Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 3, 1886, Page 7

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STRICTLY PURE. IT CONTAINS NO OPIUM IN ANY FORM IN THREE SIZE BOTTLES, PRICE 25 CENTS, 50 CENTS, AND $1 PER BOTTLE 6255 CEN ! BOTTLES are put up for the commodation of all who desiro & goo and low pricod Cough, Cold andCroupRemedy 11088 RING A REMEDY FOIL CONSUMPTION LUNG DISEASE. Bhould gecuro the largo $1 bottie Direction accompunying each bottle. Sold by all Medicine Dealers, SWIFT'S SPECIFIG Ia nature's own remedy, made from roots corgin, The above of its ‘Mmanufacturo omand has been grad- aintil o £100,000 1nbratory 18 ¥ ow v do. This great Veg- cuncer, catarrh, imatism and_blood without the uso 1C CO., f Ammln, G !N)Cffi OR WHITTIER 617 St. Charles St., St. Louly, Mo. ry Hlood D! Purifie Ecrofula, cc o of merg N.Y. 1 o o olty papers old oY e e e = ental and Physical Weakness ; Mercurial and other Affecs Ih‘n\l of Throat, Skinor Bones, Blood Poisoning, old Sores and Ulcers, aro treatcd wit LI T AR e Dl A B Diseases Arising from |l|l]|s:rfl| Excess, 45 of sight and defective Seal dechy’ aversion tothe. o or by Tl frac, | 5 Itivo Written Guaraniee giren in every a. Medicue scht every whore by mall oF expresss MARRIAGE GUIDE, Bl phyaient foiogs o ropre A FiINE LINE 0¥ Pianos and Organs —AT— WOOBBRIDGE BROY’ MUSIC HOUSE OMAHA NEBRASKA. ESTABLISHED 1870, 01ER 200000 sol_u\ ‘flfl Catalogues and Pri AlLLLG best C 7 USEDINALL “%‘ PARTS OF THE . J” WORLD KQARRIAGEQ O, —— plication. Sold by and Deaiors. 7 A. Amm.‘ oioe. Mu..m r. Soaled pariiculsrs, Dr. D & Co. wu;x. BRUNKENNESS Or the Liquor Habit, Positively Cured by Administering Dr, sines’ Golden Speeitic. or ten without 4, ls absolutely and spoedy 26 of tho person takl d will effct o p o of cases, ¥ s followed. iniln, fmpre; ! 2 it becon A possibility foF the Hquor appetito to exls FOR SALE BY FOLLOWING DRUGGISTS KUHN & C0., Cor. i6th and Dsugla 18th & Caming Stw,, Omahn, Ne A D, FOSTER & BRO,, Council Blufy, Toswa, nlot contalning hundrods be3t women wid men (rom Cail or w ©f testimo: Bil Do isof te for pa Do you want a pure, Ing tom loxion? 1If 50, & fow ap (5 cations of Hagan’s MAGNOLIA BALM wlll grate iiy you to your heart's cons tent. It does away with Sal lowness, Kedness, Pimples Blotel bes, and all diseases an imperfeetions of the skin, 1t overcomesthe flushed appears ance of heat, fatigue and ex- eitement, 1t makesalady-of THIRTY appear bat TWEN. '\ 2 and so natural, gradual, and mem are ifs effects that it is impossible to dcwct its application, hlooms IN THE LAND OF THE MIKADO, An Omaba Man Sight-seeing in Japan—A Day in Tokio. MET BY CHANCE IN YOKOHAMA, Mr. Dewey Ituns Across An Old Ace quaintance of Twenty Years' Ago— A Strange Mecting in a Strange Land —Romance of a Fors gotten Actor. Interesting Letter from O, 1. Dewe Yoxoniava. Feb. 8.—At nine o'cloc this morning, sccompanied by an inter pref I started for the depot distant sout a mile, ch of us occupied a jinriksha, pulled by the coolics on a run over the smooth strects, and in ten min utes we were at the depot. English ears, three classes, were in_ waiting. tance to Tokio is eightecen mil forty-five minutes, with six villag stop at. Tho day was chilly. A foot-pan of hot water Was in each first-class car 1o place our feet onto keep them warm Rice fields, small farms, natiyes’ hou thickly populated, met out gaze on every hand along the road, and at every depot there were swarms of native Arriving at the spacious depot of Tokio hundreds of jinriksha nen solicited our ) age. The guide, Shay Akamaten, w fame translated means Pine Troe been in the United States and good English, and is familiar w ways of Japan. We shall Tree” for short. o' said ‘¢ ter hire a two-horse rig to make more