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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1882)
THE DAILY BBE--OMAHA FLJDAY , NOVEMBER 10 STRONG FACTS/ A great many people fire asking what particular troubles BROWN'S IRON BITTERS is good for. It will cure Heart Disease , Paral ysis , Dropsy , Kidney Disease , Con sumption , Dyspepsia , Rheumatism , Neuralgia , and all similar diseases. Its wonderful curative power is { imply because it purifies and en riches the blood , thus beginning at the foundation , and by building up the system , drives out all disease. A Lady Cured of Rheumatism , Baltimore , Mil , , May 7 , iBSo. My health was much jMAtteml by Khtumalltm when I commenced taking llrown'd Iron Hitter * , ami I scarcely had strength enough to At tend to my dally IiomehoMiluticv I am now using the third bottle and I am regaining Mrength dally , and I cheerfully recommend It to all. I cannot .iy too much In praise of It. Mrj. MAHY H. UHASIIKAK , 173 1'rcstmanst. Kidney Disease Cured , ChrlilliiiubiirR , Va. , tBSi. Suffering from kidney disease , from which I could ret no relief , I tried Brown's Iron Hitlers , which cured me completely , A child of mine , recovering from scarlet fever , had no appetite and did not seem lo be able to cat at all. 1 cave him Iron IJitlcn with the happiest results. J. Heart Disease , Vine St. , Harrltburg , Pa. Dec. 2 , 1881. After trying different physicians and many remedies for palpitation of the heart without receiving any benefit , I was advised totry Drown sIren Iron Hitlers. I have used two hot- tics and never found anything that cave me to much relief. Mrs.JiiNNin HBSS. For tlic peculiar troubles to which ladies arc subjcdt , BROWN'S IRON BITTERS is invaluable. Try it. Be sure and get the Genuine. BALL'S ' CORSETS Every Corset Is warranted satis- f notary to Ha wearer in every way , or tbo money will bo refunded by the person trom whom it was bought. The only Oonot pronounced br our Iwullnnr phjijotuu Ho Injurlou. to tha trcaror , andcndorttMlJT lullo < ti ho " rnoit comfortable and perfect fitting Canot erei PRICES , by Mail , Pmteae Paid t * Uetlth PrcHrvlna. * 1.GO. Helf-AdJuitlnK , 1.BO Abdominal ( extra bcary ) 9.00. Nurilne , 61.80 HeiaUt PrcMTYtn * ( One coutll ) 9.00. Parocon BMrt-Hupporllnir , fi.eo. For * * le by Icudlnu Jlctutl Drulcri ercrywhere. CHICAGO CO11SUX CO. , Cbtcauo , HI. HEAT YOUR HOUSES fl / FURNACES IN THE WORLD , MADE DY BIOHARDSOfl.BOYNTON & 00 CHICAGO , 1)1.1.8 , Embody new 1882 Imprnvuracntt. Mor .raottoal tea uru > ; Cost Ions to keep lo ndcr ; UiuloiD fuel | will gbo moro heat and a larger volume of pure air thin any furnace made Bold by PIKIICKY * IHlAmi'OUD.Omana.Neb 100,000 TIMKEN-SPRINGVEHIOLtS NOW IN USE. " . They urp rt Ml other i ( or > y rlillnir , ttyli nd Jurablllt ) , They are for sulo by alt Loading Oar tago Builders and Doalurs throughou ho country. SPIUNG8 , 44AES & BODIES Korwl b Henry Timken Patentee irillutldor o ( Fine Carrlijie , - - naco THE CITY STEAM LAUNDRY rnaltei a apeclklty of Co"ars & Cuffs AT TUB BATE Ot Three Cents Each 1 Work ollcUed fromi.ll over the count r The charges nd return portage mutt s oomptuiy the package. Bpeclal rate * ' large clubs or i > ? endai. 24-tf u WILKIN8 & EVA Ml THE PAY OF PLAYERS- Some Idea of the Salaries Re ceived by Actors and Actresses , Firat-OlaeB Companies and .Gross-Road Concerns. The fiarumgfl of Variety People ple and Operatic Artiste. Interesting Facts Concerning tbo Cash Profits of the Playorfolk. Supoa Mid Dnllot-Glrle. lllol 0'T > ci orrat. Theru are 40,000 people in this country who are wage-workers , and whoso toil by day and night , outside of enriching about 4,500 other indi viduals , is meant only to fill the rest of mankind with delight , and repre sents no result moro permanent or tangible than Iho fleeting sunshine of a smile or the golden vapor of a joy that has filled a human heart. Yet , according to a recent article published in a Now York dramatic paper , the work of this small army calls for Iho payment of at least $32,000,000 annually in oalarioa , Thuy labor through but forty weeks of each year , and during thin time their efforts briim millions of dollars to the pockets of the gentlemen who employ them. The Now