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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE_ THURSDAY. MARCH 4, 1886, STRICTLY PURE. IT CONTAINS NOOPIUM IN ANY FORM IN THREE SIZE BOTTLES, PRICE 25 CENTS, 50 CENTS, AND $1 PER BOTTLE CEN! BOTTLES aro put up for the a commodation of all who desire & goo and low priced Cough, ColdandCroupRemedy THOSE DESINING A REMEDY ¥OIU CONSUMPTION ANY LUNG DISEASE. Bhould secure the largo $1 bottles. Direction accompanying each bottle. Bold by all Medicine Dealers. DOCTOR WHITTIER 817 Kt. CharlesSt., 8t. Lounis, Mo. f two MedicalCollegos, has hoen longer {eatment o f Cunowi ous, Seiw 1u 84, Louts, P:Ier'vollwl’r;nlrlflo'l‘ n‘?“" Sical Weakness : Mercurla Tions of Throat, Skin or Bones, Blood Polsoning, old Sores and Ulcers, are treated with nnparsll AR A e ing from Indiscreti or Indulgenc: ects : nervou oring Fnanently eure i venled envelobe, fren (o any addres Besor by mail fred, tvited atd strietls e A Positive Written Guarantee siven Pl case, Medicine sent every whore by aail MARRIACE GUIDE 200 PAJES, ¥INT PLATES, bindiog, fr 500, 1n b o b e (o 14+ cdivion, e ™ " EPITHELIOMA ! OR SKIN CANCER. For seven yoars | suTered with n cancer on | my fu fizht months ago a friend ro- commended the uso of Switt’s Speeific und 1 do- termined to make an offort to eit, In this 1 was successful, and began its use. The influ- ence of the medicino nt first was to_gomewhat aggravate the sore; but soon the inflamation was nlluyed und 1_began to improve after tho first fow bottles. My general health has greatly improved. I am strouger, and ublo to do any | Xind of work. Thie cancer on my face began to decrense and thie ulecr to heol, until thero s not a vestigo of itleft—only a littlo scnr marks tho place. Mrs. Jorore A MCDONALD. Atlinta, Ga., August 11, 1585, 1 have had & cancer on my face for somo yeurs, extending from _one clicck bone across the noso to the other. It has given me o great deal of pain, at times burning and_itching to such an extént that it was almost unboarablo, T Swift's Specific i May, 168, ht bottles. It has given thg remoying tho intlkmation and toring my general health. W. BARNEs. xville, Town, Sept 8, 1885 on blood und’ skin diseases muiled witt Specifie T W. 23 streol , Drawer 3 Atlanta, Ga A FINE LINE O¥ Pranos and Drgans —AT— WOODBRIDGE BROS’ MUSIC HOUSE OMAHA NEBRASKA. ESTABLISHED USEDINALL 1870. Pt PARTS OF THE fl@fil@fi] YA WORLD [ (s S@or@rmace(S, —— Catalogues and Prices on application. allthoe best Carrin Ly Dealers, : BICAL GO.. BUFFALOMY: STACY e, Romarkable and quick eul i . amesiyiinet apiek Dr. WARD & CO., LOUISLANA, M0, DRUNKENNESS Or the Liquor Habit, Positively Cured by Administering Dr. Haines' Golden Specifie. It can be given In & cup of cofiee or tea without the knowlodge of the person taking it, 1s absolutely Barmless, and will efiect & pormanent and speedy cure, whotber the patient is a moderate drinker o8 An aleoholic wreck. It has been glven In thous nwids of o nd In every fustance a perfect cure has followed. 1t nevor The system once impregnated with the Specific, 1t becomes an utter Lmposslbllity for the liquor appetite to exist. FOR SALE BY FOLLOWING DRUGGISTS KUHN & CO,, Cor. 13th und Dongl 18th & Cuming S mahe, N A.D. FOSTER & BR . Councll Blaff, Lowa. Call or write for pamphlet contalning hundreds ©7 testimonials from the be 3t Womien and e frow Bil Dris of the country. Ladies Do you want a pure, bloom- }ug y(:onlnrle&lonpi fil{ 50, & ew applications o! agan’s MAGNOLIA DALY will grat. ify you to your heart’s con- , Redness, s, Blotehes, and all d’lsonset? an Imperfections of the skin, It overcomesthe flushed appear- ance of heat, fatigue and ex- eitement, It makes a lady of TIRTY appear but TWEN- 3 and so natural, gradual, and perfect are ifs effects that it Is impossiblo to detect its application, T Iy IE KILLED THIRTY-TWO NEY, A Bketoh of Bspinosa, the ““Red-Handed,” in Pioneer Days. How He Was Finally Tracked to His Mountain Lair and Murdered—A Teign of Terror—His Bloody Knife Still Preserved. Denver Tribune-Republican: Adjutant General Taylor of Colorado hasin his cab- inet, in the Barclay block, a rude knife sheathed in buck<kin, once the property of old Espinosa, the torrible Mexican who killed thirty-two white men, not out of malice, not for the purpose of robbing, but simply because he had a passion for bloodshed. tachment of st which was