1'JttE DALEY BEE--FKIl > A5f MAY 18 PLAIN TRUTHS The Wood is the foundation of life , it circulates through every part of the body , ami unless it is pure and rich , U > od health is impossible. If dUcai * has entered the system the fnly suie and quick way to drive it out U to purify and enrich the blood. Thctc iimplc facts arc well known , inil the Mghcs' medical authorities agree thu nothing but iron will restore the blood to its natural condition ; and also that all the iron preparations hitherto made blacken the teeth , cause head ache , anil arc otherwise injurious. UROWN'S I RON UITTERS will thor oughly and quickly assimilate with tiv blood , purifying and strengthen- itJ it , anil thus drive disease from any part of the system , and it will net blacken the teeth , cause head ache or constipation , and is posi tively net injurious. Saved his Child. . 17 N. EuUw St. , rultlmcrc , Md. Feb. it , 1880. Cent ! : Upon the recommenda tion of a friend 1 tried HKOWN' * IRON BITTKHS at a tonic and reiterative - iterative for my daughter , whom 1 was thoroughly convinced wai waiting away with Consumption. Having lost three tbughtert by the terrible di > ea < e , under the care of eminent ph ) lci.in , 1 v.at loth to Lelieve tnat anything could urreit the prORrcn cl the disease , but , In mycreauurprhe , before my d.High- ter had takm one botlie of IlkoWN'-i IRON liTTBiS ! ! , h < - began to mer.cl and now U quite restored Io former health. A fifth daughter began to thow signs of Consumption , and when the physician .it consulted he quickly said "Tonic * were re quired , " and when Informed that the elder sinter v. as taking HHOV. N'S ) IKON IliTTKKs , responded "that is a good tonic , like it , " AUOKAM Piutrs. BROWN'S IRON IITTIRS ! : effectually - ly cures Dyspepsia , Indigestion and Weakness , and renders the greatest relief andbcncfit to persons suffering from such wasting diseases as Con sumption , Kidney Complaints , itc. DUFRENE& 'MENDELSSHON ' , ARCHITECTS ! REMOVED TO Omaha National Bank Balding , JOHN STAHI.E8 , . JBIIOME flO'UMI1 ' , ITctlJtnt Vice 1'rvt't , W. S , DEI8I1EN , Sec uJ Trevi. THE NEBRASKA MANUFACTURING CO Li. coin , Neb , MANUFACUREIIS OF Corn Planters Harrow * Farm Rollers , Sulky Rakes Ducketilev.it ! g Alndmllt. We are prepared to do job work aud manuUc- turlnc lor other parties , Addie ? ! all orders to thi NKIWASKA MANUFACnUItlSO CO. Lincoln , NJI ! tut CORNICE WORKS ! Iron and Slate Roofing , 0. SPEOHT , - . Proprietor. 1111 Douglas 8t. - Omalia , Noli MANUFACTUUKIl OF GALVANIZED Iron Cornices I DORMER WIDOWS , FINIALS , Tin , Iron and Slate Roofing , ; Bpecht's Patent Metallic Skylight Patent , Adjusted Hatchet Bar and Bracket Shelving. I am the general agent for the above line of goods , IRON FENCING , Cresting * . Balustrades , Verandas , Iron Bank Railings , Window Blind. , Gel- lar Guards ; also GENKUAL AGENT FOR PEERSON & EILL PA'JENT ' IK SIDE BLIND. Send 81. 8t , 8.1 , or 85 for n nninplo re 4ANDY oftliobeHtrnnUlcHlu tail box liy Kxprc America , put up In elegant boxcct , aiu Ntrfctly purr. Sultn trie Tor prcHoiitn. Kx < prcHN rlmreoN Herlit llcfem tc all Cklcn DANDY K . Tr ) ' It once. AtldrcHH , C. F. GUNTHEK Confectioner , Chicago. . AFUrUtf VlulTABU REMEDY ccMSBikni1 IOF POKCR'OT , P9ICKLY STIMULANT linn ific , iTiNKicHitmcicoa SYSTIM WMJJR 0 IOtM01 t ST ITAI51 DIOHWOtfi DICtiTIVC fORCll UUUIIHI L THI niEBttTKIIRWIIHMt ritriiuii p OMAHA.NCB PIONEER HARDSHIPS. | True Story of the Death Yallay Horror. Lost in the 'MountainsTerri bio Bufteriug.of a Train that OroBBod the Biorros in Midwinter. From the Ban Fr anctici Chronicle. SAN 13EiiNAnoiNo , May 1. The story that IB commonly told of the emigrant train thut perished In Death valley In 1840 forms ono of the most painful chapters In the history of Cal ifornia. It has been frequently retold with all Its thrilling dotalla. The scene of death , ai It looked yoara after , with the bleached bones of ox"on and the fragments of wapona scattered over the valley , has often been plot- nrod. Only two of the party of eighty aevon , It la said , survived. Although the account of the terrible sufferings of that band of nmigrants U ono of the fttvorlto stories told of early Cali fornia days , the truth of that terrible journey in yet to bo made pnbllo. The following narrative Is bated upon facts gathered from the many who survived the privations and Bufferings of that wlntur In Death valley : In the first mad rush for the "Lind of Gold" ia 1819 , many of the Argo nauts wore men who loftnomc , wives , children , klndreda or BweethoartH , to whom they expected to return In the near future. All who came expected to return Immediately. Some came to our shores to bnlld np homos. The great hegira of 1849 was made np of f jrtutiO'hnntcra eager to reach the on * chanted land.They left the "states" without regard to the season of the year , and thus many arrived at the great half-way house Salt Like late In the fall , and there learned of the snows of the Sierra Nevada moun tains and thofato of the Donnor party andothoro who attempted to crois tbo almost unexplored wilds during the winter months , IMPATIEHT FIOUEEIW. Many trains decided to winter at Salt Lake and spread themselves ont among the Mormon sottlera , where they could find food and shelter for thumni 17os and stock. About the 1st of October the Impatient fortune hunters , bemoaning and cursing their Inactivity , began to canvass the theory of crossliig by some southern routo. No ono , howovcr , appeared to know anything of the country , and further they had boon told by Fremont that the route was impracticable. Still they were not satisfied and finally dU- onvprnd in the person of a Mormon , Maj IIant , a person who had boon ever a southern route with n pack train , and who declared it feasible for wagons and offered to pilot them Uir' u jli for $10 per wagon , A train of 105 wagons and two carts was made np , containing about 200 persons. The rodeo took pl 03 at Ilobblo Greek , U. T , , ton miles sentiment of which on the 21 of Ootobor , 1840 , an organiza tion of tbo train was ( .Heeled by elect ing Dipt. Bixtor , of Michigan , cap tain , Dr. MoOormlck of Iowa Olty , Io , , Bboond in command , and dividing the train Into novon sections , each with a ciptaln for gn&rd duty , and with Maj , Hunt employed as guldo , The train rolled out and roanhod Beavircmk , in Southwestern Utah , without any incident worthy of note. LEI ) AHTKAY. llero thry were mot by Oapt. 0. K. Smith with a pack train from St. Louis , Mo. Oapt. Smith had led a pack train ever the old Spanish South ern trail and prof i mod to know a cut off by which a hundred miles could bo saved , by following np Beaver crook , leaving It near the point where the Mountain Meadows massacre after wards occnrred , and ( tossing a range of mountains and striking the old Spanish trail near the crossing of the "Muddy. " Ho induced nine of the men , led by Will Webster , a daring , reckless man , to join him , and then the ontlro train followed him with the exception of BO yon wagons and the guldo , Maj , Hunt , who pronounced against the route. The train pulled ont , and following the trali taken by Oapt. Smith , followed - lowed It up on to the range of moun tains between them and the "Muddy , " Hero they found by his wandering and winding trail that Oapt. Smith hid lost his way. The train encamped and sent ont pioneers to look ont a route off the mountains. Two days were spent in a frnltlosss search , and aa all the pioneering parties had returned , with the exception of one composed of the Rev. Mr. Brlorly and two young mon , and reported it Impossible to got off the mountains , It was determined to retrace their stops and follow the trail taken by Maj. Hunt. On the morning of the third day the tiams wore hitched io the wagons and every thing prepared to start. Ihey were detained a short tlmo while the men burled a comrade who had died the night before. While they were wait ing Brlorly and party came In and reported finding o practicable route down a valley which opened ont towards the southwest. IN DEATH VALLEY. The train was hero again divided. Sixty-five wagons followed Brlorly down Into what is now known as Death valley , the balance of the train returning and taking the Spanish trail followed by Maj , Hunt , The experi ence of the train of sixty-five wagons which followed Brlorly "down Into tbo valley of death" was a severe ono , They travelled for days without food for their stock and barely water enough to subsist on. Still they continued on their course , leaving their way dotted by the carcasses of their oxen , which fell down and died from starva tion , Finding It Impossible to pro ceed with the wagons , they wore Gully abandoned , and , packing as much provisions on their starving cattle as they could carry , all started west , every mau for himself. They cook dlllarcnt routes some came out by the Mohave and Oajon pasn , others by the San Fernando pass and others came ont on the plains north of f Tehachopal pass and were found and cared for by French and McKlnzlo. Upon the abandonment of the wagons a man named Bennett and hla family and another named Arkano and hla family , together with throe or four young men remained in the valley. Relief failing to come , John Rogers and another young man were sent out for relief , and patsing through San Fernando pass , reached Los Angeles , and packing two animals with provis ions i , wont out and brought the fam ilies In , arriving at Ohiuo ranch on the 2Gih of March. jiAJon nuwr'H rAnrv. The entire Death Valley party suf fered most Incredible hardships , living most of the tlmo on the carcasses of their starved oxen , which afforded but scanty nourishment , a even the bones contained not a particle of mar row. They traveltd e for days on fee over the hot , burning sands , with a very scant supply of water. Notwith standing thisonly two deaths ocsnrred on the journey. The seven wagons under Major Hunt and the balance of the train which turned back fro-n the tlII mountains and followed him all arrived - rived in safety , the last of them arriv ing at the Ohlno ranch on the 12th of IiJ January. They suffered great hard ships and lost great numbers of their cattle , but they brought the first wa gons Into California by the southern route from Utah. Oapt. 0. K Sulth after wandering In the mountains for some times , finally struck the "Mud dy , " and , following It down to the Spanish trail , succeeded In getting in with ten animals out of seventy. The nlno mon who joined him from the emlgrrnt train at Bearer creek trav eled with him for a week or morobnt , becoming dlsconted , they killed and "jerked1 tholr last hone , and under the leadership of Will Walker , started west. west.All of the mon wanted to travel southwest , but Walker Insisted on leading them northwest. They finally got Into snow , tholr provisions gave out , and Walker began to vaguely hint that some ono wonld h&vo to furnish moat for tbo others. At this two of the mon , Savage and Plnnoy , got up ono night and left them , and , crossing a range of mouutaiun to the south ever thirty feet of snow , found an Indian camp. The Indiana cared for the wanderers , and , under the guidance of ouo of them , they finally reached Monterey In the spring of 1850. TIJE HEMNANTHOF TUB TllAIN. Thus the proeonco of the remnants of the sixty-five wagons which are still to bo soon In the sandy wastes of Death valley Is explained and a horri ble myth which has harrowed np the feelings of the symyathotlo lor the pant thirty yoara la dissipated , and as farther evidence that the foregoing is a true account , It Is stated by many minors and prospectors who have vis ited and carried oil portions of the wrecked wagons , that while the skele tons of cattle Ho on' all sldoa , not a human skeleton Is to bo soon. Ddath valley has boon In the last few years scoured ever by prospectors , who fall to find In it any of the terrors vividly depicted by fiction writers. It ia In deed a misnomer. It Is no worse J tnan a hundred other places inhabited by [ man in Nevada and Arizona. NOT ] IN WASHINGTON GUIDE BOOKS. A. Plnco Where Oalhoun Drank Sherry ana Clay and Webster Gambled. Washington Letter to Cleveland Lcaler. I am aarprisud to find how little people 1 know of Washington and its life. Fifteen thousand strangers come here every winter , nnd hundreds of thousands visit the capltol every year , but , as usual , net ono man in ton coco anything , ' and the groaf masses at homo know absolutely noth Ing cf the atrango sights and strange people who nmko up the 200,000 residents of Washington , Last night , for instance , in a stroll on Panusylvaula uvonuo , I noticed a couple of congressmen entering a llttlo saloon directly opposite the Na tlonnl thoatro. It was a low wooden building , old and weather-worn , and on the lintels of Its door I noticed the words , "John Hancock , founded 1810 , "Directly ever this entrance wan i the sign , "Old Curiosity Shop. " I ; entered a long , narrow room , with a celling so low that the head of o Slado wonld scrape It. The bar , fitted on1 as elegantly ai any In Washington covered the wall at the right of the entrance. Back of It hang pictures and , relics of the crimes and honors o" the \ past , and the walls of the rest o the ( room were covered with articles which wonld make any museum rich The old , gray-haired negro who tended the bar was in himself a curi osity. Ho told , as ho tilled my glass , that he had boon tending the same bar for thirty-five yoirs , and that his saloon was the chief resort in forme ; times of the statesmen of the capital S ld ho : "I have often seen Clay. Webster and Calhonn drinking here together. Henry Olay and Daniof Webster used to bo here nlghl after night. Clay always drank brandy julips , and his spirits rose rapidly under the Influence of liquor. Webster drank considerable , and the only observable change in him was that his eyes grow brighter and his talk became , if any thing , more measured. Oalhoun sel dom drank strong drinks , and took either lemonade or sherry , and often nothing. Ho wonld como in to talk , They were lively follows them days and they liked tholr fan just as vrol as the big men do now. They often played cards here. " "Did they gamble ? " I asked. "No for money , but generally for thi drinks. I remember a game of card Olay and Wester and two other men played hero ono rainy night. They played here for the drinks and smells , The mon that won drank , and thos that were defeated paid for the daluk and were forced to smell the glasses o tholr opponents. They started in a 10 o'clock and they played until 2 Luck was against Clay , and I don' think ho won a drink during the whol evening. " I spent a very pleasant half-hour examining the curiosities hung on the walls and put np In cases around the room , In ono place there was a pair of shoes formerly worn by Washing- ton , No. 19's , I should say , with broad , iUt soles and cotnmon-sonBO hods. No aristocratic Instep had the | Father of his country , end this pair looks more like the slipshod pair of a cobbler than these of an E. E. Y. Next to this was the soodest-looklng white plum hat I had ever seen. Largo , old and fuzzy , Its nap worn off , and Its color changed by the dirt of several decades , it was labelled as the hat of fGon. . Xich. Taylor , and the card stated that it came from the battle of ofm Palo Alto , An antagraph letter from President Lincoln stood near by one of John 0 , Oalhonn's , the great seces sionist and the great unionist almost k lining each other. A picture of Charles Gnlteau was appropriately nude a companion to enoof J , Wilkes Booth , and on the other side of the room was a theatre bill , giving the play at Ford's the night the assassina tion of Lincoln occurred , Bills offerIng - Ing $100,000 rowardfor Booth's arrest , the extras published by the Washing ton papers the morning after the trag edy , and ono containing spec ial telegram announcing that the assassin bad been shot , and calling for rejoicing , made up parts of the collec tion showing up the last days of the civil war , There was currency of all kinds , postage stamps dating back al most to their origin , and a hundred or mure autograph letters , any of which wonld bo very valuable now , This little saloon Is ono of the curiosities of the capital. It Is not down in the guide-books , but its history and mus eums make it worth seeing. A Cnin not Beyond Hrlp- Dr. M. H. Hlodsdaie. Keuawee , 111. , cl vises uiof a remarkable cure of.consump- tlon , He saysi "A neighbor' * wife w a attacked with violent lung dl ea e , and pronounced beyond help from Quick Con sumption. Ainlast resort the latnlly wan persuaded to try DK. WM. HALL'S BALSAM FOR THE LUNGS. To the astonishment of alt , by the time the had used one ball dozen bottles she WAI nbont the house doing ner own work , I mw her at her worst and had no Idea she could re- cover , " Farewell to Wall btreet. Ken York Star. "I don't own it single share of stock in any newspaper In the country. I never oared anything about The World while I had it. It never oc curred to mo to me to use It for any personal or political purpose. It was simply an accidental trade of mine. I never Interfered with Its conduct In any form. Its principles were In variably opposed to mine. I am a re publican. In fact , the best evidence of this la that the paper , as a matter of fact , never did reflect either my sentiments or my Interests , and yet I never Interfered. Take , for Instance , the tariff question. My every Inter est Is In protection. I did tint Inter fere In the least when Mr. Hurlbert advocated free trade. " "Have you any new enterprise on hand , Mr. Gould ? " "No ; none at all. lam gradually getting ont of business and - concentrating trating all my affairs. I have boon ont of Wall street for the last two years , and never expect to go back to It again. I intend to take a good long rest and travel and study , " "Aro you going on your yacht soon ? " "I am going , bat I dou't know how soon. It depends on circumstances , My yacht will have steam np on the UOth of this month , and will make her trial trip on the 25th ; but I have not yet decided either when or where to go. " "How do yon expect to spend your tlmo on the ocean ? " "I am fond of books and fond of my children. I shall read the former and play with the latter. My whole family will accompany mo. The ordi nary amusements at sea I shall not bo able to Indulge in , as I never play cards nor drink nor smoke. " "What do yon think of the financial outlook ? " "It will depend on the crops. I never saw bettor indications. Ont west the crops promise to be abund ant. In that case the year will not only bo prosperous , but times -will bo- ooino even hotter than they aro. A largo portion of the corn crop of last year ia still in the country and will bo shipped just as soon as the farmers got through with tholr spring sowing , It is estimated that at least 40 per cent of last year's corn crop la still on hand. Europe wants all our surplus. The crop outlook there Is not very good , according to my private Information. " "You have not said yet why you disposed of your Interest In The World ! " "For a variety of reasons , but chiefly booauso I saw an apprehension In the public mind that the paper Imperiled the liberty of the people. When I perceived the popular distrust I bowed to the will of the people. I never cared anything about The World , and long ago offered It for sale. When Mr , Bennett , through his paper , first charged that I had designs upon the control of the press , I sent him a long cable dispatch offering him The World for what It had cost me. I am glad that I have disposed of U , aa I wish to put all my affairs In clear shape before I sail. " "Every epileptic sufferer ought to try Samaritan Nervine at once , says Rev. J. T. Ettcr , of Now Glarns , Win. "It's " a never falling remedy. Tightness in the chest Is a forerunner nor of disease. Samaritan Nervine Is the antidote. $1.50. Mrs. Nlcaereon'd Case. WASHINGTON , May 13. It Is under stood that Mrs. A , H , Nlckersonwho arrived In Now York a few days ago from Europe , where eho has boon for three years , will immediately institute legal proceedings to sot aside the de cree of divorce obtained by her bus- husband , Major Nlokerson , U. 8 , A. , In Philadelphia a few weeks ago , Her friends furnish for publication the fol lowing version af the case : Mrs. Nickerson know nothing of the divorce until news of the husband'a marriage was telegraphed her by friends , A story having been circu lated that she abandoned him and ro- nntuod by preference In Europe so long , her friends are anxious to have it known that she had no cholco butte to remain there , as her repeated en treaties to bo allowed to return with her child were ignored or refused by her husband , and slio had not the moans to return until she appealed to relatives , from whom she kept the story of her troubles until the last moment Major Nickerson will undoubtedly bo , court martlalod , Hereford's Acid Phosphate. INDIGESTION KHOM OVKIIWOHK. Du. DANIEL T. NELSON , Ohiea- oo , says : "I find it a pleasant and valuable remedy In indigestion , par tlcnlarly in overworked mon. " Wo notice the Marriage Fund Mutual Trust Association , of Cedar KapUU , Iowa , highly spoken of by the leading papers. \ ou should secure a certificate at once , Write for circulars and appll- cationi , ARTHUR'S PLANB. Tbo Presidency In Vlow for ' 84 , and no WoBtornoraJto be Strengthened. SpecUl to the C'ndorjUl Commercial Oaittte. WASHINGTON , May 14. Said a very prominent Illinois politician to-day , speaking of the probable failure of that state to receive the commission- erihlp of Internal revenue , "It would not have made any matter if both sonatora had joined In an earnest recommendation at the start. It was not in the books that Illinois should have the place , and it is not In the books that John Logan shall have much more Influence with President Arthur. The trouble is that Arthur Is now certainly n candidate for tha pretldency There Is no longer any doubt about It , I don't think any thing : about U ; I know it I know It by everything that a person can do to Indicate hla purposes. President Arthur himself of course does not say llh . Ho poaelbly might deny It , but lln ii ' a CHtidldum , nnd ho Is trying to mak'e a good ndtnli.iitr&tlon with that end in view. Ho Is nut doing every thing that the politicians want him to do , i\nit ho to doing a great many thiuga that they do not want him to do , Ho is not going to do anything tJ build np Logan hi Illinois , or Harrison risen in Indiana , or uny of the ether numerous rival Western candidates In tkoir own states See what ho has just done to Harrison. Ho has not only taken an Indiana man for the cub net , without consulting with the cr republican senator Irom the state , but he took ono of the most pronounced opponents of Harrison Inside the party , Jndge Fresham , and Arthur Is now insisting npon the honor of hav Ing selected Gresham himself witbont outside suggestion , and all that flar rlson know abont It was that he was informed that the nomination was to bo made , and practically requested the poor privilege that notice of It might bo convoyed to Judge Gresham through himself , Harrlaou was not even able to nominate Grosham's sue cessor aa district judge. The man whom ho advocated strenuously , and stayed days In Washington In his Interest torest , was not serloualy considered , and the man whom Judge Gresham alone suggested received the placo. I tell you , General Arthur is not going to do any thing for western presidential candidates , and Logan's candidate will not win. The appointment of a commissioner of internal rovenno will go east. " Good health Is the greatest of for tunes ; no remedy has BO of ton restored this prize to the Buffering , as Hood's Sarsaparllla. Try it. Substitutes for Hops. Now York San The high price of hops this year has produced activity in the business of supplying a substitute which is cheaper. Several preparations are used. The subatitnteu can bo sold at a profit when hops are 10 cents a pound. As hops are now selling at 00 cents , and have sold as high as $1 10 a pound , the demand for the hop substitutes is brisk. Some of the substitutes are made abroad , but the largo profit has induced the Invest ment of American capital In the busi ness. ness.Tho competition In the bcor busi ness Is so croat that even the amal quantity of hops used to make a barrel rol of boor becomes a considerable Item In the cost , The use of the sub ntltuto la considered somewhat of i secret in the business , but the goodi are openly advertised , and warranted to make boor aa bitter , as clear , and of aa good keeping quality as can bo done with the best hops. The naturi of the ingrodlonts