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'% THE MURRAY lRON WORKS BURLINGION TOWA ENGINES,|SAW MILLS. BOILERS, Npeniaue OOt Sophies BRIDGE WORK, MILL AND MINING [Meat Cutting Machines. MACHINERY. Tanking Outfits & Presses PATENT LOG 0006 Wheeled Scrapers, AND SAW MILL sPECIALTIES, | Fruit Evaporators, Prairie. Com Shellers \WNTECTz5,, IRON WORK. THE HYATT PRISMATIC LIGHTS SEND FOR ESTIMATE C. F. GOODMAN. Wholesale Druggists AND DEALER IN . Paints, Oils, Varnishes and Window Glass OMAHA YNEB. Who have trifled away their youthful vigor and power. Who wre suffering trom terrible drains and losses, w hi o are weak, IMPOTENT 1 unfit for mar> Biullages, who find Npower "m{ vltal poslt:ve & last- RE, NO matter of how long standing y who has failed to eure you, by a few weeksor months use of the ecleb dicd Myrtieain Treatment. B At home, without exposure, in les ime, gad for L other method in the world, Weak 8p i ambition, gloomy thoughts, dreadful Impotence, impediments to marriage, epileps leading to’Consumption wnd Insanity, arc premptly he MYRTT IN TREAT MEY MARRIED MEN, AND MEN ABOUT TO MARRY REMEMBER, PERFECT § AL STE M $3 healthy and vigorous offsp Tong life and thelove and respect of a faithful wifc 0 man ghould ever m who ha been guilty of indescretions, until he has been restored to PE FECT MANHOOD. ~ We guarantee a permanent cure in every case undertaken. Send stamps for treatise with proofs and testimonials. Address The Climax Medical Co, St. Louis, Mo. removed by SPEOIAL NOTICEZTO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Ground Qil Cake “ Tu is t he pest and cheapast food for stock of any kind. One pound Is equal tt three pou. ds of corn. Stook fod with Ground Oil Gake In the Fall and Winter instead of running down, will increase in woight and be In good marketable cond! fon In tho spring. Dairymen, as woll s others, who uso it, can testify to lts mor {ta. Try It and judgo for yourselves. Price $24.00 per ton. No charge for saske Address WOODMAN LINSEED OIL WORKS, Omaha, Neb, P. BOYEIR CO., [DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp's FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFES, VAULTS, 'LOGKS, ETG. LOSO Farnsam Btreoot. @mmaha D. M.ISTEELE, & CO.. WHOLESALE GROCERS H,'B, LOOKWOOD, (formerly of Lockwood & Deapes, Chlcago, Manager of the Tes, Cigar and Tobacco Departments. A fall line of all grades of the above; also Pipes and Smokers’ carrled in stock. . Prices and sawples furnished on application. Open orders intrusted to us shall racelve our carefal fiattentlon. Satisfaction Guaranteed. ABENVS FCR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER €O W [F, BROWN, GEO, W. F. BROWRN & CO.: (COMMISSION DEALERS IN LIVE STOCK Offce, Exchange Bullding Unlon Stack Yards, ] OMAHA, NEB. Alo connected with Gregery, Cooley Co , Unlon Stock Yards, Chicago. BROWN Finat NATIONAL B, W A, PAxtox, Pi SwaAN Buos. JoiiN A. McSuANK, Manager Bay State Cattle Co. J. A. CamouToN Progt. First Nat'l Bank, Omaha, Address all communications—Unlon Stock Yards, Omaba, Nebrsska. ‘and Troas. Unfon Stook Yds., Omaha o. HENRY 7. CLARKE, Prest. and Treas. JOHN T, CLARKE, Secretary, H. T. CLARKE DRUG COMPANY, SUCCEEDING LEIGHTON & CLARKE, WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS A M, CLARKE, Vice President ARGEST Jobblng Drug house between Chicego and San Francisco. CAPITAL STOCK, $200,000, We 4 shall boat the bottom of t1e market at Wl timos. Will duplicate Chicago aud 5, Louls prices with ml.uu. added, _ Our spec alty will bo 3yie ntereat by callog ou us or sead for our price List waiot will appear about January th, Mall ord bolicited. 