Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 2, 1885, Page 7

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THE DAILY BFF---MONDAY MARCH 2, 1885 p— ~ TAE CHEAPEST PLACE IN OMAHA TO BUY Foll=fe - Tel=Het Is AT DEWEY &STONES' Onoe of the Best and Largest 8tocks in the United States to Select From. NO STAIRS TO CLIMB. ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR " THE A. L. STRANG COMPANY, Double and Single Acting Power and Hand PUNPS, STEAM PUMPY Evgine Trimmings, Mining Machinory, Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fittings i e ot HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURGH AND BOHOOL BELLS, Corner 10th and Farnam St.. Omaha Neb. ERTEL S HAY PRESSES Are the Lhmp(*it Most Dumh\l\({*, blm.lllest in Size and Iaghtest in eight. . of hay Withno Hay Presses of any kind can the amount of work produced, such little expenge, (ten tons andfover to load ra'lioad box car,) a8 can be done with the Ertel Improved Machinee. anted or no ale. For {lluistrated new circular address, ERTEL & Cf Wiinois, lon Omaha Beo a llem lhmyhslma in 1863, YOUNG MEN Who have trifled away «‘1‘1?“ routhful yigor and power: Who re xnf[l‘ungnum te?flb]g drains and |ogses, wli o are weak, |MP°TEN T, and unfit for m.lr- ofallag ges, \\lm find ower and vital |ty POYVe and SEX- AL, INGTH weakened, w h.-n.. 'ESS or early habits > a posmve & last- ng CULRE, NO matter of how lonz standing. your wl g weeksor months use of the ted Myrtleain Treatment, At honto WitkONt expoaurt, in I 5 i time, and for LESS mone mvmnd in the world. Weak back, l[o'ul che, EMISSIO! itude, loss of spirits and ambition, gloomy thc a ¢ memory, Impotence, impediment other gymptoms pilepsy : Line t Consumption and Insanity, arc uuxll])lly removed by AIN TREAT "MEN’ : MARRIED MEN, AND méu ABOUT TO MARRY, REMEMBER, PERFECT SEXUAL STRENGTII MEANS; healthy and vigorous offspring ife and the love and respect of faithful wife. No man should ev I)xfr)' ¢ heen guilty of early indescretions, until he hus been restored to PER- 30T MANHOOD. ~ We guarantec a permanent cure in every case undertaken. Send Q stamps for tr .ui with proofs and testimonials. Address The Climax Medical Co, St. Louis, Mo. MAXMEYER&BRO Are now offerine PIANOS ORGANS FACTORY PRICES. The greatest bargains ever seen in Omaha 200 ORGANS!! 100 PIANOS! FOR CASH OR ON INSTALLMENTS Also great reductions in Diamonds, Jew- elrv. Clocks and Silverware. MAX MEYER & CO. The only importers of Havana Cicars, and Meerschaum Goods in Omaha. ‘Wholesale dealers in Guns, Ammunition, Sporting Goods, Notions and Smokers’ Ar- ticles. JOHN NAGEL, BUCCRSSOR TO ABIG CAT o= FREE HasriNgs ¢ NAGEL, Also 13 valuable and reliable re- hOIGSale ¢ cipes (ne ! lll)efort' p\;ll;h-shi‘du)onuyd » of c an PrOduce ;’::;Lm'th‘x‘lt”lu 82‘7):‘)({; aod a copy f the “Cultivator” sent FKEE to any one that sends 8 stamps to pay postage etc., 8 comic picture cards will also be enclosed in the pack- age. These recipes are \'uluabla tn the household and any energetic son knowing the secrets thz-y dise usy need never want for money. Please write name and address plainly. Put oyl 3 stampg in a letter and address it National |to the W ESTERN PUB, C0., bos 509, Omaha. Neb. And Conmmnission. No. 386 Holladey St, DENVER, COL, So'icit Consignments and guar- antee quick sales and prowpt re- turns. Give usa trial. References—Bradstreet's or Duns Agencies; and German Bank, Denver, COUNCIL. BLUFPS ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEWS, THE NEW PASIOR, Rev. G. W, fta' First Sermon In the Congeegational Church, Yesterday morning Rev. G, W. Crofte, the nowly called pastor of the Congrega- tional church entered upon his minlstra- tions, his scrmon being as follows, from the text: 4 omus ( . the same yesterday, to-day and forever,”—Heb, 13-8, The world In which welive is one of mutation and change. There s a cor- stant varistion in natare. The various seasons