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e s e i $ i I'TMES. PORTRY OF THH Only of Me She never graces crowded bal Where fevered wa'tzes thril She never dreams of marble And vassals at her will; She dances where the waterfalls Are leaping wild and free, Then sinks to sleep in cottage walls, And only dreams of me, halls She never glances down the strect From phaeton or sonpe, She does not know the mode to grest A loverat l.h-(‘»lny: Jut from the losded hay my sweet Oft sees the swallows soar, And well she knows and flies to meet My footsteps at the door. 80 let the statesmen pass me by And win the noisy game, And let the soldier’s banner fly Acrosa the road to fame, Wealth, too, go; for what care | Beneath this dome of blue, 11 T can gaze in Maggie's eye And know she loves me true? Hard Things to Do Rochester Post-Fxpress, "T'is hard to make a dollar bill Cover the nveds of ten; *Tis hard to get a rooster’s crow From out a clucking hen, *Tis hard to listen to a horn Which other peoplo blow; And, oh! 'tis bard to wait two years For the democrats to go. e Sho Gave » Smack. Tnoxperienced Post. She kissed me, my beantiful darling, T drank the delight of her I The universe melted together, Mortality stood in eclipse. A spirit of light stood before me, T hear a far rustle of wings; The king: of the earth weroas beggars, And the beggars of oxrth were as kings, e ee—— HONEY FOR TH# LADIES. TLong jersey gloves of finest wool are highly favored. . Honvy armure brocades are used for ont- sido garmenta, evening dresses. Ostrich feather trimming is used on handsome mantles, Crenelated edges to fancy hous are a growing fancy. The newest shade of gray-blue takes the name of night-of-Fraace blue, Plush ribbons with Ottoman repped backs appear on many dressy bonnets. Blue bronze vases from Japan are some- thing new in the decorative art line. Window curtains this season are more elegant and extravagant than ever before. White or colored silk handkerchiefs are worn around the neck inside the cloak, The new linen collars are standing bauds, with a row of embroidery on the edge. Some of the mew bonnets have the crown of one color and the brim of an- other. Autumn leaves and wild fowers are more than ever used for decorative pur- poses. . Dainty and pretty ics cream plates are of Bohemian glass fn oval torm with tiny hantles, Moorish desigus are all the rage in house- hold decorations, and promise to be uni- werrally adopted. Bn engaced girl is the happiest when she is telling about i to another girl who is not engaged and is not likely to be. kets parsons, On the day following the old structure, which had been stauding two_hundred years, was demolished, and a_handsome lno atin, The trimming is composed of ilver-fox fur. Another wrep of deep myrtle.green velvet is lined with old gold and trimmed with dark green os- trich-feather trimming. A prominent hosiery man at Atlanta is quoted by the Constitution ns as saying Atlanta women have the biggest feet 1 hiave ever tried to ingase fn_ mik, lisle or balbriggan, Why, Ihave had some of them to go all through the stock, and pro- feasing not to be suited, inquire for stock- ings for their husbands, and under the pre- tonwe of laying in a surprise for the good man, really measure their own supplies.” High coloring in millinery is further en. livened by very conspicuous gilt orna- menta in novel and unique designs, First among these are the hugest of antique buekles, warlike and barbaric looking weapons of \arious shapes and sizes, and great pina with jewelied heads linked to- gether by gold coins and medals in old Roman patterns, to say nothing of beasts, birds, and reptiles—designs familiar to all, but appearing anew in gold and silver fila: gree, enamel French gilt, paste, and jet, the range of ornamentation extending from a tadpolo ts an elephant, " some Day Isabella Geant Meredith, in Harper's, Bome day I shall be dead. Some day this tired head, ‘With all the anxious tnoughts it now doth know, Shall be laid low, This body, pain-racked, ill, Shall lie at length, and still, Under the clover and the wind.swept grase, Nor hear yon pass, "Lhat were, indeed, strange sleep, ‘When even you might weep And