1114 HARNEY 5TREET. THE A. L. STRANG COMPANY, Oouble and Single Acting’ Power and Hand PUMPS, STEAM PUMP Eoglne Trlmm , Mining Machinery, Bolt Hose, Brass and Iron at ohuln or retall, HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, OH AND SCHOOL BEL!A Corner 10th and Farnam 8t., Omaha Neb, be, or defective memory, and many other symptoms we Drugs, Paints, Oils and Window Glass E+ imatos given on plate glass. T) those about to embark in the drug business will do well to consult THE DAILY BEE--THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 1885, ' SONGS OF THE WAR, How “John Brown's Body" Was Written—¥Mrs. Howe's Battle Hymn, New York Graphic, Some one describes in a Philadelphia paper the methods of Frank Howard, popular ringer and ballad composer, It 18 s:ated that after writing the words he will get together saveral members of the minstrel company wiih which ho is connected, and they will all sing, sug- gest and criticise, while he embodics on the pleno, ti1l at last the melody thus hammered out is made to fit. The author of that famous war song. ‘‘John Brown’s B: " deectibes In a letter to the Graphio similsr process In connee- tion with that wonderful picce of passion and nonsense, patriotism and brutality, high-wrought euthusisem and emotfonal fervor. Theauthor, Mr. Jerome Lisonard, reeides at Russell, Kan, Ho wa a boy of 16 years during that first battle summer of 1861, living at Leavenworth, Kan., where his elder brother was an orchestra leader in a variety theatre. Leonard waa fond of music and very much in the habit, with a boy companion, of thrum. ming off combination tunes from old melodies floatng in his head. The 8th Kansas volanteers o:mmanded by John A. Martin now governor of that state, wereia Leavenworth duritg Juns, 1861, proparing for depar:ure to Kentacky and Tenncsses, from which department they did not return until the war was ended. The oldicrs frequented tho Cantarbury, and ‘“John Brown Had a Littls Nigger," *‘One more River to Croes,” Oanaan’s Happy Land,” and other catch songs were exhausted, Young Jerome heard his brother talking of the need of & new war song, went to his room and ham- mered out of an old cracked piano and two old Methodist camp-meeling tunes the stirrlng ryhthmic melody with its “‘hallelujah” choras we know as the John Erown mong and music. He wrote two of the verses afterward so famcus, and it was eung cn the boards that night., Iteet the soldiers wild, and 80 traveled from Leavenworth to Beston harbor, where it was adopted by the 11lth Massschusetts, then garrisoning Fort Warren, By them it was brought to the Potomac. The 8th Kansas carrled it to the armics of Thomas, Logan, et al. A newsb.y on the street mextday added the striking, of course, line, half humor- ous, half bratal, and wholly impasstoned: We'll hung Jeff Davis to a sour apple tree As we go marching on, With that line the John Brown song was falrly lsunched, and met every where in the union lines the favor of the sol- dfery and the adapted verdict of the peo- ple. Nothiog ever replacel it. Mrs. Howe's “‘Battle Hymn” was sung by the camp fire, but the ruds and stirring *John Brown,” first set echcing over a continent by the boy, Jerome Leonard, held its p'ase on the march and on the battlefield until the end, and still has power to s'ir and rouse with asocitions of “decring do.” ——— Conghs and Colde. Those who are suffering from Cougbs, Colds, Sore Thiroat, erc., should try BRowN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHES, Sold only in boxes. — —— Ia the Island cf Ivica the popular em- blem of love is gunpowder, and the mest brilliant accomplishment a young damsel oan deplay is to stand without flinching while her lover fires at her legs, and which of en assume after a lengthy courtship tho appearance of a Christmas plum- pudding. e SKIN DISEANES CURED. By Dr, Frazior's Magio Ointment, Cures £ by magic: Pimples, Black Heads or Grub Blotches and Eruptions_on the_face, leaving tho sn cloar and beautiful, Also cures Iick, Salt Rheum, Sore Nipples, Sore Lips and old, Obatinate Ulcers Sold by druggists, o mailed on receipt price. 