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2 HEADLIGHT GLEAMS. | Presage of a War in the World on | Wheels, How Pocling Difflcuities Are Overcome by Intelli- gent Agents. The following interesting plece of railroad news is from the OChicago Times of Monday: The recent purchase of the Hanni- bal & St. Joseph road by Gould has little significance to the Burlington road, so far as the Wabash is concern- ed, as it does not give the latter any advantage over the Burlington which this road can not overcome in sixty days. It will necessitato the building of a branch from Laclede to Kansas City, and it is stated that work has already begun on this branch and wiil be completed before the close of the season. No bridges will have to be built either at Kansaa City or Leaven- worth, as trains can be run over the bridges now existing by the payment of a toll similar to the oue paid by the roads ranning over the bridge at St. Lovis. The fizht which is imminent, however, lies bet n the Burlington and the Union Pacific, and many well informed railway men shrewdly sus- pect that the Hannibal & 8t. Joseph 18 now held as a menace to the Bur- lington. In_ case the Burlingion should take advantage of present cir- cumstances to carry war into the enemy's territory, the Union Pacific would find an invaluable auxiliary in the road recently purchased. As an excellent authority states, the Bur- lington, up vo the present time, has not been in a sufficiently WELL INTRENCHED POSITION to make a move, but has improved the time in strengthening its forces and necuring powerful allies, The Rio Grande, with all its oxtensions, in- cluding the new ons now being built to Utah, is so strongly bound to the Burlington that the latter has become virtually its owner. The Santa Fe, upon a very gauzy promise of a share of the business which the Rio Grande has in its power to give, has linked its fortu with those of the Burlington and its Narrow gauge ally; and this triumvirate is now ready to wage re- lentless war upon the Union Pacific. The Rio Grande willingly threw itsel into the preffered embraco of the big Ohicago road. Financial disability and a hatred of the Union Pacific, which was of pre-natal influence,made the narrow gage road willing to offer itseif, body and soul, to a corporation that wae rich enough to lift it OUT OF A FINANCIAL SLOUGH, and to offer ita services, however in- significant, in “‘downing” the Union Pacitic. The Santa Fe had not much to loose, and an opportunity to cripple its old rival, and perhaps make a slight temporarily gain, was improved without hesitation. The hundred and one delays which have been brought about just as tho three were in condi- tion to enter a pool, have all been looking to this end--to prevent the forming of a pool so that the two roads could begrn the fight and escape the odium of breaking a, contract. ‘The Burlington now belioves that with its harrow guage acquisition, and by the Mid of its ally on the south, it is in fighting trim, Its division from Deonver to Kansas Oity has opened for freight business. This puts the rond on an equal footing with the Union Pacific w0 far as the Missouri river bueineas is concerned, with the excep- tion that the last named road has shorter lines and betier tracks—some of the Burlington road being laid with forty-eight pound steel, little better than that used on narrow uage roads—to both Omaha und ansas Oity, The plan of the cam- garian boundary. The party con sisted of three men, each of whom is married and has three children. Each man had also a bear. The only dis tinguishing feature of the gy was their dirt, and of this they pc ed a superabundance. As there been many arrivals of gypies a tle Garden recentiy, these did not at- tract much attention. But ic was nc ticed that one of the children, about two years old, had a fair face and light hair, and was altogether unlike the other children. Somo of the steer- age passengers by the same steamer interested themselves in the matter, and are of the opinion that the child must have been atolen. One of the gypsy women, however, stoutly main- tains that she is ita mother, HUNTING A MONTANA BEAR. Herding Bruin in a Spring Wagon Across a Prairie. White Sulo*+= “iings (Mont.) Orrrespondence Decr Lodge Ne'w Northwost, Whether or not a man desireth to be healthy, wealthy, and wise, he must yet rise early if ho would tuko the White Sulphur Springs coach at Laney's en route for Helena, was the object of Mr, David Folsom, of Smith River Valley, as after a 3 o'clock breakfast he steppod into