York paper already referred to has the following anent this subject : "A guide published last 'year gives a total of about 4,500 theaters that kept open tholr doors for an average of forty weeks. Taking the poor at traction with the star that fills the theater to overflowing , the average re ceipts would bo about § 150 for each theater , or § 075,000 paid every night for the amusements throughout the United States. This would make a total for ono week of $1,050,000 , or , for the entire season of forty weeks , $162,000,000 , not counting matinees. Taking , then , an industry that brings in over 8160,000,000 in round num bers during the season , the neatly dressed men that are said to "hang around the Square" ( Union Square , New York ) are the mon that control or pull the wirps and sot the machinery in motion. Those figures are , after all , but approximate , and neither in cludes matinees , which in themselves would count 81,000,000 , nor does it include the circus world , which is not represented on the Hialto. " The "neatly dressed mon" who are seen "on the Square" in the summer months are managers and actors , and apart from the monstrous figures of the above kind that are published now and then , there is little general knowl edge of their method of business , or the rewards they obtain , or the mis fortunes thai fall to their lot while their working Benson lasts. Occasion ally an item appears in print to the effect that Patti received ? 5,000 concert from Abbey during last season , which she didn't , and that Christine Nilsson will got $4,000 for each oven- ing's singing during the American tour she is about to enter upon , which she won't ' got , and people immediate ly jump at the conclusion that there is NOTHING BUT OLOKIOTJH FOUTUNE for the portion of every player in the land , and untold wealth and volumes of fame in store for nil who sot tlielr 'trembling foot upon the stage. In this they are mistaken. There are princely salaries only for the few ; the great army of Insurious those who fill the lower ranks are scarcely bet ter rewarded than people in other pro fessions who are not subject to so much public scrutiny or compelled to put up with the hardships and perils of constant travel If there is any difference in thu amounts earned by the average player and the average book-koopor and newspaper reporter , the excess in favor of the stage docs not begin to make up for the lost pleasures of home and the missing satisfaction there is in having and knowing n permanent place of abode and a wide circle of friends , whoso very greeting has always boon a joy as welcome as the morning , Abbey paid Patti $3,500 a concert , and will pay Nilson $2,000 and all her ex panses ; ho will pay Mrs. Langtry $1,000 a night and a per sontago over u certain amount ; John E. Owens eots $350 a week from the Madison Square theater people of Now York , for playing Old Rogers in Esmoralda ; 0. W. Gouldook is paid about the same figure for playing Dunstan in Hazel Kirko ; Charles 11. Thorno , Icpdlng man of the Union Square company , guts $250 a week ; John Gil bert , thu veteran comedian , is paid a like amount James Lewis , at D.xly's Theater , and Stoddard , the comedian of the Union Square Company , have each over 200 u weok. These ueoplo are all well-known , their names stand out prominently in the every day his tory of the world's iiiiiUBCinunta , and tliuir pay is commensurate with the advertising draught there is in their reputations ; but take the cases of poo- pie with smaller namt's , and see what they are paid and what they must pay out in return ; then balance up the ac count a and compare the result with the financial outcome of a year's toil in any other direction the player has not saved any more than has the man of another profession , although ho hua not indulged in any extravagant ex penses , and neither himself nor any member of his family has as fully en joyed the fruits of his labor us the IB fruits of thu non-theatrical inun'e work have been enjoyed by his family and himself. There are faw people in any branch of the amusement urofos- sion , nowadays , who are not oircum < epect in their modes of living and try to bo yory caruful with their dollar ! and diuiua , seeming