differ one from the other, and no two days are just alike. At one time the esrth is robed In its pure white ermine af snow, and adorned as no queen has ever been adorned fn its loy jewols; at another tlme 1t i3 clothed with the most beautifal emerald and garlanded with flowers. And so it {s with government; there Is constant change. And on it is even with ourselves, Now a little prattling child around the fireslde home; then, a silver- headed slre, leaning upon the stafl. So it is with everything. The history of all things is remarkable for its changes. many of which bring sadness to our hearts, and the tear comes welling up to the eye, and it eoems refreshing to have our thoughts directed to the immatabllity of the Crea- tor. any person drinking liquor on the streot, orin avy manner refuses to sse that the ordinances of our clty are fully complied with, such police officers will te immedi- ately discharged from the foree, 'W. R. Vavanay, Magor. Marsh 1, 18 mowAa ITEMS, Ida county has & debt of §55,340, Keokuk draws the coler line In skating rinks, A PEER'S PRANK, Modest PParson Into Trouble London Letter to 'hi adelphia Nows Aglosferd ueod pranks he played on a bashful pars-n who stopped for a month or 80 a durind his father'slifetime. Joo says ha traveled all the way down to London and spent one whole afternoon knocking about St. John's Wood trying to find a Packiogton Burlington spent§53,003 on her sshools | woman who would aid him in his little last year. The Cathollc church at] cost §40,000. Lemars wlil A party of Oklahoma raiders have been organized in Des Moines, The Creston opera house will engage no mora snide companies. The spring reglatry 2,425 voters in Sioux City. The engineers and surveyors formed a state organization, thows there are [ Packingten the same evening, joke. Finally he hit upon an sged damsel of very easy vittue, whoss carecr of ignominy was stamped upon every feature. He instructed her how to act and spent two hours, he says, rehearsing her In the part she was toplay, He promised her a rlch plum if she filled the role well. Then he hurried back to The next there were morning the family andguests have |nearly & dozen there at the time— had just finlshed breakfast and had en- A Burlington hackman was fined £50 tered the drawing room when the servact for getting drunk at a funeral, Storm Lake has a population of 2,000 (jady to and is now a city of the tecond class, The Lake Mills vigilance club blaffed | must be some mistake. the natives Into respecting prohibition. The loes by the burning of the Ham- |name burg plow factory was $40,000; insurance, $20,000. announced that there was a lsdy bnlnw who wiehed to tco Rev. Mr.— sco me,’ stamperod the | ynun;\ ‘It ca—ca—can't ba me-—there Wh—wh—what does she waut! Wh—wh—what's her Who is she?’” “\N slr; she asked me if you were here,” rapl(ad the servant, ‘‘and when I person. A Des Moines echool teacher has been told heryun were she seemed terribly ex- discharged for reading the *Mistakes of | Cited: Moses ” We are glad to know that there s | turned loose forty young ‘‘cemetery pro- scmething that Is same—something Lord Joesus Christ, according to the words of the apostle that wrote this let- ter to the Hebrews. He has been, and always will be, the same; touching the boundarles of the two oternities, the past and the fature, al- ways the same. In wmy remarks this monring, n this intrcductory intercourso, I wish to call your attention toa few pointa for your consideration, as well as my own, in which this wonderfual person- age hss been, is to-day, and always will be, the same. Consider Jesus Christ in the vleibility 1is character snd works, end in con- sidering the subject lst us note In the first place that Christ has always been the Savior of mankind, und ever will be. John In, Revelations, speaks of this Christ as the man that was slsin from the foundation of the world; not as the men who was crucified on Cal- vary. Would you ssk when was the foundat'on of the world made? ‘In the beginning God made the heavens and the earth.,” The foundatlon of the world was made in the beginning, and the Rev- elatlons eay that Chuist, the man, was slain then, It doss not mean that he was at that time made a sacrifice for tne slns of the people. He was slain, 8s it were, then for the redemption of huma ity, and then he was given as the Re- deemer of mankind, and the proclama- tion of the true gospel was sent forth. 