60 cents, Sold by Kuhn & Co. an Goodman, ———— There is conslderable barbed fence In Maricoga county, Arizons, and the vast flocks of wild ducks which frequent ths valley often fly low, and striking the barbed fence, become impaled therefon. It 18 sald that tons f ducks are gathered daily by the boys from the fences and sent to market. ——— LABOR AND LABORERS, Matters of Interest to Employers and Employed. Philadelphia Record In several craft employers are resort: ing to novel methods co dispose of trades- unicnlem, Mr. F. W. Breed, of Lyon, Mass., will have ncthing to do with the board of arbitration of the Lesters’ union, but will remove hls woiks to Rochester, N. H. A Bangor, Me., paper extends an Invitation to se: 1 diseatisfied em- ployes in Massashusetts, and details the vast unutilized water-poweradyantages of Malne. The action of New York iron- founders and cigar monufacuurers is not forgotten, ner the two cases of tntonded removal of local shos manufacturers There is an intimate relation between the poverty of labor and the liquor traflic In one manufacturing town (Ka'l River) $1,000,000 is spent -nunnlly in etrong drmk nd saloons pay $65,000 annanlly for licentes. Laborers are frequently told to spend less for liquor and they will have more money for beef. Yet this Is no answer. The beet men and keenest thinkers are puzz'ed over the present phase of the labor problem. One set of thinkers give us higher puties; an- other class wants lower duties; laborers ory for co-operation; greenbackers for more money and less faterest; other re- formers for free land and no rent, and lomelur eight hours. All are splutter- Englnh labor papers report a steidy improvement in maoy fmportant trades, among them ship-building and the ma- rine engineering trades. The coal {rade is falrly active and the textile trades are duing better, In our local 1 dustries ths manufactur— ers of jerseys areviry ba Jerseycloth Is wanted sa fast s made. Hosiery of all kinds {s selling rapidly snd knitung machinery is in good demand, All the manufacturers sre busy, Machinery and etove molders sre finding more work coming in. The Baldwlos have mcre men on than ce last fall, Two or three large machive works are turning out exceptionally large lathes. Textile machinery manufactarers are working at one-third capacity. The boot and ehoe makers are in a general way busy, It was genamlly believed last fall that on the openlng of spring there would be a very general resumption at probably better wages, Harmony mills at Cohoes, New York, reducel wi 10 ver cent last Mondsy, In ths Lawrence, Massschusetts, mm. 3,000 men bave been discharged. In the west several azricoltural works will re- main at present capacity, On the other hand, there a' o bright indicitions, Ssores of eastern mills ave rucning two to four hours over-time. To-morrow fdur rolling mills in this state will double their out- put, Several hat factorles will add to ] thelr force, and favorable reports come of Intended Increase of work in many minor industries throughout the state, A Plttsburg tirm hes just received an order for several thontand tons of asmor vlates of heavy pattern for Russia. The firm is preparing for an ecary start, Another nmnnhdurur there has secured a contract from the British government to build thirty boals for the Egyptian service, to be 160 feet long, thirty feet wida, 500 tons burden, and to cost €18 - 000 ¢ach. The work is to be hurried. Allen Blaisdell, of St. Louis, has been asked for plans and specifications for thirty fron hulls for the same parpose. Several Pennsyvanla mills are at work on bridge, plate, sheet and bar fron for western bridges and general railroad re- quitements. Work is belng pushed for- ward on western nall mills, steel mills and other manufacturing establish- ments. A company has been Incorporated In New York with a capital of §1,000,000 to bay cheap lands in the west and colon- jze them with cheap European labor. 