Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 28, 1885, Page 7

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THE DAILY BEE---S ATURDAY FEBRUARY 28, 1885 THE CHEAPEST PLACE IN OMAHA TO BUY FU RH,NN I Is [Flolefet AT DEWEY &STONES One of the Best and Largest 8tocks in the United States to Select From. NO STAIRS TO CLIMB. ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR NAX MEYER & BRO. PIANOS. —— AND—— ORG ANS Factory Prices, ~——AND— EASY TERMS. 8Send for our catalogue and price list before pur chasing elsewhere, MAX MEYER & BRO. LEADING JEWELERS And Sole Tmportera of Fine Diamonds, Watches, Silver- ware, Rich Jewelry. ‘Wholesale and Retail. Cor. 11th and Farnam Sts HAX NEYER & GO SOLE IMPORTERS WEST . HAVANA CICARS [——AND--= Meerschaum Goods, IN oMAHA, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Guns, Ammunition, Sporting Goods Notions and Smokers’ Articles, 3tationery, Catlery, Druggists’ Sundries And Fancy Goods. Full and complete line and BOTTOM PRICES Max Mever & Co. 7020 101024 Farnam Sts., Omaha Orange Blossom Flour WHOLESALE BY L A STEWART & CO, 1013 Jones Btreet } AsK ¥OR REg OROSS. { OMAHA NEB e CHICAGO ane ORTH- WESTERN RAILWAY. THE BEST ROUTE AND SHORT LINE Omaha Gouncil Bluffs and Chicaoo, The only line 10 take for Des Moines, urshall- town, Cedar Rapids, Clinton, Dixie, Chicago, Mil- waukoo and wi polate east. “To tho people 6t No braska, Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, Idaho, Nevada, Orogon, Waahington and Calitornia'it oferd superior t ssiblo by any other line. the nuwerous points of superior- y 1 by the patrons of this road hotwecn Omaha and Chieago, are its two traing & COACHES which aro thofincat that hu ; It which are mo LOR DRAWING and its widoly ce tho equal of which cannot be found els; At Council Bluffs tho tralns of the Union Pacific Ry. connect in Union Depot with those of the Chica co & Northwestarn Ry In Chicago the traing of thie e mako close connection with those of all eastern apolts, Clincinnatl, Niagara Fal z Montrenl Boaton, Now York, Philadelphia, ington and all polnts in tho East, ask the ticket agent for tickots via the NORTH.WESTERS, ' 1 vou wisn 1 Al ticket oll tickots via this liue, R 3.HAIR, Gen. Pass. Agent. CHICAGO. RTIFICATE OF PUBLICATION. AUUITOR OF PUBLIC ACCOCNTS, S1ATE OF NKIRARKA, Lincolu, Fehrumy 18t, 1856, Itis hercby certified that the State | Company of .Des Mones h Tows, bas complied with Taws 0f this State, and is authorlze] to tra 1is news o Fire Insarance in thin stats for the cur. Tont s oar s my hand and the eeal f tho Aud counts the day and yoar ahove written. Siguod: IL A. BABLO K, Auditor P, A, or of WEAK UNDEVEL(]PEI] PAH]& OV T DM AN BODY. U“'M‘ PH| REYS oMEOPA‘I‘mOWB VETERINATES For the Cure of all diseascs of Horses, Cattle, Sheep DOGS, HOGS, POULTRY, Used successfully for 20 years by Fare mers, Stockbreeders, Horse R.R., &c. Endorsed & used by the U.S.Governm’t. 2@ Pamphlets & Charts sent free, s HUMPHREYS' MEDICINE C0., 109 Fulton 8t., New York. phrey Homeopatine » Specmn No.2k 30 years. The only succesful remody for Narvuus Deblllty Vital Weakness, ork or other causes. | Plattsmouth, - - - ity, all wenknoss ofi eberat oL Ly mull, J, LW arner,: COUNCIL BLUFFS ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEW 8, Thanks to Fricads. 1 desire to express my thanks to my many friends in the city for the subsian- tlal expression of esteem and confidence they have in a (ulet way mado to me and my family. I trust all who have thus shown their interest in our welfare, without even making known to us their names, will realize the truth of the great master's saying, ‘It 1s more blessed to glve than to recelve, T. S. BoveLr, Council Bluffs, Ia,, Feb, 27th, e ——— As constitutea av present tue uepartment of Horticulture of the Ohi versity con- sists of five distinct di These are as follows: 1, a fruit garden; 2, a vegetable garden; 3, nursery and forest tree plantations; {, an_arboretum; b, experiment grounds; 6, greenbouss and flower garden. The import. ance of the various means of illustration can hardly be overrated, Horticulture