come, and go - even you—unheard of me As bird or bee, Nay, sweetheart, nay! believa Here is no cause Lo grieve, One 0 waywora, of trouble so oppress, Tn glad of rest. Perchance, when that release Hath wrought its spell of peace, O'er this unquiet heart, long vext with woe, Heart's-ease may grow. ‘Who loves me will not weep ‘When that I lie aslee) g The colored kid gloves are worn with But rnhur}‘oym thiok luufi sOrrow may ave erd some day. "RELIGIOUS. “You 'tend the young hopefnl cried out il keep ‘em to your presching, daddy; awake, The eccentric «vangelists who compose the Salvation Army purpose celebrating Thanksgiving Day in Philadelphia in their own peculiar fasnion, They announce in their paper, the War Cry, that on the 30th of November there will be a “Great Go at the Barracks of the First Penn Corps, led hy Major Moore and his Hallelnjah Wife.’ They also announce & “Soldiers’ Banquet at 5:90, with presentation of new eolors, followed by an a/l night of prayer.” Bill Bummington helongs nominally to an Austin church, but usually goes out hunting on Sunday morning, jast as If it was not wicked. His pastor, the Rev, Mr, Soothem, met Bill the other day, and snld, among ofher things: “1t's a shame and sn outrage, Every Sunday morning, while I am preaching the gospel, five or six young men of my congregation, young men ofgres pectable families, nre out hunt. ing, 1sayitsashame and an outrage,” “I've eaid the same_thing, Pareon, a thou- sand times,” replied Bill; *it is & shame and an outrgge that you can never get to go along with us, Parson, can’t you tell the congregation you have to go out into the country to see & sick mav, and slip off and_go with us next Sunday? I've got a gun il lend you,”—Texas biftings. Unly a Woman's Halr. Only & woman's hair, Bindiug the now to the past, Only a single thread, Too frail to lust. Only » woman's hair Threading a toar and & sigh, Only & wonau's bair Found t-day in the pi HDUCATIONAL. Amhurst has now 852 students, The Polytechnio socioty in Louisville has made the price of admission to its drawing class very small, in order tha mechanics may study an art which ,may b, useful in their trades, An afteraoon school in popular science and history is about to be opened in Cin- cinnati, 1t #ill hold four sessions a week for ten weeks and will be conducted by ac- complished teachers, The classical departments at Oxford still continue to attract the largest number of able men, being hard ran, however, by the mathematical school. Natural ecience comes next, then theology, then history, and last of all low, in which only one first clnas was obtained during the year, The Toronto (lobe says that one of the The jubilee fund of the Congregational | Questions put to the candidates at a recent Union of England and Wales now exceeds : one million dollars. Last week was ocelobrated First Parish church of Charleston, Mass, The Rev., ¥, L. Norton, of All-Saints cathedral, Albany, has given a brass pul- pit, & brass eagle lectern and black walnut ruyer desks to Christ church, Norwich, oun, Mr. Nerton is well known in this city, having been formerly the assistant minister of 8, Thomus' church, The programme for the week of prayer, January 7-14, 1842, issued by the Evan. gelical “alliance indicates the following topics: Thanksgiving, confession, prayer for the church universal, for families, for the nations, and for missions, Special refer- enco is also made to education, to intem- perance, and to the opium traflic A special service was held on the lnst Sunday in October in the old Moravian , at New Dorp, Staten Island. new parsonage, the gift of Willism H. Vanderbilt, is being erected in its place. A missionary stesmer, whose hull and machinery weighed only six tons, 1s now Pnyar-ru?l from the misty cast are one | moored in the Thames in London. The of fashion freaks, and no ultr fashionable dsme should be without one. passing novelty young ladies The New York Herald says it was a Olucinuati young lady who, when she was presented \with s pair of opera glasses, “asked how in the world she was %o keop them on. Light silks of palo soa green, delicate pink, and lilac, are c.mbined for evening ar, with dark gurnet, dark