1t the Knights of Labor turncd thelr atten- tion to such a schemo they would make more materisl progress and lay broader and deeper foundations in one year than they will make under thelr present plan of actlon, They will yet come to_it. What they are doing to-day wes urged on them ten years sgo by the pioneers in the intellectual field of labor action, The Hocking Valley miners’ last woek receipts wero $2,605. They are fighting the ironclad contract with renewed cour- age. The South Norwalk hatters have re- celved In cash from hat-making friends durlng the past four months $24,- 000. The reclpients of atd now number 216 men snd 175 women and the women sare the bes: men of the lot, stimulatirg the women in pantaloons to continued resistance, The New York car drivers are ol;.:nn~ izing, The German bakers will soon start a paper. The Cuban cigar makers pay 20 cents a week to & ‘‘reader,”” who translates from American papers every day all matters of intorest to their trade. Several tneffectual efforts have been 1nade to organiza tho sewlng wemon of New York, who are truly serfa of the the needle, poor and helpless and forlorn, It is remarkably strange how the most successful labor tricksters and double- dealing sgitators manage to hide thelr de- ception aad got themaslves called honest —Honest Jim, Hcnest Bill, Honest Tom, and 80 on. The Pater:on trades sssembly proposes to baild a mechan'cs’ Institute, The Columbus (O ) printers rejoice be- cause the boycottsd Times capitulates, The new secretary of the interior de- partment loans to labor, and it is ex- pected will favor some good democratic labor men with appoiatments, There are 15,000 organized wage-work- era in Ca'iforn'a, and an organl there unbosoms himself in thls wise: “Our legltlature has done nothing but deliver the state over to the merciless monopoly; the white fools do the voting, the knaves the counting; resldence on the cosst de- velops all the selfishness in human na- tare.” Tho department of the Interior is making an_exhaustive iavestigation into the apprentice system, Circulara are out, full of questions, requesting ex- haustlve answers. The reports to be compiled will contain, in addltion to other information, a compilation of the apprentloeship lawa and decisions under them, apprentic:shlp under the com- mon law, and a hictory of the rite, growth aud decay of the syatem. They will also contain fall information of the progress made in trade sskools, at home and abro.d Many yesrs ago a humble day laborar nsmed Robert Dunemulr was walk- iog pemsively in the woods near the mines in Vietoris, B, C., where he worked. A storm had swept away a_glant fir from the root of the tree. His practiced eye detscted coal. He secured all the adjacent Jand. Last year his mines produced 251,840 tons of coa', worth $1,008,344. One steel manufacturing firm in thbe west end of Pennsglvania bas juet opaned ccffse works adjacent to the mills, where hot coftee, rolls, sandwiches, otc., are served up cheap. A plat of coffee with milk and sugar costs 2 cents; pint of coffee with ham sandwich, b cente. If such humanitarian sentiments found expression at many of our manufacturing establishments thers would be less liquor drinking and leess physical ex among labor. A CARD.—To all who are suffering from errors and Indigestions of youth, nervous weakness early docay, fows of manhiood. ete. I will send, & receipt ill cure you F CHARGE. This great & missionary to South clt-addressed onvelope to Rkv, Jo- Station ‘D " New York. ly America. spn T, INM o —— A Family of Sulciues, ‘Washington Star, Colonel Mayo, who killed himself re- cently in Virglnia, was a member of the forty-elghth congress from the first Vir- glnla dutrlut, and was unseated and the seat awarded to Garrison. Colonel Mayo was elected as a readjuster. After his eolection to congress and before the meet- ing of that body, word came to Washing- ton that Mayo had committed suiclde on a Potomac river steamer, but it proved to | ™ be his father who had killed himself. A brother and a eister of the late congrees- man aleo committed saicide, making four of the immediate family who have taken their own lives o — Horsefod's Acia Pnosphate, FOR ALCOHOLISM, De. J. 8. HuLumax, Philadelphla, Pa., says: ‘It is of good service in the troub- les arlsing from alcohollsm, and glves sfaction In my practice,” A Consistent Man, Arkavsaw Traveler, The ‘‘free_pass’ qnestlon has very much agltated the present session of the Arkansaw logislature, The other day a well known representative aross and said “‘Mr. Speaker, I wish to offer & resolu- tion making it & mlsdemeanor for any member of a futuce on of the Ar. kanssw 1>gislature to accept » free pass over a reiltoad.” *“Why not let 1t npply to the members of the present sosston?’ some one asked, “‘Oh no, that won’tdo, We've all g t passes and it would be im- politato return them. Sr, this pass system is wrong, It has a tendency, sir, to corrupt, but it saves money, If they hadn't eent me & pass I don’t know how I would bave got here. Reckon I'd had to walk, bat, sir, it Is our duty to remove future lw\.hlun from tempt stion, I am In favor of all good measures, and I promised my people that 1 would work for the tsmperance cause. Iam s tem- perance man from the word go.” In turn ng suddenly bis coat tails struck the corner cf the desk, Reaching bsck snd takiog the drippi g fragments of a bottle from his pocket, he remarked: *‘Tem peravce Is the ealvafion of man snd the joy of woman, bat 1'd ltke devilish wel) % know who put that boitle in my pocket. Sl like pretty good licker, too, Spaskingabout passes, why, sir tha fature legislator cught to bave every p ;lmblu irducement tw bebave him. el A LITERARY HERO, ———— The Life of Jool Barlow, The Pub lisher of “Watta' Panline,” Aro we golng through an epoch of con- tonnlals, writes s New York oorrespon dent ot the Troy Times, it might be well to notice the fact that I Is just cne hun- dred years since American literature took its firat start after the revolation, The first book published on thls continent after the peace with Gioat Britain was “‘Watts' Paalms,”’ edited by Joel Barlow, which was lssued ia Hartford in 1785 Barlow was then 30. He was a native of Connecticut, acd had studied at Yale, where In 1778 he delivered a poem en- titled the *‘Proepect of Peacs,” Bis po- etlo talents had already attracted notlce, and this led the clergy to request that he should prepare an editlon of Watts for public worship. He also edited a weekly paper in Hariford, called The Amerlean Meroury, but afterward added law to literature, He had, however, already contemplated what he considered his great poem, ‘‘The Oolamblad.” This was not completed until the lapse of twonty years, but its inception wasgiven in the “*Vision of Columbus,” which was published the year our government was formed. Parsuing this reminfscency, it may be added that Batlow went to Europs soon after issaing the Vision, and was the first Amerlcan author that visited Great Bri‘ain after the closs of the war, He sympathized with the French revola: tionists, to whom he rendered tome diplomatlo servics, and on his return in 1805 he was the best Informed American on the subject of foreiga affairs. Ho was then 50, and his ripe experlence rendered bim higbly usefal to the general govern- ment. He made Washington hia abode, and ercted an elegant howe. Two years afterward hls great work, ‘“The Columbiad,” appeared. It was published in Philidelphia, and was the most costly book which, up to that tlme had ever _ bren fssued in this country. It was ded- teated to Robert Fulton of steamboas fame, and was graced by u portralt ef the author, together with eleven copper-plata fllustrations execated in London, The author expected that this work would permanently rotain its distinction as the greatest of American poems. It was read and admired, but like many other works of mmpm.