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S7TRONG FACTS/ A great many people are asking what particular troubles BROWN'S 1RON BITTERS is good for, 1t will cure Heart Disease, Paral- ysis, Dropsy, Kidney Disease, Con- sumption, Dyspepsia, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, and all similar diseases. 1ts wonderful curative power is simply because it purifies and en A Lady Cured of Rhe Baltimore, N My health ws Rheumatism w taking Brown's Iron P scarcely had strength enc tend to my daily hiow 1amnow am regain cheerfully 1 cannot say 173 Prestmanst, Kidney Disease Curcd. Christiansburg, V. Suffering from_ kilney from which 1 coul tried Brown's Ir A hild of n scarlet fever, did not seem to be able to eatat all. 1 gave him Iron, Bitters with the happicat results, Kyii MONTAGUR: Heart Disease. Vine St., Harrisburg, Pa, Dec, 2, 1881, After trying different physicians and many remedies for palpitation of the heart without receiving any benefit, | was advised totry Brown's Iron Bitters. 1 have used two bot- tles and never found anything that gave me 50 much relicf, Mrs, Junir Huss, For the peculiar troubles to which ladies are subject, BROWN's TRoN BITTERS is invaluable, Try it. Be sure and get the Genuine. o ® AN B factory ivery is warranted satis- or the will be retu by e person from whom it waa bought. onl; ) PRICES, by Mall, Postage Pald: Health Preserving, $1.50. Sclf:Adjusting, §1.50 #9.00, o Nursing, $1.50 ul2eod&eow y HEAT YOUR HOUSES Sl A [Wrought or Cast Tron.] ['poo 20 Teo) 204) MOST POWERFUL | — FURNACES IN TE WORLD. TON & 00 MADE BY RIOHARDSON,BOYN' CHICAGO, 1LLLS Embody 1'155 Impr wementa. e i b o dwi b u-lln-hu il e furuace made 0 e ' pure alr 8old by PIEROEY & BRADFORD, Omans, Neb iytids 100,000 TIMKEN-SPRING VEHICLES NOW IN USBE ud durab They are fage Buil he country SPRINGS, for ssla by all Lesding Oar Forssl b Henry Patentee su1Bulider of Fine Carriages, BT LOUXS, - - MO, 116 RSETS igvEaa ny They e .:-ummu for easy rlding, style ors sud Dealors throughout G5AR+ & BODIES Timken, THE CITY STEAM LAUNDRY makes a specialty of Co 'ars & Cuffs, AT THE RATE OF Three Cents Each., Work solicited from all country, ’l\iflll'l?hud return "‘hnu‘ 8o- farss chibe oF o e THE HOMESTEAD LAW Commieejgper McFarland’a Construc- tion of the Law Governing Homestend and Pre-emp- tion Settlers, Wasnineron, November 4,—The commissioner of the general land office in a commurication to a firm of law yeors, answers some very pertinent questions of interest to homestead and pre-emption setticrs, In respect to an inquiry relative to the location of sol- diers’ additional homestead rights on non-contiguous lands, the commission- ersays: “‘The land offico does not construe the law so as to require that the tracts entered must be contiguous, An approved olaim for eighty acres, for example, may, under the rales of the office, be located on two legal sub- division of forty acres each, whether the tract so located be econtiguous or not.” Two of tho questions relate to mottgages und quitclaim deeds to se curs money loaned 1o a homesteader or pro-emptor for the purpose of mak- ing improvements, and to agreements to give warranty deeds to securo the advancement of money for use in making final proof and payment on homestead and pre-emption claims, and to the validity of theso claims, when such deeds and contracts are made or entered into. The commis- sioner roplies that it is a fundamental principlo of the JHOMESTEAD AND PRE -EMPTION LAWS that entrics under those laws can be made only for the use, ocoupation and benefit of homestead or pre-emption party. The homestead law requires an affidavit, proliminary to the accept- ance of final proof, that no part of the land has been alienated, The pre- emption law requires an affidavit that the party has never settled upon the land to sell the same on speculation, but in good faith to appropriate it to his own exclusive use, and that he has not, directly or indirectly, made any agreement or contract in any way or manner, with any person, whereby tho title to the lamd should inure, in whole or in part, to the benefit of any person except him, These provisions, the commis- sioner says, are sufficiently explicit to be readily understood. Any trans- actions that tend toan invasion of the restrictions of either law, or that in. volve collusion for the illegal obtain- ment of title to the public lands of either homestead or pre-emption en- tries, made or perfected in the interest, or for the benefit of others than the entry parties, are illegal, and entries somade are vitiated thereby. Whether a transaction, purporting to be a loan of money and the giving of security therefor, to enable a settler to MAKE HIS IMPROVEMENTS or pay for his land, is or is not legiti- mate and bona fide, is one of the questions that are to be determined, in view of the conditions and circum- standes connected with a given case, In this connection attention is called interior, in which it is held that a mortgage given by a pre-emptor as security for money loaned him with which to pay the government price of the land, 1s not an alienation of the land nor such an agreement as is pro- hibited by law. Another question as to the time within which a settler on unsurveyed lands may make proof after the filing of the township plat to survey in the local land office, the commissioner says ceiver, F'ree of Charge. Al persons suffering from Coughs, Colds Asthma, Bronchitis, Loss of Voice, ollar-uize hottle will do. The Little Things that Give an At- mosphere of Refinement. —_— Androws’ Que Nothing so marks the distinotion between a woman of refined tastes and one of a coarser fibre and more slovenly nature as the appearance of The room of & their bed rooms, vague suggestion of feminine dotails of her tollet. a room may strike one as a very bower, For instance, & woman of the kind chair on which they lay. inexpensiveness of the materiais; and which she made up her pin cushlon, We will begin with the brush oase. satin or glaze, twenty-one inches long onehalf yards of pale r should be made into six small bows, two in the ocenter, case, at a distance res) about three inches from to a deolsion of the secretary of the|C I‘;flt, whether the land is surveyed or urveyed, and the facts of settle- ment, residence, cultivation and im- provement, together with the good faith of the settler, are matters pri- marily to be shown in every oase to the satisfaction of the register and re- an afaotion of the Throat, and Lunge, ara ro. quested to call at C. F. Goodman's drug store and get s Trinl_Bottle of Dr. King's Now Discovery for Consumption, free of charge, which” will conyince them of its wonderful merits and show what a regular wo have in view would soften the ugli- neos of her plain wooden brushes by the neat cases she would make for them, At night when she was un- dressed ehe would conceal tho plain. nees of her removed garments by the square of white muslin edged with lace, which she would throw over the The ele- ganco of her combing jackets and dressing gowus would atone for the the lack of ornaments on her toilet table would be remedied by the de- lightful freshness of the muslin with This is made out of o plece of mauve and twenty-two broad, covered on one side with spotted muslin, This s then doubled in half, and the two sides are stitched up. The case itself now lying finished before you, you proceed to to trim the uppermost or cover, A piece of narrow insertion must be placed all round close to the edge, and on to both sides of the insertion some narrow white lace must be sewn, The lace on the outer side should be pro- jeoted one-quarter inch beyond the sides of the case. Then two and mauve up one of these bows being placed at each corner and The center two must be sewn on to the corner of the vely of top and s2t{me WILKINS & EVA NS, | bottom, and the stitches fastening LA LL them down must be taken right through to the under case. By taking thewe stiches right through, & couple of divisions are made into which to slip the brushes. A brush case of this kind can, of course, be made up in all colcrs to suit carpets and wall papers. I'he toilet tidy, which generally hangs on the right hand of the dress- ing table, should match the brush case. A piece of very stiff pa eight inches long and six and a hal inches wide should be covered with the mauve glaze and spotted muslin. Then it should bo rolled up into an ordinary sugatloaf bag, and made to retain its shape by a couple or 8o of stitches, From the conical point at the bottom two or three short ends of narrow ribbon should hang, while the mouth of the bag and the projecting point at the top should be bound round with ribbon and finished off with a small bow, A second bag, made of note or newspaper, should be placed inside to receive the hair, and should be renewed every fortnight Tho nightgown case is & very simple affair, Remembering to have it ac- cord with the reat of your toilet ap purtenances, you make this_also of mauvo glaze and muslin, You re- quire a piece of glazo thirty-two inches long and eighteen inches wide, When you have covered your glaze with mualin, you turn a length of twelve inches and stitch up the sides, You border this with lace and insertion in the same wuy as you have trimmed the brush cave, but the pro- jecting flap you cut into a point and merely bind round with ribbon, The square of muslin to throw over your clothes at night is less often seen than the other things we have been describing. Yet nothing more is de- sirable in a bed room than this. It consists of three yards of the muslin of which servants aprons are made, trimmed round with torchon lace. When you are traveling 1t comes in nicely an a wrapper to put over the tray of your box. The combing jacket should always be of some wwhing material. A three- quarters length loose fitting jackoet, with long, open sleeves is the best kind to have. White musline and percales in summer, and white flan- nels and serges in wiuter, are the most euitable materials; but ordinary prints, if the pattern be pretty, will answer every purpose of home wear. If meant for invalid wear they should be niade as coquettishly as poesible —of palo blue cashmere, with jabots of cream colored lace falling down tne front. Do Not Be Doceived In these times ot quack medicine adver- sisements everywhere, it is truly gratify- my to find one remedy that is worthy of praise, and which really does as recom- mended, Elictric Bitters we.can vouch for as being a true and reliable remedy, ond one that will do as recommended. They invariably cure Stomach and Liver Complaints, Diseases of the Kidneys and Prinary difficulties, We know whereof We speak, and can_readily say, fil}vu them atrinl. Sold at fifty cents a bottle by 3, F. Goodman SUSTAINING HIS CHARACTER. Pertinent Remarks nade in a Boston Horse Car by an Honest ‘Worker in Lime. Boston Journal, A horse car was proceeding up Shawmut avenue on Saturday after- noon, and among its freight of precious human lives it bore six young men, all ion that he was en, ged in the tering trade, an traction. about for a seat. young men got up and, in one breath, erate and distinct seats, young men sat down again, the young men their respective comented thereto, plasterer, after looking down to see that else arose, got up and sald: to take this she got in, other leddy, the folks aboard th half, THE BAD AND WORTHLESS Are never imitated or counterfeited. value. and in every way trying to induce suf- fering invalids to use their stuff in- stead, expecting to make money on the credit and good name of H. B. in similar style to H, B., with vari- ously devised names in which the word “Hop” or *‘Hops" were used in matter what their style or name is, and espicially these with the wo Binmfivi&b .t.:.mhnlu W green Hops on the wi warned are tions or counterfeits, and complexion gave color to the opin- A > IS:' gardless whistler in the postoffice, take whose features indicated that he was of Hibernian ex- The car was crowded and bumped along slowly, and presently there entered a young woman of con- siderable charm of featuree, and looked Instantly the plas- terer and the six elaborately adorned tendered her the choice of seven sep- She ac- cepted that which was offered by one of the gilded youths, whereupon the the plasterer and the five remaining Present- Iy a colored woman with a big bundle came in and hung to astrap, while remained in positions as if Thereupon the up and nobody ‘‘Plaze seat, mum, I offered it to the young leddy over yander when ut she took one that one o' thim byes alongside give to her. 8o woman of innate refinement is per- | you take this, for, begorra, if 1 should vaded by a subtle charm, due to that { Tace and delicacy which hangs over all the Ivory-backed brushes, tortoise shell combs, lace curtains looped back from oval mir xor-——all thees may be lacking, and yet ape it from yez after offering it to the car moight think I was a masher, and I've got a charackter to sustain;” and, thus speaking, he tovk his old clothes and a kit of tools that he had fished out from under the seat to the front plat- form, and all the youths looked out at him and gazed at one another, and krew not what to say, and there was silenco for the space of a blockand a This is espeeially true of a family medlcine, and it is positive proof that the remedy imitated is of the highest As soon as it had been tested and proved by the whole world that Many others started nostrums put up away to induce peeple to believe they were the same as Hop Bitters, All such pretended remedies or cures, no ““Hop" or *‘Hops" in their name or in any way conneocted with them or their name, are imitations ’l?! wo:unufld':' Beware of them. To none v them. Use nothlng but genuine Hop = Shasove¥ or dun;\rm:l it and dealors | a las oy (1 s 10 i dealing In imita- J. WHISTLING A CONTAGION. A Study of a Postoffice Phenomenon Supported by Interviews. New York Sun. In the corridors of the postoffice, at about 5 oclock on any week day, there are any way from fifty toa hundred boys at a time—errand boys and boys without errands, Some look happy, some sad, and some indif- ferent as the hurry or loiter through the corridors; but every boy's mouth wears an expression that no urchin’s lips produce when in repose. Closer observation shows that each boy it whistling, aud that the confusion of shrill sounds which fills the cor- riders is the mingling of popular and unpopular airs, A little study enables the observer to trace some of the sounds to their source, and he finds that, while many of the histling tunes and making fairly at it, others are simply whistling noiser. Each, however, seoms to attend to his whistling as assiduouely as though his whistling apparatus were the first fiddle in an orchestra, | ons who frequently visit the postoffice do not notice the sound any more than a man who works in a plar mill hears the hum of the knives, Strangers often stop and put their fingers to their ears, ““It’s too much for me to explain,” & veteran watchman in a blue suit said yesterday, putting his hand to his mouth in order to give direction to hia voice in the gea of whistlo wavea. *As soon as % boy gets through one of the doorways he breaks out. Some- times he hegine in the middle of a tune, sometimes along toward the wind-up, and once in a while at the beginning, It looks as though he had been going through all the motions of whistling whilo in the stroet, and as though when he entered the atmon- phere ot the . postoffice he found the one thing that was needed T URSDAY, to produce sound. I have seen two boys coming across the street talking 80 earnestly that you could see the backs of their teeth, but the moment they entered the postoffice their words ato%pnd, their lips puckered up, and euch began whistling a different tuve. They kept it up till they struck the sidewalk again, and then they resum- ed their talk, and seemed as it they were on the point of coming to blows a8 they went out of sight.” “Do the popular airs of the day hold their own among the postoffice whistlors?” the watchman was asked. ““You can't pick out anything at a little distance,” he replied; ‘‘it’s like going into the bird house in Central park, You can corner a boy and find out what he's trying to whistle; but the general effect in the same the year around, Itis wind blown in every key that the human whistle is capa- ble ot.” A physician was asked for an ex- planation of the phenomenon of the postoffice whistlers. ‘It is merely a sort of contagion,” said the doctor. ‘‘The next time you hnp‘pen to be walking with a friend begin whistling ‘The Heart Bowed Down’ and see how soon he will break out with the ‘letter song’ from ‘Peri- chole,’ or something of the kin. And along toward the end of your walk whistle something with a lovely,break- down movement, and see how soon he will respond with semething of the same sort. It's nothing but a kind of mental contagion, If, as you say, the whistling in the postoffice1s a con- fusfon of sounds now, it is bound to is to bo answered according to the oir- | irraproachably dressed, and, to their | grow worse. _Nothing will encourago cumstances of any case t may be | own minds at least, of engsging per- | & reckless whistler more than the noise prugnhd. A settler is entitled to|sonal appearance, unched up in a pude by uth@r reckless whistlers, But credit for the time of his actual settle- | corner, also, was a man whose linen | it is un ious all around. If you were to collar the loudest and moat re- him out sround the corner of the building, and aak him what he meant by that diabolical whistling, he would look up to ¥uu in an injured way, and snarl: ‘Whistlin’! 'Who's been whist- lin'? " Never too Late to Mend. Thos, J. Arden, William Street, East Buffalo, writes: **Your SPRING BLOSSOM has worked on me splendid, I had no ap- petite; used to sleep badly and vet up in the morning unrefreshed; my breath was very offensive and I suffered from_revere headache; since using your Spring Blossom all these symptoms have vanished, and I feel quite well,” Price 50 conts, trial bot- tle 10 conts, To Fill a Newspaper. Chambers' Journal, It is a common fallacy among the general public that it must be a very difficult matter to find news to fill each day's paper. So far from this being the case, the ingenuity of the editors and sub-editors ls continually on the stretch to find space for even & selection of the most important news at their disposal. In the office of a leading daily newspaper there is often more matter thrown into the waste basket, or struck out of man- useripts, than would suffice to fill the paper; while interesting telegrams, for which not only the postoffice, but the correspondents who have sent them will have to be paid, are consigned to the same recep- tacle almost every night, simply be- causelit is 'mpossible to find a corner for them, The ealculations of the edi- tor, moreover, are liable to be upset in a hundred different ways, Some great crisis, storm, crime, or disaster occurs, or an important debate sud- denly a in parlisment, or some great man dies, or there 1s an extrao; dinary and unexpected inflox of a vertieements —perhaps a combination of ti and all the arrangements of ho offic e onding i Hop Bitters was the purest, best and t P elioo arp correspondingly dis most valuable family medicine on | “WPEC: * earth, many imitations sprung up and Horeford's Aeid Phosphate began to steal the notices in which e n . the press and_people of the country | 1y A 1. HALL, Fair Haven, N had exprossed the merits of H. B, |y Vit A Wyptabis (GF CGveh L marked benefit in iudigestion and urinary troubles OUMFORIING GRA BREAKFAST, +By & thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of igestion and putrition, and by & careful spplication of the flne projeriles of woll-# locicd Coon, M. Eppe has provided our breakiast tables with & dellcately flavored beverage which wmay save as many heavy doctors’ bilis 1t is by the judicious so of such articles of diet that s coustitution way be gradually bulls up until en, to resist every fendenc of subtle maladis are AND READY FOR DELIVERY Four 'Feet Wide BY| Seven Feet Long, LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE MAP OF THE CITY EVER PUBLISHED,, Compiled under divection of An- drew Rosewater, City Engineer, And Examined and Compared by George Smith, County Surveyor Thereby making it the OFFICIAL MAP OF THE CITY, Over Six Months work upon it at a Cost of ahout $1,600. y | CONTAINS EVERY NEW ADDITION laid out up to this date, Also all public and private buildings of note photographed thereon. WHOLESALE MILLINERY & NOTIONS Zephyrs, Germantown, Etc, STOCK LARGER THAN EVER. { 1308531310 e ® ki 1. OBERFELDER & CO. PERFECTION HEATING AND BAKING, 1a only nttained by using CHARTER 0AK Stoves and Ranges. WITH @jj WIBE GAUZE OVER DOURS. For sale by, MILTOH ROGERS & SONS OIWVEATLA. jull:m&ely Single Brosch Loading Shot Guns, from 85 to §18 Double Brea ch Loading Shot Guns, 18 from to § 76, Muzzle Loading Shot Guns, from 1) to_ 825, ; Fishing Tackle, Base Balls and all Kinds of Fancy Goods. Full Stock of Show Cases Always on Hand, Imported and Key West Cigars, a large line of Meer- schaum and Wood Pipes and everything required in a fil"st-Class Cigar, Tpbacco and Notion Store. Cigars from $15.00 per 1,000 upwards. Send for Price List and Samples. WILL OPEN AT NO. 1216 Farnam Street. A.?M. CLARK, ~Painter&Paper Hanger | SIGN WRITER & DECORATOR. OLESALE & RETAIL WALL* PAPER! Window Shades' and Curtains, f TAIN POLES AND 3 ) URES, H{iPaints, Oils & Brushes, { 107 South 14th Street OMAHA, - - - NEBRASKA . JENESS FORMS, ING COMMERCIAL LAW, PENMANSHLP, POLITICAL ECONOMY, COMMERCIAL ARITEHAMETIO, ENGLISH LANGUAGE Taught by gentlemen of business experience and broad scholarship at the WYMAN COMMERCIAL COLLEGE, A new institation based on the highest standard Jof ex: and evening sessions are no:l;‘::l l!lofl!ll’l 'lanl“opendun. @ For circulars or special inf jon apply 2 . BOOK-KEEPING, BANK