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CHAS, SHIVERICEK, FURNITURE UPHOLSTERY AND DRAPERIES, Passenger Elevator to all floors, 1206, 1208 and 1210 Faznam Street, OMAHA, NEBRASKA, YOUNG MEN I - : 8pirits and ambition, gloomy thoughts, 'mpotence, impediments to marriage, ep ud Insanity, arc preniptly ing to’ Consum! TRIA T the MYRTLEAIN h‘l EN Who have trifled away their A youthful vigor and power. Who e suffering trom terrible drains 1l Josses, who ire weak, MPOTEN'T, and unfit formar? a i ME fal 't JAL TRE ( CAN receive apositive & last- ing CURE, NO matter of how long standing y © may who has failed tocure you, b weeks or months use of the celet ted Myrtleain Treatment. At home, without exposure, in less i time. and for L money than any ude, loss of d defective memory, spsy and many other symptoms moved by B who find MARRIED MEN, AND MEN ABOUT TO M,ARIIY, REMEMBER, PERFECT SEXUAL STRE long life and the love and r who have been guilty of e FECT MANITOOD. ~ We g Send 2 stamps Addi NGTH M pect of ANS; he: ithful wif tion rantee a pern for treatise with proofs The Climax Medical Co, and vigorous offspring, No man ghould ever marry until Le has been restored to PER- inent cure in every case undertaken. and testimonials. St. Louis, Mo. SOUTH OMAHA Packing Houses in Operation. Postoffice Established and a Town Gov- ernment Soon Will Be. Lots 60x150 feet gnth 20 foot Allevs for ale. One-fourth Cash, Balance “in 1, 2 and 3 Years. Best Locations Being Taken Get a Lot or Two While They are Cheap. SEND FOR A And nt Company’'s Office, 216 S. Omaha,” MADP. 3th St Vebrasha. M. A. UPTON, Ass’t. Sec’y and Manager. "GERMAN D. WYATT. Lumber Merchant Cumings and 20th Sts.. Omaha. Neb. RUEMPING & BOLTE, ~MANUFAOTURERS OF— ORNAMENTAL GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES Fintals, Window Oaps, Iron Oreebings, Motallic Bky-lighle, &c. Tin, Ironlsnd Bls § M0 RAnAn 194k Bivatt Omahe Nahroaks: 82, CAPITAL T TICKETS ONLY §5, 3, §70,000. G4 Suares 1y Pror ontion na State Lottery Company hereby certify that we supervise the ar Al the Monthty and Semi-Annia Drawings of the Louisiana State Lottery Company and in person manage and control the Drawings s, and that the same are conducted with fairness and in good faith toward all par we anthorize the conpany to wse this cor J les of our signatures astached n s advertisements.” Louisia e COMMISSIONERS. Incorporated in 13568 for 26 years by the legislature for_educational and charitable purposes—with capital of §1,000,0(0—t> which & 1ecerve fundof over $660 000 haa slnce been added. By ar overwhelmiug pop wiw mado & part of the y adopted Dooember 24. A 1, 1870, The only lottery ever votod on and endorsed by tho peoplo of sny state 1 never scales or postyones. Ite grand elngle uumber drawiogs tako place monthly A KFLENDID OFFORTUNITY T0 WIN A YORTUNE, FOURTIL GRAND DRAWING, CLARS D. IN THH ACADENY OF MUNIC, Nuw Ouikaxs, ' TURSDAY, AlkiL 16, 1885, 179th MONTULY DRAWING, CAPITAL PRIZE, $75,000. 100,000 Tic! r vote its franchise stato constitution a6 85 each, Fractions, of Fifths, in proportion, LIST OF PRiZRS, 1 Caital Piize. 29 Prizes of 100 Prizos of 400 I'r zew of 500 Prizow o 1000 Pfzew of arrs 9 Approsimation 97 do a do IXIMATION Prizes of do do 1967 Prizes, smounting 4o .. Application for rates to cluts shovld be made on 40 theotios of {he Company in New Orleans, Yor further information write clearly giving fu address. POSTAL N M. A. DAUPHIN, New Orloans, La. enth 8t., Washiogton D, C. oney Orders payable sad address Hogistered Lottors to NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK New Orlcans, La. Posltive rome: of PTION, 7 el Woman's Suflering and Relicf. Those languid tiresome sen you to feel scarcely al that constant drain that is taking from your system all its former elasticity; diiving” the bloom from your cheeks; that continual strain upon your vital forces, rendering you irritable and fretful, can easily be removed by the use of that marvelous remedy, Hop Bitters, Ir- regularities and obstructions of your