is taught a8 an art bassd on science. Obs tion and practice are required to suppliment and em- phasiza the instruction of the class room. #4"CAPITAL PRIZE, 75,0008 TICKETS ONLY SHARES IN PROPORTION ) Company Dravings 7 with all par. this cer attached and. in_ person. manage and control. the themselvés, and that the same are condu i 1 faith towa niles of our signatures 0" 0 26 years by th haritablo purpos Tncorporated in 1 for_educational and capital of £1,000,0(0—t> which a sesrve fund of over §050 000 hias slnce been added, By ar overwhelming popular vote its franchise wasmado a part of the preient state constitution adopted Decembor 24 A. D, The only lottery ever voted the peopls of suy state 1t never sealos or posty onea, Ity grand eingle numter o A SPLENDID OPFORIUNITY 10 WIN A FOKTUNE, THIRD GRAND DRAWING, CLANS C. IN TIK ACADKMY OF MUBIC, New Oniraxs, TUMSDAY, MAKCH 10, 1885, 178th MONTULX DRAWING, CAPITAL PRIZE, 75,000. 100,000 Tickets at 88 each, Fractions, in Fifths, in operation, LiaY OF rRizks: 70. on and endorsed by drawings take place 10 brises of 20 Priecs of 100 Prizes of 500 Pr zos of 600 Prizes of 1000 Pefss of AVPROXINATION PRIZES. § Approviustion Prizes of 5150 “ l.\.v Ul . Apblication far rtes to cluts should be made anly 1o theoitice of ths Company In New Orleans, For turther infoy address. POSTAL New York Fich by Fxpress ()l m ation writ carly giving full TES, Expross Money Orde iu ordinary letter, Cor of t5 and ujwards &% ous pense) addresscl, M. A. DAUPHIN, Ar M. A. DAUPHIN, New Orleans, La. 007 Soventh 8t., Washington D. ¢! Make P O. Monev Orders payable and address Registered Letters ¢ NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK New Orleas, La. H. 8. ATWOOD, N eb. raaka BAXADEA OF YHOROUGUISXD W HEREFORD D JERSEYGATILE AND DUROO OB JMRSNY RED SWINE The Poetry of Motion, A certain young man named Yates Tried on the four wheel roller skates, A turch and a whirl— He got mixed with his grl, And now neither has limbs that are mates [Newman Independent The roller skate is very nice, With all its trips and whirls, Bat dootors say the roller skate Wil kill off all our girls [Cincinnati Merchant Traveller, ollare dollars A girl who mada gents’ lined ¢ One waek earnad tho sum of five Tonght akeatea with the cash And straight made a mash, raceful was she on the rollers, ~[Boston Courder, A-go-to-the-rink young man, A don't-take-a-drink young man y-shakery, ake the bakery™ Sit-down-to-think young man, [Norristown Herald, named Mollie M Mars and Ur ng to ber feet, d, quite neat, ‘Sic semper tyrannis,” —[Erratic Earique, This maid The motto. They were skating togethor O'er the smooth floor And hosaid, “My dear madam, Your grace T adore, And T would that through life Wa can thus onward go; Will you take me, my doar one, For wheel or for woe? —(Baston Budgot, ¢ the rash young man n the skates Astonish the States,’ Then he atrikes wildly ont— Faster and faster; And with a bump and shout Yells for court-plaster. —[Norristown Horald. — KILLED BY A LONG SHOT. [coNTiNUED.] ‘Mr, Powers,"” said the man ofsclence, dropplng his glass, ‘the shot was fired from the room in the fourth story in the east end of that bullding, It suraly must have been an accident, for the walls of that intervening house which they are bullding out there obstract the view he- tween that window and the one below us, 80 that it was fmpossible, even if any one deslred to kill Mr. Vandyke, for him to take alm, and that in the night, too, ‘while at the same time, in order to reach this distance, the gun must have pointed up at an angle that would carry the shot itself far above the top of thatnew houee. It was surely a random shot firad through that squara cut n the—but etop—why that cut through the window? They say o weok ago those walls had not gono up high enough to close the view. Could it be—ha! incredible yet impossible.” The learned gentleman was evidently talking to himself, and not to the ignor- ant men who stcod beside him on the voof. He silently reflected for a minute before addressing them agaln, “‘Mr. Powers,” said he at last, we had batter go at