sent from Fort ) Colonel Sam I, Tappan. The knife was presented to Louis N. Tappan, and by him to the collection in charge of General Taylor. Colorado A BLOODY KNIF It is an evil-looking weapon, made probably by Espinosa himself, the bl eing covercd with dark spots 5 of blood. It is a matter of conjecture on the part of those who sce it a8 to whethoer this instrument dispatehed all of the thir- ty-two victims, a_supposition not quite slausible, as the dveadful murdercr was meu to have been very expert in the use of hisgun. Nothing is known of the early Espinosa. He was first discovercd selling isky to Indinns on the borders of Me: co, and was arrested for this unlawful sroceeding,the officers intending toma him prisoner. He eluded them, however, made his eseape, and was not heard of for some tim: About thistime dead bodies began to bo found in that part of Colorado. WORK OF A BLOODY AND. In the gulches, in the mining camps, among the rocks, in - man, questered 8pot, bodios.werd found whish seomed to tehed in the most brutal manner. after week, month after month, this state of things went on. The Colorado earth was soaked with blood which recked in sun and sh For months no clue could be found to the murderer. The many and frequent deaths were inexplicable. Blaok my tery hung over the young territory. Peo- ple were 1id to venture out after dark, and in fact did not feel safe even in the daytime. K!hrr alapse of long weary months a Mexican woman one diy crossed Raton Pass just above Trinidad in company h a white man in an ambulance wn by mules. Journeying slowly along over the steep rocks, the pair were suddenly surprised by ' having the horses fired upon” and _killed. The man succeeded in making his escape in the mountains, but the woman was made a prisoner by the two Mexicans who had tl One of the Mexicans was Espinosa. The woman remained in ity for some time, but finally made e one dark night and made he ;y.:(.luf?: who_lived just t Purgatori During 1 soon fixed the ides with which bove Trinidad - captivity she tity of the numerous murder: thé territory was ringing. A DISCO D, 1 studied the man, observed hi ns, and positive_that she was right in her conclusion. No sooner had she returned to her people thau the news went abroad and pursuit now became fixed upon a Mexican named Espinos: who was believed to be guilty of all this indiscriminate slaughter, All this happened in 18 nd '63, Esni- nosa being next heard of in Californi Ich, where he was agun up to his old trick of separating the soul from the body. Upon the heels of the murders the miners of Cslifornia Gulch followed fast in hot pursuit of the villain \ overtaking and killing a younger brother of Espinosa’s, who ravaged the country under his leadership. Espinosa, how escaped his pursuers a second tim was next heard of in the San Luis In the meantime the terri tnre had offered a large reward for him, dead or alive ceral men were out on the search. Zarly one autumn morning just at sun- rise it transpired that Espinosa was umped near Gray’ Gulch, in the Sangre de Ch nge, on the south- west slope, about twelve miles from Fort Garland. THE ATTACK. The men m pursuit were on this side of the mountain, feeling sure that Espiosa was somewhere in the regi although they had no id in his immedi icimty name is Tom Tobin, still living in the San Luis v , was the scout in ad: the soldiers. Tobi sure snot, it having: been s 3 that he had never aimed at any living thing and pussed it. This man, riding cautiously along in the autumn sun- rise, was att d by the smoke of camp-ire in a ravine. Quickly di mounting from his horse, he crept cau- tiously along, accompanied by one of the y' men 1 his detachment, until neda place where he could see, t glance revealing two Mexicans lei v cooking their breakfast in the very tof the ravine. It needed but an instant for Tobin to see that the grim, copper-visaged old m: fully broiling his antelope ste conls, w. none other t Espinosa, who might as well have been christened the “Red Handed.”” Making up his mind in an instant Tobin said to his companion *I'll shoot at the old man, You sim at the young one!”’ TOBIN'S INSTRUCTIONS, These instructions, Tobin afterwards ined, were given because he knew friend was a poor shot, and he felt sure that his own aim was better directed upon Colorado’s nrch fiend. Both men raised their guns, bo! red, and the un- suspectind fathér of murder, Espinos: fell over the red coals, a lifeless corpse, In exact accordance with the notion of Tobin, the other man's aim failed in its purpose, only wounding the young Mex can, upon whom Tobin soon drew his giull and dispatched, as quickly as he had done the elder. ‘The intrepid Tobin then sent his companion their horses, which some rods away, and any — witnesses, save heavs and too blood-stained rocks of the ravine, de- liberately severed old Espinosa’s head from his body, drew the long black hair up over his sealp, tied itin a knot, and making his way to the spot where his friend was standing with the horses, stuck his saddle-horn through the knot of hair, and rode into Fort Garland, where he was roceived with enthusiasm Governor Gilpin, then the governol the territery, being there w y of soldiers, all of whom gave Tobin Learty reception, TOBIN'S REWARD, The reward offered for Espinosa v large, but Tobin had great difliculty in securing it. One legislature after another considered, or pretended to eonsider his claim in a weary, “‘eircumlocution office” kiud of way, the ‘years slipping by in meantimo, withoat Tobin'y s g ceived a cent. In the end, however, he received half the sum offered, which was a very comfortable amount. - Tabin is an old hunter and trapper, and one of the central figures in Colorado’s early his tory. He visited Denver two | years ago, but spends most of his tinié in his old ints. Kit Carson’s son married s aaughter, and lives in the same section, Having been recently elected sherifi of the count As for Espinosa, he was a boru desper- look after had_ left without to they ife of | ado, who never plundered, and who did not commit murders as the means of gratifying rovenge, but simply, it is thought, because ‘‘he had a fancy for the tragic.” It is a singular fact that he never robbed the men he murdered, money and valuables having been fre- quently found on their dead hodi, His character is one of the most striking of any desperado’s ever heard of in the t, and his memory still Jives in the rts of a score of carly pioneers, who, for a period of two years, never lay down to sleep at night without dreading his ap- proach. ot A MORTGAGED EMPIRE. Russian Real Bstate Heavily Incam- bered by Debts Due to Jewish Bankers, Wlo owns the Russian empire? asks the St. Petersburg correspondent of the New York Sun he czar collects taxes, dy fees, ete., which he hands over to his eredifors, minus the running ex- pensos of the government. This year, or instance, out of a total income of £503,700,000 he takes for his personal use #5,280,000,while the share of his ereditors amounts to $130,000,000. Imitating thoit august master, the Rus- sian nobles and other land-owners, as a rule, cannot manage their estates with- out resorting to frequent loans. In Rus. there ave thirteen land banks which advance money on d guarantees. Fully one-third of all private Iands of tl¢ cmpire are mort d in these banks, and the sum due to the banks amounts to £100,000,000. The c¢ity banks, too, of which there are in Russia 238, advance money on mortgages. Until lately tiie peasants were unable to horrow money on the mortgaged sy tem. But about two years ago the gov- ernment opened a special land bank for peasant, and now they owe to that bank about 15,000,000 roublos. "Plhus u large partof the real estate in Rus: is mortgaged in the banks. In their turn all the Russian banks ow largely to the state bank of the empi which along with the imperial treasury, is far from being able to meet the forcign debts of Russia, “Who owns asked of a Ru “The Jewish the ian empire?” I " was the reply. gL A Moral Tale. Little Johnny, the youthful contributor of the San Francisco” Argonaut, records this mor: al A preecher wich had been a wicked gamler fore he w preecher he seen a feller wich wa and he sed, the preccher did rds with this por nd win ol his monny. and when he is busted may be he will listen to the ivine trooth and be saved.” So they played, and the preecher won ol the fel- ler's munny, evry cent, and then he sed: “Now, see how w vou have ben for to loos yure munny, and yure whife and babys haven’t zot' no bred for to eat.”” And the gamler le s That's so," and he bust out a oryin Then the preccher he sed: “Pore sinner, if yau prommice me unto your onier to not Jlay cards agin, Ile give it ol back, cos me a preccher.” So the gamler he'was a stonish, and he sed: “I never see seech a good man; I prommice, yes, indeed, and haven bless you!" and’ he burst out in’ again, the gamler did. Then th preecher he give him back ol his munny and - the follor put it in his pocke! whiped his eyes and blode h: gratefle, and then he thot a pretty sune he coffed, and he preecher: “I feel mity mean t this hendred doll; from a man whicl has rescewed me from card-playing; tell you what Ile do; you put up a other hun- dred agin it, and weel toss up for the pile, heds or tails, best two out of thre.” o i i Mg Ways of Making a Living. New York Herald: Among the foreign abiders in New York the: re scores of odd means of making a living of which the public knows little. No one would imagine that the sabot of the French peasantry would be marketable in this and of " leather footgear. Yet an old man on South Fifth avenue until found subsistence in hollowing out shaping the wooden shoes. Few think cither of the strange bucolic occupations the suburbs_ offer; how there are farm ands_in Harlem and people who go about New ¢ and Long Island col- lecting medicinal herbs and leaves and watercresses, and how from the same quarters even frogs are brought by the colleetors of them to the New York mar- s, Then there are the thousand shapes in which actual mendicancy hides itself T a pretes ng the public. t from the organ grinders and the 8 t bands, the acroba s of the b: and the itinerant concert compani the German oons, there are the men with the performing bea rin town now, and that ¢ ned birds who cau e creat- to tell fortunes i ition to per- forming other dutic ure by no means orintholo It is an old, old world does not know lives, and the closer | viewed the fuller its trathfulness, SO PIL PILE A ‘sure cure for Blind and Uleerated Piles I Dr. Williams, (an Ind Williams’ Indian Pile Ointment.” A single Dox has cured the worst chronie eases of 25 or 30 years standing. - No one need suffer five minutes after applying this wonderful sooth ing medicine, - Lotions and_instruments do more harm than good. Williams’ Indian Pile Ointment absorbs the tumors, allays the intense itching, (particularly at night retting wara in bed), acts as a poultice, nstant relief, and is prepared only for i itehing of private parts, and for nothing elsc, SKIN DISEASES CURED, Dr. Frazier's Magie Ointment cure: magic, Pimples, Black Heads or Grubs, Blotches and Eruptions on the face, leaving the skin clearand beautiful. ~ Also cures Ltol, Salt Ktheum, S pples, Sore Lips, and Old Obstinate Ulcers, Sold by druggists, or mailed on receipt of Hcen tetailed by Kuhn & Co., and Schrooter & Becht. At whelesale by C.'F, Goodman. —_—— A western paper hearing that a coon- ery is about to be established at Orange, - J., called upon its readers to lay over Orange by establishing a polecatery. e Sick HeapAcHE.—Thousands who have suffered intensely with sick headache say that Hood’s Sarsaparilla bas completely cured them. Oue gentleman thus re iuvclf. v dood’s Barsaparillu is worth its weight in gold.”” Reader, if you are suf- fering with sick headach ive Hood's saparilla a trial. It will ‘do you posi- tive good. Made by C.I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. - Sold by all droggists. 100 Doses One Dollar. of ing that half of th how the other half in New York is ance given of PILES Bleeding, Itchin s been discovered by remedy), called Dr as by - Itisnot an usual thing in Southern towns to find the percentage of deaths among the colored population is twice s agreut as among the whites. * # * # Delicate Disease, affectin maie or female, however induced; epeedily and permancntly curgl, Hlu; trated ‘book for 10 cents in stumps. World’s Dispensary Medicrl Association, 663 Main Street, Buftal. e 2 A California Chinaman says they are manufacturing firearms in China to équip a force to invade California and- kill all the Irisinmen. sl e Augostura Bitters are the best remedy. for vemoviug Indigestion and all -diseasos originating trom the digestive organs. - Be- wate of counterfeits. Ask your grocer or druggist for the genuine: arficle, manufac- tured by Di. J. G, B. Siegert & Squs. e old Franch house in Qusbio which was used by Montealm as hesdquarters in 1739 is about to be torn down, to make roow for 8 modern building. WHAT WARNER'S SAFE CURE Ouresand Why- -~-mnaion of the Kidneys, Back Ache-Inflammation of I the Kidneys. BLADDER OR’URINARY ORGANS. Oatarrh of the Bladder, Gravel, Stone, Dropsy, Enlarged Prostrate Gland, Impotency or General Debility, Bright's Discase. WHY? Because it is the only remedy known that hus power to expel the uric acid and urea; of which there are some 500 grains secreted cach day as the result of muscular action, and sufficient, if re: ined in the blood, to kill six men. It is ect cause of all the above diseases, as well as of Heart Disease, Rheumatism, Appoplexy, Paralysis; Insamty and Death, This great specific relieves the kidneys of too much blood, frees them from all irritants, restores them to healthy action by its certain and soothing power. IT CURES ALSO Jaundice, Enlarge- ment of the Liver, Abscess and Ca Bile Duets, Billiousne: Tongue, Sleeplessne Debility, Constipation, tones, anc every unpleasant symptom which results from liver complaint, WHY? Because it a specific and positive action on the liver as well as on the kidpeys, increasing the secretion and flow of bile, regulates its elaborating function, removes unhealthful forma- tions, and, m a_word, restores it to nat- ural activity, without which health is an impossibility. IT CURE; Leucorrhoma, Languor, ALSO Female Complaints, Displacements, Enlarge ments, Uleerations, Painful 'Menstrua- tion, makes Pregnancy safe, prevents Convulsions and Child-Bed r and aids nature by restoring functional activ- ity. ‘WHY? All these troubles, as known by every physician of edu arise from conge: nd impaired kid- ney action, causing stagnation of the blood sels and breaking down, and this is the beginning and the direct cause of all the ailments from which women suffer, and must as surely follow as night doos the day. WHY Warner's Safe Cure is acknowl- edged by thousands of our bast medical men to b the only true blood purifier, i because it acts upon scientific principles, striking at_the very root of the disorder by its action on the kidneysand liver. Yor, if these organs were képt in health all the morbid “waste matter so deadly polsonous if retained in the body ed out, On the cont y if the > anged, the acids ave taken up by the blood, decomposing it and carrying death to the most remote part of the boc WHY 93 per cent of all diseases “which afilict humanity, arise from impaived kid- s shown™ by med authorities. ner's Safe Cure, by its diret action, Fosuiwl restorés them to health and ull worl ngFapcity, nature euring all the above distasés h car s removed and we guar nt ner’s Safo Ciife 35 a positive proventive if taken in time, s you valfie héalth take it to avoid as it will ag all times and under nstanceg keep all the vital func- up to par, ; also gunrantee a cure and beneficial effect for eaah of 'tk going diseases, also that every case of Liver and Kidney trouble can l{u cyred where degeneration has Not taken place, and even then Bene- well ion, ticularly in the spring, it is unequalled, for you canol habe fulde ilodiwhen the, Bidusys or liver are outlof order. Look to your condition at once. Do not postpone treatment for a day nor an hour. The doctors cannot compare records with us. Give yourself thorough constitu- tional treatment with Warner's Safe Cure, and there are yet many years of life and health assured you. Eomiires THE GROWING NORTHWEST. A Freshet of Prosperity in County—Local Politics, LoxG PiNg, Neb.,, March 1.—[Corres- pondence of the Beg.]—The city of Long Pine, Brown county, is at present making preparations for an unprecedented boom. It herctofore | only been growing gradually and keeping pace strictly with the growth of the surrounding count The development of the city and country has been marvelous, and still there could be no aiternative for the reason that the city has its advantages and the country has soil with productive powers that is not excelled anywhere and all the farmer has to do is to usc a little industry and the unbroken level praivie becomes a blooming garden. It is without question the greatest vegetable producing country in the United States, and the people here need never of any inducements for canning factories and creameries for they couldn’t keep such institutions away if they should try. 1t will be like the milis” that are here now. People in other towns were ping for mills but fates were against them, but Long Pine couldn’t keep them a and now there are two mills here running day and night and u third one nearly completed with a fourth one six miles down the river nearly finished. The mills that are now «in operation ound 15,000 bushels of wheat since the 1st of August, 18 The city has the railroad division, machine shops, round-houses and eating house also the best hotel accommodations in the northwest. Brown county is republican by 400 ma- jority, but ke all new countics when tirst “organized, it had men in office wRo worked for their own and their friends’ aggrandizement, but the people last fall hed them clear out of political exist- ence and the new oflicers haye reduced the indebtedness of the county from $12,- 000 to $8,000 and.expect to have the coun- ty out of debt:within three years. No county bonds issued nor expected to be. The peopla- df Long Pine and Brown eunty aro, rpgardless of politios, st Van Wyck n}nn’ and the first thing every man here, wI;F is nmkiv‘lF any pretentions Brown toward the legiskiture, does is to begin advocating the cause of Van. The feel- ing is an undarcurrent, but very deep, and only requires the excitement of 4 campaign to iw wipitate it into a roaring torrent. Such isthe case all along the Elkhorn valley..aud before November next every town will have its Van Wyck organization, It seems to me that there is n smile playing over the face of the gods when looking at some of the unini- tiatod aspirants for Van's place in the senate. Just!think a moment whata new member has to learn before he will be able even to cadteh the eye of and be ree- ognized by the president of the senate. They may blow and orate all they please in Nebraska, but when coming in"contact with the old ostentations war-hor: the senate they are gon upon until they shed their swaddling clothes. The pu«?)lc in this neck of the woods cannot find anything against Van Wyck, nor can they see anything in priut from his most bitter political enemies that will disparage him in their minds, so they are going to say next November, “Well dono, gaod and. faithful SOrvant; we will try yoti some more.” M. A Burt County Town. OAxLAND, Neb., March 1.—[Corre- spondence of the Bee.]—Oakland is mid- way between Omaba and Siousx City, is surrounded by as good agricultural land as there is in the northeastern part of the state, and all well improved. Prices for land range all the way from $25to $45 per acre. As a business ¢enter Oakland cannot be excelled between Omaha and Sioux City. Moro grain is shipped from here than from neighboring points, only yestorday over $5,000 was paid out to the farmers for grain alone. We tinve four large ele- vators owned and controlled by men who always pay the highest possible prices for grain and hogs. Many substantial and beautiful resi dences are being ercctod and in contem- plation. A business block of brick will bo built in the spring. With all these improvements and business activity, and the absolute certainty of the county’ seat and another railroad, we think a f:right future is before us. When Daby was sick, we gave her Oxstorla, When she was a Child, she cried for Castoris, ‘When she became Miss, she clnng to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave tham Castoria, —— Samuel J, Piper and Albert G. Hern- don were life prisoners in the Albany )l)l!uih'n 1 B’fflr robbing a muil coach in lexns. When the recent cpidemic of typhus fever broke out in the jil th volunteered as nurses, and both rendered valuable seryices until Piper hims taken ill. He is just recovering. heroic conduct induced Albany oflic to ask for their pardon, and a teleg: was receivd on Thursday saying the par- don had beeu gi Absolutely Pure and Unadulterated. HOSPITALS, CURATIVE INSTITUTIONS, INFIRMARIES, OURES CONSUMPTION, HEMORRHAGES And all Wasting Diseases DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, MALARIA, THE ONLY IPURE STIMULANT FOR THE SIOK, INVALIDS, CONVALESCING PATIENTS, AGED PEOPLE, WEAK AND DEBILITATED WOMEN For saloby Druggiste Grocers snd Deaicrs. | Price, Ouo Do) STt Tihe Socky Mourtaias (except t Yo procure: 11 R hel iaiet Bontn er I iata chgt mataerk Froes Suarves propalt by el 8 Doers i The Duffy Malt Whiskey Co., Batimore, M. g MPANY, Chicago, Lilots, Wester Belling Aflnu,w Send 3t atgmp for owr Unfad +a,consiting princip ally of row "Fiuaity baiuabis £or Tudl jon, Dyapevs Diseaser, I san be prepares OMAHA OPEN BOARD OF TRADE. FARLEY & CO,, BROKERS INGRAIN Provisions and R. R. Stocks. 1305 Donglas S_trcet, Omaha, Nebraska. ccute orders for purchase or sale of wheat, corn, pork and railrosd stock: Refer by permission to the Omaha National Bank. Firstclnss attcnt'on to orders from in- terior whie ure ol Asthma Cure. This invaluable specific readily and permn. nendy cures all kinds of Asthma, The most obstiniato and long standing cases yield prompt- 1y 10 its wonderful curing rtios. It is known throughout the world ‘for its unrivaled efficacy, J. L. CALDW ELL, city of Lincoln, Ncb,, writes, 1884 §inco using Dr. HAirs Asthma > thun one r, my wife hus been rely well, and not even a symptom of the disense hag l\rm-urml LIAM I3 N T, Richland, Towa, writes, L1855 1 have beon afiicted with Huy Fever and Asthma sinee 1850, 1 followod your directions and wm happy to say that I never slept better in mi’ life. T am gind that 1 am among the many who can speak so favorably of your romedies, A valuable 84 page trentise containing similat Proof from every tato in the U, 8., Canuda and Great Britain, will bo mailed upon application Any druggist not having it o stock will pro- curo it IR MAMN WHO (8 UNACQJAINTED WITH THE GEOGRAPMY OF THIS BY EXAMINING THIS MAP THAT THE GHIOAGO,ROCK ISLAND & PACIFIZ RAILWAY [ of its central position and close relation to off Briacial Haes i Fn Wenh 45 R EH NG R0 aisfal ‘polita. Constitutes the mo ta Rilnental ik 1 that systam of hrova o wileh Tivfiey and Tt aten tras 3 g hml I ulln Wdlwl from vlzlllllll nd Boutheast. and. sor orthwest Bouthiwest. PN ‘The CGreat Rock Island Route @uarantoes s patrons that senso of personal s e Sorasd b otk thoraighiy” daiberel rou o, Binooth tracks of Sontl aloel Tall, iy Dt el verts dnd Porticton xs Bunta Abpliasces of patunt i (hat exacling K ical oporation o octaltite ol “hia voute aro Franat & potuts i Union Depots, od C s Pygis pabid ey Fnahmieseed” colirid sud The Fast Expross Trains between Chic Poorl, Councll uils, Kansas C1ty, Tanvetscrih an Lohison are con o werl vendlated. dualy Ny ofstored Dy Gonches, Magnlacent Fuiltian ¥iste focpers of e Tateat ol Desos Diniig Carw. liy which slaborataly tooked meals are leisurely aten, Notwden Chioago wad K ansss Clty and Atchiau aro"aiso Fun the Celébrated Moclining Chals Cars. The Famous Albert Lea Route s the direct and f * line between Chi lnncapclls sad 8t re Bere connestion n Union Depots for &l , ..ats 1o the Te ritish Provinees. "Over this ron Talils are Fun 0 the wtering 1 sorta, plcturusque loc nf o oy of Tow s sbia. "1t la a0 the o " “1-‘:':1:‘- y:{:ué- “ ‘\ahufl fleids and pastorel it another IREOT LINK, via Sensca and Kan- kakeo, has U nod betwees ol apolla'and Lafajetie, and Council b a Polls aL For " detalled It btaiiable, as well }fl e Uuli b S8 ol Eriacii ik Blatcs and Conada; of by ad- E. 8T, JOHN, Froo's & Geal M, Gen'l Tkt & Pess. Ag't, CHICAGO. TEXR CEHEBDAPEIT PLACE IN OMAIIA TO BT FURNITURE, BABY GARRIAGES, Elc Is AT DEWEY & STONE Oneof the Best anl Ly ost Stoc's in the U.S to Select from. No Stairs to Climb. Elegant Passenger Elevator M. BURKE & SONS, LIVE STOCK COMMISSION MERCHANTS, GEO. BURKE, Manager, UNION STOCK YARDS, OMAHA, NEB. Merchants’ and Farmers' Bank, David City, Neb, Columbus State Bank ().,‘olumbus. Ne Plattd, Neb. s Onmaha National Bank, Omaha, Kearney Nation McDonald’s Bank, Noi Will pay customers’ draft with bill of lading attached for two-thirds value of stock. \AIIL T IRAANITID THE BEST THREAD ror SEWING MACHINES [THE BEST THREAD ro SEWING MACHINES J SEVILLLIVIRINT TG SIK-CORD SOFT FINISH SPOOL COTTON. | Y —— Full Assortment for VINYARD & OMAEIA, - L ESTABLISHED 1863. CHANDLER-BROWNCO. GRAIN AND PROVISION Commission Merchants. OFFICK: Chamiber of Commerco, Board of Trade, Milwaukee. Chicago. H. C. MILLER, Western Business Solicitor. W. P. PECIK, Local Business Solicitor, 1301 Doug Red Star Line Carrying the Belgium Royal and United States Mail, sailing every Saturday Between Antwerp & New York T0 THE RHINE, GERHANY, ITALY, HOL- LAND AND FRANCE. Salon from $8) to $100. Excursion trip from $110to $I80. Second Cabim $5), and Excursion Steorage pussage at Poter Wright & Sons, General Agents, 5 Broadway, New York, Omaha, Nebraska, Frank E. Moores, W., 8t, L. &P, tidkét agent. ROSEWATER & CHRISTIE, CIVIL & SAHITARY ENGINEERS Rooms 12 and 13 Granite Block, OMATELA., b‘l;EE'RASI—:A. Grade Systoms and Sewernge Plans for Cities and Towns a specialty. Plans, Est Epecilications for Public und otl: orks furnishe on Public Tnj AND Gty ROSEWATE