eystern, are relieved at once while the special cause of periodical pain are permavently removed. None recoive 8o much benefit, and none are so profoundly grateful, snd rhow such an inter- est inrecommendiog Hop Bitters as women, A Postal Card Story. I was sflected with kidney and urinary Trouble- “For tweive years!” After trylng all the doctors and patent medicines I could hear of, I used two bot. tles of Ho) ons, causing And I am perfectly cared, 1 keep It “All the time!” respectfully, B.F. Beothe, Saulsbury, Tenn,—May 4, 1883, rorn, P, May 8, 1875, me of several diseases, such as ess, sickness at the stowmach, monthly ete. I have not seen a sick day 1n a r, since I took Hop Bitters. All my neigh ors use them, Mrs, Fannie Green. 3,000 Lost. *A tour to Europe that cost me $3,000,done “‘me less good than one bottle of Ho “'they also cured my wife of fifteen years' no t'vous weakness, alseplesaness and"and dys- pepsia,” R. M., Auburn, N.JY, 80. BLOOMIN 0 1,79, Stns—T have heen suffering ton years,and T tried your Hop Ditters, and it done me more ood than allthe dostors. Buaby Saved. Wo are 50 thankful to say that our nursing baby was permanently cured of a_dangerous 8. 8, Boone. o0g | and protracted constipation and irvegularity of the bowels by the use of Hop Bitters by 1ta mother which at the same time restored her to perfect health and strength. —The Parents, lRochester, N, Y, None genutne without a bunch of green Hops on the white | Shun all tho vile, poisonous stufl ‘Hops” i thelr aule. A Clear Skin is only a part of beauty; but it isa part. Everylady may have it; at least, what looks like it. Magnolia Balm both freshens and beautifies, rry |almost to the line of well v RS repews oy ANXT AR ATM™ATY o - THE DAILY BEE--THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1885, MRS. NAVE'S CLOCK. The Pacific Express Company Will Have to Pay for Breakig It, A Case that Caused Much Amuse- ment in Oourt St, Louis Republican, The case of Mrs, Mary B. Naveagainst the Pacific Express company was tried before & judge In Judge Thayer's court yosterday. Th tlon was firat tried In Justice Taaffe’s court in November last, and a jugdment rendered in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant apperled. The actlon was to recover the value of a French calendar clock of elegant work- manehip which the plaint!ff shipped from St. Lovis, in July, 1883 to St. Joseph The package arrived at its destina tlon apparently in good order, but when the plaintifl opencd the box the clock was found to be smashed and broken to bits —ruined, How it came to be known that a case promising some fun was about to be called {84 myetery, but known it was, for the usaally empty benches were crowded be fore Judge Thayer had taken his seat. A jury was called and_the trlal way com- menced. The plaintiff was the first wit- ness. She Is a person to attract atten tlon anywhere, but in a court room, with only herself and one other iady present, she was the centre of all eyes. Even the reporters were constrained to glance at ber helmet of waving black and purple plumes, and the changlng expression of the face underneath, She is a brunette, and wore her hair banged in rront, down rched brows under which sparkled a psir of eyes bright enough for o belle of eighteen. She was asked to describe the clock and state Its value, and the circumstances attending its packing snd shipment, which she did with perfect clearness to the minutest detail. She also explained the condition In which she found it on its arrival at her hotel in St. Joseph and sald it was entlrely ruined and broken to pleces THE DARK EYED YOUNG MAN, She detailed the facts counected with her visit to the express company’s office in this clty when she preferred her clsim for damages. She referred to the polite- ness with which she was recelved by a certaln “dark-oyed young msn,” and when asked by her attorneys for the pur- poe of identifying the demand as lezal, if the persen with whom she talked was in the couri-room, ehe fixed her eves calmly on a not very youthful gentleman sittlng near the defendant’s counsel— every eye followed her's—and eald. “That's him;’ and then, as the ycuth shifted uncacily in his chair and ssemed about to remonstrate—‘‘oh, yes, you're the man; and you were very polite until you found I wanted money.” 