once to that room, I am in- clined to think we may got {ho truth there.” In thirty minutes they wero all three at the maln entrance of the building. They found sitting in the door a man with & woodea leg who astad as door- keever. To their inquiries he promptly responded that the fouth-story yoom, In the east end, was rented by Adolphe Weraer, a Swiss, This announcement brought simultare- ous exclamations from all, He was the servant who had left Vandyke a month before, and in whose place Regan now waa. Asking If Werner was at home, they learned that he had gone awsy esrly ia the morning carrying a valige in his hand. His rent was pald for a mouth in advance and he bad left his key with the janiter, saying that he might come backin a day o two, cr that he might not come at all. In the latter case he sald the agent should at then end of the month, unlock and take posecssion of his room. Having got the key they mounted to the fourth story aud travereed a long dark pasiage to the east end. They stood be- fore the door of that mysterious chamber, whose impenetrable dirknees held the secrat of Henry Vandyke’s murder, They opened and enterad, A dim light from the ccrridor followed them into the apar:- ment, enabling them to seo that thers wera three heavily curtained windows, two looking east and one south, toward Vandyke's residence. Officer Powers tore the curia'n from one of the east windows and let in a full flood of day- light. Thero wera two chadrs, and fn one corner & #mall cot with scant cover. By one window was a long, narzow tablo or bonch, upon which wers lylng a number” of workmans tools—files, ham- mers, pliors, bits of {ron and fragments of wire, with o small vice ecrowed on to one end, Near the middle of the room wasa sirong wooden frame firmly fastesed to the tloor with tcrews; it was about the helght of a table. Acrcsiit lay a large bals of heavy old carpeting, not round, but flattened on the sides. It was about six feet long and two feet in depth and width. It was not lolng level, but had its south end tilted considerably above its norih end, Conspicuously on thls bale Iy a large white pader envelope, It was addressed to the ‘‘Chlef of Police.” The professor saw it first, and,’ grasp- {ng exclatmed: ‘*Ah! hera Is somo'hing that will re- vesl the secrat.” Seating himself, he tora out the con- tents, a number of closely written sheets of paper, and Powers and Jones stood by his side whils ha raad the following con- fesslon of Adolphe Werner.: Monsieur, I write this to save any In. nocent persons who may be charged with the| death of Henry Vandyke, 1 killed bim. Ten mioutes sgo the fatal mees. enger sped from me to him—sped in ur! he did to me a horrible Mon Dieu! he killed my Marie, Not the drag which crime. my wife, My angel! he gave her kiliid, No, but the shame —nhorrible! My Marie, my lost, lost Marie! Monsleur, do you see this paper? I have not wept tlll now. My nerves have been steel and my hesrt adamant. But he 1s dead, and now I weep for Marle. Bebold the stcry, I was the most skilled workman employed {u a manufac- tory of fire-arms in my native country, I became profoundly acquainted with the vitle in its utmost” capabilities. 1 even made some importact improvements in long-range guns, Misfrtane befell us there. Not my fault, not hers, though her beauty, yes, her beauty was the in- nooent cause. We sacrificed ourproparty, parted with the little cctiage where we lived in the loviiest valley of the Alps, and came hither. We straggled for two years ln graat poverty; until he, Henry Vaundyke, found us auong the pacrest of his teoants. He employed me as a ser- vent. I was glad to serve for wages, aud was onoe more happy. 1did not lodge in his honse, but in & hired apartment with Marle. 1 wentto my servics carly | and came late. One day he enticed Marie from her house by an unheard of deception It was an unupmknl»h- or In two weeks my angel- She 1s with the good saints above My resolution wa1 at once taken, and 1 began to desize the plan. But, mon sisur, one thing troubled me, Every night Marie come and stood by my bed, She was very sad, and 1 thoaght, T feared she dlssapproved, though she did not spesk It troubled me, I say, and in the night 1 falterad; but when the day cams my pur- pese came again. 