blue, brown, d toyal purple velvets, with admirable bect, ‘Handsome redinzotes aro left open from he waist all the wl{ down the front and back. The sleeves of these garments are perfeotly plniv, aud are tight-ftting with. as popular for trimming winter dresses as they were for summer suits for children, Dark colored velyet or plush dresses for little girls are ornawentdd in this way. When an Edgefield youth goes to spark a girl he finds the old latly in one corner of the room, the old man in another, and & dog under the melodeon, and he is re- quired to speak up like an orator, In jewelry is shown a very movel lace pia in the form of & locust with sapphire eyer, the body of a light-colored lapis la- zuli, the legs of gold, and the wivgs formed of tiny dismond chippings. A Montana woman sued for divorce be- cause her busband kisned the servant girl. ‘ou want this man punished?” asked the judge. *I do, she, en,” said the Judgo, L hall not-divorce youl from . A number of Alabawma girls, who are probanly very young, are baving the ini- tals of their sweethearts’ s tattooed in monogram on the palins of their left hands—the hands hearest the hearts, A womun of Marblehead, Mass,, paid an election bet by *‘toting” another woman in & wheelbarrow through the principal streets and twice around the court-house, followed by acrowd of one thousand or more men aod boys, cheering Justil Cashmere grows in favor for simple dresses, and s 0 in “all the subdued colors, &s well as in black. New suits of cashuiere are prettily trimmed with em. broi lary in silk or chenille, or with bands of pluali or velvet, Sealskin is as fashionable as in past seasons. The redingote of sealskin is long snd nearly ight-fitting, with plsin coat name of the vessel is ‘‘Peace. been built for the Baptist M Jannty soft felt English hats, much re- | clety, who destine it for the service sembling those worn by gentlem mis for ultra-fashionable 9003?0 river, and it has onary so- o the ssion in the upper reaches of the That boat can be taken ecen readily for traveportation pur- poses, During the semi-centennial servioes held rmx ace Methodist conforence recent- 5, , four divines, who had been in the min. try fifty years and upwards, gaye an en. tertainiog “account of their experience. Among them the Rev. James Irwin, for- merly of Oswego, stated that he began miles, and that for his first year's favors he recoived the then munificent sum of 810, of which $4 was in cash. The Rev, Georga O, Barns the moun- vival mectings n Counectiout. He says the chief purpose of his Northern mission is to overthrow the gloomy gospel which preyalsin tho Northy sud whicly o says, A who wear black clothes, a white necktie, seminary, The wealthy Methodists of Philadelphia, who are building the new Trinity church, have planned an extraordinary odifioe, un: like any other on earth, auditorium, the Sunday school, the dinin gest, or liberal expenditure procure, glass windows, about 1,500 person: with the Bunday ing more than 3,000 persons, IMPINTIES. Church oyster festivals were first intro duced by the hard-shell Baptists, l’]l‘l y have a clergyman in Des Moine w through sermon lasting forty minutes, on Sus church The query now ir: oY York Tribune. Well, nlesves. Sealshin sacques are even longer than they were, some of them reaching al- most to the hem of the dress, Furlined garments are losing favor, as the fur is aptto rub off on th and dealers ray that many ladies ing the for liniog taken out on thas ac- count. The preference for linines this season will be elther for plush or quilted A Miles City mother declines allowing ber daughter to again visit Kalamazoo, i@ last time she returned trom her visit, she iosisted on eatin, e with » tiny silver fork, haviug » lace-fringed napkin at her plate and cowpelled her littlo brother to etand over her with a fan, Heavily alded Parisian trav lin cloaks of black, olive brown, dark and fawn ‘color —most stylish and ugeow® won in cut and make, satin-lined and ele- guutly finished with bands of fur—are andsome and costly wrops, only within the reach of those possessed of plethoric pocketbooks, Pearl vecklaces of many rows twined around the throat, magnificent triwmings