'Ihe man- Ter of saying this, and the sidelong look which accompanled it, produced a rcar, won the case, and transfixed with embar- rassment the aforeraid “dark-oyed young man.” Even Judge Thayer could with difficulty restrain a emile, and to do so was obliged to ehift hls po:ition and ap- pear to msks a mote of the amswer. Deputy McCune rapped vigorously for sllence, and when 1t wa3 restored the witness’ facc was as calm as a summer morn, with but a parceptible flash of tri- umph, THE CLOCKMAKER CALLED. Her decislon of character was further shown when ehe had left the stand and an old clock maker who had once re- paired the article in question was called. He was asked & number of questions, which eliclted objections from opposiv counsel, and as the court ruled the plain till would smile, nod and say softly. When the other side siruck out a clause threatening to the case, she frowned, bit her lipsand ehook her head in the most expressive manner; but never anything cffeneively or in a self-coneclous way. When the jury received the case they agreed in a short time on a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for €160, the full amount claimed. Counsel for the de- fendant requested that the jury might bo polled, and they all answered that it was their verdict. — Origin of A Ammonia {3 obtalned in large quantitics by the putrefaction of the urine of ani- male,— Eneyclopedia Britannica Every housekeeper can test baking powders contaiving this disgusting drog by placing a can of the “‘Royal” or *“Au- drews’ Pearl” top down on a hot stove until heated, then remove the cover and smell, Dr. Prices Cream Baking Powder does not contain Ammonia, Alum, Lime, Pot- ash, Bone Phosphates, (prove it by the above test). It Is prepared by a Physican aud Chemist with special regard to clean- lin ud healthfulness. monie, Maple Sugar in Nebraska. Fremont Herald, Frank Gibson and George Taylor have each brought to the Herald oftice some fine specimens of maple sugar made by them this spring right here in Nebraska, That made by Mr. Gibeonis from sap ob- tained from the common maple troes of this county which are growlng around his yard in town, aud boiled down on a cook stove, Hls specimens ave very olear and white, and equal in every respect to the best sugar made from the regularhard maple trees in Vermont, Pennsylvania and other eastern states, Mr, Taylor has about fifty trees tapped on bis farm near Arlington, and will make quite s quantity of sugar and syrup from them. He boiis the sap out dcors in an iron kettle, and the sugar and syrop is very nlice, though not quite a3 clear in color a3 that bolled down on a stove, but fallyequal in flavor and every other respect, Tne writer en- joyed the pleasure of takiog dinner at the home of Mr. ond Mrs, E. A. Abbott, a few miles northeast of *he city, the other day, and found the table supplied, among lota of other good things, with fine maple syrup of theic own making, They have tappad some of the large ehade trees around their place and have made quite a quantity of syrap. Now, there bave been a gcod many skeptlcs who have not belleved that syrup and suger could be made from the kind of maples that grow vaturally in Nebrasks, because they are not the regular hard or eugar map'c acer earchaiinum. We have always belizved that sugar could be made from any of the various varletics of ma- ple Indigenous to the United States, in- cluding the box elder, acer pegzundo, & varlety of maple 8o common In Nebraska which yiclds a sap of considerable swee'- ness, from which excellent syrup hws been made In this part of Nebraska at least, But ths kind of maple most com - mon here is the red maple, acer rubrum. which although it does not grow quite as 1 rge as the hard maple, furniehes a