always to bo 01 the lookout for a threatened ralnj day , so that the fact that they do no grow rich with any greater ropiditj than their follow wage-workers can b < attributed only to the other fact tha1 they uro VOT ANY BETTEB PAID. The Globe-Democrat reporter yes. ttrday interviewed Mr , George si. Borrell , stage manager of the Gram , opera house and Olympia , upon th subject of actors' salaries and tboatri cal . Mr. Berrell b 60. expenses. an aotc 60.to and manager of many yean expor enoe , and his statements concernin , the stage and ita people and its poop ] can bo relied upon , Jin said that sal aries had advanced in the past five or ton years , but the increase was not moro than sufficient to meet the in- creasnd expenses which the actor is called upon to boar. In the days of stock companies an actor or actress who had boon engaged for a season by a theater could secure good board nt SO and $7 a week } now that ho must flit through the entire country , playing here ono night and somowhcro els a the next night , there are heavy trav eling expenses to bo paid , atnbunting to $15 or $20 a wcok ; sometimes ha can live for 81.50 a day , ftt olhcr times ho may have to pay $2 50 or $3. lie gets moro salary now than ho did ten years ago probably 20 < .r 30 per cent , more but the excess goes to the hotel keeper , , the railwey eating- house , otc. There is no more money in his work now than there was when ho had a permanent homo and his life was not besot with the hazards and temptations of incessant travel , "What does the salary list of a firnt- claea dramatic company amount to ? " the reporter asked ; "say a company likeJohn McCullough'sft "John McCullough , I think , " said Mr , Borroll , "pays his company from $500 to $600 a wook. I do not know the exact amounts paid to individuals , but' Fred Wardo , when ho was Me- Oullough'a loading support , got $150 a wook. Edmund Collier , I suppose , gets from $100 to $150 , Joe Ilaworth § 50 or GO , John Line about $50 , and Barton , the old man , about $40. A doavy man , like Harry Lsngdon , is piid all the way from $35 to $50 a week , and the utility corps have sala ries ranging from $20 to $35 an actor like J. 11. Hhowollgots over $30 ; Miss Mittens Willelt is paid probably $25. A loading ladylike Miss Forayth , can command $75 to $100 per week , and an "old woman , " like Mrs. Fos ter , from $35 to $50. The legitimate companies are the costliest. A com bination for comedy or society plays has a much lighter salary list. Now , I suppose Joe Emmot does not pay his company more than $300 per week , and McKco Rankin'a company costs him about $400. A leading man in a first-class dramatic company may get , like Charley Thorno , $250 , or , like Frederick do Bollovlllo , $175 a week , and from that all the way down to $75. ( The figures for loading ladies go through the same wide range , from Sara Jowott at the highest salary down to the $75 class. A good low comedian who has made his mark can command from $40 to $75 , the latter figure if ho is of any prominence ; the "old man" will bo paid from $40 to $60 , and ho who playa THE OENTKEL , I'OLISIIED VILLAIN , from $40 to $60 , qnd possibly as much as $75. , A Boubrotte , playing cham bermaid parts , gotn a salary ranging from $35 to $50 , and the small fry of a company are included in the num ber of those who ask and receive from $20 to $40 a wook. In molo-dramatic companion of the real old blood-and- thunder kind , good salaries are paid. James II. Wallaok , of the Jesse James combination , that will appear nt the Poople'u next week , is a good actor , and is probably paid $75 a week , certainly not less than $60. The cross-roaders and fly-by-night com panies , that play in one-night towns , usually give a leading man or loading lady $20 a week and board , and the lighter pooalo get as little as $8 a week and board. Ono of these barnstorming ing organizations can go into a village and make money if they got a $40 house for each performance. With this amount they can pay salaries , board , railroad Uresl bill-porting , tvVl- vortising , rent , license , etc. , and have a few dollars loft over for the man ager. " "What is called a good house for an average show ? " "Well , wo estimate a good opening , Sunday night , here at the Grand Opera House or Olympic , at $1,200 to $1,500 ; a good house will foot up about $800 , a fair house $450 , and when there is only $250 or $300 the house is u bad ono , The receipts must go up to $350 at least to make the show pay expenses , " "What is allowed percentage com panies ? " "Somo companies got as high as 70 per cent of the receipts ; others , but very few , as loir as 4b per cent ; the average percentage is about G2& Mapleson gets as high as 00 per cent at the Olympic. An attraction like John MoOullough or Joe Emmot gets about 70 per cont. " "What does it cost to run a thea ter ? " "Wo figure it downat $150 a night , A loader of orchestra gets from $35 to $75 a week , Waldauor was paid $100 a week at the Opera House for several seasons. A stage carpenter is paid as low as $15 a nook by some moan man agers and as high as $30 ; first-class stage carpenters in Boston and Now York got from $75 to $100 ; sounlo art ists , here and elsewhere ; from $35 to $70 , and some are paid extraordinary prices for special work , The individ ual musicians in an orchestra got from $12 to $20 ; a good solo player , $25 , The property man , who must bo a Jaok-of-all-trados a carpenter , painter - tor , sculptor , machinist , otc , and have a good practical knowledge of chemis try got $40 IN THK OLDEN TIMES , but ho now receives from $15 to $25 , Stage managers command from $35 to $60 , a treasurer from $30 to $75 , and hln assistant from $12,50 to $25 , Doorkeepers are paid from $10 to $20 ; gas mon the tame , and night and day watchmen from $45 to $60 a month , " Mr , Borroll did not say whether the Bt. Louis managers paid the largo or Ninall figures given. The olwnc.oa are that they lean to the lightest salaries. Mr. Borroll enid further concerning the attaches and their pay that bullet girls who make the awkward pages and ridiculous court ladles in the play got from $5 to $8 a week ; the Olympia - pia and Grand Opera houtu pay their girls $0 ; girls who are employed fet extra occasions got $1 for each per formance. The Kiralfys pay their ex tra ballet girls fifty cents performance ; "supos , " as the male supornumorariet are called for short , got twenty-five cents. " You must recollect , "said Mr , Mr. Borrell , "that actors and actress ea are obliged not only to pay thoii - expenses out of their salaries , bul i.id mnst have complete wardrobes. It id the case of a leading lady like Mrs be Forayth In a legitimate company , hei rior wardrobe will cost from $800 all tin or way up to { 1,500 ; the leading man'i rl.ng wardrobe is almost aa costly. He mus ng have one dresa at least for every play ile and sometimes he mutt have several An actor like Collier , playing opposite parts to John McOullough , must dross well , and his wardrobe cannot have cost less than $1,200. Common cotton tights cost from § 3 75 to $ G a pair ; silk stockings $15 ; silk tights $22 and $22 ; sandala $5 and $ G a pair ; buskins $5 to $8 ; rutsot boots $0 to $15j wigs , from the inferior kind at $4 np to $50 , $60 , $75 and $100 ; a bood blonde wig for a leading lady costs $75 to $100 ; the average run of wigs is $15 , and a common stock actor must have a different wig for every part. Then there is armor ; for the legitimate role it must often bo made to order , and ono suit will cent $300. Symmetries that ore used to make thin mon stout , by padding the arms , breast , back and thighs , will cost $40 to case the whole body and from $15 to $20 to fix up the legs and thighs. There must be n largo assort ment of feathers , ranging in price from $2 to $ G ; swotdn of different periods that cost from $5 lo $15 caoh , and cloaks , caps , hats , etc. , that are correspondingly costly. Stage jowolo , too , must not bo overlooked. They are of glass and some composite metal and nn aotor or actress with A plethor ic purao can pay as much as $150 for a sot ; croirn , tiara , bracelets , necklaces and jeweled bolt and costus can bo had , however , for $40 to $50. For society dramas the actor must sometimes have a suit of clothes for each act , and hia wardrobe can cost him from $300 up ward , according to the kind of tailor ho patronizes. FKOM OTHER SOtTHCES the Globe-Democrat reporter learned that the average traveling opera com pany pays its principal people at about the same rate the same kind _ of people are paid in dramatic companies of equal standing. The email fry are not as well treated as their brethren and sisters of the dramatic stage. A chorus girl is doing well if she goto $15 a week , and some can not got moro than $8 or $10. Variety per formers are as a class well paid , but traveling expanses are heavy with them , and their savings can not bo largo. Sketch artists like Charles and Ella Jerome , who wore paid only $40 or $50 a week five years ago , now receive $80 jointly ; Master Arthur Dunn , the rising Bobby Nowcomb , who is not more than 17 years old , is paid probably $35 a week ; his sister , Jennie , may cot $25. A few years ago Arthurs talents would not bring moro than $15 a wook. Society sketch artists , like Jeppo and Fanny Delano , are paid $100 a week. Belle Clifton and Louisa Doluisl , for merly ballet dancers , now do a skip ping rope dance , and their act is worth about $50 a week , with rifio song and dance thrown in. A banjoist like Billy Carter or Billy Carroll gets $75 Irish comedians of the Murphy and Mack caliber obtain $100 to $125 a week for the team , and Gorman come dians like Murphy and Shannon about the same salary. John and Louis Wesley , song and dance mon , get about $75 a week ; Yaljean , the jug gler , about $60 ; and Charles Diamond , the Milanese minstrel , about $50 a week. Variety shows like Esher's or the Crystal Palace have to pay some of their people salaries as high as first-class houses. A team of artists can not afford to come hero from Kansas City or Chicago for lesa than $50 a wook. There is plenty of talent to be had , however , at $8 , $10 , $18 and $20. Variety people command these high figures ) because there ii such demand for this kind of jta t ; there are numerous < inmpanij& > r anlzing , all wanting good performers , and when good ones can not be had , the medi ocre and even the bad are taken and fairly paid. Minstrel mon get from $10 a week and expenses , the salary paid to the soprano-voiced gentleman who sings "A flower from my angel mother's grave , " up to $75 for a Cush- nuiu or Kersands , and $125 for a man with Billy llico'e reputation. Some times a big reputation and a big sal ary do not go together , as in cane of Barry Maxwell , to whom Haverly paid $15 a week and expenses. The average in burnt cork companies is $20 and $30 a week al' around , which is exclusive of traveling expenses and board , the manager usually assuming this burden himself. rnoM T.UESE riauRES the reader can glean some idea of the amount of money earned by individual actors and actresses each week ; indi vidual expenses can bo sot down at from $10 to $20 a week for board and traveling , and when the deduction is made and other contingent outlays are footed up there will be no reason left for astonishment when the performer is found at the beginning of the sum mer vacation with barely enough money in his pockets to help him in weathering through the short-crass period that lies between him and the opening of the following season. THE BAD AND WORTHLESS Are never imitated or counterfeited , This is especially true of a family medicine , and it is positive proof that the remedy imitated is of the highest value. As soon as it had boon tested and proved by the whole world that Hop Bitters was the purest , best and most valuable family medicine on earth , many imitations sprung up and began to steal the notices in which the press and people of the country had expressed the merits of H. B. , and in every way trying to induce suf. fcring invalids Jo use their stuff in stead , expecting to make money on the credit and good nanio of H. B. Many other * started nostrums put up in similar style to U. B. , with vari ously dovinod names in which the word "Hop" or "Hops" were used in away to induce people to believe they wore the same as Hop Bitters. All such pretended romedioa or euros , no matter what their style or name is , and espiclally thpso with the word "Hop" or "Hops" in their name or in any way connected with thorn or theit name , are imitations or counterfeits. Beware of them. Touch none oi them. Use nothing but genuine Hop Bitters , with a hunch or cluster ol green Hops on the wliite label. Trusl nothing else. Drugcrists and doalen are warned against dealing In Imita tions or counterfoils. Tens of thousands of dollars are aquund ered yearly on traveling quacks , who J5 from town to town protesting to cure 1 the ills that our poor humanity U heir o.in Why will the public not learn commoi ene , and if they are auflerlng from dy * pemlaor liver complaint , In vest a dollar In SPUING BLOSSOM , aold by all drugguU am . endorsed bv the faoultv. Bee tei Li- . ST&TB JOTTINGS. Typhoid fever prevail * to nn alarming extent at Hatting * . Col. Johnson , of Anhland , celebrated his 00th birthday last week , The people of Hising City eaw David City In n mirage nn the morning of the 3d. Nearly 2,200 car loads of cattle , averag ing twenty to a car , have been shipped from Ogallala , this jcar. Upon entering the jail the other evening the deputy sheriff of Uutler county was knocked down Ith n club by a prisoner , who made his crcapo thereby. On the night of the 3Ut , Carlson's tailor shop at North Platte , was burglarized , Two days later fbn thievea three In num ber were arrested at OgalUJa with some of the stolen clothing on their backs. Tha particulars of a sad accident comes from Mncon- little son of Mr. Gray during the nbnence of his parents , at tempted to burn off n stubble field. The clothing of his little ( later , who was with him , caught fire and butned her in shock ing manner , rcMiltme In death at about 10 o'clock tliosnmo ovcniug. A little two year old son of Mr. and Mrs , John Anderson , of Waucaponn , came to ltd death from strangulation last Mon day forenoon. The mother who was wnnh- ing had placed n tub of water partially filled with clothes on the floor and went out of the room , leaving the little one nlone. On her return she found her child in the ( ub where it hud fallen and died in a short time. Cedar County Nonpareil , Never too JLatn to Mend- Thos. J. Ardcn , William Street , East Buffalo , writes : "Your Si'iuxa ULOSSOSI has worked on mo splendid , I had no ap petite ; used to sleep badly and ret up in the morning unrofreshod ; my breath was very offemivo and I suffered from severe headache ; since using your Spring Blossom nil tlieso symptoms have vanished , nnd I feel quite well. " Price 50 cents , trial hot- tlo ! ( } cents. Plenty of tTult. Wcstirn Agriculturalist. It is the privilege of every western farmer to supply his family with plenty of fruit , and this bleesod privilege should not bo neglected As our soil and climate will produce such a great variety of fruits for the whole year that can bo raised with reasonable care , no farmer is excusable for not having plenty of fruit for his family. While fruit growing may not bo and generally is not financially profitable , yet every farmer can and should have an abundant supply of small fruits and apples , pears , poaches , &o. , for the health and happiness of his family. He can't aiford to go to town and buy them when ho can so easily have them fresh and fine at homo for the grow ing.Almost Almost every farmer has some ex cuse of an orchard and while many get plenty of fruit , many others have none , t imply for the lack of a little care and attention. Now is a good time to prepare a plat of ground for orchard and small fruits ; well plowed and manured now , it is ready for ear ly spring planting. Buy what you want of your local nurseryman , or send to seine reliable nurseryman ; don't be swindled by the traveling tree peddler. Have a patch of strawberries ; they come early when wo most need and appreciate them. Then a patch of raspberries and blackberries will give a succession of berries through the season. Then wo got grapes , apples , plums , peaches , pears , etc. , that when once we hayo them on the farm we wonder how anybody can get along without them. We hope every reader of the Agriculturist will provide plenty of fruit and to spare the whole year round. Satisfactory. Mrs. Wallace , Buffalo , N. Y , , .writes : "I bare used IluitDorK'lBl.oou UirrKna for nervous and bilious headache ? , and have recommended them to my friends ; I be lieve them to be superior to any other medicine I have used , and can recommend them to any one requiring a cure for bil iousness. " Price SI. GRATEFUL-COMFORTINGIK EPPS'S GOGOA. BREAKFAST. "By a thorough knowledge ol tha natural lawn which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition , and by a careful application ol the flno properties o ! wcll-s looted Cocoa , Mr. Eppg haa provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavored beverage- which may eave as many heavy doctors' bills It Is by the Judicl'ua nso of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundred * of aubtta maladies are floating around ua ready to attack wherever there Is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping our selves well fortified with pure blood and a prop etly nourlihed frame. " Civil Sen-Ice Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. Bold In tins only ( i-lb and lb ) , labeled JAMBS EPP8 & CO. , Homoeopathic Onemlsts , tnea&aat-wly London. Englan ALL TRUE FELLOWS Worthily point to the "HUB PUNCH" A nn article of such rare and exceeding merit a ilescno a place on every sideboard A Social OInca of Hub Punch Is \ulcomoaccessory of friendly Intercourse pccullirly acceptable at parties. Uucorlr , an Us ready , Vunthia bruwcd at request are fa Uhuidltlnuaior. Gifted orators ne\er dUloso Tlio real source whence their eloquence flows licllcte me , It comes , after dinner or lunch , From a ( letting bowl of 0RAVES' HUU 1'UNOII The name and Utle-"HUB PUNCH" ti adopted - ted asm trvclo mark. All unauthorltod use of thU tr de m rk will be promptly prosocutod. 0 , H. ( WAVES & SONS , BOSTON , MASS. * Sold by Grocers and .Wine Merchants everywhere. Trade supplied at Manufacturer's prices by M. A. MoNamara ; families supplied by A. H. Gladstone , Omaha Neb . EUROPEAN HOTEL , . Th moit sentraUr locattd hotel .In th dty. RoomiT6c. t.OO , II.Mood , WUM I * * * * WV V W - - " r " 'li * | _ ' Flnt CUw RoaUuiaut connected wltn thi hotel. .HURST. - Prop- - Garner Fourth and Locuit Street * . * I ? . X.OT7XCB I3MCO , nlaMe / rm. irrpa rat Ion ofi- Ml not lilaekm ' § no charafterifUr t ran preparation TtEo nwniM th t L G ' HAimtn's IRON TONIO Oare. In CAW of NctrtxH rrw-tnOion , Krnulo UteeamL l > r p < Tri , wid Impor iiihnl condition ol tha bkxxl , thn rcorlmi rcrowlr hju. In mj hAixlK , nwwl Bomo wonderful cum. Uucw UiAt hi > bfttned inme o ( nu tno t mln it phj'BieUnd hMO rtoldod to UiU Krc t and lncomp r bl rrmodr I prreeri uJ T nc Tlnmp Mvirm rotor tolhe Irtrxxl , ral healthful tone to itlrc organs and applicable to General tbUUyTMx nf Anne- tUelrotraHim a f vital J'oircrs ar.il Impotence , MANUFACTURED BY THE DR.HARTER MEDICINE CO. . 213 N. MAIN ST. , ST. LOOJ ) WHOLESALE Zephyrs , Germantown , Etc , STOCK LARGER THAN EVER.lsos& { BUK2(5Utno ( I OBERPSLDER & CO. BOOK-KEEPING , UOSTfriiSS KORMS , BANKING COMMERCIAL LAW , PENMANPMil' , POLITICAL ECONOMY , COMMERCIAL A'fUTHoIETIO , ENGIjlSH LANGUAGE Taught by gentlemen of business experience and broad scholarship at the J r A now institution based on the hfghent otandard "of * excellence. _ Day and and evening sessions are now in successful operation. " " For circulars or special Information applv to or address A. TJ "WYMAN. PERFECTION HEAT9N"AND BAKING , Is only attained by using Stoves and Ranges. WITH WIRE GAME OVER BOOBS , For sale by MILTOI8 ROGERS & SONS Jull-m&oly The Oldest Wholesale and Retail JEWELRY HOUSE in Omaha. Visitors can here find all novelties in SIL VER WARS. CLOCKS , Rich and Stylish Jewelry , the Latest , Most Artistic , and Choicest Selections in PRECIQUS STONES and all descriptions of FINE WATCHES at as Low Pri ces as is compatible with honorable dealers. Call and see our Elegant New Store , Tower Building , corner llth and Farnham Streets. THK LEADING IN THE WEST 1 General Agents lor the Finest and Best Pianos and Organs manufactured. Our prices are as Low as any Eastern Manufacturer and Dealer. .Pianos and Organs sold f < Wp naah or inotalljaento at Bottom Prices. . A SPLENDID stock ot Steinway Chickering , Knabe , Vose & Son's Pi anos , and other makes. , , Also Clough & Warren , jr Sterling , Imperial , Smith / American Organs , &c. Do not fail to see us before purchasing chasing- . MAX MEYER & BRO. , A Large Stock always on Hand. B.NEWMAN&CO v WILL OPEN AT ZsTO. 121S Farnam Street.