon ana full stcp. We should take great care of cur brain if we inteod to use it, Itlsa very ssnsi vivaorgan,end is «a'ily affected by ex- ternal imflaences, Very 1ttle, aftor a'l, i known of the lccaticn of various phre nologic:l organs of the brain, The ro'a- ticn betwiea thought and the mater organs which we call the brain, is a little micty yet. Tt Is not for poor, short-lved and pany men to know everyihing. The brain, Lowever, is a carious organ, It is a gocd thinginis place, but entirely useleat when removed frem the par y to whom it belongs We thoald not over werk the brain, or s rain it in trying to think of hard words no ouc elec knows the meantr g of. Noither should we try to prescrve our braios in slcoho! durin cfiice hours. Alcohol and gray matier are always autagonistle. ey take good cara of our braiss snd nct wear them out trying 10 impart suformation t» tho e who do not re:k it. Another thirg that we should reimember is that the braia weighs anout tacory timesas much as the torgue, and therefore, there is no phyeicl gical law which wul reqaire us (o tell all we know. — Bili Nye Visits Genoa. New Yerk Mereury., Christmas day we sigited land off Genoa, lat, 44 deg. 21 min, 15 scc. north, long 8 deg. min, 24 eco. esst. A strong southerly breczy <n cur hind quarter luffed us up a Lt 1> on the qiisr- t-rdeck apd tauled us taut amidships, On the lce bow a Jight sea was braakiog as s young landlubber from Corsica lianed athwart the taft ail and fed the huogry sca with little frigments of lils breakfast. O to the lefe lay Genoa, lookicg ay it did 400 yems §u> when Columbus was reluctanily hera there. How times have changad in Genca tince Chris uted to live tere! Anyore would herdly remember the p'ace ¢xcept by its general sppesrance and the pictures for- tunatelv preserved in the gecgraphier A railway connects Genoa with Tuvin I fried to get a pass cver this road, | met with only inditferent suceess. road is run almost exclusively by forei ers, and the employes are largely forei Wherever I go in Europe 1 micet thiy g eat drawback and s'umbling b ock to enjoyment. 801 did not make the railway suthorities understand about the pess, and aftee both arms had been talked I said it was no matter, 1 wou d er walk anyhow, Still I shall lcave La'y with an unfriendly feeling toward this road and shall do all 1 can to torn travel over some other thocoughfsve. Genoa was founded two lundred years before Christ, and yet is not a yery big town after all, 1 I could have two thou sand ye s in which to build & own and couldu't get up a bigger, Fettor and clean er town 4 would cease 10 be g townist and us Mes. Mark Hopkins has builta new house 80 ccatly that s acdiim to the v lustion of the hitt'e Mena-hrge tsiowa of Grest Barrine on lowers the t:x of the townspeople by ab ut .1t alf, enter into some other business by which to_obtain a livelihood Genos !s main'y celebrated in history for belng the birthplace of the man who discovered America; aud yet ho was nots tine ldeas strictly speaking, bora in Genca, and h did not ditcover Americs. Such is life Out heroes, vur cods and_our goddesto melt away under the terrible alchen y yoars, and hisfory, that at first crowt the chscure wi i a wreath of laurel, at at Jast tears down the nems she hae worked years to catve and fills the hungty maw of oblivion with the inani mate dust. One after another heroes, discovercrs, poets and artists fade away William Tell, Columbus, Shakespearc and many others have suffored again aud again at the hands of the historical vax pire, and it would eeem tha® none of us are absolutely safe, The youngeet of us may yet live to learn that Lydia E. Pink. ham was not the author of herown vege table compound, Thus we live and la. bor for halt a contury to perfect a balm that will knock the hlind staggers higher than Gilderoy s kite, anc at last a vandal historlan robs us of onr hsrd-won fame. I often wonder that we have as much courage ard lofty an bitlon as we have, History says that the early yeara of Ganoa up to 1270 were ttormy and tem pestuous in the extrenie, the government veing demooratic in form. Then tae democrats got ont of “‘soap,” and