1 had often obsarved, fiom the window of hiy sleeping-room, this tsll building, nearly a mile distant. 1 ronted this apartment.{I next went to an importer of fire-arms and eought for & ritls made In my own country. 1 found one of the largest a'ze that had the name of my old employcr on it, 1 have no doubt—I am certain my own hands have wrought on ft; it has my mark., I bought a suitable telescope, and having fitted 1t with a croes of sp'der lines, 1 attached it to the rifls, a8 tho surest means of taking far and accorate alm, 1 made twenty-five osr- triges with the greatest care. I made the losden bullets very long snd com- pressed them in a nicely finfshed mold, 80 a8 to glve them an increased and uai* form density. Tho powder in every ono was gauged to a perfect equality of weight It was necessary next to find ths exact distance from the room to hisroom. Be- fore undertaking it I procured a quiet discharge from his servica. There was no quarcel, no anger on either part. Then at night, with a red light--red, so that I might distinguish it from others placed in the window of thls room to guide me—I carefully walked at a natural pace from the wall uader this window, I repeated this for several mights. My paces from one wall to the other, vmh little varlatlon in the resulls, averaged|T 1614. By walklng 100 measured yards, and counting the steps, which numbered 125 and one-third over, I learned that the exact distance from his window to mine is 1208 yards, And three yards from my window to the centre of my room, and two yards from his window to_the centra of his bed and the whole is 1213 yards, A very long shot, but all the batter for that,sinoe 1 knew the gun could ba relied on to make it. Next, taking rifla and cartridges, I went into the country. Finding a suitable locality, I bearded with a farmer. 1 consiructed a target, and with a tape-line measured off 1213 yards? One might suppess that I could have dis. peused with the tape-line and have de- ponded for getting the distane on step ping it as before. . But this would not havesbeen satisfactory, for in walking a given distance at his natural pase ons does not make the eame number of stcpy In the night as in the day. I was care- ful even to take the 100 yards above men- tioned at night, and exactly along the line between the two rooms. After experimenting for several days, and firing twenty rounds, I got my tele- £cope sights so perfectly adjusted that the Last five shots struck within an inch of the canter of the bulls-eye of the target. This bull’s-eye was invislble at the dle- tance except through the teleecope. It was suflicient and 1 came back to the city having been absent a little moro than a week. 1 wss sorprised on my return to see a new building in pcocess of erection ex- actly on the line between my room and Henry Vandyke’s room. Its losation ls much nearer his than mine, and I eaw at once that if J1t way to have as many as three storles it would, when completed, obstruct the view from my window to his, and prevent me from tak- ing almat his bed. Oa in quiry 1 learaed that it was to be three utorm and that it was going up repldly. It be- came necessiry to act with dispatch or my plans would be frustrated. I, therefore, at once set about constructing a etrong frame of wood, firmly fastened to the floor, as you soe it. Two days wera consumed 1in this work, while in the meantime the walls of the new structure were rapidly rising, 1 watched their progress with eager anx- icty, On ths third day the frame was ready carly la the morning and my rifla was placed upon it, polnting toward the window of Henry Vandyke. It restel between clamps provided for ft, and arrangadito bo tightened eesurely. now remained only to giva it the right aim and secure it, Looking through {ho telescope, I saw that the curtain of the bedroom window had not yet boen drawn He had not wiked up. At about 10 o'clock the curtain was raised and