peed as we have a busy day before us. A jinriksha for each puiled us to the only hotelin tl CITY OF OVER A MILLION INHABITANTS, While waiting at the Sei-yo-ken hotel for th r to appear I glanced over the hotel reg Names of persons from nearly e arge city in the world w there, The hotel man turned over the leaves aw back to September 18th, 1877, and pointed with pride to the names of U. S. nt, Mrs. Grant, and others of the party. Ialso saw the name of D. N. Richardson, of Davenport, Tow: tered September 14th, 1 an hour our rig tailed chubby 5, time spes ali the call him We bet- ame up, with two bob- allions, the driver wi ing a plug hat and frock coat with br buttons. That's English, you know. A ive footman without a hat followed asescort. *“I'ree” told the driver to dri to the Ame; 1 legation, two miles di tant. We rode through W strects filled with natives. None of the houses on these streets re over v ies high, built closely togethe ont being a store or on reached the legation sidence part of As we drove nto the grounds 1 by a native, was sounded rn the inmates of the The building is grounds are adorned folinge seemed un- igned to seats waited_ for and minis- of the city. a gong, 1 approach of visi spacious, and the with trees who: touched by frost. | in the the envoy 3 ter plenipotentiary who soon_anpeared. He was a sort of ‘Jack-of-spades-looking man, who mly welcomed us. Our errand there was to sce the minister's son-in-law, the secrotary of log who eame over on the same steamer with me, and who had been rece pointed. Twas informed that the s tary had just_started for Yokohs call on e, We accordingly vy short, " remarked that Tokio wa long xlml eight miles wide (A\Imnst as lar s Om with her s |l|L|u||~) and t we must hurry up. Gov. Hubbard, of Texas, suc- ceeds the Hon. John A, Binghan min- ister. The governor is a lendquarters- in-the-saddle’ and of immens ight. The sccretary is a native of but hails from Texas. He 1sa od enough fellow, but in: 1 of spenk- ingo as this: © ynnpt)wl[h:\l 1 Buddhist tem- Half an howr’s drive brought us to uly grove-—an avenue sever- sTong. On each side are solidl stone monuments, all dif- forently carved, and of different heights, Japanese letters are ved on cacl stone to tell the world hio fur- nished the stone to. [ul]l .ms his mem- ory, for these hundreds stones presented by Daimios in remarked that the 1 furnished by the wives and servants were Daimios. The one-wife furnished the smaller ston “Daimio,” by the way, means a woember of the old Yeddo nobility-—a thing of t prat. Seven temples are seattered through- out the grounds. ‘The fronts arce deco- rated with dragons and hideons scrpents in gold leaf and all fancy colors. A .m\l.xu! immense height looms up be afigare or statue of Buddl pper ind having a jim-crow “Tree” asked if we should enter one of these temples, and we according. y ascended the steps of one of them. A Kk fat priest met us and bade us move our shoes. *“Lree” pr 1 to but I declined to unboot. So we s the interior of the holy tem- p].‘, a ten- al hundred y rows of stones wero Daimios whose miny er kind of Daimios OTHER PL The next pla perial mansion, endless show of beng so large we stay “Short and A A daughter ot Hol t, of Conn- ol Blufls, resules here in Tokio. Her name is Mrs, Waddell, and we spent an hour pleasantly at her resldence. Then a six-mile drive brought us to Ih Yokura’s mansion. The doctor w on tho steamer from me, and had invited me to ¢ il anese dress, command, 31_’!1] rdsome face brought us tea and cakes, Irom there we drove to the Cita- de e Mikado's palace is within the rounds, After a look at the government uilding; took a glance up the Yosh- iwara, This is the finest street in the city, and s lined with beautiful houses. Yoo suys this is the great “sporting’ street, and that it is inbabited by over ten thousand *‘sporting” women, Pro- ceeding on our sight-seeing tour we ugh u wide strect and across Ba shi (Japanese bridge) which One-third of the eity is anals and river This bridge is the center of the city. Ascend- ing a hill we observed’ the sign, “French Restaurant,” and there we took a lunch. Driving through a | ate 1 noticed that it was p.