Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 12, 1883, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE OMAHA DAILY BEE-~TUESDAY JUNE 12, 1883, STRENGTH to vigorously push a business, strength to study a profession, strength to regulate a household, strength to do a day's labor with- out physical pain, All this repre« sents what is wanted, in the often heard expression, “Oh! I wish i had the strength!” If you are broken down, have not energy, or feel as if life was hardly worth liv ing, you can be relieved and re- stored torobust health and strength by taking BROWN'S IRON BIT- TERS, which is a true tonic—a medicine universally recommended for all wasting diseases. got N. Fremont St., Baltimore During the war T was in- juredinthe stomach bya piece of a shell, and have suffered fromiteversince, Aboutfour yearsagoit broughton paraly- sis, which kept me in bed six months, and the best doctors in the city said I could not live. Isuffered fearfully from ndigestion, and for over two years could not eat solid food and for a large portion of the time wasunableto retain even Tiquid nourishment. I tried Brown’s Iron Bittersand now after taking two bottles I am able to get up and go around and am rapidly improving. } G. DECKER. BROWN'S IRON BITTERS is a complete and sure remedy for Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Malaria, Weakness and all diseases requir- ing a true, reliable, non-alcobolic tonic, It enriches the blood, gives new life to the muscles and tone to the nerves. Sarecf vOU use Hon Bitters! Jyeasmeam i wnd, a8 JOUT has GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 1878, BAKER'S a ‘most excellent articla for f Sold by Grocers overywhere, W.BAKER & COy GHOCOLATES BALL'S Every Corset is warranted satis- to its wearer in m!x WRY, or the money will be refunded by the person from whom it was bought. SORSET only Corset pronounced by our leading muy;!fl e PR I e S 'most comfortable PRICES, by Mail, Postage Paldt Preserving $1.50. (extra heavy) #2.00. co BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS. 51 Broadwav, N, Y, me-eod & “FOR TABLE USE" Tho Natural Mineral, KAISER WATER ! Frow Birreshorn on the Rhine BECOMMENDED BY THE HIGHEST MEDI CAL AUTHORITIES, 'R+ D'K HOLLENDER & CO,, Sole agert or the ¥ and Caoals, 115, 117, 119 '“:‘fl':" Belf-Adjusting, 01.50 Nursing, $1.60 A FOREST REAR PARA. Endless Varieties of Trees in Brazil, Mighty Parasites With Roots in the Air, Exuberance of Vegetation. The Wendertul, A lottor from Para, Bazil, In The B8an Franclsco Chronicle, saye: Only just beyond tho actual precincts of the city of Para you may instantly bury yourself in the intricate mazes of the dense tropical forest and lose sight of all indleation of the residence of man, Youare bewlldered to remem- ber you were walking in the elty atreot only fifteen minates ago, and yon are reminded of the marvelous picee of tapestry which, In tke Ara. blan tale, 1a eald to have Instantly travsporied the happy possessor to whatever plecs he desired. Bat, though yon huve been wishing to en- tor vho Brazlllan f rest, you are very oure you have not stepped upon the magic cloth, and the thought occurs that in this forelgn land there may be wizards of untold power, and the strange ecene around may prove to be only the work of enchantment. You pause, but the vislon, far from fading, fncreasea In distinotness as your eyes become _accustomed to the shade. The quick change in light {s more noticeable than auy change In temper- ature at first, Oatslde the sunlight is even palnful in its Inteneity, and as you enter the narrow footpath which penetrates through every part of the torest lying near to the city, there is a plearing sense of the contrasted shade. 3 THE BOA, But beware lest you grow suddenly to) poetical to be wary, for though the surrounding’ greenery and the grow- ing coolness of tha air lure to unre- stralned enjoyment, there are low- hanging branches to avold, and when the way seems most open there may be a treacherous loop of the strong, trall- ing vines that would quickly banish all your eocstatio ideas of beholding a monkey or the great ant-eater in his native bome, especially if In strlving to malntaln or regain your equilibriom youshould thrust out a hasty hend egainst the thorny trunk of an srmed Famillar since chilhood with the ideal lllustration of tropleal foresta, you look, but in vain, for the tall tree whose trunk Is clasped in the In- variable colls of & huge serpent or the chaln of monkeys looped so conspicu- ously across a ravine, However, few persons care to go alone to explore the depths of the forest, since there are still huge boa constrictors to be found occaslonally, and a few of the wild animals are qulte as undesirable acquaintances. Noar the olty these dangers diminish, while another peril remalus quite as great, It ls not easy to determine whether it be harder to find one's way through a trackless wilderness or from among countless narrow Intersecting paths to choose the only right one, which has nothing to distinguish it from lonumerable others. THE DANGER OF GOING ASTRAY, The thick impenetrable masses of forest growth are such that, once be- ing left there is little probability that one will reach the pownt from which he started, so that it becomes a real peril instead of only a childish