1t was then declared that the seed of the woman should bruise the sorpent’s head. In tha fifcy-third chapter cf Isaiah, what a minute and perfect description s given of the life and eufferiogs of the Lord Jesus Christ. How troe to the facts he explains Hls hietory. ‘‘He was wounded for our transgressions; bruised for our inlquitles, and with Bis stripes we are healed.” So perfect{s this that eome of those who are endeavoring to set aside the inspiration of prophecy, have declared that it was not written hundreds of years before Christ, but {hat it was written after these things came to pass. But the facts are it was written before and this wonderful Redeemer was ro- v | vealed unto Isaish. He was revealed un- to the prophet Danicl and to the an- ciente. Jesus is the blessed, glorious Saviour. He will be sufficfent for the present, suf- ficlent for the future, until the last has been redeemed. In the second place Christ is thg same spiritually that He has ever been. Heis the element of power. He did not come to us followed by a powerful army, and supported with wealth, He was born in poverty surrounded by the pocr and friendless. In three hundred years the civilized world, as it were, was conquered and brought to the Saviour's fect, and it was done through this element of power of which we bave epoken, Again, Christ is the same perfect fdeal man to-day that he was then, The union of the divine and the human in one, and thus it appears to every one, the trath, the life, and the way. Study the lifé of the Lord Jesas Christ, you cannot help coming to the convictlon that he was something more than a man. The age of the werld in which we live is an age of crlticlsm, aud critlof has done ita best in dis:ecting the character of Christ, but what bas it found there? st has found perfeotion, Looking for sin and error it has found light and purity; looking for failare it has found intinlte bsauty and glorlous victory. The blessed lamb of God stands before mankind as the complete embodiment of all that 1s pure and noble and good, the syme yes terday, to-day and forever. He slands upon the common plane of humanity. The best that we cr any man can do in this world 1s to be like him in thought, in word and in actlon, The highest aspi- ration and purest hope of the christian heart {s simply to be like the Lord Jesus Christ, He fs the Savior of eternal life, 8s he has always been, *1am the resurrection and the life. He that believeth on me, though he were dead, yet shall he live again.” Then shall De brought to psss the saying, “Death {8 swallowed ap in victory.” *0O, death, where is thy sting? O, grave, whera is thy victory?” My dear friends allow me to present this savior to you, and allow me in my minlstry to this church to hold up to you this Christ that has been the savior of the world in all ages. Let us acknowledge Jusus as our savior from sin, as a mighty element of power In punfylnz our lives, and dn winning souls to the Lord Jesus, Let us gather around this blessed savior, realizing that In Him alone we have a hope for a blessed future in this life, and a glorious life in the world to come, o —— The governor has commissioned the following additional delega‘cs to corgress on prieon rveforms next Juve: W, J, Moir, Eldora; M. H. Westbrook, Lyon B. F. Clayton, Macedonia; Septh P, Bryant, Davenpo P, W. Lswelen, larinda; Albert Reynolds, M. D., Olin- Hall, Burlington, scd