vil Enginc B HAMBURG - AMERICAN England, France & Germany, Tho steamships of this well known iy built of iron, in water-tight compariments, and are furnished with ovory requisiie to make tho pussage both sufe und agrceable. Thoy carry tho United States and Buropean madis,and Jenvi New York Thursdays and Saturdays for Ply- wouth, (LONDON),Cliorhoug,(PARLS uud HAM: BURG, Hoturning, the steamers lvave Hamburg on Wodnesdays and Sun vin. Havre, taking passon Southampton und London. First cubin $3), $6) and Steerago § Railrond tickets from Plymouth to Bristol, C: Aift, London, or to Any in the South of England, FIRE Europe only 25, Bend for L RD & 00, Y ger Agents, 61 Droadway, Now York; Washiogton and La Sulle Sts. 'Chicago, 11l Nebraska National Bank OMAHA, NEBRASKA. Paid up Capital. . $250,000 Buplus May 1, 1885 ... 25,000 H, W. Yares, President. A. E. Touzavriy, Vice President. W.H. 5. Huaues, Cashier, W. V. MoksE, umm“".]‘(:)lm 8. CoLrLing, H. W. Yares, Lewis 8. Reep, A. E. Tovzanix, BANKING OFFICE: THE IERON BANK, Oor, 12th and Farnam Streets Geueral Banking Busiuoss Transacted aro Tho Caligraph Is rapidly displacing the pen. Reason how you sy you cannot sford 10 do witheut it. No other labor saving invention has so loss: ened_drudgery or brain aud hand, or suved a lul{u porcentage of dear labor. at It twius off but tw, as much ina given pen (it easily ‘. mucn) and it gives you sev rs iy a8 and interost on your- Yor “efrculurs and specimens ap- 1, G. STRIPE, Omaba, Neb., gont for Nebraska and We-tbrn Iowa NS, (Underwood's best) for sll kinds o writing machiies, oo baud. Prico §1 caoh. 0 48 A0%5 Lho sale to the Trade by —— SCHNEIDER, IWEBRASITA. e — 1 EN! _. T n‘| ly Iy e giving nows aper i ieglial epdorsprasnta, 4. ¥ §IEK: RSN CIVIALE AUENCY. No. 17 Fuilon Strests New Yorks PENNYROVAL PILLS “CHICHESTER’'S ENGLISH.” The Originnl and Only Genuine, Sats aud atwars Rellable, Rewaroof worthiess Iitationt rugsist bF o fitions Uillchregter Chemical Con P AR b adinon baunre, Philaday Pan sta every wht X for 4 BABY CARRIAGES ONE_ON WIOLESALE PRICE. 1 PAY o charges to all poings within 300 miles, ringes 1o select from. Send two cent stam for iiustrated catalogue. - Mention this paper, stully Introd W NCY, 221 W. MADISON ST., CHICAGO. ‘E!'DRFD. Teme Free.~A victim of youth- ANN000 s vous DNy, Togh Mate food, &c. having tried in vainovery known remeds ins diseovered s simple soli-care,which ho will sen R £0 hia followsniTorera. Address J. L. RERV S, 43 Clisthara#trcet, Now York Oity, A POSITIYE Cure without medi One box will cure No nauseous doses of cubehs, copaiba or oil of P $1.50. old by all drngrists or mailed on 7. C. ATL.AIN CO., cine. Patonted Octos the most obtinato case in four days or Ioss. sandalwood that ure certuin to produce dyspe fprice. For furthor purticulars sent 83 John st., Now York. Alan'sSoluble MedicatadBougies s of i 4y Felict. apd peincory’ Appliuncch, (OF tho spcedy relief apd pen Dernont cark of Nerions Debittt. doas of Yieality snd and gl Eindred trousis or aiiog, Complets rostoration to Henlt Ko TIoK In {ncurreds IO i suitlei envelops mamed 16, OLTALC BELT CO,, Marshall,. Railway Time Table. OMAHA, Tho following is the time of arrival and des parture of traing by Central Standurd tine at the locnl dopois, 0 . St. P., M. & 0. arrive and r dopot, cornor ngon tho B. & C. b, from the o inion Pacifie BRIDGE TRAINS. 1ge trains Wit leaye U, P, depotat 8:d5=— 0—3:87-4 b:dd CONNECTING LINES, Arvival and departure Of tuins from the transfer depot at Council Blums: DEPAIT. AURIVE, CLICAGO & NORTHWESTHRN, Lo Muil and Kxpress, . . Accomuiodition ... Bxproass ... ] CUIGAGO & ROCK ISLANIA “Mail und Expross .. Acoommmodation [y T, BEDFOSS. ......1 1 CHIGAGO, MILWAUKEE & BT, PAUL, “Muil und Express. o EXDICES... ors s BUKLINGTON & QUINOY, Mai! una Expross Expross ., LOULY . Louls lx erBL. Louis Eix /Tranafer. Y. 8T, JOB & COUNCIL BBl Muil and Expross. _Express. BIOUX CITY & PAGIFIC < Sioux City Mail . Paul K WEST 088 Looal, o Depart, AN PN | o L |'0, & REP. VA “Mail and Express 1. & M. IN NE#, Ml aud_ Express. .. Night Express BOUTHW ARD, SOURL PAC NORTHWARD, | CSIL P M. & O 0. Bioux City Expross - Bii0é!Oaklund_Accommod'n VAID. b & Q. STOCK YARDS TRAINS (] L. G. SPENCER'S TOY FACTORY, ‘| Ail leavo, 0. P. donot. Ouiaba, at 0143888 71—6:20 p. m. B, daily oxcopt Sus D, & ] oy . m. Leave Btock Yards for Oweha at 7:55-10:353. ly exoopt §