his spring wagon this morning —the 156th 8 —to be driven by Mr, Aaron Goodale toward that station. Beyond Mr, Kolsom's meadow the road is un- fenced, and out of sheer porversity, or, perhaps, with intent to run into as many ditches as possible, meanders diagonally across a threc-mile stretch of sage brush, prickly pear, and bad- ger holes, the ascent to the plateau beyond is through a gulch so deep that a team climbing this rise would bo en- tirely hidden from any one standing but a little way above. Mr. Folsom had scarcely reached the brow of this hill when his horses stopped with a quick snort, and he bo- held at a few rods’ distance a cinna- mon bear standing face toward him in the middle of the road. The only arms of Mr, Folsom and his com- panion were the jack-knife, without which ths Yankee is not, and an ordi- nary carriage whip. But lo! doth a man watch two nights in vain for the bear which hath stolen his ewe lamb, to pass him in the highway with a cold obeisance? Not so. Mr. Fol. som conceived the idea of pressing my lord bruin to return with him to his rauch. He accordingly put his horses into a run, and making as short a circuit as possible, was soon between the bear and the mountains, for which the beast was making with all conyient speed. It looked for a single instant as if the bear had a no- tion of contesting the right of way. But it 15 supposiblo that he mistopk the two plunging horses, the long spring-wagon, and its two shouting occupants for one and the swme sui generis for which he had no use, and he struck off dingonally for the valley. The circle had been made with com- parative easo on the level service of the plateau, but in this headlong race down the bluff —over sage- brush, badger-holes, rocks, ditches — the wagon leapad, swayed, and pitched like a mad thing, It is no wonder that poor bruin again turned his course when, after a chase of a mile, this jerking, flying, roaring phenomenon appeared botween him and the mountains, To the great delight of his pursuers, in- »f of crossing the road again he kept 1t for half a mile and until he was within two miles of Mr. Folsom's house, when he made another wild rush around the fences for the moun- tains. Such was his extraordinary swiftness and endurance that even on the open road Mr. Folsom was oblig- od to keep his horses at their sharpest trot in order to equal the bear's speed, and when again their course lay over the sago-brush he had run a mile be- fore they could overtake him by their maddest galloping, retarded as they were by & wagon which the actors in this scene gravely aver bounced twen- tyfive foot into the air at every plunge of the horses. paign will be to put the Union Paclfic to rout, to slaughter rates at every point, and to not declare peace until all three roads shall be permitted to enter a pool for Colorado busines on SUCH ARBITRARY TERMS as they themselves may dictate, There has been an oppressive calm; there will be a fearful storm. No one has been deceived by the outward sign of peace which the Colorado rail- roads have assumed for the past four months. There|were certain tempest- uous features that could not be kept beneath the surface, no matter how frut an effort Lhe officers made to look unruffiad and unconcerned, or how loud they talked about their peaceful intentions, The newspapers of the entire west are cognizant of the alliances that have been made, and have for the past month predicted war as inevitable, It is feared that, no matter what the result may be to the railroads, o reckless cutting of rates will do much to unsettle the stability which Colorado commerce is just be- ginning to assume, A POOL LINE AGENT, According to The Wall Street News this is the way in which railroad man- agors expect their general freight and Ppassengor agents to carry out pooling agreements: The scene is laid in a railroad office ~-any railroad office you may have in our mind's eye. The president sends or the general passenger and general froight agents and says: ‘‘Geatlemen, I have gone in with the other roads on a pool " I tumble,” replios the passenger agent, “I observe,” adds the freight man, ‘‘Huving signed a solemn contract not to cut rates, what is your duty, Mr, 1!’"“"3" Agent!” ““To carry passengers at half fare, if needs be, to get ahead of the other v b ‘‘And your duty, Mr, Agen.t” “‘To charge the pool rates and re- bate 25 cents per ton,” “‘Gentlemen, accept my thanks for the prompt manner in which you see through s millstone; go ahead and beat the othier roads out of every dol- lar you can.” A Myetery of Castle Garden, From & New York Bjecial, Among the passengers landed at Castle Garden Monday from the steamer Oheateau Leoyille, which ar- rived trom Bordeaux, were s number of gypeies from Bosnia, near the Hun- Freight But at last—was bruin atter all to escape them?--he leaped the five-rail fence like a deer, and with apparently undiminished speed rushed through the pasture. It is needless to say that his pursuers made short work of the fence, but meantime he had dis- tanced them considerably, and among the fences he undoubtedly had the best of them, The chase continued as madly as before, but only for a few moments, for, like another brave Montanian, poor lord bruin ‘‘resolved to have a drink if it was the last act of his military career.” His tongue was ln_lling far out, his eyes were burstin, with the heat, he indiscreetly plunge into a deep slough, thereby signing his own death warrant, The wagon was driven at full speed toward the house, Mr, Folsom shouting to the men to saddle his horse and bring his gun. Ten minutes later a sharp rifle report, followed by a groan and a splash, told that the ciunamon bear, which had been herded for four miles ina spring wagon, would no more troublo the ewe lamb of the flock, The skin, a remarkably fine one, Mr, Folsom will have made into a rug as a glft to his wife and a last trophy of this most romarkabla bear hunt Daviv Kenvox, —_— Paralytio strokes, heart disease, and kidney affections, prevented by the use of Brown's Iron Bitters, — The Edison Light, New York Times, The New York Times says of its ex- perience with the Edison light; *‘The whole lamp looks so much like & gas-burner surmounted by a shade that nine people out of ten would not have known the rooms were lighted by electricity, excopt that the light was more brilliant than gas and undred times steadior, To turn on the Jight nothing is required but to turn the thumbscrews: no matches are uudad,_ nu patent appliances. As #00n a8 it is dark enough to need arti- ficial liglu, you turn the thumbscrew and the light is there, with no nause- ous smell, no flicker and no glare, *“It was about b o'clook when the lights were put in operation, It was then broad * daylight, and the light looked dim. It was not till about 7 o'clock, when it began to grow dark, that the electric light really made itself known and showed how bright and steady it is. Then the twenty- seven electric lamps in the editorial rooms and the twenty-five lamps in THE DAILY BEE- { the counting rooms made those de- partments as t as day, but with- out auy unpleasant glare, It was a light that a man could sit down under and write for hours withoat the con- sctousnees of having any artifical light sbout hi There was a very slight amount of heat from cach lamp, but not nearly as much as from a gas burner—one-f 1th as much as from gas, thoe inventor says, The licht was soft, mellow and gratafnl to the eye, and it seemed almost like writing by daylight to ight without a par- tiols of flicker and with scarcely any heat to make the head ache. The electric lamps in the Times building were as thoroughly tested as any light could be tested in a single evening, and tested by men who have battered their eyes sufficiently by years of night work to know the good and bad points of a lamp, and the decision was unan- imously in favor of the Edicon electric lamp as against gas.” Hecond Edition of Job Mra, Ocden, N. Division street, Buffalo, wnys: “T cannot be too thankful that T was induced to try your Frnine Brossom, was at one time afraid 1 should never be able to get out again, I veemed to be a second edition of Job without his patience; my fice and body were one vast collection of boils and pimples; since taking one bot tie of your Spring Blossom I am quite cured, all eruptions have disappeared, and I feel better than I hav Tong time.” Price 50 cents, trial bottles 10 cents, Marryiog Rich You need not be poor and depend- ent on your wedding day, for every person—mais or female—can get a good round sum of money at masriage if they hold a certificate of member- ship in THE MARRIAGE FUND MUTUAL TRUST ASSOCIATION of Cedar Rapids, Towa, $10,000 has already been paid in benefits to its members, in the nine months of the associations’ organization,and there is a golden opportunity for thousands more to reap oven larger benefits, Nothing like it was ever known. Do mnot postpone sending in your request for circulars giving full and completo informgtion regarding the plans and opperations of the associa- tion. Agents can make bigger money than in any other business. It is striotly honorable, pleasant and pro- fitable, The Auditor of State holds a deposit from the association as pre- scribed by law, for the protection of their members. The only association of the kind in existenco organized ac- cording to law. Write at once for circulars, Say where you saw this notice. aug3ll-m An Exciting Fight in the Water. A correspondent writing fromn St. Helen, Roscommon county, Mich., gives the following interesting account of a desperate encounter between a man and & buck deer, held in the water at that place. He says the hero of the occasion wus R, A. Bar- low, bookkeeper for Henry Stephens & Co., lumbermen, of that place, prowess was a watchword among the durky inhabitants of the pine-scented forests, and had he had other hair- breadth escapes and blood-curdling adventurer, he might have been made the subject of a sketch that would have brought him renown among the small boy of the day. As it was, he was only Mr. Barlow, a bookkeeper, and when on Wednesday last the sun toward eventide sank sloward the horizon, he laid aside his pen and office-duster and hied himself toward the rippling waters, where in the shel- ter of the evening shade he would cool his fevered brow and dip his pedals in the cooling liquid. Gaining courage a8 the shade of night became greater, he descended on and captured a punt and started for a greater depth of water where, unchecked, he could sport with the finny tribes in their own element, Comiug to the surface after a dive of unusual distance, Mr, Barlow was astonished at soceing ap- proaching him a buck of large propor- tions, whoeo antlers spread over his head like the bravches of a tree of the forests, Startled almost out of his boots, or rathor out of the water, the swimmer struck out for his boat and there with a paddle waged war upon the animated buckskin, The animal, nothing daunted, made for that float- ing bookkeeper, and with a dexterity worthy of a better cause, spilled every- thing into the water, swam for the shore, and disappeared in the woods, Mr. Barlow was badly scared and very wet when he returned to his lodginge that night, THE BAD AND WuRTHLESS Are never imitated or counterfeited. This is especially true of a family medlcine, and it is positive proof that the remedy imitated is of the highest value. As soon as it had been 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. fering invalids {0 use their stuffin- stead, expecting to make money on the credit and good name of H. B. Many others started nostrums put up insimilar style to H, B., with vari- ously devisod names in which the word “Hop" or ““Hops" were used in a way to induce peeple to believe the; were the same as Hop Bitters, such pretended remedies or cures, no matter what their style or name is, aud espicially those with the word “‘Hop” or “Hops” in their name or in any way connected with them or their name, are imitations or counterfeits. Beware of them, Touch none of them. Use nothlng but genuine Hop Bitters, with a bunch or cluster of green Hops on the white label, Trust nothing el Drugeists and dealers are warned against dealing In imita- tions or counterfeits. Fighting Fire with Fire. This may be od policy on & bl , but it will not swer with the fevor ystem. lrritat ik medicines exasperate onsify all com. plauts of the stonach or the bowels. Nover take & drastic evacusnt for indigestion or constipation Administer instead Tarrant's Seltzer Aperient which is at once & febrifuge, & cathartic, and an invigorant and has a soothing and healing ulfoct upoli the disordered vicera. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGIS' OMAHA. W DN whoroas, had he been & nimrod whose | - . ?——r——. ¥ S.TRUE Temperance Is not signing a pledge or faking a solemn oath that cannét be kept, because of the non-removal of the cause ~liquor. Thewaytomake a man temperate is to kill the desire for those dreadful artifigjal stimulants that car- g’,lx'l“ifn‘., bright intellects b premature graves, and desolation, strife un- happiness into so many familics. wd Ttisafact! BrowN'sIrRON % BirTERs, atrue non-alcohol ic tonic, made in Baltimore, Md., by the Brown Chemical ¢ Company, who are old drug gists and in every particu- Tar reliable, will, by remov ing the craving appetite of the drunkard, and by curing the nervousness, weakness, § and general ill health result” \.uff® fng from intemperance, do Kl 1nore to promote temperance, { f in the strictest sense than ¥ 10ther means now known. :;{: well authenticated fadt#that many