the sach thrown up. The master had gone, and Agnes, the cham- bormaid, had come to make up the bad and arrenge the room. I conld see her distinctly, with her bare arms and her frow. sy hair. She made up the bed, and, to my regret, placed upon it a white coverlet, I had hoped she would place on it the red_coverle: which, during my the public schools ot Iirmingham, Al about to marry caused the principal t | fifty applicstions from other Indies in the ity for the vecancy One of the bills int we of 20 ye roduced in the Cli ng man < trade by sarving is f the «tate srnia v moral 20 out trowsuiry, The remarkable d MS, recently mac youug man, covery of the Maverick by Henry F. Waters, the England Historic iting the attention , not only in this country of historicl student bt also in Fogland, The R Academy of Turin announces the foundation of & prize of 12,00 francs for the most useful and striking work or discov stomy, physiology,the exact geaphy, of statistics, The or the work or discovery i de. 1836, Membars of the Royal Academy or the Academy of Scicnces in Turin aro ineligible for the prize, the judges CHAS. SHIVERICK, FURNITURE UPROLSTERY AND DRAPERIES, all floors, 1208 and 1210 Farnam Street, OMAHA, NEBRASKA, Passenger Elevator to | | | } | | of which will be the Academy of Sciences of Turin, An historical structure in Paris of special value as _a specimen of Seventeenth contury work {3 offered for sale, and is in some dangor of being demolished. This is the Hotel Sale, at the corner of the Rue de Thorigney and un til recently occupied by the Central school of arts and manufactures, The oty of the friends of Parisian monuments rocently ine spected the builiing and recommended that it shoald be utilizad as & museum, & library or a school of art., Mr. Moorhouse is a teachor in a school San Antoine. Among his pupils is Tom Brackett, who is a very bad boy. Whera is your ruler, Tommy?" Mggrhous asked Mr, heat o with it yesterday and broko in threo pieces,” Tell your father to get you a new ruler and to buy a thicker and heavier one next time, Texas Siftings.” "he value of chewing gum a schoolmarm had s 1t |3 to school provided with gam, without, Then she threw twenty- lems at them with astonishing results, o0 chewers of gum correctly answered twenty one, whila the gumless six mastcred only eight, Thus is another vital educational queetion solved.—[Boston ) Another famous legend has struck a snag, t is now aeserted that when Rome burned fiddles had not been invented, and cone- {uently Nero could not have indulged in the musical pastime attributed to him, Ala with the disappearance of the Capt. Smith-Pocshontas, th Tell-appla_and other allegories, what will the school children of the future do for vretty fables? "'he presidency of Madras like that of Ben- gal and Bombay, has its university, 1t is simply an_examining board, conferring de- groes, and taking general supervision of educati work, = There are 1,202 graduates, & few of whom are Kuropcans and Eurasians, but most are natives, There are 27 second-grade and 13 first-grade colleges affiliated with the university. Of the second- grade colleges, 9 are under government c. trol and 7 are Hindoo schools. In these 16 no religious nstruction of any kind 18 given. Of thio remaining 11, 8 are. Oatholic, 1ia Luth eran, 3 are Wesleyan, 1 belongs to the Amer- ican board mission, 2 tothe society tor the propagation of the gospel, and 2 to the church of England Miss LETTER LIST. | List of letters romalning {n the Omaha postoffice February 26th, 1885 GENTLEEAN'S LIST, Ackerman H Butler V.V Beeler G W Bachman C Briden J Jarshballe H Boldiog W R Christianson L Crane W M Cook O W Crandall G H Dougherty .J Dray J 1 Dav Davies it 1 Arndson G Allen P Bedel R L Brown C Bartlow L Bontley C (i Bloom C Bowen W I Collins T Crandall A J Cronan J' Culley / Dayer Danner Doed A lllfl'vmluefsr TH Dwyer D Tineson A Golden W Gray H Graves W B Giese T Green C W . Harvey W B Heniberger W A Hartwell J J Horgreaves G 11 Jonea Jackson J Jahan K er M Kug E Kennedy J B—2 Logan G Tahreeqne H Lysam C Lascher A M MecMullin H C Moban D 1 