-&»l. bullet marks, and asked 7 plain. He said the bullets wer the gate during th Mikado and the ShioZoon, in-chief of the milit in 1867, ¢ is an image—Dai Butsu (m. d- ‘hu\—\\wul\ -two t high, made of bronze and filled with clay. Crossi 1g the street we visited a tea-house L din a ple. zrove and by young damsals, who invited us Lo pa take of tea and swoeets, Tree" ‘mow proposed u visit to Go Hiaku Ral Temple of the Five Hun dred Diseiples of Buddba. [ the sc um| bml\lm" e were sl i colossal gilt image of on in which is g curiosities. ~ The place oncluded to make our with a SPAnS & can a colossal throne. On one side was the statue of an elephant, and ou the othor The dis- | In half | a statue of alion Tm\- is too vflvnh]l' to me to describe in this letter everything | that I saw here. I couldn’t do it justice i nty-four hours I would like to the praying machine, but have no time now. Near Hon-yo Go Mon, on a high hill- top, are the English consulate and lega- tion buildings—elegant structures, they are, too The English flag, mc speeted than any other in oriental coun- | tries, can be seen at a_great distance. We took in the fish market, and it w great sight to see the varieties of sc Japar produce. We also_inspe t o temple, and took a lool cut residence of Mitsui, the nker. The principal thoroughfare of okio is a hundred feet wide, with brick sidewalks, and with trces on ch side. The buildings on this street are all fine structures, many of them bemg three stories hig Tokio The g to be the the fall of tl was loeated the The empire of J 10,000,000 of inhabit size of France. It where in the larg Zood hotels. This v y in Tokio has given me agood idea of how tosce the city properly I shall return soon anil 3 ral dags in looking over I dr the city, and a ain and return to nes ealled Jeddo. boyhood stated it After | in olden shies of ous ost city in the world Damios the new itol ad the name changed. an contains nearly nts, and 18 abont the afe to travel any- now, and in the nty-sis miles ove ark we take tho cars ! TING IN YOKOHAMA —111E FORGOTTEN ACTOR. Yoronaya, Feb. 4.—This morning was cool, but the sun shone, bright, and in Omaha it would be called warm. A Mr. Roberts, an Ameriean, long a resident in 1, took me ont to ride through the nd into the count On the way 1ssed a school house where hundreds of littlo round-faced, happy-looking Japs wveru ing, many of them Iwmw bare- foot Men' w everywhere pulling s londed with goods, while jirinksha men were standing here and there by their car aiting for a job. Some of the men were bare-legged from the knee down, showing lm\\'\'lllll mus- cle. \mmnuuh WO rln)l)uuw'llx' ugh the strects on clogs. What clatter! Some of them ha pretty faces, but as to chape I cannot say, as they are clothed in loose wrappers of the Mother Hubbard styl passed through a narrow streef ged with people. 