I judy from general appeirances that Genoa has never fully recovered the loes. A “scay campaign throogh Tealy at ths present time would s productive of much gosd It would muss up ths Meoditoranean protty bad, however, fir afewx weeks, and change the rich ollve complexion of the people Tho first dcgy was clected in 1339, donot know what the dutles of do 'wera, nor what salary hia reccived, but am led to believe tha' the pay was good Genoa i8 a great plase for the bu lding of ships. Elegant houschold furaiturs is made tere also, such os chairs, tabler, cabloets and other atticles of virtu, *‘Bu viriuous and you will b happy.” i1 tac mct o of the Genoesy, They belleve hsving a moito wheter they use is not, “Len years ago Genon had a populatoa of about 162,000, bat I think there are more hero now. | thought I counted more beggsrs than that and thers must hate been ut least two hundeed people who werc not identifiad with that indue trg. I have always done what I could in America to relieve want, but where want seome t) be the normal condit'oa | allow pature t) take her covrie. The beggars of Italy glory in their shame. They are glad that they thought cf it instead of y'elding toa weak and fool sh temptation to fritter awsy their young lives in man ual labor, Thus they live long sni do well, es pecially if nature has bles:ed them with & crooked leg or a double hump on thelr Dback. To the ltalian beggar a large vol- uptuous tumor on a face that would stop a clock is & bonanza, and America is the most liberal in ita contributione. e — the Washington Monuments Corner-Stone was L Correspondence Cleveland Leader. Ieame scross sn old covy of the Na- tional Intelligencee of July 6, 1848, at the limary today. It contains a full de- acription of the laying of ths corner-stone of the Waehingfon monum-nt, on the 4th of July of that year. Wa:hicgton city ccntsioed at that time lesy than 40,000 people, and what is the bestpast of the ity now was then a swamp The day of bg cf the corcer stone was cool and pleasant. A rain had laid the dust on the eveviog preceding i*, and the sun rose with thousands in thsciy to v ew 1he ceremeny. Tue morn ng open d with silutes from” the navy yard and the artc- nal, and the prozes ion which formed wes made vp of a great number of temperance socisttes, some of which dragged hogs heads of water on wheels, ot fire com panies, of Sundsy schools, and of other organizations from sl peris of the country. The layiog of the etone wss attended by trom 15,000 to 20,000 geople, and the crowd sarg “Old Huodred’ as a pattof its ceremories, The ground for along dietnce around the monument was covered with a temporery floor of boards, snd aroond these eeats like those of the grend stand at a race courze were 1:t out to spectatcrs at so mucn a head. Robert C. Wintkrop, the speaker of thc House of Representatives, read an ad- drese, and a very long and a very able one it was, The paper esys it was clcss- Iy listened to and that a'tention did not flag in any pert of It. Among the spectators present were Mrs, Presifent Madieon and Mrs Alexander Hawilt n An arch was erected over the coracr stone, snd on the top of this was tied a living cagle, f rty years c1d, the rame, it is taid, which eat cn the tdumphal arch erected to Gencral Lafoyctts, dorng hw lest visit to this country. After the cere men es were over the crowd formed i.to procession acd marched to the avenue, where the president, old Zach Taylor, viewd them. Gorbri, it says that Zach Teylor's death was oxcfoned by bis drinking too much ice watar on this day. He says that Pretident Taylor filled himself with fee water at the ley ng of the corner stone, snd when he returned to the white hoose aftar it he ate heartily of cherzics, wathing than down wirh iced milk. An hoarafter he was tsken witn cramps, ckolera morbus rewlted, and four days later he died, In the ¢ rzer stone of the monument ware p'acad e great variety of srticles There wirs a great numbir of the news sapers of the day,s number cf pictures of Waeli ngton, colus of 4 1d acd stlser of all deacr’ptions, tho perteaits of all the preeic cats, daguerrolypes of the Genera) and