E l,uh.nb Given, of Des Moines, .. B \iuglnn, mnyu! of the ecity of Qouncil Bluffs, s, do hereby order that every saloon, or plase where beer, wlua, whisky, ets., ete., is c'aimed to be for eale, that all of such places must close !htlr front and back doors and not sell auything that 1s intoxi- from 8 a. m. to 6 p. m., on March avy policeman that fails to mee s order obeyed, or meglects toarres’ always going to be the |motera,” infinitely preclous—the Joe Fitzhenry rehelled against the pop law of Keokuk. ilis goods were confis- cated and he was lnnded in jail. iouly watching the facial, developments of father. railroad is getting 8o deep into the mira of litlzation that an carly collapss fs ex- peoted, The railway bridge over {he Miesie- sippi river at Clinton, after fourtoen years' scrvice, is belng replaced with new iron spans. A tailor named Miller, doing 1\|Iz|ncss at LeMars, on being accueed of living In criminal intimacy with his step-daughter, skipped out. It 1s tstimated two-thirds of "the un- married women of the state are opposed to probibition, They favor the pop law every time. The dead body of a man was found Thuraday last four mile’ southwess of At- lentic. Investigation showed death had been caused by exposure. Col. Henderson, congressman from the Dubuque district, is confined to his bed in Waehington by breaking out of old wounds received in battle, Dubuque has a young amateur skater named Mitchell whom responsible sports wish to back against all comers under 14 years of age, for from $50 to $100. A tramp set fire to the stables and sheds of a farmaer living about elght miles west of Webster Clty, burning up besides grain, hay, etc., soms elght or ten head of cattle. The authorities of LeMars have se- corad sufficlent evidence to cause the ar- rest of James Hopkins for firing the Ra- vere house and Plymouth mill a few weeks ago. The policeman of Sioux Clty fired twenty shots at a colored tramp on the run and falled to hit him. On belng reprimanded by the marshal he clalmed the target was too dark. Several able-bodled men have called at the offico of the Oskaloosa Herald within a week to complaln of the lack of work and their inability to provide food and clothing for themsclves and familles. Jim Wilson, a colored duke of Keokuk, was filled with buckehot by his dutifal step-son, whom he ordered to ‘‘stop that racket.” The shots were oxcavated without seriously damaging the old gent. Des Moines is still pegging away try- ing, with as yet no graat degree of suc- cess, to ralse the $50,000 required to se- cure the permanent location of the etate fair. It seems, 8o far, to be a permanent dislocatlon, The Cadar Rapids Gazette tells of a woman in that reepectable town who lay Inatrance for three days, and was only arouted by one of the neighbors trying u; ::ounow some brown sugar of the hired glrl. Major Waeson, who lost a pile of money and a paymaster’s commiesion In the regalar army by indulging in draw poker, will locate in Des Moines, where he has been glven a position {n the oflices of the Wabash road. A Scstt county man of 45 applied for a licenss to marry the 19-year-old daugh- ter of his deceased wife by a former hus- band, only to learn that the expense of such a transaction would foot up from one to ten yesrs in the penitentiary, Col, Fred Welker, of Muscatine, it is said, will stand as one of the most prom- inent figures in the proposed great pano- rama of the hattle of Shiloh, represent. ing that part cf the field knowa us the| lip. hornets’ neet, tlst, Paul Lameraux. Mr. John P. Whitney was kindly en- The Keokuk medical college has just her new born bsba for a likeness of {ts | m—m-—mistake. The Fort Madison & Northwestern |2Ust bea lunatlc, ‘Tay I want to see him and Im- mediately,’ she said. ‘Who shall I eay?’ 1 asked her, and she replied: ‘Tell him iv'a Marian-——he'll know. I'm his wife?' " At this remark there was consternation among the