qual- ity of sap fully cqual in swectness and This maple much resembles the white or sliver maple, acer dalslcarpum, often called “soft maple” In the osst, where it grows more plentifully, and which it is eaid doss not yield & very 200d quality of sugar. Ashas been demonstrated beyond & doubt In the last fow years that the red maplo produces very sweet sap, which when boiled down makes an excellent quality of syrup or tugar, we can see no roason why more of the extensive groves in this part of the country are not util- ized in this way, and made to yield a handsome Incorue, Anybody who has a couple of dozen of maple trees of fair sizs can make syrup enough dr spring geason by bolling the map common cook stove to last an ordinary family soveral months, and as the evap. orating process can go on while cooking is belng done, there will be little extra outlay for fuel, The method of tapplng the trees and making the syrup may not be familiar to some people who may wish to try the ex- periment, and for their benefit we wiil describe the manner in which thore who have made sugar here de the work. In tapping the treos the best way Is to use a three-fourths-inch bit, and bore a hole In the tree not far from the ground, about an inch and a_half deep, and into this hole drive a stick witha hole through 1t, 80 that all the eap may be led to the oud of the spout Sweet elder wood 1s very convenlent to make theso spouts, as the pith can easily be pushed out with a stick of the proper size, and the end whittled off to fit the hole In twe tree. Drive It in just far enough so 1t will stay firmly ‘in place, ‘T'he sap may be caught In any convenient vessel, and placed in kettles on the stove to boil 1t down, By testing you can oaslly tell when 1t s of a proper consistency for useas syrup. Itis well enough to keep adding more sap, as it boils away until one kettle contains the saccharine propertios of four or five gallons of sap, and thenlet it boll down to syrup. If you desire to mako sugar, boil the syrup until it granulates, and then remove from the fire, stir a little, and dip into emall dishes that have been greased, and allow it to cool. To find out the proper time to stop cooking, take outa small quaniity ina saucer and stir briskly, Whenit arrlves at the proper consistency it will turn from syrup into sugar immediately. If you do not it, It will remain in a wax-liko mass, Of course this ls a rather primitive way of making sugar, and one which may bo laughed at by those who make hundredsof pounds of eugar each season, but it is the best and cheapest way for those whe have only a few trees from which to obtain sap. Tho sap won't run when the trees are frozan, nor after the buds are well swelled and the leaves begin to form. It runs best in warm days justaftera hard freeze; and sometimes darlng a warm spell it wiil nearly stop, and then run agatn freely aftor a night's froezs. The amount of sap a tree will produce is governed more by the amount of follage and corresponding roots than the size of the trunk; the more top and roots, the more sap. e — Sicx Heapacne,—Thousands who have suffered intensely with sick headache say that Hood’s Sarsaparilla_has completely cured them. One gentleman thus re. lieved, writes: ‘‘Hood's Sarsaparilla is worth its weight in gold.” Iteader, if you are a suflerer with sick headache, give Hood's Sarsaparilla a telal, 1t will do you positive good, Made by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Maas. Sold by all drugglsts, 100 Doses One Dollar, o ——— A M. Who Won't Go, Detroit Free Press. The postmaster of a burgabout twenty- five miles from Detroit was in the city yesterday in search of influence. He had been informed that his official heas in danger—not from the new admis tion, but from h's fellow townsmen. “1 tell you,” he explained, as he wiped the sweat from his brow, “it's an awful strain on a fcller’s braln. We got our post-office about twenty years ago. Our first postmaster was to> highmosed to play checkers with the boys, and we got up a petition and bounced him.” ““For a better one?”’ “Which wes me. Yes, the boys put mo in, but after a year or two they began to growl. I wouldn'tlick the stamp on for ‘em any longer, and the first thing I knew old Davy had my place.” “Go-d man §” “Tolerably; but the fiest thing he did scttled his hash with us, Got his wife ‘a new eilk dress and had s door-bell put up. It took two years to bounce him, but we got thar!” *‘And the next!”’ <“Wall, we gin the place to a womn, and she held it for five years and died. Then we gin it to the storekeeper, and ho held it till he bucted. Then the boys rallied on me agin, and I've held it for ssveral years,” “And they want to get you out?” “‘They do. 1've had six circus horses winterlug on my farm, and it’s made ‘'em all jealous. A lightning-rod man had al- 80 made my place his headquarters, and that's another reason they are down on me. Jist the minit a feller begins to climb up in the world they wanthis scalp. Soon’s I heard they had a potition arourd {o dust me and put in old man Smith my wife went out and washed the front windows, to show ’‘em that she dtdn’t coneider hereelf no duchese, and I put on my old duds aud sawed two cords of wqad, but it didn’t stop ’em, They might have got over the clrcus hosses and the lightnlng-rod man, but I've hsen ap- polated state agent fur a patent wind- mill painted in three colors. The galled jade can't forgive that.” And what will you do?” *‘Die in the harness! I've come down here to hunt up a man who says cld Smith was sent to state prison In Indlana and I'm going to have about fifty Influcn- tial men #lgn s cerilficate to the effoct that if my wservices are dispensed with they can't guaranty the ‘safety of this country fur more'n a week from date.” — — Brown's Bronchial Troches for Coughs and Colds: T think them the best and most convenient reliof extant,—[Re . Humphrey, Gratz, Ky, L —— The New York pelice are glving eome of their attention to thieves who steal electric light wires from poles in that city—a rather dangerous theft for any bu well-posted men to engago In. | — A sound mind goes sound digestion, and nothiog contributes to- ward it more than the use of Angnostura Bitters, the werld renowned appetizer, man- ufactured only by Dr, J, G, I, Biegert & Son dom without & e — menufacture the 950,00 tons of paper annually required for the supply of the world, 430 days' medium flow of water down the river Thumes would be needed, o the front with a weather prophet who forecasts ‘‘a snow storm for 1his month deeper than any we have had yet this season, and accom- E:med by beavy wind, There will also two snowstorms in April.”’ FTOUR BEARS AT A SHOT, Ount After Rabbits, the Marshall Brothers Strike Lumck Enough to Stock a Museum, Rinoway, Pa., March 20 —Joseph Marshall and Frank, his brother, live In Dagascahonda, five miles from this place, A fow days ago they loaded thelr shot guns with fine ehot and went out in the woods near thele house to shoot two rabbits thoy had seen there. The broth ors separated In the woods, and hunted along & hundred yards apatt. They had gone a quarter of & mile or so, when Frank heard Joseph yelling for help at the top of his lung Frank hurrled in the direction of the cries, and did mnot reach the spot a moment toosoon. A big sho bear had Joseph down In the snow, and was wrestling him around so lively that his clothes were already torn to tat- ters, and his flosh was in a [falr way to be used in the same manner. With a shout Frank jumped into the space where the one sided fight was going on, His appearance startled the bear, and she hastily rotreated behind the upturned roots of a fallen tree, and ditappeared in a big hole In the ground, *‘I jumped on that tree trunk abeunt three minutes ago to take a look around” sald Joseph whon he had got enough breath back to talk. ‘‘and I heard a funny sort of a squeal somewhere absut the roots of the tree, I stepped up to ree what was making the nolse, and discov- ered this hole in the ground. I got down on my hands and knees to examine