of pearl-beaded -lm: iques, sod fringes some of them thirty incher déep, and strin of tiny Rowan pearls twined in the hair are ogstly ard elegant garnitures for full. dress accasions, t.hA fiy‘ww: wisslonary visiting Thibet for ¢ ' me recently ex; ror at findis. he onism re- Versed b’ v tho Fing of Caspomiess 21, law allow » \vomen several living husbands, and a lad gave the a vbo':h“luh:::.d five men when dark velvets o T Sk It o superb one on exhibition is made of & very dark sbade of royal blue, i & I visite shape, snd lined throughout "l& tight-fisted old curmudgeons” who dodg: the tax collecton, Tt may hab been de intention at fust clothing, | fur preachers to hab a disregacd ob money, are hav: | but show we & prescher dat won't elimb down affen a sixteen-hand mule ter pick up & nickel fn do road an' DIl sphit yer & thousar d rails fur authin', In answer to question as to his reli. gion, & chap on trial in Syracuse the other day for some offense said Lis mother was & Cathollo and his father was & Protestant, and 80 ho supposed he was a half breed “This seems to bo & new use of the familiar clawsifioution, “Dambablo nons nse” and “the f1g ende of Calvanism,” is what Pastor Tinker, of the Methodist church at Norwich, Conn, call the doetrines promulgated by the Rey. George O. Barnes, the *Mountain Eyan: it " Mr, Barnes is trylng to convert the Nutmeg fitate . A clerk of an emiuently re ctable instructed to prepare an advertisement and have it inserted in the papers. He pre- b rred one which read: “The pot scooped! () h&llxl (||;ur umr. to the bob-tail flush of any other house in town on fi . Slothu. " Boston Post e A country preacher was exhorting b uubelicvers, aud his text was - e Fiood. As he waxed eloquent he said: *‘And Noah warned the wicked that they might repent, but they beeded him not;” and ths floods came*snd drowned them all, and what do you supposs they thought then?” A preacher raising hiseyes from hisdes in the widst of his sermon, was uuuynxki with amazewent to see his rude boy in the f‘u‘q velting the hearers in the pews be- low with horse-chestnuts, But while the pale | good man was preparing & frown of reproof, ! fectly gentle, After the the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the preaching in 1851, on a olrouit covering 365 | pn tain evangelist of Kontucky, is holdiog re- the devil'a gospel, invented by the prince of liare, and carried out by men carry a Biblo under their arm, and preach as though they were a whole theological The new build- ing will have under one roof the church room, and all the conveniences that ad- vanced architectural ingenuity can g he style is Gothic, with & profusion of stalned One wajestio polychro- matic window is to be twenty feet wide and forty feet high, admitting a flood of many-colored lights, The church will seat but it is 8o eonnected 0ol room that the two | tent, cheap teachers, through a desire to can bo thrown into one, thus accommodat- an hold a man with the nose-bleed *‘Aré churches practical?” asks The New they seem to be, They contrive to get movey out of the house, the head of which is's deacon, was | ¥ mination for the civil service held in city was: A man left $20,000 b his will, the sum to be divided between his two sons, one of whom was to receive $1,000 more than the other.” The ques- tion was *“too hard” for the applicants Tvery one of them auswered that the one son was to receive $11,000, and the other £9,000. An effort is now being made to enlarge and complete an institution for education in industrial callings at Huntsville, Ala- bama., It being wore especially for the benefit of the colored citizens, its resources are limited. The colony has purchased land adjacent to the city and is now suc- cessfully teaching the elements of an En. glish education to nearly one hundred pupils. A Ruseizn lady has just bestowed 50,- 000 roublea upon her country women to be used in giving medical training to those de- sirous of becoming physicians, ‘Thers are now nearly (00 middle schools for girls n Russin, attonded by over 60,000 pupils, Since 1861 wspecial courses have been opened for the training of young women as teachers, while facilities have been