company. Joe's sister, who seemed to have taken a great llking to the young person, said: *‘Your wife, Oh, Me. An unmarried Algona woman is anx- [ married.” “So--30—1am. Thersa must bs some M—m-—my wife! M— I don't know her. She I w—w—won't sse M—Marlan. her.” ©Oh! yes, you had better seo hor,” said Lord Aylesford, ‘‘Graham, atk the lady to step up.” The little fellow was_frightfally dis- tressed and when the door opencd and flummery, appesred, he actaally sbricke in dismay, “‘She's a 1—l—lanatle,” tlcally. “I'll lupa'ic you,” sald the old witch, approaching him. “Youw’il run away from me, will you, and leave the poor children starving?” And asehe got cloeer to the poor parson she assumed a pathetic tone and said: *‘Oh, Percival; Percy, dear, toe little ones ask me every day, ‘Mama, where’s papa—will he never come bask? ‘Have you no hesrt? 1've searched for you everywhere.” ‘It was getting warm about there just then. The young carate looked as if he were golng to have an spoplectic fit. The company divided in opinion. One-half resolved that the parzon was an arrant knave and the other thought the woman was a maniac. The earl eaid to the claimant: “Go home, my good womanv, and take my word for it, your husband will follow you this very morning.” Jos whispered to her, ““Go,” and the venerable hag departed with the remark: ‘‘You had better come home to your brats. I've found you once and I'll find you agaln if you don't. So remem- er,” Aylesford ssys that the sufferings of the poor fellow were 8o terrible that he (Joe) already repented of his joke. The parson left Packington that very day, and the same opinion, parhaps, still pre- vails about the young man, Someeay he {s sly and wicked, while others declare the woman was a maniac. — —— A PALSIED POLYGAMIST. he cried fran- Arraignmentof an Old Man at 00 at Balt Lake. Satr Lake, Utah, February 20,—A case In court hera to-day represents the utterly inefliclent way in which polygamy | ¢ proeecutions have been conducted here ontil within a few months. Thomas Henegar, of Ogden, was indicted in 1879 when that place was part of this district. He has never been arraigned tlll to-day. When he was called the prosecution was dumfounded to see come forward a man getting on toward 90 years of age, but almost doubled over a staff, shaking with palsy, and sfilicted whh faclal contortions which were &t once laughab'e and pitiable to see. His face was shaved a la sailor Jack, a short, heavy, white beard running from one ear to the other around under the jaw. His gray hair was kept in place by & violet blue sik handkerchicf paesed ina over his fore- Lead and tied at the Dack. While being arraigned he was requlred to etand up. Supporting himself by both hands resting upon the table, he bowed forward toward the clerk and the judge and listened to thereading of the indictment. His facfal contortions never abated, Firat, out shot his tongue, gyrated afew times, then rested 8 moment on hls chin and disap- peared into his mouth, followed, asin hot pursuit, by a portion of his upper With the ex! tion of his breath to be palnted by the ar- | the under lip shot out, glving to his face an expression of supreme alsgust at the procsedings going on, Then the mouth tertalned by a n'ca young man whom he | opened wide, displaylng a shattered set met on the train between Des Motnes | of false upper tecth, which were instantly and Sedan, from the sleep indaced by the siranger's whiskey he dlscovered tho absence of the nice young man and §700 in cash, When Mr. Whitney awoke | hid by the lipsgoing togetherwith a bang and surging violently up agsinst his drooplng nose like breakers against a cliff. His eyes added rhythm to this poetry of William Spencer, of Carlisle, while contortion, which had its sunpy lines in driving into Des Molnes, was struck by a locomotive of the Rock Islaud road, at & crosslng on East Fifth straet. Hlis sleigh was loaded with