Mrs. Wathingion, fac-imi'es of Wirhington's accounts. and a descript'on of the magnetic tolexraph, thin in lts infancy. If now utits completion therc cculd be blocked up within its topa cimilar collection, showicy the condition of cur ¢'vilizationand the advapcas we bave made in our Lilslosy, the ratiors of the future might huve something to chew upon wlien the monumert at last croim bles uncor the tooth of all devouvriog tim in or How e e e —— Proparations are being made by the in- habi.tints of St. Aucustine, Fla., for the celabration of 1he 352011 anniversary of its founding, which will taka place on March 27 and 25 — CHAS. SHIVERICK, FURNITURE UPHOLSTERY AND DRAPERIES, Passenger Elevator to o1l floors, 1206, 1 and 1210 1 OMAHA, NERRASKA, A J. SIMPSON G, Ul pJqeisy | THE LEADING CARRIAGE FACTORY 1409 and 1411 Dodee St. { ““winisdi™ } Omaha Ne ou application MAXMEYER &BRO PIANOS ORGANS FACTORY PRICES. The greatest bargains ever seen in Omaha 200 ORGANS!! 100 PIANOS! FOR GASH OR ON INSTALLMENTS Also great reductions in Diamonds, Jew elrv. Clocks and Silverware. MAX MEYER & CO. The only importers of Havana Cisars, and Meerschaum Goods in Omaha. ‘Wheolesale dealers in Guns, Ammunition, Sporting Goods, Notions and Smokers’ Ar- ticles. TRY YOUR LUCK! And Don’t Lose This Chance. For this Year Onlv. The best opportunity ever offered to try your luck in these hard timies. In order to give the public in general the advantage with a small sum of money, to par- ticipate in a real German Money Lottery, guaranteed and sanctioved by the German govern- ment, we offer five whole orignal tickets which we have made into 16 different numbers of the 287, 'Hamburg Lotiery, in club plays and sell enme for the small sum of 85 as long as we have some on hund. The:e tickets are good for the last thrae principal drawings which com- m-nce March 11,1855, and termipate on May 13, 1865, This Lottery has been for over 143 years in existence; has one hundred thousaud tickets and fifty thousand 500 winning numbers which is over one half the actual amount of ticketa, ch ho'der of tickets receives, after the drawings, the Original Liste, also the » monot of the | if won. We hope, 13 we give 16 different numbere, that every ticket holder, on receint of the winning lists, will be satisfied with the result. The capital prices are mark 500 000, 300,000, 200,(¢0, 100.0C0, 90,- 000 70,000, 50,000, 30,000, etc . the smallest being 145 mark, * It 18 of interest to each and everyone to invest as soon as possible before the tickets are all sold, Remt either by Post- office order or draft and tickets willgo forward at once, Original tickets of the Hamburg & Brunswick and Saxon, constantly on hand. C. ¥. SOCHMIDT & CO., 62 Congrese Street, Detroit, Mich, GERMAN D. WYATT. Lumber Merchant Cumings and 20th Sts., Omaha, Neb. EFIREID. W. GIRAY. (SUCCESSUR TO FOSTER & GRAY). 0 VI I IR, LIME AND CEKENT, Richards Machirne Omaha, &Clarke . rylb&vlfasl‘z‘ngs AUTOMATIC. ENGINE SLIDE VALVE ENGINES, PORTABLE ENGINES, i WATER WHEELS, ' ; STEAM BOILERS, STEAM. PUMPS, ENGINE GOVERNORS, WATER-WHEEL: GOV'NORS CORN SHELLERS. CORN; CLEANERS; BOLTING-GLOTH, | CENTRIFUGAL REELS, " BRASS ‘CASTINGS, SCALPING REELS, . i .. SASH WEIGHTS, HEATERS AND FILTERS, ' [EATHER & RUB'R BELT'G WELL AUGERS, ROLLER MILLS, BRICK YARD CASTINGS, ' SHAFTING "PULLEYS-HANGERS &BOXES RIOGE 1RON; WROVGHT % CAST IRON, REPAIRS 0F ALL KINDS, NEBRASKA LAND AGENCY 0. F. DAVIS & GO0., {(Fuccrssors To Davis & Syyies,) GENERAL DEALELS 1 REAL ESTATE 1505 FARNAM STREET Have for sa'e 200,000 aores carefully solected lands Vastera Nebrasvs, at low price aud on asy terms Tmproved farws (or sa'e ia Douglus, Dody ¢, Colfax, Platte, Burt, Cuming, Sarpy, Washiigton, Merrick Saund ution, Taxcs paid o al the stats, Money loar ed on ed ¢ Notary Public alway ted + » UMAHA, n . Comespen’ens o RUEMPING & BOLTE, ORNAMENTAL GALVANIZED IRON CORKICES Finlals, Wis dow Cape, Ixon Orestings, Mokalllo 8i Ighie, Be. «x/ b16Boutb 151k Biroed Omaba asks, Tio, lrow aod Xia | Orange Blossom Flour WHOLESALE BY L A STEWART & CO, 1013 Jones Btieet | asrosswwowcss { OMAHA NEB

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