Munel H McCune T Teltenstoen A Gehul Y Gerhotd HI Graf J Gylbeds S A Hooley J Humilton H Hall 7 B Haymaker E Jones ¥ Jones G T Kelly J D Keith C Latham F Lytle E Lawrence J A Mostain J Motony H 8 Mins J McCullam R Morrison J Martin W A Murtough D Nicholson J Nilsor C Negor 1T Nelson O H]h‘rwh co Parker .J Prothers S Portes W, Ponclike I Radgers R A Rodgors T W Sunford W F Steyker J H—2 Smith P Schenk 1) Speight W Turk ¥ Thomyson J (i Voight A Van Natta N Wolfe ¥ ¢ Pleasants 1. Proth R Peterson H Robertson W Rolbors A 1 Sears W Sanerwein H Schaffenburg J Smith G H Thomas D J Thorn I Vingon M Willens H eervice, bad often been used. Isaw ab a glancs that the white coverlet was a ser- fous difficulty, because the plastering of the wail, seen boycnd the bed, was also white, and at o great a distance might mako the outlines of the bed very indis- tinct. Had the red coverlet been on, the contrast in color would have rendercd it easy for me to fix the alm of the rifle on oy parbof the bed, 1 found my foars verified. With long effort and stralning of my eyes It was lmpossible to fix the alm with that certsinty which was abso- lutely necessary for a fatal ehot. With any uncertalnty ef the re- sult I would not risk it, throvgh the window, to hit his bed, aye, even to strike him without kill- ing, would bs to place him forever on his guard and lcad bim to suspect me, since ho, though he only of all living persons koew what cause I had to bate, what provocation to kill him, No; better give up this plan and try some other than try and fail. 1 was In despalr. That new bulldiog, those Intervening walls, were ranning up so fast that they would in twenfy-four_hours hide his .f.ao- from my sight, But for that there was no dif- ficalty, because I knew that In two or|M three days at most the red coverlet would replaca the white, and then all would bs 1t almoat distracted me to think that a plan so splendid in {ts conceptlon, o sura In its results, should 1) deteated by this infernal wall, | tore my hair, 1 cursed the workmen, It seemed that they were madly energetic and fast In their work. [0 k& conTINUED ] e — EDUOCATIONAL, One bundred and two women are serving on school committees in Massachusetts this year. ‘The small boy thinks that the ruling vice is the teacher's command to him to hold out bis hand, ~[Boston Post, The various colleges in C'anada are about to unite for the purpose of establishing & grand central university —a great seat of learning. At Yalo 78 per cent of the students came from other states thau Connecticut: st Har vard 45 per cent came from other than Mas- uch\metls The rumor that ons of the lady teschers in For, to ehoot | 1 Warren G Waolfe ¥ C Whitcher Mr Wich C W WatsonC Yuercher A Wagner C Wirt & DuQuatte Wallace M U Whits H I, Wedeman P Yulkoski J LADIES’ LIST, A Amstrong E Browa Miss C Byrnes Miss L Trown Miss 1, Bell 8 Buchanan M Chambers Miss E Crawford Miss O I} Dirish Mrs A Dowd Miss M Elliott Mrs Ervan ¥ Edwards Mies J Arustrong Miss Bidwell Mies N Dassitt Miss C—2 iragg Mrs D Bostwick Mrs M Bartcn Mrs 1, Bunch Miss L Chamberlain Miss 1, Clemmous Mrs C Dhul Miss M Dervin Mrs 1. Ilis Miss M sson Miss A Evers M Fay M @reen Mrs R Gillispie Mrs T Hartman Mrs P Jakchsen Miss K A Jonsson Mies A Jamerson Mrs E Kunz Mrs L Lane Mrs J I Livermore Mrs E A Marr Mrs 5 Kennedy Biss 13 Lerawlin Miss G Lovey M Mckivoy Mra J Mitchell Mies Merriam Mrs I, I3 Morgan Miss W Morrisy Mra M Nelson K 0'Dey 1) O'Nell Mim A Valmgren Miss M Pad Miss I Pitts Mrs N Herata Miss H Renne E Smith Mrs I Seihort Mrs A 1 Sandgren J Torngvist Mies K Nilsson Miss H Nilsson Miss N O'Herron Miss Patter Miss 1. Patterson Miss J Peterson Miss H Perry Miss I Rogers Mrs R E Rurchman Mrs E Rrafc Smith Mrs E M Seran Mis W I, Snedaker Mrs L Trocoup Miss T Torsson Miss 5 Valland Miss M Welch Mrs I} Willisms Mrs D W Weiman 14 Winacs Misy L M Wade Miss 1 4th CLASS MATTER, Heppenheimer & Maurer Lummiss Miss M H J Marks Quan Miss M F Bwith G B Fates Miss Btewart 1. Welch Mrs ¥ O, K, Covraxnt, Poshuaster Al SIMPSUN 9‘ Ul plaeisy | THE LEADING GAR RIACE FACTORY 1409 and 14112 Dndze St. M