granted to women not only to obtain some of the advantages of a university educa- tion, but also to qualify themselves for the practice of medicine and surgery, It is complained in Pittsburg that the present system of “cramming” nrupfls or the high school, ties down net only the pu- pil but the teacher to a_skeletonized form of education that is distasteful alike to both, Teachers bave to train their pupils on the line that will be pursuod in the high school examination, To . pi them suitably for this, within the aliptted time, mth ing but bare fact /is ‘eliminated. ing can be elaborated upon, no matter how interestivg, The children are held in a routine rut of study; the teacher has to content himself with ascertaining that the [;ll has not slighted his lesson, He has tle time to instruct, in the true sense of the term and no time to waste in elabora- :lnn upon anything outside the limit of the o+80n, The entire school revenue of New Hampshire during the past year was $184,527.74, and _the expenditure was 575,808, Fourfifths of this sum went in the salaries of teachers, The average cost of instruction per capita is $14 03, Malo teachers receive $36,45 a month and female teachers $22.86—a ridiculous dis- proportion, Many of the schoo's are so small and poor and are in operation so short a time that they do little or nothin for the children, Seven hundred Aufi fifty-throe of them last year had, some twelve, and some less than twelve pupils, and 310 numbered six or less than six, 1'he gradual revolution which has been going on in the industries of New England has created a tendency of the population to the manufacturing and other business centres, This multiplies the children in such towns, but the schools of the rural districts, from an opposite tendency, are suffering & constant depletion. Usually scholars and educational revenues fall off altogether, and a school of six or eight Ichifllrl will be limited to as many weeks, squandered on inexperienced, incompe- lengthen the terms, = The superintendent of public instruction suggesta ba & remedy the abolition of the district school and the establishment of town schools to which ohlldren, living at & distance, shall be transported at the public expense, PEPPHRMINT DROPS, There is one wan in New Hawmpshire so A Brooklyn man no longer asks another | gtalwart that he won'c even bolt his door. y morning: ‘‘Are you going to | —Boston Post, . “Are you golng to hoar a stump speech this morn- Texas claims n goose 65 yesrs old, but it is & suspicious claim. Whovo was that goose during the war® A South Carolina paper, referring to the disappearance of & man, says he “had on his working clothes and an overdose of liquor, The assistant cecretary of state has de- cided that a frog is not a fish, All the smart men are not out of office, In the year 1880 there were] produced in Japan 206,856,407 Fgallons of _alcoholic liquors, The 'democratic majority in Jupan must be somethiog immense, About three hundred survivors of Ges John H. Morgan's command held u r union at Lexington, Ky., last week. 1 only sad feature of the occasion was the absence of the horses they stole during the war ° A Wisconsin editor has on hand 12 liver L..uh. 200 bottles of stomach bitters, 12 ottles bf Qair dye, 24 bottles of cough wedicines, three trusses and two wooden legs, and he advertises for » partner to help start a drug store, A Michigan pa : are are g to be thicker than grasshoppers in woods of Michigan this winter,” JDare say. Loars are generally considerable thicker than grasshoppers; in fact; bigeer iu every way.