jugs, only one of which was broken. Nelther Spencer nor his horses received any injury. There was & mystirious death near Vinton lest week. A young map, name not given, hed slx weeks ago married a well-to-do farmer's only daughter, and old people and young were happy and arranging to move to Califoruia in the spring. Thesday moralog the young man had been out doing the choras as vsoal, and came to the house when his wife was getting breakfast and asked how long before the meal would be ready, and as it woold taks a few minut:s' time he said he would go out and stop a hole in the calf-stable where spow blew in. Soon he was called, but no answer. Ina few moments the yourg wife called agsin, and getting no response, went to look for bim, Seciog him in the dim light in an slmost kneeling postura in the calf- able, as If stooping to look for pholes, hnvmg stopped the one he mentioned, and she slipped up behind him -ud clapped her Lands on the sides of his fecs, when she found he was dead, but still'warm, hanglog by a rope kept for tying cows while milking them No possible reason can be devised for the act, except that he was playfully adjust- ing itabout his neck and drew the small rope 80 tight as to cause him to lose con- sclousness, the Instantly forming and Punch-like smile, to be followed agaln by the gloom of opening caverns, Every obzerver was convulsed with the laughter, but as the last words in the Indictment fell from the clerk’s lips and the old man took his seat the mirth was sapplemonted by pity. District Attoraey Dickson, who had never seen him befora, after the preliminary pro- ceedings said: “If your honor please, [t is evident from the advanced age of the defendant, Henegar, and hils extremely decrepit condition, that, the ecnds of justice could not, and would not, be promoted by subjecting him to trisl and pupith- ment for polygamy, and 1 thercfore ask that the ca'c against him be dismlsied lnd his sursties dischargad.” st the order ba i tered according- ly," ssid Judge Zane, and the old man's counsel whispered in hls ear what had happened. The old man siraightensd up, as though a load had been lift:d from his shouldere, and, after a further brief con sultation with his attorney, left the court- room fading H. 8. ATWOOD, Plattsmouth, - - « Nanrnuka BREADYA OF YHOROVGH ul HEREFORD MKD JERSEVGATILE ) AND DUROO OB JBRANY RAD BWINE How the Late Lord Aylesford Gor ;., CHAS. SHIVERICK, to tell me about the o 1 thought you were un- |2 the terrible harridan, all paint, frllls and § FURNITURE U[‘l!(l].r\l;ri‘“' AND DRAPERIES Passenger ‘Elovator to all floors, 1 OMAHA, } y , 1208 and 1210 Farnam Strect, BRASKA, - THE LEADING GAR RIAGE FAGTORY 1409 and 1411xDodze St. “imaten ™} Omaha Ne TRY YOUR LUCK ! And Don't Lose This Chance. F'or this ¥ear Onlv. The best opportunity ever offered to try your luck in theso hard timies. In order to the public in general the advantage with a small sum of money, to pare ticipate in a real German Money Lottery, guaranteed and sanctioned by the Gorman govern- ment, wo offer five whole orignal tickets which wo have mude into 16 dilferont numbers of the 5 as long aa we Hamburg Lotiery, in club plays and sell same for the small sum of have some on hund. Theso tickets are good for thn Inst throe principal deawings which com- mance March 11,1885, and terminate on May 18 This Lottery has been for over 143 yoars in existence; has one hundred thousand tickets and fifty thoueand 500 winning numbers which is over one half the actual amount of tickets, ach holder of tickets receives, after the drawings, the Original Lists, also the smount of the prize if won. We hope, as wo give 16 different numbers, that every ticket holder, on receipt of the winning lists, will be eatisfiod with the result. The capital prices are m H00 000, 300,000, 24 10, 100 000, 90,- 000 70,000, 50,000, 50,00, etc.. tho malivst beir g 145 to cach and a porsihle hefore the tickets hor by Post- d tickets will go jorward st once, ho Hamburg & on, conetantly on hand. SOTMIDT & €O 2 Copgrese Street, Dotroit, Mich, 00080%,,8,9,8,9,0,9, OOOOOBN ) DUE‘I‘Y’S comeesn 2 LT R JE S wonenm Malt Whiskey. A'bwlutely Pure and Unadulterated, Entirely Free from FUSIL OIL, _Do you know what it is? Ask your Physician F nlL or Druggist and he will tell you'that I'I' I DEAD[Y PUISUN 3 ‘ pative ‘»m‘e(‘un Jfor Malaria, Pulmonary ot Indizestion, Nory ous blew, General Dobility seasen. Endorsed by over 3,500 P wvaluable as i ULANT AND TONKO in' Ky iarrhea, Jow. forms of Discasc. o emmmem ANTIDOTE FOR CHOLER A ,sosmm— ‘We are the only concern in the United S bottling and selling to the Medical Jo3 Profession and Drug Trade an absolut iskey, one that is free FUSIL OIL and that is not onl Is of the best fami country 2.9,9,5.9.°, O SOBASS EXXXXR SOOOORNK o 3 b8 e all Wi mul [ . 5o oo s DR.ARENDT, the great German Chemis —«T have made an analysis oe OF your PURI M. VLT WHISKEY, which ga result, Your %o Malt Whiskey, obtaiied mostly by extract of malt conviesion and a very careful &3 &3 3 . . . Ffermentation and distillation. is entirely free from fusil oil and any o similarly obuom(ots alooliols which are st eften founid D wwhisken, 1 ther RECONMMEND IT TO THE M DICAL PROFESSION. it ral works Y reaoribs an altoholie o IN FACT, IT IS A BEVERAGE AND MEDICINE cOrBIHED. Tn cnnsumpl YES m\ll l.hn-al- nn|‘u{uvA"«|“\l\‘x‘|!;"l‘l‘?~ the send to any nddre riod staton i Mountains), 5 C a plain case (thus avoiding all pitles of our PURE MALT WIK oompany SUILE d RTON and oth STING i 2 boon propared ceperially for u |<om|uln ¢ It can be prepared by any family housekeepor_at slight, i’l IVEA X A XSELT XEnse (l(uv\ Bee 254 being of the ingredients.) ¢3¢ )4 After this preparation has been taken for a few wecks, the h|w'x usly conspicuously prom- o > 232 inexit bones In patients suffe frnln:()lhuu‘\]l-tllul|“uml li)ns{‘ |fli|‘h«'nscsi get covered w |:I| n:: O | g t and mus . the sunken and bloodless cheeks up and assun rosy hue, s ol Tta rovi o Body, and chiG amon them the ieatt, ¢4 Sbl0 b porform their functions, bicause of beiniz nourished with g +g% had been before. In other words, the system is supplied with moro ¢4 * an exhaust, thereby giving nature the upper hand in the conflict. #, mmeemS0LD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS AND FINE GROCERY HOUSES s Price ONE DOL:L.AR PER BOTTILE Sam) © Boltles sent fo ay address i the United States (East of the Rocky Moy tains), se packed In plain case, Express charges prepaid on receipt of S . THE DUFFY MALT WHISKEY CO., BALTIMORE, MD., U. S. A ER R IR AL XX XXX IR R AR RS OOO00 tatetetetetetetetete e e 50t 0yt GERMAN D. WYATT. Lumber Merchant Cumings and 20th Sts, - Omaha, Neb. EIREIIDD. W, CGrEAR. (SUCCESSUR TO FOSTER & GRAY). LY IVEIB IR, LIME AND CEMENT. teak and our o 432 thie drooping spirits revive, while all the nmsdm of th $#5 are stronger und bette 2 richer blood than the 25 carbon than the diseas & RUEMPING & BOLTE ~MANUFACTURRRS OF— ORMAMENTAL GALVANIZED 1ROH CORNICES Fiatals, Window Osps, Iron Orestings, Meballic B Jlights, &0, Tia, lron snd Bla a5/ b10Bonkb 1kh Birest Omaha broks, Orange Blossom Flour WHOLESALE BY L A STEWART & CO, 1013 Jones Btreat | OMAHA NEB Richards &Clarke - Machinery &Castings Omaha, AUTOMATIC ENGINES BRUSH MACHINES, FLEVATOR CUP. SLIDE VALVE ENGINES; SMUT MACHINES, ELEVATOR BOLTS, PORTABLE ENGINES, SEPARATORS. ARCHITEC TURAL WORK: WATER WHEELS, CORN. SHELLERS: BRIOGE IRON, STEAM BOILERS, CORN. GLEANERS, WROUGHT: & CAST IRON, STEAM PUMPS, BOLTING' GLOTH, REPAIRS OF ALL KINDSY ENGINE GOVERNORS, CENTRIFUGAL REELS, BRASS CASTINGS, WATER-WHEEL GOV'NORS SCALPING REELS. SASH WEIGHTS, HEATERS AND FILTERS, LEATHER & RUB'R BELT'G WELL AUGERS, d ROLLER MILLS, BRICK YARD CASTINGS, SHAFTING ‘PULLEY S HANGERS &BOXES AFK FOR RE= OROKS, |

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