\ry value, it gradually sunk out of eizht, and iz is not probable that another edition wlll ever be priated Its prophecy of fature dovelopment is one of its most striking featurss, of which the following is an instance: From Mnhlwk 's mouth far westing thh the Through :\ll the woodlands recent channels run, Tap the redundant lakes, the broad hills brave, And marry Hudson with Missouri’s wave, From dim Superior, whose unfathomed sea Drinks the mild splendor of the setting day, New paths unfoluing lead their watery pride, And towns and empires rise along their mde, To Mississippi's soucce the passes bend, And to the broad Pacific main extend, How wonderfally this prophecy has been fulfilled during the eighty years of interyal ! *‘The Columbad” at once gave Barlow natlonal distlnctlon, and this led him to project a fall history cf the countrg, but Iis plans were brokea by the call to di- plomatic servicé. Madison needed an ambassador to Friance, and thera was no one 80 well adapted to thiseervice as Joel Barlow. Oa reaching Paris he found ttat the dream of liberty and its bloody feenzy had glven place to the stlll more blocdy cespotism cf Napoleon. He be- held the march of, this crowned mons‘er to Moscow with an army of nearly half a millicn, so few of whom ever returned, Four months afterward came the sad {id~ ings of the failure of the expedi ion, ac- compsnled by a request from Napoleon that Barlow should meet him at Wilns, His object was never published, but it is probable that he w shed to obtain troops from America to renew an army sacrificed to his own folly snd ambition. Barlow obeyed Napoleon's request, aud, attended by hls private secretary, hastened to the appoinfed spot, but the expected mesting uever took place. The exposure of the journey and the wretched condition ¢f the Polish inns reduced his health, aod on the 22d of December, 1812, he died of pneumonia near Cracow, whero he lics in an unknown grave. His last days were saddened by scenes of hor- ror, for he belield the wretched remnant of Napoleon's army p:risbing by frost and famine on the borders of Poland. Thete scenes gave his genius its last in- splration. and belpg uwable to use tha pen, he dictated the moat tremendous 1n- oictment which the peetic muse ever de- livered sgalnst the imperlsl tyrant, It is called ‘‘Advice to a Raven,” and closes with the hope of l'l‘l«rth;s total vengeance on the monster’s head, Barlow is the only one of our ambassa- dors that fills & foreiza grave, but his name is not recalled ou this occasion by either his misfortunes cr his production: 1t 18 merely introduced by its ¢ .nnection with the centennial of the new bir.h of litarature and the important fact that the first volume issued after the revolution hymn book The Extermination ot Game, New York Herald. In the autumn of 1883 there were brought into St. Paul. Mion,, 200,000 buffalo hides, In 1884 there wera brought in only fivethourand hides, This year it is said there will be none, and this rapid dimination is not due t> 1he cffect of eny attempt made to prevent slavghter by the protection of this magoificent game, but to the strides made toward the extermination of the animal in the Inter- ests cf a ruthless . Besides the buffalo our other large game are the elk, the moote, the male dser, the Virginiu decr, the aotzlope, ths mountain sheep, the catiboo and the white goat. These are found on Immense tracts of land +tlll owned by the government in Idato, Montana, Oregon and Waehington, and if unprotected they also will be exter: minated. Why should they not be saved by a game law forbidding the killing of anylarge gime on pationsl lands? It would be a law difficalt to enforce a: once, bat two-thlids of the slavghter would b prevented if hunters wers only forced to furtive operations. And the of extirpation threatens not on'y rgy game of tha country— ion of ordinary geme is, of course eatirely within the authority of the legitlatures of the stater—but all ame that is migratory whose tarritory coverstwenty degrees of lattitude will be banged at sll the yesr round and de- stroyed finally, unless sportemen can by concerted astion secure such & harmony in the leglslation of states im diiferent stltudes as would be equlvalent to an « t onal law. This would not be an easy thing to accomplish, but it