~—Boston Post. Hiuot to subscribers: Subscribers of the paper who fiuds & cross-bone and ekull with crest of metallic burial casket drawn in blood on the wrapper of their pape: will know that their subscription has expired, and that something has got to be done. Wihe Washington dispstches say that President Arthur has decided to adopt & new policy, 1 knew s wan in Connecti- cut several years ago who sawed off the made, money paid over, and the new pur. chaser wae leading off his horse, the former owner called to him: “T say! When yonu svant your buggy repaired, there is a man on, Pecan street who will do it very cheap.” t. Tiomis exchange says striped pa sols have taken the placs of striped stock. ings. May be they have in St. Louis, but we have not noticed snybody here wearing striped parasols—at lenst, where they nsed to wear striped stockings. We don't oatch onto the styles very quick here,— Peck’s San, Puck’s Patent Proverbs: Never kick a man when he's down - jump on him,—The woman who cheerfully carries coal up eight flights of stairs always has a spool of thread sent home in the red wagon, so that her neighbors may seo the smaliness of the package and wonder what the dismonds cost; but brown sugar and yellow soap is the combination that appeases the asper- ities of a mosquito bite, The Jay Hubbell game does not always pan out well. The other day a stage driver in the Black Hills undertook to horsewhip the passengers into getting out of the stage and pushing it up-hill, but the phesengers emptied their revolvers into im a few times, held a coroner’s inquest, and found that he had died of pneumonia, ~Texns Siltings, Mes, Banning, of Dunlapville, Ind., ran away from her hows and husband and left behind her a note sayi Hire agirl and stay with pa this winter, and alwaye if you can. I left some Canton flannel, Get Home one to make the girls some underwear, Don't think I went awsy with any one, as I went alone, Don’t let aunt live with you,” "The truth of the old adage, thatthe inst sentence in awoman's letter is always unnecessary, is daily mads apparent. “How shall the American savage be civ- ilized?” ia a question asked by a writer in the Atlantic Monthly, There are many ways, Teach him that is improper to eat with his knife, ard that colored nap- kins should be uced at the fruit end of the meal, and not during the opening choius, Teach him not to arrive at a reception un- til 9 o'clock, and neyer to appear in a awallow tail during the afternoon Tell him that it is bad form to drink beer be- fore and absinthe after dinver, Also send him to dancing school, compel him to avoid pio, and have him instructed in the art of walking in the Engiish style, Then bang his hair, and put o pir of eye-glasses and white plug hat on him, and you have your Indian as thouroughly civilized as it tho average white man.—Puck. A Timely Hint, Pack. Beneath the leaflots yellow, Tn the garden lone and murky, The most unhappy fellow Ts the turkey, ‘Who knows he won’t be living One day after Thankegiving, Josh Billings Heard From. Newrorr, R, I, Aug. 11, 1880. Dear Bitters -1 am here trying to breathe in all the salt air of the ocean, and having been & sufforer for more than a_year with a refractory liver, I was induced to mix Hop Bitters with the see gale, and have found the tinc- ture a glorious reeult, * * * J huve boen greatly helped by the Bit- ters, and am not afrald to say so. Yours without a struggle, JOSH BILLINGS. —— Unmarried Persons Should loge no timo in securing a certificato in the Marriage Fund Mu- tual Trust Association of Cedar Rapids, Towa, concerning ‘which circu- lars and full information will be sent free upon spplication. 1t is organized under the Insurance Laws of Iowa, THE DATLY BEEQMA HA SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25 The Secret of the universal suce Brown’s Iron Bitters i ply this: It is the b preparation cver made; is compounded on thoroughly scientific, chemical and medicinal principles, and does just what is claimed for it—no more and no less, and is the only legalized and legiti- mate institution o% the kind in the country. Its officers and managers are among the most prominent bus- iness men in Cedar Rapids, inclading bankors, the tmaster, capitalists, railway ¥ , iusuranck men, leaaing lawyers, physicians and other reliable citizens. Over $15,000 has already been paid to members. It is a splendid investment, as safe, secure and safe as a Government bond. You can just as well have a good sum of money to commence married life on, as not. Remember it only costs you one cent for a postal card to request full explanation and information. Good agents can get territory if ap- plied for soon. Write to-day. Do not postpone it. Mention where you saw this notice. 