of the aubatituto i kept a secret , but the makers ave that it is not deleterious. Of conrst ) , the enormous prlco o hops this season has stimulated the hop raisers to vigorous efforts to secure a good crop next aeason , From Call foruia it la reported that the plant will bo one-fourth greater than last season , and similar reports came from the hop districts of this stato. As hops lese their strength by ago , h Is Impracticable to store In plentifn' years to provide for the short years. Old hops are always low priced When there Is a plentiful crop hora and a short crop In England American hops are used to make Lngllah beer. It Is , therefore , apparent that the Englishman did us a groas Injustice who said : "They can make good ale In this country , for they ha'n't got the 'ops , you know. " 18 UNFAILING JLM > 1NCUU1NQ Epileptic J > 'i Spasms , Falllu , . , [ Sickness , Con- vul lonsSt.Vlt- us Dance , Alco holism , Oplnm Eatlnp , Seminal Weakness Impotcncy , Syphilis , Scrofula , and all Nervous and Blood Dlsoasos. t "ToClergyincnLnwyersLttcrarj-iIcn Merchants , Hauliers , Ladies anil all whoso sedentary employment causesNcrvousl'ros- t ration , meKularltlesoftlioIllood , Stomach Dowels or Kidneys , or M ho require a ncrvo tonic , appetizer or stimulant , Samaritan Ji'crvine is Invaluable. C3 ? Thousands proclaim It the most wonderful Invlgor- nut that ever BUSJi ; . 1 1" | , , | _ [ V , talnedaslnkingsys- N F R W F I tern. Sl.BOatDrngMllrl"rrlJ . Fortesthno- gists. - nlnls and circular [ COHQUERORJ send stamp. TheDR.S. A. RICHMOND MED. CO.SolePropr' St. Josoipli , 2&O. 0 < ) Genius Rewarded , OH , The Story o ? the Sawlnu Haohto A lumljome little pimphlct , tluo an ! gol' ccner with numerous enguUn.s , nill be GIVEN AWAY to any adult parson calling for Ik. at any brand or sub-ottlce ot the Singer Manufacturing Corn- panyor < tlll bosunt by man , ) X > it-paM , to any l > crion Ih Ing at a a stance from our otflce , The Singer Manufacturing Co. , Principal Oilico , 84 Union Square NEW YORK. 'TOR TABLE USE. " The Natural Mineral , A KAISER WATER From Blrroiborn on tli e Tlhtiie RECOMMENCED BY THE HlttHFST MEDI CAL AUTUOIUTIES. FRKD'K HOLLANDER i CO. , Sole agtrt or the U. S. and Caaaia , 115,117 , lit Elm St. , h'tw er . STEELE , JJHNSON & CO. , WHOLESALE GROCERS AND JOBBERS IN Flour , Salt , Sugars , Canned Goods , and , All Grocers' Supplies. A Full Line of the Best Brands of ABD lAHUFiCfURED TOBACCO. ifinntr ! for BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFL N & BAND POWDER 60 -DEALERS IN- HALL'S SAFE AND LOCK CO. Fire and Burglar "V-A-TJILiTS - - , x. o o aac s , 1020 Far n ham Street , PERFECTION HEATING "AND BAKING Is only attained by using CHARTER OAK Stoves and Ranges. WITH WIRK ( IAUZB OVEE DOORS , For sale by MILTO ROGERS & SONS MORGAN & CHAPMAN , WHOLESALE 2I3 Farnam St. . MANUFACTURER OF GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES , Window Caps , Finials , Skylights , &c. THIRTEENTH STREET , OMAHA , NEB \ Single Breech Loading Shot Buns , from S5 to 818 , " Double Brooch Loading Shot Guns , from $18 to 875 , Muzzle Loading Shot Ouns , From SB to 825B Fishing Taokel , Base Balls and. all kinds of Fanoy floods , Full Stock of Show Oases Always on hand , Imported and Key West Cigars a large line of Meerschaum and Wood Pipes and everything re quired in a first-class Cigar , Tobacco and Notion Store Cigars from $15 per 1,000 upwards. Sender or Price List and Samples ANHEUSER-BUSCH tN & Brewing Association , CELEBRATED KEG & BOTTLED BEER , THIS EXCELLENT BEER SPEAKS FOR ITSELF , Orders from any part of the State or the Entire West will be promptly shipped. All Our Goods arc Made to the Standard of our Guarantee. GEORGE HENNING , Sole Agent for Omaha and the West. Office Corner 13th and Barney Streets. F I The ouly Coal mined west of the Mississippi River that is equ iu quality to the ROCK SPUING COAL. THE OETLY IOWA COAL That will stock for a year without slacking or'shrlnklng. Pronounced by all the leading brick men In Western Iowa us the very best coal for burning brick over need In the West. EUREKA COAL AND MINING CO. , Frederic , Monroe Co. , lown.