is not im. posuble. ——— * % % % Ocganic weakness or loss of power in either sex, however induced, l}luflll] and permanently cured. En. close thres letter s'amps for book of Wood’s Dispensary Mo lul Association, Buffalo, N, Y, ticular s, CHAS., SHIVERICK, FURNITURE UPROLSTERY AND DRAPERIES, Passenger Elevator to all floors, 1 AHA, NE 8 and 1210 Farnam Street, RASKA, SOUTH OMAHA Packing Houses in Operation. Postoffice Established and a Town Gov= ernment.Soon Will Be. Lots 60x150 feet gith 20 foot Allevs for ale. One-fourth Cash, Balance “in 1,2 and 3 Years. est Locations Being Taken. Get a Lot or Two While They are Cheanp. SEND FOR A MAP. Apply at Company’s Office, 216 13th St. Omaha, Nebraska. M. A UPTON, Ass't. fec’y and Mane ger. RUEMPING & BOLTE, : ~MANUFACTURERS OF— ORNAMENTAL GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES Fialals, Win tow Cape, Iron Orestings, Moballlo Bky-lig] ar. M0 R0DID 12b Sivesd Omahs Nebraaks &c. Tin, Irsalsnd Sl ¢ Tiis CUT SHOWS A SKCTIONAL VIEW OF OUR NEw Polar, Dry Air, Self Ventilating HARD WOOD REFRIGERATORS Manufactured in the moet perfe-t manner from Kiip-dry oak lumber, charcoal filled, zinn lined, galvanized froa shiIves, hand: fomely parelcd and designed for the wants of a class of trado that want the best goods that can b n ade, Parties wishing speclal sizes can Save from 15 to 20 Per Cent Ty placing orders now. IW. L. WRICHT. 13th Street, Bet. Farnam & Harney OMAHA. Richards &Glarke . Mapizlizez"y&Gaslzngs : Omaha, - Neb. AUTOMATIC ENGINES, BRUSH MACHINES, ELEVATOR CUPS., SLIDE VALVE ENGINES, - SMUT MACHINES, ELEVATOR BOLTS, SEPARATORS, "ARCHITEC TURAL WORK : CORN SHELLERS. BRIDGE IRON, CORN CLEANERS, WROUGHT & (AST [RON, BOLTING CLOTH, REPAIRS OF ALL: KINDS, CENTRIFUGAL REELS, = BRASS .CASTINGS, SCALPING REELS, . SASH WEIGHTS, HEATERS AND FILTERS, ' LEATHER & RUB'R BELT'G WELL AUGERS, ROLLER MILLS, BRICK YARD CASTINGS, ' SHAFTING ‘PULLEYS-HANGERS-&§BoXES PORTABLE ENGINES, WATER WHEELS, STEAM BOILERS, STEAM PUMPS, ENGINE GOVERNORS, WATER-WHEEL GOV'NORS GERMAN D. WYATT. Lumber Merchant Cumings and 20th Sts., Omaha, Neb. DUFFY’'S s T T .S — MaIiWhlskey. Absolutely Pure and Unadulterated, Entirely Free from FUSIL OIL, s —Do you know what it is? Ask your Physician DEM]I.Y Pulso" or Druggist and he will tell yo um i la Pulmonury plalut; llu.llu<~ul , General noh Endorsed: by ove . AND TONIO in 'l""hhold lf(sw-r. d all low forms of Discase. HE RECOGN _ANT|D°'|'E FOR CHOLERA s We are the only concern in the United States who are hottling aud selling to the Medical % Profession and Drug Pure Malt Whiskey, one that is freo from % FUSIL OKL aud tiat iy not only found on tie sideboards of the best families in-the m,r), but also in the physician's dispensing room. the great German, Clemist, says:—1 have made an anall /tmr BN i E e fih gave a very gratifying result, Vo 1t Whiskey, obtabed mostly by extract o, 1t convusion and a very careful § Termentation and distillation, is entirely ee from fusil oll aud any o, mnuurly Gonomiors atoohots whioh are sl ot ount eiwitakey. 1 the ECOMMEND IT TO THE MEDICAL PROFESSION. R RRRE %0t e b0 %t e et %% ATl Wantin It jvaluable as u sl IN FACT, ITIS A BEVERAGE AND lflflEDlOlrE OOMBINED: ok “P'[lvgsd‘ P ida plal g all 1o ¢ PURE WAL W under By n SURE o SEASES [ S WRSTINE D nula hos been prepared especially for us by the great G y{.}ufi-\%.u by mA.lumnv liousek e wrxnlsufi ATter this preparation Las been taken for o few weeks, tu ’ inent bones lnrulu uts suffering from Consu ¢ thick coating of fat o c] 0 sunke Words, the Bystem {5 »u“ ’ Thon than the discase can exhaust, thereby giving nature the upper hand in the contlict, & weessS0LD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS AND FINE GROCERY HOUSES s Price ONE DOLLAR PER BOTTL.E Bawplo Guart Bottles veut 1o auy addrem In the United States (Eaxg of the Racky Mow tains), sccurcly packed in plaiu case, Epress charges prepaid on receipt of S1.B 5. THE DUFFY MAlT WHISKEY Gl]., BllTIMUHE MD.,U S A: