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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 3, 1884)
THE DAILV BEE OMAHA , THURSDAY JANUARY 3. I88i FURNITURE - THE - CHEAPEST PLACE IN OMA.HA TO BUY urniture -IS AT- They always have the largest and best stock. HO STAIRS TO CLIMB ELEGANT PASSENGEI ELEVATOR TO THE DIFFERENT FLOORS. H. B. IREY 15th and Farnani Streets. - - Omaha , Teb. Below will bo found a few of the BEST and most DESIRABLE BARGAINS : OMAHA CITY PROPERTY. No.211 2 story brick residence , near St. Clary's avenue , at a bargain. No. 221 12 vacant lota , t block from street cars , earno distance from Hnnseom Park. Wo offer these lots , which are very desirable for building purposes , at a low figure for a few days only. No. 220 3 lots on Saunders street , near Charles. These lots will bo sold cheap and are well located for a block of stores. No. 229 Business property , rents for § 2.000 , pays 20 per cent. Best thing ever offered. No. 235 Three houses and lots , rents for $ l,2QO per year. No. 241 3 lots in Bartlott's addition , very cheap. ' No. 253 15 acres in Cunningham's addition. ' < No. 247 3 lots in Hanscom place. No. 94 4 lots on S. 10th street. Easy terms. Each , $300. No. 102 House and lot. House , 5 rooms and basement. Lot , CO xWO , S. 10th street , near Charles , $ SOO down , balance in 2 years. 51,400. No. 84 9 lots , 00x132 each , S. 10th st. Must be sold altogether. $4,500. No. 77 3 houses , 2 brick and 1 frame , on lot 00x132 , S. llth st. $4,900 cosh , balance long time. 87,250. ft No. 40 One aero lot and house , 4 rooms , 4 blocks , S. St. Mary avenue street car line. Very cheap. $3,700. Liberal terms. . No. ll3 houses and lots , 50x140 , Si 10th st. , Nof railroad. This is the best bargain for an investor over ofl'orod in the city. $2,500. No. 90 A good house of 5 rooms , with basement and other good improvements. Lot , 50x150. Fruit and evergreen trees 0 years old. Nice residence property. Easy terms. § 3,200. No. 19 Now house and barn. Lot , 132x148. This is a very de sirable residence property , and is offered at alow price. Will ox- chango'for farm property. $4,500. No. 143 2 lota i Block K , Lowe's 1st addition , 8150 each. No. 103 8 lota in Boyd's addition. $175 each. Easy terms. No. 1C ? 2 lots in Lowe's second addition. Each contains 1 acre , with house and barn. Bargain. No. 109 4 acre lots in Lowe's second addition. No. 179 1 lot in Kountz' third addition. Now ] house of 3 rooms , barns , etc. $1,800. No. 181 1 lot in Kountz' third addition , 2 houses , etc. $1,500. No. 184 2 lots in Block 3 , Kountz' third addition. Must bo sold together. $2,200. No. 180 3 acres in Okahoma , with good 5-room house and other improvements. § 3,500.FARM FARM LANDS. No. 201 40 acres near Fort Omaha. No. 202 2 good farms near Waterloo. 240 aero farm near Oscoola , Neb , , $25' per aero. Will exchange for city property. Easy terms. No. 12 2,000 arres of improved landin Hitchcock county , Nebraska , ranging in price from $3.50 to $10 per acre. No. 17 040 acres of good farm land in Dawson county. Will ex change for city property. $3.50 per acre. No. 22 The best farm in Nebraska , 7 miles from Omaha , contains 150 acres , 2 houses , wells , cisterns , barns and all other first class im provements. Also orchard matured and bearing. Will exchange for city property. No. 107 Several valuable and low-priced tracks of landin Madison county. 10 farms within from o 12 milci of railroad , and 23 pieces of im proved lands , near Table Rock , Nebraska , all conveniently near market , and m many instances offered at great bargains. Among other counties iu which wo have special bargains in farms and unimproved lands , are Jefferson , Knor , Clay , Valley , Webster Sarpy , Harlan , fBoono , Filmore , Cass , Seward , Merrick and Nuck- olls. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED. H. B. IREY & CO. , Real Estate Agents , Southwest Corner ICth and Farnam St. , Omaha , Neb. J. 0. PRESCOTT1 N. P. CURTICE. J. 0. PRESCOTT & CO. , 33Lotei.il PIANOS & ORGANS ! Music. Musical Instruments of all Descriptions. CHEAPEST AND IOST RELIABLE HOUSE Xax tlio * 3t .to. CALL AND EXAMINE OUR STOCK OR SEND FOR PRICES. NO. Farnam Street . . . . OMAHA. DEALER IN LumberSash , Doors , BlmdsBuilding Paper LIME , CEMKN1 , HAIR , ETC. Office aud Yrd , Oir. 13th and OaliforniaStroots. OMAHA , NEB MAXUiMOTUr.EU Of Galvanized IronCornices , TfciitecDtbStitd LEFT OUT ON LONE STAR KDUNTAII BY BUM ItARTK , , i i I. There was little doubt that the Loiv Star claim was played out. Not dug out worked out , washed out but played out For two years its five sanguinopropriotor had gene through the various stages o mining enthusiasm ; had prospected am planned , dug and doubted. They ha ( borrowed money with hearty but tin redeeming frankness , established a crodi with unselfish abnegation of all rcsponsi bility , and had berne the disappointmoiv of their creditors with a cheerful rcsigua tion which only the consciousness of semi deep compensating future could give Giving little else however , n singular dis satisfaction obtained with the traders and , being accompanied with a roluctanci to maku further advances , at last touchoi the gentle stoicism of the proprietor ! themselves. The youthful enthusiast ) which had at First lifted the most incHoct ual trial the most useless essay to the piano ot actual achievement , died out , leaving them only the dull , prosaic recort of half-finished ditches , purposolcs : shafts , untenable pjls , abandoned SU glnca , and meaningless disruptions o the soil upon the Lone Star claim , am empty Hour sacks and pork barrels in tin Lone Star cabin. They had berne their poverty if tha term could bo applied to a light remind ation of all superfluities in food , dress o ornament , ameliorated by the gentle do prcdations already alluded to wit ] unassuming levity. More than that Having segregated themselves from the ! fellow miners of lied Gulch , and ontorot upon thoposscssion of the little manznniUi thickotcd valley five miles away , the failure of their enterprise had assumed ii their oycs only the vague significance o the decline and fall of n general commu nity , and to that extent relieved them o individual responsibility. It was oasioi for them to admit that the Lone Stat claim was played out than confess to a personal bankruptcy. Moreover , thoj still retained the sacred right of criticism of government , and reso supcrior.in their private opinions to their ovrn collective wisdom. Each ono experienced a grate ful sense of the entire responsibility o the other four in the fate of their outer prise. On Dccombos 23 , 1803 , a gentle rain waa still falling over the length ant breadth of the Lone Star claim. It had been falling for several days ; had already called a faint spring color to the wan landscape , repairing with tender touches the ravages wrought by the proprietors , or charitaoly covering their faults. The ragged seams in gulch and canon losl their harsh outlines , a thin green mantle faintly clothed the torn and abraded hill side. A few weeks moro and veil of for- ; otfulncss would bo drawn over the fee ble failures of the Lone Star claim. The charming derelicts themselves , listening : o the raindrops on the roof of their lit- ; lo cabin , gazed philosophically from the open door , and accepted the prospect as a noral discharge from their obligations. Four of the five partners were present the Right and Left Bowers , Union Mills and the Judge. It is scarcely necessary to say that not one oc those titles was the genuine name of its possessor. The Bight and Loft Bowers wore two brothers ; their aoubri- buots a cheerful adaption from their fa vorite game of euchre , expressing their relative value in the camp. The mere : act that Union Mills had at ono time patched his trousers with an old Hour mck legibly bearing that brand of its fabrication , was a tempting baptisimal suggestion that the other partners could not forego. The Judge , a singularly inequitable - equitable Missourian , with no knowledge whatever of the law , was an inspiration of gratutious irony. Union Mills , who had boon for some time sitting placidly on the threshold with ono log exposed to the rain frcm a bhoor ndolent inability to change his position , inallywithdrew that weather-beaten member and stood up. The movement moro ot less deranged the attitudes of the other partners , and was received with cynical disfavor. It was somewhat re- narkablc tlmt , although tjonorally giving he appearance of healthy youth and per- oct physical condition , they ono and all imulated the decrepitude of ago , of nvalidism , and , after limping about a ow moments , settled back again upon heir bunks and stools in their former > ositins. The Loft Bower lazily replaced a bandngo that ho had worn around his ankle for weeks without any apparent iccesaity , and the judge scrutinized with eudor solicitude the faded cicatrix of a cratch upon his urm. A passives hypo chondria , _ berne of their kolation , was he last ludicrously pathotio touch to their ituation. The immediate cause of this commotion elt the necessity of an explanation. "It would have boon just as easy for rou to have stayed outside with your msiness log , instead of dragging it into rivato lifo in that obtrusive " > way , ro- orted the llight Bower ; "but that ox- musth o effort isn't going to fill the pork ) arrel. The grocery man at Dalton says what's that ho said ? " he appealed lazily o the judge. "Said ho reckoned the Lone Star was bout played out , and ho didn't want any nero in his thank youl" repeated the udgo with a mechanical effort of memory ittorly devoid of personal or present in- orest. "I always suspected that man after rimshaw begun to deal with him , " said ho Loft Bower. "They're just mean nough to join hands against us. " It vaa u fixed belief of the Lone Star part- icra that they wore pursued by personal llinitiea. "Moro than likely those now strangers ver in the Fork have been paying cash nd filled him up with conceit , " said Union Mills , trying to dry his leg by Iternatoly beating it or rubbing it against lie cabin wall "Onco begin wrong with hat kind of anipo and you drug uvery- > ody down with you. " , This vaguoconolusion was received with ead silence. Everybody had become ntereatod in the speaker's peculiar moth- d of drying his leg , to the exclusion of tie previous topic. A few offered criti. ism no ono asaisUuice. "Who did the grocery man say that of asked the llight Bower , finally ro- uming to the question. "Tho Old Man1 ' answered the judge. "Of course , " ejaculated the Right iowor sarcastically. "Of COUIHO , " echoed the other imituora ogether. "That's like him. Th.o Old > lan all over ! " It did not appear exactly what waa like 10 Old Man , or why it wu3ikohiinbut ] , euorally , that ho alone was responsible or the groceryman'B defection. It was > ut moro concisely by Union Mills. "That comes of letting him go there ! t'a just a fair provocation to nny man to mvo the Old Man sent to him. They aii't s rtur H'strainthemaclveaathim. He's enough to spoil tlio credit of th Rothschilds ! "That's so"t chimed in the judge "And look nt his prospecting. Why n was out two nights last week nil nigh nrospocting in the moonlight for bltn leads-ju vl1 ! olshoor foolishness. " " 1 was qtiltO onoilflh tot' mo , " brok in Uio Loft Bower , "whotl Uio Other drv you remember when ho pWpOSoA t ns white men to settle c'own to pint ! ground-sluicing making grub wngcs iust like nny Chinaman. It just showei Im idea of/tlio / Lone Star claim. " ' 'Well , I never said it nforo , " nddci Union Milis , "hut when that ono of th ! Mnttison boys _ came over hero to examine ino the claim with an eye to purchasin1 it was tlio Old Man.tlmt took the concui out him. Ho just as good ns ndinittci that n lot of work had to bo done nfor nny pay ore could bo realized. Novo oven asked him over to the shanty her to jino us in n friendly game just ken him , so to speak , to himself. Ant naturally the Mattisons didn't see it. " A silence followed broken only by tin rain monotonously falling on tha roof nnd occasionally through the broad adobi chimney , when it provoked n rotaliatiiij hiss ana splutter from the dying ambcn of the hearth. The llight Bower , witl n sudden nccoss of energy , drew ni tin ply barrel before him , nnd , taking i pack of well-worn cards from his pocket began to make n soltairo unon the lid. . Tno ethers gazed at him with languid in toresk. "Makin1 it for anything" asked Mill The liight Bower nodded. The J udgo nnd Loft Bower , who wore partly lying in their respectivebunks , sat up to got n bettor view of the game Union Mills slowly disengaged himsol from the wall and loaned over the solitaire tairo plnyer. The llight Bower turned the last card in n pause of almost thrill ing suspense , nnd clapped it down 01 the lid with fateful emphasis. "It wont ! " said the Judge , in n voic < of hushed respect "What did you make it for ? " ho almost whispered , ' 'To know if we'd make the break we talked about nnd vamose the ranch. It's the fifth time to-day , " continued the llight Bower in n voice of gloomy siguif' icnnco. "And it wont ngm bad cards , too. " ' I ain't superstitious , " said the Judge \yith nwo and.fatuity beaming from every line of his credulous face , "but it'a tlyin in the face of Providence to go agin such signs ns that. " "Make it again to POO if the Old Man must po , " suggested the Loft Bower. The suggestion was received witli fa vor , tlio three men gathering breathlessly around the player. Again the fateful cards wore shufllod deliberately placed in their mysterious combination , witli the same ominous result. Yet everybody seemed to breathe moro freely , as if ro < liovcd from some- responsibility , the Judge accepting this manifest expression of Providence with resigned self-right eousnoss. "Yes , gentlemen , " resumed the Lofl Bower , serenely , ns if n calm legal deci sion had just boon recorded , "wo must not lot any foolishness or sentiment got mixed up with this thing , but look nt it like business men. The only sensible move is to got up nnd got out of the camp. " "And the Old Man ? " queried the Judge. "Tho Old Man hush ! he's coming.1 The doorway wns darkened by n slight lissome shadow. It was the absent part ner , otherwise known ns the Old Man. Need it bo added that ho was a boy of nineteen , with n slight down just cloth ing his upper lip ! "Tlio crook is up over the ford , nnd I had to shin up a willow on the bank and swing myself across , " ho said , witli n frank laugh ! "but nil the same , boys , it's going to clear up in nbout an hour you bet. It's breaking nway over Bald Mountain , and there's n sun ilosh on n bit of snow on Lone Peak. Look ! you san see it from hero. It's for all the worlk like Noah's dove just landed on Mount Ararat. Its a good omen. " From sheer force of habit the men had momentarily brightened up nt the Old NIan's entrance. But the unblushing ox- libition of degrading superstition shown n the last sentence recalled their unjust icverity. They exchanged meaning ; lances. Union Mills muttered hopo- essly to himself : "Hell's ' full of such > mons. " Too occupied with his subject to no tice this ominous reception , the Old Man : ontinucd : "I reckon I struck n fresh ead in the now grocery man nt the Cross- ng lie says he'll lot tlio Judge hnvo a iair of boots on credit , but he can't send Jiem over hero ; and considering that ; ho Jud o has got to try them nuywny , it don't seem to bo asking too much for the Judge to go over there. Ho says lio'll give us a barrel of pork nnd a bag if Hour if wo'll give him the right of asing our tail-race and clean out the ewer end of it. " . "It's the work of a Chinaman nnd a 'our days' job , " broke in the Left Uowor. "It took ono white man only two hours : o clean out n third of it , " retorted the Did Man triumphantly , "for i pitched n ut once with a pick ho lot mo have on : rodit , and did that amount of work this norning nnd told him the rest of you joys would finish it this afternoon , " A slight gesture from the llight Bower shocked nn angry exclamation from the Left. The Old man did not notice n'ther , but , kniting his smooth young Jrow in a paternally reflective fashion , .rent . on : "You'll have to got a now pair ) f trousers , Mills , but as ho doesn't keep : lothing , wo'll have to got some canvas ind cut you out n pair. I traded off tlio > e.ms ho lot mo have for some tobacco 'or ' the llight Bower nt the other shop , ind got them to throw in a now pack of : arda. These nro nbout played out. iVo'll bo wanting some brushwood for the ire ; there's a heap iu the hollow. Who's ; oing to bring it in ? It's the Judge's urn , isn't ' itWhy / what's the matter vith you alii" [ To la Continued. } Called to 1'reacli. Wo foot called upon to preach n few gospel acU fuctd that are worth knowing. Wo runt everybody to enjoy ull that in possible u this world. Wo want all those who are uttering from rheumatism , neuralgia , and all rdieu , iprnlim and pains to know that Tlutmut' -.electric Oil U au unfailing and BplondlJ euro , The Hiibjoct of calling a constitutional con- ontlon to ravine tha organic lawn of the state rill come before the next Maryland leglnla- uro , tha iwuombllug of euelt a convention verv twenty yearn being provided bylaw , . 'ha Instrument now Iu force U defective in uany particulars and the Bontlment that it hould ba amended appears to bo general. GallMit ItcBCtiCH , There can bo something heroic in a modi , tno OK well a in Individuals , Junlock Jlloul httcn liavo elToctod many a gallant iesc.no mong the guttering nick. Thousands linvo scaued thn miseries of dyspepsia and nervous lublllty throUp'h the nso of thli wonderful ( icillclno. It Is emphatically the best atom- h and blood tonlo In the world , C'uneral Hancock declares that ho would da- line the nomination for presidency If It wtira , ; ai ! ) tendered him. FARM MATTERS , NIXKTY DAY COMf , F. K. Fro3sUoiinolsvUlo. Clnrks cum ty , Oliio , writes Tin : BKB that lie hns " Inrgo quantity of n very superior qualit of pxtra brgo white corn wmoh was 01 rittinatod by myself nnd which is umiai , nlly early , lionee H nnino , " 00 D < x Coril. " ft will malnfo aulHcienlly i ninety ilnys (6 ( bo out of the w y of th frost mid the freeze thus filling A Wml long foil. The cars nro from ten I Iwoivo inchus long ntul about two-third of the stocks hnvo two largo nnd pcrfoc onrs. The grains nro unusually largo nnt long Vhilo the cob is comparative ! ; small. Ono hundred and thirty bualiol of this variety wns raised ono one acri this season , nnd many old nnd rcliabl farmers pronounced it the best nnd moa prolific variety they hnd over soon. As ! nm anxious to know what the corn wil ilo , 1 will mnko the following offer to tin renders of your vnluablo paper. 1 wil send n large snmplo package of the cori to any farmer who will give it n fair tria nnd report his success to mo next fall nnd who will send mo ten cents to pa ; the postage , I can furnish the best p references in regard to my good faith it the nbovo statement if necessary. " HAisixn nons. Hugh Fey of Mnplo Crook , Dpdgi county , givca hla experience inioisiiij hogs ns follows : From Nov. fiiJ , 1&82 , t ( Deo. , 'J4 , 1882 , ho sold 141 hogs , nottinj liim in clenn cash 91,041.1)5. ) From Jan. in to Doc. 24 , of the present year , In sold 8 < i hogs , weighing 24,075 pounds for which ho received $1,207.25. Air Fey is thoroughly I convinced that ovci nt the prices hogs hnvo sold nt during tin present year it pays to raise them. SKKD coux , A Michigan fnrinor gives the following ns n method of saving seed corn : " 1 su loot my seed corn early , nnd , nftoi husking' , bury the oars in my oat bin leaving thorn tlioro until wanted tin following spring. I have never ospsricnc nd nny diiliculty in the germination of inj corn since adopting this method. Tlu oata absorb rapidly and evenly nil moi aturo , nnd prevent nny freezing of the selected ear. " 111(5 HTKIIUH. Mr. Waldo Lyon of Burl county soli ! recently the best lot of steers over ship. . pcd from this state , bringing him ? l , OCO the atoera averaging 81t ! ) ; each ; thislooki like big figures , but they wore largo steers , well fed. rnoTEcriox ron I'IOH. Experiment made by Prof.E. M. Shelton ton , of The Kansas' State Agricultural College , show that it pays to protect pigs , Ton animals as nearly alike ns possible wore kept , during the last two winters , in soporato pens , five in basement of a barn and five in the yard without cover ing aavo straw for bods. They wore fed with Indian corn twice n day , ouch mose being carefully weighed. The result waa as follows : Pigs in the barn , 1 Ib. of pork cost 410 ! ) Ib. of corn. Pigs outside , 1 Ib. of p .rk cost 5 7-10. Or expressed in other words' each bushel of corn , fed iu the bam , ir.ado 1110 ! Ib. of pork. Fedoutaido , inado 0 7-10 Ib. of pork. This % shows that of every bushel of corn fed to the unsheltered pigs , an amount capable of making 1-0 pounds of pork wns used in keeping the pigs warm , Ac cording to those figures , the sheltered [ > ig gained 100 pounds iu weight during the season , it wna by the expenditure of 4-1) pounds of corn for each pound of pork , or 400 pounds of corn for the whole in crease. The unsheltered pig required " > 70 pounds of corn for 100 pounds of ; > ork. Corn In Adams County. To the Editor of THE BEK. Having noticed several short articles in TUB BEE respecting the presontcondition 9f the corn crop , and especially its fitness 'or seed another season , with n tendency : o create anxiety among farmora hero as well ns elsewhere , I have made careful examination of the corn hereabouts , and ind just cause for sounding the alarm. 3ur corn is probably us good as any to so found in the atato , and yet we nro mdly short in suitable seed corn. Ilio rainy weather of last October , ; orminating in a heavy snow storm , ind this , followed by n very severe frost , jcforo the corn wns dry enough to husk , alibctually destroyed the germ of the 3orn. Had farmers gathered their aced .ho last of September , or oven the fore rt of October , all would have boon well , jut moat of them did not , and hence : heir frantic endeavors to obtain old corn 'or seed the coming spring , 1 have aeon several men who have raised from three : o five thousand bushels of corn this year n the city overhauling cribs of aid corn for seed and paying uat double what they could jot for their own corn. When will farm ers learn to bo prudent in selecting and laving seed and do it at the best time and lot take such fearful chances ) I became mtisQod after two years' ' residence intho _ itato that moat of ( .the corn being raised liorcaboutn required too long seasons to nature , and in order to bo absolutely mro of our crop wo needed an early lort that would mature inside * f ninety lays. In corresponding with parties who mnko a busmosu of looking up do- lirablo sorta of seeds , I obtained a largo number rjf sorts and planted the samp under as favorable con- iitiona as possible. None mot my ex pectations but a now kind thatoriginntcd in Minnesota , called the North Star Qoldon Dent. This is not only a strictly ninety day corn , but is of good sized cara with small cob and deep kernel , the heaviest corn of its size I have over soon. It runs from 12 to 24 ounces to the car. This corn wns ripe in August .and thor oughly dried out in September , and it is the only reliable need corn I have. Had my entire crop boon of this aprt , t would liavobeonmuchbottor olF. I began feeding this in August , but ns soon ns I ascer tained the damage to the tall corn I stopped and carefully housed it far seed. You may wish to know of its yielding iiualitios. Although aomo of it wns cov ered up by heavy rains , yet it outdid the other , yielding fifty bushels to the aero all round. 1 think y u will ngroo with mo in advising farmers to plant largely of the earliest and best sorts of son ) . I shall confine myeolf to planting this sort of com until I can find something - thing bolter. O , W , KIMIIAM. . s , Neb , , December 'II , Not it ( 'uno. Not a coxa of rlioumatUm , not n eaio of uourulclu , nut it ca o of jalii or * praln not mo liai lulled to go when uttttckoU by Tlunam" J.ctdtrlc Otl , _ IOWA NKVVS , MuraliallUwn U in ila Ulat you- . T lie creditors of West & { Jens , of Dos Monies , will get a liunl dividend of 8J per cent. The total indebtedness of th estate was about $105,000. The ice harvest is progressing genera ! ly over the state. The improvements in Marshalltown fc 1883 foot up 8UD9i ( ! > . The body of an unknown young ma wns found in nn alloy in East Dos Moinc last Sunday morning. A bullet hoi through the head , and n revolver will ono empty chamber lying near indicatoi n suicide. There wns a small amount o niotiOv in the dead man's pocket , bu nothing on n , ' ? person to lend to his idon tificaUon. The body , on Sunday am Monday , was scanned by 0,000 people butnt fast reports the identity of tnomai was still a mystery. Gov , Sherman has appointed the fol lowing gentlemen ns delegates to tin river improvement convention , called ti meet in Washington , D. 0. , on the lira Tuesday in February : Kdward llussoll Davenport ; A. W. Swalm , Oskaloosa ; D 11. Solomon , Solomon ; S. M , Clark Keoknk ; John Mnhin , Muscatino ; .1. M , Turner , Lansing ; L. F. Parker , Da von port ; .T. AV. Chapman , Council Bluffs Goo. L. Torbert , Dubuque , and George D. Perkins , Sioux City. Nothing Ijlko It. No mmllcliioha * ox or boon knruvn so offcc tunl In the euro of nil those diseases nrlshif from nu Impure condition of the blood n < Scoviu'd SAUSAPAUILI.A on Uronn ASH J.tvitr SVHUP for the euro of Scrofula , White Hwel ling * , Kliounmtliiti , 1'lmplo * , lilotchcw , Krup' tlons , A'onoroal Sorwt nnd Dlscftsos.Comuwjv lion , Cioltro , ItolK Unucon , mul nil kitulioi : dUon M. It puritips the nyatem , brings coloi to tlio clicoka mul ro toroH the mllcrcr to .1 nnnnnl condition of health mulIgor. . It U nmortoil tliat the orilltiary connoHw mod by liulloi nro proiluctho of grant nils ehtcf , Wo hollot o thN In so , nnd tlmt a bet , tor moans of socurttiR a bountiful complexion U to USD sonio Rood blood modiclno llko SCO VI LI AS Ur.OOl ) AND L1VKU SY11U1 which clonnsoti'tho blood mul Rl\ci permanent beauty to the skin. COMMKUOIAI ; . COUNCIL nnJiva sunKKT. Wheat No. 3 spring , 70o ; No , 3 , COc ; rQ joctod , f > 0o ; good doniniul. Corn 1/oalora arc paying Sue for old com and Ufic for new. Onts In Rood demand nt 20c1 liny 100(5)0 ( ) 00 i > or ton ; 50o per balo. llyo tOc ; light supply. Corn Monl 1 25 per 100 pounds. Wooil Good supply ; prlco.1 at yards , 5 00@ COO. COO.Coal Coal Delivered , hard , 11 50 per ton ; oft , 0 00 per toaV Duttor 1'lonty and In fair iloinnnd at 20o ] croamory. ! ! 5c. KgPT > lloaily sale at 25o t > or dozen. Lard Vatrhauk's , \\lnilusullng nt lie. 1'oultry l inn ; dealers nro imylng for chickens lOc ; live , Z CO per dozen. Vegetables Potatoes , 50o ; onions , 40c ; cab- bnpos , 30 ® 10o pur dozen ; niMiloH. ready sale at - ' f > 0@i : 50 for prtmo stock. Flour City Hour , 1 C0@3 40 , ISrooms 2 00@3 00 per doz. | LWK HTOOK. Cattle 3 00@3 50 ; calves , 5 00@7 CO. lIoRH Local imckcrH nro buying now and there In n good doinnnd for nil Rriultw ; choice | ) acklng. f ) OOCari 10 ; mixed. 4 UTi(5ir ( > 00. ONE OF THE BEST PHYSICIANS TESTIFIES. I ha\obcciiu lncS lft'n Specific In inv vractlco 'uninlto a longtime , and I rvzanl Ittlioliust com- l > ! natlun an a Wood putlllcr and tonic. It U entirely MHrct lile , liclns eoinpiwod < > ( the extracts of ronta whlco Krow In this Hoctlon of QcortfU I am f itnllUi Hltliltulilstorylroin tlio time tha formula wan oil t-nlruJ from tlio Incllmin. It la curtain anil iufe nm- ctly for all kinilgof liloiMl polnoa and skin humor , and : huro has no > er been a falluru to cure. I havu cured blucxl taint In TIIK TimiD nxMtimioN ulthlt , alter I hud most ilinally failed by tha moil approved methoils of treatment Hli mercury and loiiIJa of potassium. potassium.I'UED A. T001IKU , U. D. , Ferr\ Houston Co , Oo. Our trcattao on Howl anil bkln Dlseatts uullcj 'roc ' to applicants. applicants.Till Till ! SttllTHrKOIFIOCO. , Drnw cr y , Atlanta , ta. ! Nebraska Cornice -AND- MANUFACT'mKllS OP GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES FINIALS , WINDOW CAPS , TIN , IRON AND SLATE ROOFING. PATENT MKTAUO SKYUOUT , Iron Fencing ! CruntliiL'i , Balustrades , Verandas , OIHcu and Danl lUlllnxa , Window ami Collar OuanU , Etc. N. W. COIl. KIN-HI AND JONES STd. WU. OAISKIl. Minnict. WliOH , liability , uxlmimtloit unit vrfliutturo ilvvny nre ruu vU iiy < HOMCI * , rrrorw of } out ht etc. , uro pprfrclty rcttum ! ( u iNtliti.L health nnd < lluvni < Um-\viiiicl tlr ! < > ct uifihoiUnticI ub- > luti > Ihiiroiiuhni-M. rli'ilnd 'IrmUno frf" . MAnSTONnEMEDYCO.,40W.14lhSt.NewYorl ( . CHZCJACJQ F50AL33 COl * tumuii MM i , * < u. jiiittii. . .4Ton MiM > . Hi-am Uux IiM-luilrit , 2401. ' "Anmen'a OOALB.OO. " Thn "j.irl. II in nw4 iiIn .IV ill. M 00Omni M7M. ll > InrM I'llll K I.IHT MlttX. POBOxJS , TOOLS , &o , firm IIIIM.I nun. mil nnir uiiux , no 4ll III. AllVillllill > i' i > fT ( > Jlln. IO Yftrr. t * . P Mil < i t mA'irjr rolitf ajil jw't. tlowor" , tifiK Vl' ' * Oilier ArtlrliM 1 II > iiinitHMICHUM vii ) r i | Marked Down ! Millinery and Hair Goods -AT- ALMA E. KEBTH'S. liTHiwclal InJuMtnonti .ultvred evening. Htore Onii | ) uutll 3 o'clock p. u , 100 IPth Street Opp. Postoflloe. HICCINS' MKUCIIA.STH1 LUNCH AND SAMl'I.E IIOOJI , 1203 Douglus St. . Onmlia , Neb RESTAURANT , 00 , 2C8 Kouth ISth Street. U | > on Dajnnd Nig [ H vl ILY PAGELSEN tl , DODGE 6TUEET , Officbour 10 I t9 * 0.80 la 7(80. ( . - * - < -.l. . . T-.WA t * M'j , Palo , Poor , Puny , and Pallid.- Considering all the ills that attache little children , it is a wonder that any of the poor little youngsters live to grow up. ' There arc children who nrc truly objects of pity. They seem almost bloodless. Their checks are thin and pinched ; their eyes are hollow ; and tlicirskin is tightly drawn over their foreheads. There is nothing hearty about them. They do not enjoy their lives. They arc suffering1 from the debility that leads to marasmus. Poor things 1 Do a good deed for the pale , poor puny , pallid child. Hand its mother a bottle of J3 roam's Iron JJHtcrs. Here is life even for the most deli cate , the most debilitated ; for the child almost given up for dead. Iron m the blood is what the child needs , to bring it up. The little digestive apparatus will recover. The pale cnccks will fill out The weary groan of the child will be exchanged for themcrryprattleof infantile glad ness. Your druggist will tell you what wonders Jlroivti's Iron' Bitters has clone for very sick children , it Thouioof the form " Shot Lino" In connection with th corporate IIRIHO of Rroat ro d , coin o ] an MCA ol ust what required ' ' } ' 'he tra\ cling pub lic a Short Line , Quick Tim * nnd the best ot ivccommcxU * tloni Ml ol which are ( urn * aliod by the greatest railway In America. CHICAGO , Rfl 9 f 8 And St. Paul. Howiis ami operetta o\or 4,500 mtloaof road a forthi.ni Illinois , \Yleconnln , Minnesota , Iowa and > koU ; ami al t main lines , branches and connoo Ions roach all the great liusliioss centres ot the VorthwcstanJ Far West , It naturally answers th Ucsorljitlon ol Short Line , anil Best Houto between ChtcaRO , Mll\vaukeo , SU Paul and Minneapolis. Chicago , Milwaukee , La Croseo and Wlnona. Chicago , Milwaukee , Aberdeen and KlloiiUala Chicago , Milwaukee , Kuu Claire nnd Stlllwatct * ChlcAKo , Milwaukee , Watis.au and Merrill. Chicago , Milwaukee , Hearer Dam ami Oshkoth. Chicago , Milwaukee , Waukcsha and Oconomowoo > . Chicago , Milwaukee , Madison and ProlrloJuChteo. Chicago , Milwaukee , Onatonnaand Falrlbautt. Chicago , Hololt Janesrl'lo ' and Mineral 1'otnt. Chicago , Elgin , llockfonl nnd Uuluquo. Chicago , Clinton , Kock Island and Cedar Rapldt. Ohlcago , Council Rluffi and Omaha. Chicago , Sioux City , Sioux Falls and Tankton Chicago , Mlhvaukoo , Mltc'icll and Chamberlain. Hock Island , Dubuque , St. 1'aul and Minneapolis. la\enport , Calmar , St. Paul nnd Minneapolis. Pullman Sleepers and tha Finest Dining Cars In world are run on thonrxtn lines olthe CHICAGO MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL RAILWAY and o cry attention Is paid to passengers by court * out employes ol the company. S. A. V. H. CAnPENTER , Ocnl Manager. Gen'l Pass. Agent. J. T. CLA11K , QEO II. HEAFFORD , Oeu'I Sup't WITH i And your work is done for all time to time to come. WE .CHALLENGE to produce a more durable material for street pavement than the Sioux Falls Granite. ODEKDIEER'S ' TOR ANY AMOUNT OF MACADAM ! Bllcil promptly. Samples sent and estimates given upon application. WM.MoBAIN&CO. , Sioux Falls , Dakota. Patent Dried Fruit Lifter. AS USEFUL NO DHALER IK A I IN GROCERY Groceries STORE CAN AVTOHU TODB AS A FAIR or ' Without It. COUNTEU SCALES. H.O.CLARK , SOLE PROPRIETOR. OAIA1IA , NHU.