1 observed that vas no jostling among them, and no quarrcling. All seemed to bé con- tented, Asce nding to u\n bluffs, over- looking the eity and_the Gulf of Yeddo, we obtained a fine view of the surround- ing country. the ce course ids o Iu.ul.numw the trees, with, the hments.” My friend Other drinks, however, could have been supplied if demanded, A neat looking Jap woman, accompanied by two bright children, alnost white, ap- peared in answer to cur summons, while dignified-looking old man came in from another room. A nce at him brought tomind an old friend of more than twenty years ago—George Pounce RATED ACTOR the Boston Museum. I entirely forgotten him. an elegant actor in his arge and stately 1 and almost equal to Forrest, St sure he was much bet cdueated. knew Pouncefort intim: well in the early days of Denve n 1864 that Pouncetort left Den alt Lake. never saw him or heard of him i until [accidently met him here to- Yokohama, forthis dignified old man I am telling you about at the Jap refresh- ment stand was none other than . MY OLD FRIEND POUNCEFORT, Our meeting was indeed a great sur- prise. It shows that wherever you may £0, no matter in what country, you m meet old friends and acquaintances in the most unexpeeted places, and under most unexpected circumstances. You ean well in \e the surprise of our meeti Pounce remembered me well an vas delighted to see me. We sat dow, and he told me all his troubles. He is him: id an educated man of considerable talent. He said the Amer- ican people had not appreciated him, and ill success had followed him. He had DRIFTED TO JAP, married the Jap woman, and idsome children were the fruit of the wiage. “L nothing for world,” he, i) | covet i a existence.” If contentment then must George Pouncefort be ndeed. But | the old man is virtually “out of the world,” embow i shady groy verlooking the ( do, with the uji Holy Mountain wpan in sight anil covered with snow. It'is one of the most beautiful spots I have ever seen, and appare content with his lof Gborea Lonncetort, the forgotten actor, could not have seleeted any more attract- ive place in which to pass”his declining years. His Jap wife attends to business, selling drinks to procure curry and to feed the family, The building erounds belong to” her. She adore usband, who, to all appearances, nd his proud of her pretty children In former days an American dwelt there but Pouncefort knew not where he had gone or what had become of him. Curiosity prompted one to ask the name Dr. aatham,” he replied, “he was o, ood-looking man and a scholar. e s unfortunate Draw-po kept him down.”’ none othe than nd a favorite had almost the two of rice and her | is two DY formerly of La wrote up our pl and was first, to sc LATIIAN, He' it wus who ns in the Omaha Herald nong the very first, if not the forth the aaq: s of th plains for cattle pui boscs, He was a cattle r himsel if I ara not mistaken, and was about t first man to p ally demonstrat with a ln-r\l of cattle, the utility of th ])]:lins for g ng grounds, People made ight of his prophecies, but they have long since proved true. I don't know what has becomg of Dr. Latham. Par ing with my old friend Pouncefor whose ill success, as lie terms it, sed have made a sort ofephilosoph anthrope of him, I returned to my hotel, To-morrow 1 shall take the steamer with a friend for Kobe and Nagasaka, 750 miles distant, through the inland sca, and will visit the large cities of Kioto and O, . This 15 the “boss” coun to I have made quite & number of ac- qlmnmm and ha been treated splendidly. ' Yours truly, 1. Dewey, e The Last Russian Serfs, Russian papers - announce emancipation of the last Russian serfs. It appears that the peasants on the estate of the foreign convents in Transcahueasia were until quite recently the serfs of the nhuwwm Jerusalem and Constanti- nople. This abnormal situation has attracted the attention of th uthorities, and since last summer the onfranchise- ment of these serfs has been in progress in the governments of Tillis and Kutais. The Brotherhood of the Holy Sepulcher possesses more than six thousand serfs, snd the patriureh of Constantinople, as representing the convent of Iversky, on Mount Atlios, has about five hundred more. The ——————e No Loss Without Some Gain. Funny way a wan got a bill through couneil here a few years ago."’ “ll«)\\ did he do it “Why, ke bet a majos bers $30 ng; ust u now ha y ot the mem- that the. bill LMy | ¥atuable cutfos il | across the desert to the north | ern-most wo “uull s 0: “Did he “Course. The odds were too la. l founding a social life very much li AMONG‘YHE ‘mMoQui INDIANS. Col. Stevergoh’s Kxciting Adventure in a Paeblo Town. Washington Post: Col. James Steven- son, of the buréan of ethnolog! $ re- turned to WasHington, afte about six months among the Arizona, bri Ind arload of r ative of the habits, workmunshin and industrics of us tribes of which little is known He w, ompanied in his travels by | Mus. Steventor, and the pair had an ad- | venture amdng the Pue sblo Indintis quite it character. Having ex- plored some' nesely discovered eave vil Inges in the vicinity of gstaff, A. T., they gathered a small party and strock wt for the Moqui towns, several days’ journey dis- tant. They arvived safely and encamped at the foot of a high mesa, upon llu- top of which stands Oreibe, the largest, west and least known of A\ll the Pucblo town Its population 18 abont 239 souls, and the village is & compact mass of rubble structures, standing one upon the other like a pile of empty boxes, and with little wrd to neral plan of itecturce. Tho | like all village dians, are comparatively harmless, but, unlike the majority, have a strong aver- sion to contact with the whites, Some of the leading men of the town me down to the camp and, after con siderable smoking and consent that their village might be vis- | ited, but stipulated that no effort should be made to convert the people to Ch tianity, The next day Mr. and Mr: enson, accompanied by e or sndly Moquis, and as m: s rode to the top of the mesa, dismounte 1ked into the village plaza, and thence climbed a ladder to the top of the cocique’s (or high priest's) house. When the presence of the strangers be- came known there were signs of excitement throughout the village. The neighboring housetops and the were llnuum-d by excited barbar- ians, who chattered in loud voices and nde threatening gestures. One burly e upon a roof just above {hio Cocique's house dangled ' lari gos- tively noosed at the end, and loudly de- manded that the-whites be taken to the estufa, or the underground chapel of the village, and there summarily dealth with, One or two demonstrative individuals volunteered to be the first to apply the knife. The friendly Moquis ~lum‘ their ground only a few umum nd then dis- appeared, but the joes, who are made of firmer material, remained. Ce Stevenson says that while the situation 3 esting, it was probably less alarming than it would have becen to peonle unacquainted with the natural timidity of the Pueblos. Mrs, Stevenson, who has sojourned with her husband among many wild tribes and kndws the Indian character well, ereated an opportune diversion by shaking her fist in t)]u' face of the hum- backed avage whose vindieti cloquence seemed to exert a most mi chievous influence over his fellows, ad- dressing to him at the same time s brief, but vigorgus, remarks in and Spanish, Avhich he was, of cours; quite unable fo understand. Before the man had regovpred his sclf-possession, the stranger’s had backed down the lad- der and then slowly made their way, with the whole howling pack, men, women, children and dogs, their heels, to thiir ponic mounted and rode down to camp. They found the cook, who was th only other white person in the party, 'condiderably alarmed. e said the éanip was surrounded soon after their dl.k rturg, by many friendly Indians, but when the Moqui descrters reached them and told the story of the proceedings on the mesa, all mounted their ponies and made haste to get away. The cook