the hole, when, with a rosr like & mad bull that big bear came pouncing out of the hole. I wasn't looking for bears, and I ralsed up about as quick as any living thing ever moved, and turned to run. 1 hadn’t taken two steps when the bear lit square on my back, and sker-r-a-a-sh! went the whole back patt of my clothos as if they had been ripped off by a stroke of lightning, and away 1 went, flat as a pan- cake, ten feet away. My gun flew as much further in another directlon, and 1 began to hollea like a stuck pig. Before I could get on my frot the bear 3 on top of me again, and, 1 wss jputiing in wy best licks to keep her from getting her paws arsund me when you came up. You can see by the way thirgs are torn up around here thatif the interview J had with that bear waen’t warm and llvely, then there never was a lively three min- utes epent with a bear before. That bear's got a family of cubs in her den, and that's what sils her.” Charging both barrels of his gon with heavy shot, Joseph's brother Frank a proached the hole in the ground where the bear had entered When he was within ten feet of it the bear 1ushed out to meet him. Frank shot her with both barrele, and ehe fell de:d, Tho two men then sesrched the den and found three cubs, which could not have been more thana day or two old. They were the slze of Newfoundland pupples. The brothers dragged the carcaes cf the old bear to the village, and carrled the cuks in the!r arms, The cubs whined pitaously for a doy or two, and then became recon- ciled to thelr strango surroundings, and now follow thelr captors about the streets like degs THE SLANDERED CLIMBER. The Gooa Use of Ivy Against ‘Walls of Dwellings, the Land and Water, We have frequently heard it main- tained that it is injurious and unwise to permit ivy to cover the walls of dwelling- Touecs, a8 it must necessarily occasion an internal damp prejudiclal to human health and comfort by arresting the rain and conducting it into the crevices of tle walls, detaining it there until it oczes through and occaslons such dampness @ it must be deeirsble to prevent even at the expense of eacrificing such an orna- mentsl coyering a8 a luxuriant and ever- green or variegated ivy. Now, experience und reason testifiy to the very opposite of ths and they are found boldy aeserting that no covering whatever is better calcu- lated or mare powerfully and uniformly tends to effect the dcsirable object of keeplog the walls of a house dry, both internaily and externally, than a gencral cont of ivy on the cutside, Letany oue oxamine any ivy-covered wall, and_they will discover the leaves hanging down, one over another, from the highest poirt to which the plant attaius to the ground, forming an ornamental shicld that casts off the rain and prevents its beating agoiust the walls, conveying it from leaf w leaf downward, prevanting its ever coming in contact with or moistening the walle; while the clinging nature of the plaut, intended for the purpose of ad- hesion, thrusts itsshoots tnto the crevices as roots aud claspers, according as it as- c:nds, and acts as so msny sucking engines, extracting and drawing awoy for the nourishment of its own luxurisnce whatever moisture the walls may bs sup- posed to attract or imbibe from the etm sphore, No wells arc dryer, or so dry, as thos to which vy forms a psrma- nont extcrasl covering, Inside the shoots and next the wall will be found, in addltion, coating of dry dust snd cob- wobs, keeping the wslls perfoctly dry In the wattest f weather, and that, too, on aspects mostly expesed to the rain and least to the cheering smiles of the sun. Depend upon it, ivy clingiog agatost a wall is & protector from damp, not a cause of it. Let our readers plant ivy against thair dwellings without any fear of incon- venient reeulis, 1t 1a a warmth-giving agent also, as many can testifiy. The old prejudice againet the employment of ivy a8 an external coverlng to buildings 18 rapldly dying out, and will at no distant date cease to be put forward as worthy attention, e The ongagement