imaren 1 Omaha Ne= on application . TRY YOUR. LUCK And Don't Lose This Chance., F'or this Y ear Onlv. The best opportunity ever offered to try your luck in these hard timies, In order to give the public in genoral the advantage with a small sum of money, ticlpate in a real German Money Lottery, guaranteed and sanctioned by the German ment, we offer five whole orignal tickets which we have made into 16 different numbers of the 237, Hamburg Lotiery, in club plays and sell same for the small sum of $5 as long as we have some ou hand, Th tickots are good for the last three principal drawings which com- mance March 11,18 d terminate on May 13, 18! This Lottery has been for 4 yearn in existence; has one hundred thousand fickets and fifty thourand 600 whmmg numbers which is over one half the actual amount of tickets, Each holder of {ic after the t‘ nal Liste, also the » mount of the prize if won. n that every ticket holder, eceint of the winning lists, \ull be "The capital prices are mark 500,000, 300,000, 200,0(0, 100,000, 90,- 30,000, ete . the smalleat being 1456 mark, It 18 of nterest to cach and every s0on as porsible before the tickets are all sold, Remit either by Post- office order or deaft and tickets willeo forward at once. Original tickets of the "mnhurR & Brunswick and Saxon, constantly on hand, C. F, SOHMIDT & CO., 62 Congrese Street, Detroit, Mich, TRRX 2920200 0NN NN "DUF S s 2 T R I e— Malt Whlskey. Absolutely Pure and Unaiulter:ted. Entirely Free frnm FUSIL 0IL. or nrumm and ]1«- mn n»ll v re Cure for Malaria, Pulmonary om, Bronchial rl haen, and all 16w forms of Discase. RECOGNIZ ANTIDOTE FOR CHOLERA .comswmmm——m ‘We are the only concern in the United States who are bottling and selling to the Medieal Profession and Drug Trade un absolutely Pure Malt Whikey, one that is free from L OYL and that is not only, found on tho sidebounls of tho best families in ti country, but also in the ph i's dispensing roor R the great German Chemist, of R AR TR "y which g " MR Witateayy obfateied montly by sxtrace o weate come ]!rmfl'utflllnu and distillation, is entirely free from f g simiiarly oinoztons alcdliols whiclare ob arien Jonintt | o OMMEND IT TO THE MEDICAL PROFESSION.’ L1 know 1t 10 bo wholeson OOOODD e — 4T navemade ar analysi lll 'JIT wlt, . ..o‘o‘oooooo.... OO Purity itsclf— st liquor thyt ofstoro ungualiiolly | PR T ETEXRRS of Rochestor, N. Y, in college JAMES J. 0'D) [asithior of séveral works on inanity, w T brcseribe an aleoholie SHMMANGT Order your fa 370 CONSUMPTIVES, .‘.‘.‘.‘.’.’.‘.’.’a’o’. aflicted with ¥1 LL on receipt of o Rocky Mo EXXXTTTTXTI tains), Consumption o nken and blood among them the able to perform ¢ gz nourished with had been before ) s supplied with mor bon than the disease can exhaust, thereby giving nature the upper hand in the conflic wmeesS0LD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS AND FINE GROCERY HOUSES, mmmen Sample Quart Bottles sent fo any addr e United States the Rocky Mo ins), securely packed in plain case, Lzpress cliarges prepaid on receipt of SRR, .,. S A i : THE BUFFY MALT WHISKEY £0., BMTIMURE MD..U XX GERMAN D. WYAT Lumber Merchant Omaha, Neb. FRED. W. GIRAY. (SUCCESSUR TO FOSTER & GRAY). LUOUMBER, LIME AND CEKENT, Cuwings and 20th f1s., RUEMPING & BOLTE, =~MANUFACTURERS OF— ORNAMENTAL GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES iaiale, Wisdow Oaps, Iron Cresiings, Meballic 8 1/ b0 Bousb 194b Bireet Omaba .o, ks, Tio, lron'sad Sla Richards &Glarke Machinery & i3 astings Omaha, Neb. Specialties AUTOMATIC ENGINES SLIDE VALVE ENGINES, PORTABLE ENGINES, WATER WHEELS, STEAM BOILERS, STEAM PUMPS, ENGINE GOVERNORS, WATER-WHEEL GOV'NORS HEATERS AND FILTERS, ROLLER MILLS, SHAFTING ‘PULLE FLEVATOR CUPS, ELEVATOR BOLTS, ARCHITEC TURAL WORK . BRIDGE IRON, WROUGHT & CAST IRON, REPAIRS OF ALL KINDS, CENTRIFUGAL REELS, BRASS CASTINGS, SCALPING REELS, SASH WEIGHTS, LEATHER & RUB'R BELT'G WELL AUGERS, BRICK YARD CASTINGS , YS-HANGERS &BoXxES BRUSH MACHINES, SMUT MACHINES, SEPARATORS, CORN SHELLERS, CORN CLEANERS, BOLTING CLOTH,

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