feared his companions been made prisoners, perhaps murdered. The party remained in the neighbor- hood several s, visitin the other Mogquis villages,t6 all of which they welecomed, and many times the visited surreptitionsly ar night by from Oreibe, who brouglit sale, which they I not In_this way a colleetion wa Meanwhile the story of llu Orecibe was carried to Keam's Canyon twenty-five miles distant, the proprictor of which, ish merchant, has hived in the \u- hity many year: wnd by dealing, pluck and” firmhess has ined an “extraordinary influence over joes and Moquis, Mr. Keam at once organized a party of three or four white men, the ‘only ones living within sixty miles, and a dozen or twenty avajoes for ares The Oreibes re 1 information of his approach, and d men of tribe incontinently un sent his Navajoes after then. including the hunchback | brought in. Keam hulllw elbows and took them to his ranch, for pline, the Stevensons ae- companying him o prisoners were it it first but after two or three days nt under the guardianship of ars, who beat drums, danced, ) other terrifying perform i to relent, and confessed s, they be ¢ had acted badly, — WISH COMMUNIST! That Has B n Orego he Russian Jews are the aptest disciples of the socialist ideas. B » remarkable for ness of intellect and extraordin tude for the acquirement of Jew in Russia develops ehe great social sentimentality, T history nothing clse which approaches the sentiment of the sermon on the mount in which the heart of Jesus pul- sates its love for every human being, triend or foe—and Jesus was a Jow, There was, then, in the Jewish organiza- tion a latent capacity for depths of feel- ing, which it only required the propor eir- cumstances to miake alive; andat least a similar fecling, w passion for &y Lappi- ness of others, has undoubtedly smong the younger generation of Jows in Russia met with — the condition neeessary to doyelop it into active en- Il is not meant that all J i humanitar] meant thatea majority of the J are hpgnitarians; but that, the JJows with the native Rus- , and with Ehu Giermans in the em- pire, the Jews jiresent, in proportion to population, a much greater number of individual o1 the stimulation of numanitar sentiment, as expressed in the socialistie dogtrines, and a; ady to risk fortune wnd life in the service ot itdrian ends. In a word, a art ot nihilistic or ialistic "!\rluh Jewish, yeursagd a band of such Jows, all gf ghem residents in Odessa, leaye Russia and seek in the atesa home where tl would be free from'the taxes and military ser- of despotiam undj the brutility of ic Mn which they had seen mora thun onoe plunder their own homes, The band numbered about 100, all neople, the average age being 21, - y all the band were unmarried youths but there were & few young and ral married coup Their hopes vague but passsionate; th means in money so small that immed ately on their arrival in New York they were compelled to hire out as laborers (lull some way should open to them to uni their numbers in # common colony or home. It is unncessa te “the particulars of their movements and la- bors; but two rs ago a portion of th band, about” one-third of orignal number, and resolyed itself into & so- ciety adopting the system of common property, and bouglit a farm of 800 acres in Southern Oregon, with the purpose of : that eoy curios for Yer openly ade. qisode in Nay and an, that th ndulged com- i | a poli | which eharacterize many of the so-called THE OMAHA DAILY BEE, WEDNESDAY, M \RCI{ ‘l. 1886. “hmh ex tians, wl th were man own This is the Russian colony at Glendale, Ore., know as the New Odessa Commu nity. The industrial labors of this society have been, for many reasons, very rude and ineflicient; the improvements ‘which they have added to the place as they | bought it are of the me limited char ac and their farms and build are only ‘noticeable for their anthrifty and untidy appearance. Their pr tinter- a socicty is to be found entirely n| Alml(\ of their ion; they have | .