0ct26.1m* A Braveand Faithful Guardian of OurHomes and Property Rescued from Immainent Pertl. opular aud well-known mem who has perform:d duty tw ot R. Dopot on o Plai gives his unsolicited testi- lower parts of 1 my urinary org my blood was and it had be- como 80 impc ated 80 poorly that my hands and feet would be cold and numb, and 50 white as to appear il I could not rest nights, but was so distressed” all over that 1 could not lie still in bed, but wou'd keep turning and rolling from one sidé to the other, all night, 80 that | badiy swollen; tul“condition, ald feel wore tired ar ing than when 1 w s ) becamo 8o serious that 1 was obliged to stop work, and for thirty days I was unable to be on duty, 1 consulted the best doctors, and tried the numer- ous medicines and so-cal od_cures, but ity ny, urged me o try Hunt's i known of wonderfal cures effect by it. Upon his representation 1 obtained two Fottles of the Remedy and commenced taking it as direct ed and greatl. to my surprise in less than twenty, four hours I commenced in an awful condition when I | Remedy, and had no f.ith in it 1 found a'most immediate ro ief, eve uso of it, my heart was made glad, you Ieortinued to take the remedy and to im. prove constantly from day 10 da .~ 1 took itwith me on my trip to Maine, for I was bound to have it With me all the time, and the result s that 1 improved spe 1l the time 1 was away; and ever since my arrival home, which was woeks ago, | ‘© been on duty every day, first rate, and the swelling of hand, fect an bave diappeared and the terrible bac which used to bother me wore than all the rest, 1o more, and 1 sloep splendid) ) should iy; it is the best medicine that I 1 vory gladly recomwend it to il ted with Kidoey or Liver diseaso, or diseases of the urinary organs. Respectful ; ISAAC W, FAIRBROTHER.” CORNICE WORKS! C :w‘l’K\,‘uT, Proprietor. 1212 Harney 8¢, - Umrha, Neb MANUFACTURELS OF Galvanized o, CORNICES, DORMER WINDOWS, FINIALS, Tin, Iron and Slate Roofing, Limb of & tree on which he was sitting that gaun o the s conclusion.”—~Willism varta, A Texas gentleman bought a b horse ' which ‘way repressnted {0 bo ber. trade had been Specht's Patent Motalic Skylight. Patent Adjusted Ratchet Bar and Brul:::lahalvm‘& ui am the gen: agent for the above line of goods. TRON l"ElsOlNU. A, co Ocestings, ::‘MW“V;I.M::’M GENERAL AGEN By thorough and rapid assimilation with the blood, it reaches every part of the system, healing, purifying and strengthening. Com- mencing at the foundation it builds up and restores lost health—in no other way can lasting benefit be obtained. 79 Dearborn Ave., Chicago, Nov. 7. Thave been a great sufferer from averyweak stomach, heartburn, and yspepsia nits worstform, Nearly everything I ate gave me distress, 41 could eat butlittle, I hav t hysicians, butgot a0 reliet 1 Took Brown's ron Bitters, 1 feel © none of the old troubles, and am a new man, 1 am getting much stronger, and feel first.rate, Iam a railroad engineer, and now make my trips regularly. I can not say 00 much in praise of your wonder= ful medicine, . C. Mack, Brown's IRoN BITTERS does not contain whiskey or alcohol, and will not blacken the téeth, or cause headache and constipation. It will cure dyspepsia, indi- gestion, heartburn, sleep- lessness, dizziness, nervous debility, weakness, &c. Use only Brown’s Tron Pitters made by PBrown Chemical Co., Baltimore, Crossed red lines and trade-miack on Wrapper. 100,000 TIMKEN-SPRIEG VEHICLES NOW X USE. They surpass ail other s for essy riding, style d durability, They are for sale by all Leading Car lage Builders and Dealers throughout he country. SPRINGS GEARS & BODIER Foreal b Henry Timken, Patentoe and Bullder of Fine Carriages, BT TOUIS, - - MO. 1-0m $600 REWARD. The above reward will be paid to any person ‘who will produce a Paint that will oqual the Warranted to be Fire and Pennsylvania Patent Rubber Paint, for preserving Shingles, Tin and Gravel Roofs. Water Proof. All ordurs promptly attended to. Cheaper and bet- ter than any other paint now In use. STEWART & STEPHENSON. Solo Provrictors, Omaha House, Omaha, Neb, REFERENCES. Officer & Pusey, Dr.Rice, Dr. Pinney, — Fuller Council Bluffs, Tow Bre offiee, Omaha Neo. J. . ROGERS & CO0, <O G B INT IS F. L. Sommers & Co's ILEBRATED CRACKERS BISCULTS, OAKES, JUMBLES AND NOVELTIES, Wholesalo Manufacturing CONFEGTIONERS AND DEALERS IN Fruits, Nuts and Cigars. 'S 14th St. OMR A4, 4 VFR ESTABLISHED 1868, A. J. SIMPSON, LEADING CARRIAGE FACTORY 1400 and 1411 Dodge Streat, ang 7-we Gm Omana, Nes, TRADE MARK Vil DE MARK talling cure for Seminal Weaknoss, 8§ permator Impot o8, ency, and all N Disoascethat Self-Abuse: s Loss of Memory, Universal Lass tude, Pain in the Back, Dimtess of Vision, Pre mature Old load o Insanity or Cousumpblon and » Prems fure Grave. £3Toe Specifl c Mediclne 18 eold by all drugils 2081 pos Bockage, 0F 8 PAck: THEGKAY 48DICINE 00., ] Y ARt . SoTme's ORAY'S SFECIFIO MEDICINE (.., i SEFURE TARING, ncocs. of AFTER TARING, 9, and many other Discascs thal alard in our paswmohlot, whick we desire to send free 1v mall fo every one, ages for 85, or wil be sent freo by mail on reriph of the money, by add i EREIPN'S | b o807 SPORTING GOODSO -5 ingle Brepch Loading Shot Guns, from 85 to $18. § ouble Breech Loading Shot Guns, §18 from to 876, uzgle Loading Shot Guns, from ‘fl to $35. | shing Tackl, Base Balls and all Kinds of Fancy Boooy ull 8500k of 84 ow Uases Alway on Hand, ~ Imported and Key West Cigars, a large line of Meer- schaum and Wood Pipes and everything requirel in a first-Class Cigar, Tobacco and Notion {tore. Cigars from $156.00 per 1,000 upwards. Send for Price List and Samples. WILLIAM SNYDER, MANUFACTURER OF CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, ANID EROoAD WAGONS Firs-Clags Paining and Trimming, Repairing Promptly Dons. 1319 Harnev, Cor. k4th, Omabe, Nob. F.C. MORG.AIN, WHOLESALE GROCER 1213 Farnam St.. Omaha, Nah. FALY. 1882 WHOLESALE MILLINERY & NOTIONS Zephyrs, Germantown, Etc, 8TOCK LARGER THAN EVER. { 130814 1310 bouglas § OMAHA, NEB sug 26 tf me I OBERFELDER & CO. SIGN WRITER & DEONBATOR. WHOLESALE & RETAIL WALL PAPE Window Shades' aigh Oz 5| CORNIOES CURTAIL] FIXTURE Paints, Oils & 107 South 14 § OMABA., - - C. J. K ARB/M PIONEBEER BUGCY AND SPRING-WAGON MANUF SPhOIAL ATITENTION E.AS HORSE-SHOEING GENERAL BLACKSM 313 and 815 FifteenthStreet, between Harney and Farnard — o 2 SHORT LINE i el Milwaukee & St. Paul b, | | RATILWAY AUMAHA AND ({;‘D“IIIN[}IL BLUFES WATH Pullman’s Magnificent Sleepers ~AND THE - a5 rem | Finest Dining Cars in the World. —FOR— i CHICAGO, RN [IF YOU ARE GOING EAST STM :.I-_c\)lyl{%}( EE CHICAGO, mlu.wmjxu:. DETROIT, NIAGARA FALLS, 7RI R NEW YORK,BOSTON, |IF YOU ARE GOING NORTH And all Poluts East and®outh-East. THE LINE COMPRISES TO e e ata In UNION OLrOTS ST PAUL OR MINNEAFOLIS, Take the BEST ROUTE, she » Nationsl Repntation as being the U CYINEET EQuipPED 0] jed to be the FIN f d 1n the Ad for all classcs of travel. i i 1. e e e s tasus | CD0AE0, Hilwaukeo &St PaulR'y, Ticket office loc Fourteenth stre Millard Hotel, On #47'See Time Table in another column, ated at corser Farnam and s and at U, P, Depotand at tnstead of & dlscomort. “Through Tickots via this Celebrated Lino foi . 94 Vice-Pres't & Gen. Manager, Chicago F. A NASH, General Avent, PERGIVAL LOWELL, G. H. FOOTE, Ticket Ageat, sale ot all officos In the West. Al Information about Rates o Fare, Slecping Gon, Passensor Agt. Ohleage | 5. 8, MERRIL A V. K W.J. DAVENF General Manage General Pass. Agent Car Acocmwodations, Time Tables, &, will be charfully glven by applylniug fo T.J. POTTER, gor Gen, Agent, Cannell Biufts J.T. CL GEO. 1. HEAFFORD, i, P. DUELL, Ticket Ayt General Sup't Ass's Gien, Pass, Aot mnio-ed 1y o I ! Nebraska Loan & Trust Company ¥ho Story of the Rew A usndsome pital Stock, - - $100,000. JAS, B. HEARTWELL, P A. L. CLARKE, Vioe-President E. C. WEBSTER, Treasurer DIRECTORS, Oswald Oliver, E. C. Webster, o Manufagt y ] Jas. B. Heartwe Ofice, 34 Uplon Bquave D, M. McEl Hinney, NEW YORE - Geo. H. Pratt 1 GEO.E: SMITE: MANUFACTURER OF Silver Plated First Mertgage Loans a Specialty This Company furnishes & permanent, how institution where School Bonds and other logally issued Municipal sectrit of Nebraska can be WINDOW SASH | s ol Wi ot G »ans made 03 Impro: s 10 all well settl Door Plates Engraved to Order: | countios of the state, through responsible local Mo eR N Th e St. Louls, Mo, | correspondents