of Mr. Sidney Dillo Ripley, & membec of the Rockaway Kennel Club, and a gentleman well known in the humting field, to Miss May Hyde, has been recently an: nour ced, | —— A somewhat novel colncldent bappened in the Selg family, of Amerlcus, Ga., the 15th inst. Three persons of the same family had birthdays on the same day. Mr, Suls was forty, his father eighty and bis daughter one year old. r——— Thomas Fluok, of Belleville, Mo., recently shaved the beard which, in 1860, he vowea to wear until & democratic presidont should be Inaugarated, o —— Use the great speciiic for d in head” and caturrh—Dr, Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Al A safety paper manufactured by & Mas- sachusetts mill will make it difficult fir any one to tamper with bank notes or checks printed upon it. The ecoloring mstter of the paper is so preparea that the application of any chemical to remove the ink will permsnently change the color of the psper, snd an Ingenious de vice ls added which betrays at cnce leny tempt to wake an erasure, Between the two the enterprizing forger will be eure to come to grief. THE CHEAPEST PLACE Foll=fi=): Is IN OMAHA TO BUY [ eli=het A DEWEY & STONES One of the Best and Largest 8tocks in the United States to Select From: NO STAIRS TO CLIMB. ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR MAX MEYER & BRO. PIANOS, —~AND—— ORG-ANS [, . actory Prices, —~—AND—— EASY TERMS. Sendtorourcatalogue and price list before pur- chasing elsewhere, MAX MEYER & BRO. LEADING JEWELERS And Sole Importers of Fine Diamonds, Watches, Silver- ware, Rich Jewelry, Wholesale and Retail. or. 11th :nd Farnam Sts. MAX MEYER & GO. SOLE IMPORTERS ——OF == HAVANA CICARS ——=AND=— Meerschaum Goods, IN OMAHA. Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Guns, Anmamunition, Sporting Goods Notions and Smokers' Articles. Stationery, Cutlery, Druggists’ Sundries And Fancy Goods. Full and complete line and BOTTOM PRICES Max Mever & Co,. 7020 to 1024 *Farnam St., Omaha. J. SIMPSON =€ _ THE 1409 and (411 Dodee St. ARRIAG E FACTORY { oenaie } Omaha Ne= on application G A. LINDQUEST & CO. 1206 Farnam Street, FineTailors Wish to announce that they have from this time marked down ALL GOODS, and will for the next 60 days, make a reduction o 10 per cent. Overcoats, Suits and Pants well mad and sure fit. GOOD CLOTHES Now is the time to buy AT LOW PRICES THE BEST THING OUT Washing &RBleaching In Hard or Soft, Hot or Cold Water, 8avES Lakow, Tiwe and_ Soar AAz LY, and gives universs! satistaction. No family rich or poor slhiould Lo without it, Sold by all grocers, PrwAkE of imitations well do- 0 misl PrEARLINY [ the ONLY BAYE labor compound and always bears the atove sym: d name of JAMES PYLE NEW YORK, The Hall Tye Writer Is the simplest, best writer made, Has luterchangeaLle type plates, fow prints from the face of the type, stead of fhrough an inked ribbon, Prico only §40. Send for descriptive olroulurs, GEO. J, PAUL, AGENT, mld4dkwim P. 0. Box 714, Omaha,Nob, H, 8. ATWOOD, Plattsmouth, Nevraska BARADNR OF YHOROVOHERED wieH exAY HEREFORD AND JERSEYGATTLE AKD DURGO OB /MKANY RED EWISH d mosk complete typo. liag THE MILD POWER CURES.+ ciul Proreription ple, Safe sud Su e i, Violsnt Cou o un“,»,imyn'mu..m. Disense P ] PECIFICS. Bold by Draciats Joeelyt of price - Hun on Diseu UNITED STATES National Bank! U. B. DEFOSIIORY, §. W. Cor, Farnam and 12th Sts Capital, - $100,000.00 W. HAMILTON, Pres't, M, T, BARLOW, Cashies) DIBROTORS: H, M. Catoweir, B, F. Suire, 0, W, Haxrow, M, T, BasLow, 0. WiLL HaMILroN, Accounts solicited and kept subject to sight check, Certificates of Deposit fssued payable in 3, 0 and 12 months, bearlng interest, or on de- wand without interest, Advances made to customers or approved securities at market rates of interest. The interests of customers are closely guard ed and every fucility compatible with princl ples of sound baaking freely exteaded, Draw sight drafts on England, [reland, Bootland, and all parts of Europe, Sell European passage tickets, Collections Promptly Made,