\ill\ anization for the manage ment of their affaivs; they have no de fined code of morals, unless itis to be o, One of their young women once foplied to me, whert T remonstrated 1o her for some unusual act of ¢ claiming: “You are too good W nnot be too good They appe howover, to be irely free from those extraordinary eccentricities of behavior ted among the entliest Chris- n, after the day of Pentecost, were filled with the Hoiy Spirit, and f one mind and one heart, and no | aid taat aught that be had was his the They Americ PUrpos who ar n reformers of u parallel line of nd those ssian come-outers not of Jewish descent - A Great Day. living in_the Missouri river countr, kota, visited a “no lice town where the iaw is rigidly enfor On his return a friend said to him yose you had a pretty ary time down A man Don’tsee where you tind any fun in a temp'rance town.”’ I never had a better time in my am run away, held a a fight, and was asked on four hoss trad n that?” lif t durin’ vie nt any more - During the nmne years the Spreckels reaty been in foree the dutics vemit- ted on Hawaiian sugar have execeded tho ire exports from this countey to the I Islands, reCOUGHS,CROUP —AND— CONSUMPTION v my p Would you w orSWEET GURM~- MULLEIN. Tho eweet gum, ns gathered from a troe of tho samo n frrowing wlong tho smali streams in ating e e fa wnd whooping-cor When combined with tho i el oup, 0 pi . Askc your 0. GE?iTAL “Wo do here ar 1ont Drawinis of Company, and the Drawin: conducted with hon faith toward all par Comprny to use th ofour signatures uttuch PR!?E, 5”'“ hy e perviso tha for il the Monthly and Quarterly Ihie 1o Lotiery We, the unie vy all Prizes dv fes which may be 1 1 Pres. Louisiana mmm Ld SAMUEL H. KENNEDY, Pros, State National Bank. BALDWIN, Pres. New Orleans Nationa! B UNPRECEDENTED ATTRACTION, OVER HALY A MILLION DISiminureo LOUISIANA STATE LOTTERY COMPAKY. Incorporated in 1868 for tnture for Educationul wnd Chasitibio pur with a capital l»‘ which fund of ovor beon added, By an overw voto its franchiso WS 1nide i ate Constitution adopted De Its grand single numbo) monthily 5 years by tho legis: | ve | 135 will take placo ok ut the folls il H 190th Grand Monthly AND THE EXTRAORDIRARY QUARTERLY DRAWING In the Academy of Musie, New Orleans Tuesiiy, March 1¢ al supervison and mahaze 1. BEAUREGARD, Of Lou- isiana, anc JUBAL A, Eanwy, of Vi ginia. CAPITAL PRIZE $150,000 Notice, Tickets are $10 only. Halves, $5 Fifths, $2, Tenths, SI- LIST OF PLILES 1 0AvITAL Pizg OF #1000 0,000 10,000 5,000 1,00 50) ) 200 0 5 Under the perso ment of or 000 000 50,000 APPROXMATION PRI 100 Approximation prizcs of 80000 i ) 1 v only to the oflico of leans, For further info full nddress. POST Orders, or Now York ¥ or, ourroncy by exvross il suins of 'and up- abds Bt OUF €Xpense) wdd L " M. A, DAUPKIN, Nuw Osleans, L early, @ving press Mo hange' i ordi Or M. A.DAUPHIN, Washington, D. ©. Make P. 0. Money Orders payable and addross registered leiters o NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANIS, | Oneof the Bost anl Lury to Select firom. No Stairs to Climb. Ele Merchants’ and Columbns Stata ational Bank, Omaha, dralt with bill of lad k, Kearney, N i . Neb.j Oni L Wil pay custoier VINYARD & O A Iia'.