medicines, especially“bitters,” are noth- ing butcheap whiskeyvilely concocted for use in local option countries, Such is fiot the case with Brown's Iros BrrTers. Itisamedi- ¢ine, a cure for weakness ang. decay in the nervous, muscular, and digestive or- gans of the body, produc- i pood; rich blood, health SDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 | | | #sour Bowelsare disordered, yonsaftor tr om Dyspeps o BURDOCA ‘LOOD BITTERS, 1t you are afflicted with Diliousness, use BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS 1t you are prosteated with sick BURDOCK BLOOD BIT BURDOCK BL 1t vvut Rlood s mpure, purity it with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS It you ha ‘e Indigestion, you will ind an antidote in BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 1t you are trowbled with Spring Compla adicate them with BURDOCK BLOOD B estoro it to healthy action DOCK BLOOD BITTERS 1t your Liveris torpid, with BL 1t your Liver is affected, you will wtorative in n sure r BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS of Humor or Pimpls, fail 1t you have any sp not to take TRDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, if you have any symptorms of Uloers or Scrofulous Seres, a curative remedy will bo found in BURDOCK BLOOD PITTERS For imparting strength and vitality to the sys- tem, nothing can eqaal BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. For Nervous and Genersl Debility, tone up the eystem with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, Price, 81.00 per Hottle; Trla Bottles 10 Cta FOSTER, MILBURN, & Uo., Jrope. BUFFALGC, N, Y. Bold as whoieeale by Ish & McMahon and C. F' Joodaina. To Nervous Sutterers THE QREAT EUROPEAN REMEDY. and strength. Try one bot- tle. Price $1.00. ESTABLISHED 1868, Peiphlets ad gob tull par- Ats, Price, Spocifc, $L.00 por ogos for §6.90. Add packege, oF alx pack lo:w b Noa. 104 Sold _in O snd all droggis: DR. CLARK Qure! No Bay! @ N X W. Bell, w 811 Looust St N }Estamuimnen 1861, } Smi SPRING ATI‘AL'EI':’B.{ENT—NM PATENT At J. SIMPSON « " LEADING CARRIAGE FACTORY 1409 and 1411 Dodge Streot, aug 7-me 6m OmAHA, NEB, EUROPEAN HOTEL, The Tnost centrally located hotel in the city, Rooms 75¢, $1.00, #1.50 and §2.00 per day.' 5 I"LM Class Restaurant connected with the otel. . HURST. Prop. Corner Fourthand Locuet Btreots. B8T. LOUIS IMO. JOHN BTABLER, President, W, §. Dwisnas, Eoo.and Tress, THE NEBRASKA MANUFACTURING 0O Lincoln, Neb ‘MANUFACTURERS OF Qorn Planters, Hrrrows, Farm Rollers Bulky Hay Rakes, Bucker Hlevacing Windmills, &c. We are prapared $0 do Job work and manutao uring for other partios, Addross al oriers NEERASKA MANUFACTULING CO Lincoln, Ne THE CITY STEAM LAUNDRY makes & specialty of Collars & Cuffs, AT THE RATE OF Three Cents Each. Tthrk wllulhai fromall ov:: the oo\ll:try. o charges and return postage must ac- company the package. Speclal rates to large clubs or agencies. #24-tf mo WILKINS & EVANS, D. M. WELTY, RROM SOHAXE Vioo Pres't, (Sucoessor to D.T. Mount.) Manufacturer and Dealer in Saddles, Harness, Whips, FANCY HORSE CLOTHING Robes, Dusters and Turf Boods Agent for Jas. R. HUllj& Co.'s ORLEBR LTED CONCORD HARNESS *“The Best in The World,” 1R1R A FIN AV ST ot OMAHAN, EB MORGAN PARK MILITARY ACADEMY A Christian Family School for Boys. Propares for Collge, Salentific Scheal 0r Business. Beod w0 X apt, ED, N. K. el nal, Morrgar Park, Oook Co., Ill. 8t. Louls, s still treat- ing all PRIVATE, NER- | I)r'r’l‘,;ly/. Toss o, VUUS, CHRONIO Special Discases, Spert torthma, Impotency (S ual Incapacity), Diseasos, Difficultfes, x- Founale Trregularities, otc, charg work"” entitled * of Women, ete.” Work on CnRoNio DisEASES, one stamp. £4T Victime of Belf-abuse or Private Discase, scnd 2 stamps for CRURBRATED WoRKS on Nervous and £ exual Diseascs. Consultation personally of by Tetter, FREE. Consult the old Doctor, THOUSANDS CURED, Offico in quiet, private, respectable place. C . You sec no_one but the doctor. Dr. larke 18 the only physician in the city who wur rants cures or no pay Medicines eent ever- where, H 8 AM. 0 B P M. dkwlyy it you ot or Fed or single, old or B posrhealth or languish Gt fees, rely on H o p i Bitt: Whoover you B cver you timely use Hepkitters ing or withoutn You wiil bol B cured it youuse| Bl Hop Bitters save sour|] i1fe. It has) hun-=| SCROFULA. The seat of all diseases of this na- ture is in the blood, as any one mani- festly knows; therefore, if you purify the blood, the diseaze, in any form or stage, disappears, Read what those say who haye tested the merits of the reat vegetable blood purificr, 8. 8. S, t cleanses he blood of all scrofulous | = taint 8o thoroughly that the disease never returns, T had serofula for reven months, the uleer covering the eatire surface of both leg After having tried the usual remedies with no relief, I re- sorted to 8, 8. 8,,and am glad to say that six bottles has effectually cured me, A. 8, LenrEesty, Atlanta, Ga. I suffered from scrofula 17 years. My shin bones were covered with ul- cers and one mass of rotten flesh, and the odor was almost unbearable. All remedies and treatments failed until T began taking S. 8. S, Previons to taking 1t I at times could scarcel walk., Now I can walk all day, and have to thank 8. 8, 8. and it only for my cure. Tuos, MCFARLAND, Atlants, Ga, T*Some thirty years ago there lived in Montgomery, Ala, & young man who was terribly afflicted with Scrof- ula, After being treated for a long time by the medical profession of this town with no benefit, he commenced taking 8, S. 5. After persistently taking it two months ne was cured. Being acquainted with him for 20 years thereafter, I can testify that the disease never returned. J. W. Bisuor, J, P, Hot Springs, Ark. 1 od will be pald % sny SO0 BT, Sialyaiaof 10 sotisse 8. 8. 8., one pasticle ot Mlercury, Iodide of Po sfum of any Mineral substsuce. BWLIT SPECIFIO 00, Proje i, !P‘ll'nl'ol Inflln ':n. §1.00. wise §1.! " Bold by ali Drugglste Ga, practice. Tigiecs color t the Wlood,| natural healthful tone to the digestive organ. it a; tite, ation of Y44 &0 4 y & 4 & Povers ar-d Impotence, R O 20 ; Al MANUFACTURED BY THE DR. HARTER MEDICINE CQ., 213 N, #AIN ST,, ST, LOU! PN Jv BOOK-KEEPING, BANKING, PENMANSHIP, COMMERCIAL men of Joii g Manufactured by the Pt ARITHMETIC, business exyerience and broal oo host 8 2 OMAHA, 2nd Pho tahle form, pparation t black racteristi paratio Thing to kive tho resaits that | 10 Disnases, Dyspepeia, And impo rhul cures. Casos that ) parable romedy. T W8 RO T3 §y10-e0d& UL 112CI A etorc i o e7Y LNESS FORMS, COMMERCIAL LAW, POLITICAT ECONOMY, ENGLISH LANGUAGES, echolarship at the AL COLLLG e L WYMAN . HEATING AND BAKIHG, only attained by vsing HARTER 0AK fitoves aud Kanges, witTH WiRE GAUZ;E”MH?B DOORS, MILTOH ROGERS & SONS OIX S LA jull.m&ely A. M. CLARK, Painter&PaperHanger SIGN W3'TER & DECORATLR. WHOLESALE & RETAIL WALL PAPER! Window Shades' aid Curtains, CORNICES CURTAIN POLES AND FIXTURES, Pajuts. Oils & Brushes, 107 South 14th Street. NEBRASKA, Wagon Company, WINONA, MINN. Winona “Every Tub Must Stand Upon its Own Bottom.” And Every Wagon Upon its Own Merits, We appreciate the above and make our wagons accordingly. ‘Respectfully, WINONA WAGON OC PARKER & BOWERS General Agents, Omaha, Neb, E AT, 1B3832. WHOLESAL® MILLINERY & NOTIONS Zephyrs, Germantown, Etc, STOCK LARGER THAN EVER. { 1308 sug 20 tme I DOCTOR WHITTIER, 6117 St. Charles 8t,, ST. LOUIS, Mo. . of two medical od fa_th teat 3, SKIN AND than any othier phssician in 8t P pers show snd sl old resident, tation a: office or b, A friend Whe A colloges,, has bes ment of UHIKR BLOOD Dise: mail, free s opinion costs vis't the city for tre sent by mail or expr: 3 ases ¥ uarantecd; where doubt exi itated, nothing Call or write. Nervous prostration, Debility, and Physical Weakness, other affections of Throat, S y Blood Impurities aud 1} Affections, Old § to Mare Rheumatism, I attention to cases from over-worked brain. oU L 1CAL CA receive special attention Diseases arisiug from Imprulence, Excmses, Indulzences | r Exposures, ag22dawly and 1310 Douglss § uu.\}m,ln-:u OBERFELDER & CO. Tho Great Lnglish Remedy vil effects of youth- follies snd exces- P8 perma- Al citly all weakening, 4 involuntary losses snd drains upon the sys- om, the inevitable ro- wane sult of these evil prace \ch ‘are so destruetive to mind and body e life misorable, oftcn leading o insani= 1t strengthous the Nerves,Brain, , Mus Digestive and Repro! It restores to all the organic former vigor and vitality, ma- cheerful and enjoyable. Price, $8 & hottle, or four times the quantity $10. Sent by express, secure {rom observation, to any address, ceipt of ice. No. C. D, sent, exc tee. Letters uesting answors wust inclose stamp, Dr, Mintie's Dandelion Pills st dyspepsia and billious B0l by all ar ugglets. Price Di. Moms's Kioxer Raveoy, Narkwnoon, ‘Oures ¢il kind of Kidney aad bladder complalate, iou arrhes, gleot and leucorrhes. For salo by all lsugitsis:'§1 » bottle. ENGLISH MEDICAL INSTITUTE, 718 Olive 8¢, St Louls, Mo, For Salein Omaba by C. F. GOODMAN, Jangs-ly D WACON, ..