-l\'-. o o ESTABLISHED 1863. CHANDLER-BROWNCO. GRAIN AND PROVISION Commission Merchants. OFFICES: Doard of Tr Cuicago. H. C. MILLER, Western Business Solicitors W. P. PECIZ, 1 Busincss Solicitor, 1304 Doug lo, Chamborof Commeree, Milwaunkee. Loc Red Star Line Between Antwerp & Hew VYork 10 THE RHINE, GERMANY, ITALY, HOL- LAND AND FRANGE Salon from $6) to $10. Bxeursion trip from $11010 §150. Sccond Cabin ), und Exeursion ). Stoor: “age at low rates. Pe & Sons, al Ageits, 5 Broadway v York. Omaha, N 8t, L. &P tick Carrying the Do Mail, sal Ka, Frank E. Moores, W., HZJSE,H TER & CHR’.S‘TI:: CVIL & SAMITARY EXGI EEHS R ms 12 m\l 15 Granite Block, Wis asposialt cations for Publ furnished, on Public Tm] oys und It o 3. Membor Amcriea <. City Engincer of CARRICES AN GAR SENT C. O D_ AT WHOLE! 1 10 all ANDIEW ROSEW AT Civil Bngine £, 1, Citisne, £00'c Omabi 221 W. MADISON ST., CHICAGO. HAMBURG - AMERICAN Packet Company. A DIRECT LINE FOR Enzland, France & Germany. The this well ke are and roquisi ke tho ocabl curry pean muilsand leave and Saturdays orboug,(PARLS and HAN Now York Thu mouth, (LON® BURG), Roturning, the stommers loave Wodnesdnys and Sunduys, viu, passc uthampton wnd London, Fist cabin §3), 560 and §15; Stoorage a tickets frow Plymouth 1o Bristol, Cars mdon, ox to wny place in the South of wnd, 1'it from Lurope only send for L. Hamburg o Havre, taking o Agents, ork; Washington und La Man'mm! Eo havinet RESTORED. Remety 100, i of yoitis. i fimpradonce ‘aveinie Docay, N clility, Lot M overy ki e,which | Addy Saligraph is x on Low you without it. e pen. tord 10 do has so less or saved such a larg |~ Figure thar work i1 g1ven tine s does tii a5 mucn and it Iy us mud i 2 a8 mueh pen (it easly you on y 0 Iowa nds o New Otloaus, La , 04 Lisad. Price §i cach. Farmers' Bank, Bank. ! prom: TEE CEEAPIITY PLACE IN OMATIIA TO BT FURNITURE, BABY CARRIAGES, £t Is AT DEWEY & STONES e cv 23t Stocls in the U. gant Passenger Elevato M. BURKE & SONS, LIVE STOCK GOMMISSION MERGHANTS GEO. BURKE, Manager, UNION STOCK YARDS, OMAHA, NEB. Da > N Kearney Nationg Columbus, MeDonald's Bank, Noi b, ng attached for two-thirds value of stock. SIX-CORD SOFT FINISH SPOOL COTTON —— Full Assortment for sale to the Trade by — SCHNEIDER, NESRASIEKA. Nebraska National Bank | OMAHA, NEBRASKA. $250,000 25,000 Paid up Capital. ... Suplus May 1, 1885 President. ‘ouzALIN, Vice President. W. H, HuaGnes, Cashier, DIREC OIS Ww.V. \lm.w, Jon CorLLINS, A\. E. LEWIS S. REED, TouzALIN, BANKING OFFICE: THE IRON BANK, Cor. 12th and Farnam Streots. General Banking Business Transactad TANDARD MEDICAL WORK I‘On{Yfid‘h AND HMIDDLE-AGED MEN ONLY 81 BY MAIL, POSTPAID, ILLUSE A ) TO ALL A Great Medieal Work on Manhood. Fxhanstod Vitality, Nervons and Physial Davility | rrirs of Yonth, and th ontoid and o1 younz, middlas m!lfl ehroniedy i for a1} ot h is inva! l"‘ Ttoontal ronch. muse 1irantend to haw finee 1 profes i smplo. B 04 the anthor by 1 Tt (o T A 1 ialls 3 0f tho board the roaderis rer i ‘Boints out tha mmnm\qumm i il hopos of many Kod. ~Mi €L " 1 fatally wre £ aren Thed in ‘this o <utution ustar £ valno than all tha antry for the pask and mastorl troat. debility Dotrolt Fron 14 institato. or Dr W, i, Boston, Mi X ) 1ve bt norphyal Suc ity widiout an " instanco of tallure Railway Time Table. OMATA, their do nul cornet traing on the B, . & C. B, from the ‘él i in lserotion’ wnd ex: u'the Union Pacifia LAINS. 1. dopot at G;dS= 13 30:00--11300 1 11:10 for for Uull b PrOss. ... " CHICAGO, MILWAUKE® & ST. P, Muil td Kxpross. . (CAGO, B Mai! und 2% Pm PEZ P WATIASH i . o1, Local. S Louis lsxpross Looal M Treanstor St Louis § ansfel KANKAR CVTY; BT, JON & COUNGI, UBURI. il and Expross. T8 : Expro EIOUX CITY & PAGIFL ity Mail Denurt AN Jenver 0. & REP. V. “Muil and Expross... |, L. & M. IN NEB, Madl and Yoro .\l'y #i10s, lh|u|| " T 8ot L M. & O Ex pross i GuklandAvcominod ASTWA D, Via IRLSInOULS YARDS TRAINS X wl4pu Owab b \ i 715 20D, m y axonpt § daily except truins datiy; € iy excent Saturday duw, , 0t GiA)—Bilim

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