fear of being lost, and there are a few known instances of wauderers never being found, though an immediate search was continued for duys. Near the olty of Para the forests and rubber awamps are crossed with a network of paths which Intersect each other so often that a compsss is a necessity to those who tread awmong them, Yet the beautles of s Brazilian forest, es- peclally if it be in the valley of the Amazon, are far too powertul an at- traction to be foregone without an effort Tho forests that sweep everywhere about Para are of primary growth and far taller than any but the pine weude of the eastern United States. The greatest wonder hero s the ‘endless varlety of the trees. One forest, In. stead of belng compose? of a single famlly (like beech or maple groves in the north, or the oak lands and plna barrens cf the west and south), gath- ers 80 many sorts within a small com- pass that one can scarcely find ten trees alike in & whole acre. This fact renders lumbering especlally difficult, and ls one reason why the varieus woods of Brazll are so little known to commerce, FLOWERING TREES, Mauny flowering trees are found in the deepest fastnesses that have been explored along the banks of the Ama- zon, and at varlous seasons of the year they hang out clustering wreaths of huge blue, white, purple or yellow blossoms. Strange plants spring from the ground, to clasp leafy hands with taller shrubs, whlcg, in tarn, reech up to the overhanglng branches of the high trees whose glant limbs are mingled with the interlacing twigs of others, while over all a 5 leaplog from one to the other the colllng vines Awlne thelr IQIODF tendrills, leaving no gap in the luxurlant masses of vegetation, The huge trunks of the tall trees are ¢f deep brown rather than gray, and there is the greatest number that bear their leaves at the tips of the lofty branches, so that the general outline of the tree Is llke that of a huge umbrella, Stems of vines are often leafless till they clamor away to the top of the mass, where they miogle thele glossy follage with that developed on the trees, clasping hands no closely that as yon look upward from below you cannot distingulsh the leaves of the tree from those of the ! |vine., Underneath this green roof the dense shade develops fow flowers and the gaudy colors one expedts to see ! |are wanting, except as they are seen on the beautifally palnted wings of birdn or radtant butterflies floating by. From above, so high that you cannot see the starting polnt among the thick, clusterlng leaves, drops sud- d uly a strong vine hanging in a deep ¢ stlo swing, that, while the stem Is 't reoinches In diameter, seems as ‘ant a8 & cable, while other vines of W aller sizo are rigid or brittle ac- ¢ rding to the family to which they may belong. FERNS AND OLCHIDS, A very marked featare in this plo- ture of forest life Is the numerous par- aslten putting forth thelr leaven among the brown twigs of strong vines or hanging on the trees, Forns, too, find orevices in the bark of the tree. trunks and wave thelr lovely fronds in richest profusion high ebove the head. Numerous orchide are thickly sprinkled on the trees, where they bloom year after year unmindful of the fact that the Indian bird-hunter, or thestlll more prosale rubber col- lector, may pass and repaes their perches with no quick glance of admi- ratlon or stolld look of satisfaction, Twinlng among vines are also sev- eral varieties of climbing ferns, and to the botanist there can acarcely be a Rreater puzzle than the tropieal fern. Some specimens resemblo certaln or- chlds 8o closely that it 1s exceedingly difficalt for even a practiced eye to distinguish betwoen them. They mimic northern moeses, common grasees, and even develop thelr fronds inthe form of dellcate leaves which grow like strawberry leaves, from run- ners, and twine thelr small, velvety stems around the twigs of trees. More than one of the ferns growlng on trees have thick, stiff fronds, bearing no resemblance to the fern famlily to the eye of a northern botanist. Look- ing more closely one finds the tlny scrolls just unrolling and then, turn- Ing agaln to the fully developed frond finds mlnute spores, llke tluy halrs, and thua discovers he has a legitimate member of the fern famlly, whose most distant relatives can clalm the name a8 long as clrcinate vernation and Sporangla fail to be found in the other order of plants. Several Ama- zonian ferns are very simllar to those found thousand of miles away to the north. One that grows, llke a well- behaved sensible forn, in the ground has a stem almost as woody as a rasp- berry can which strong thorns are de- veloped. THORNS IN ABUNDAKCE, Thorns, however, are here common to almest every member of the veget— able kingdom. Some palms bear as many thorns as over was found on a rose, only on the trunks of palms the epines are sometimes six inches or even more in length, Giant ensl- Uve plants, which here grow to be troer, are plontifally supplied with thoras as large as those found on orange trees. There are also a large number of shrubs and low trees whose leaves are spriukled thickly on both sides with thorns, larger thorns starting from all the twigs and stewmr, while creeping vines, that bear no leaves and make up this deficlency by numerous thorns, and bristling cacti rlse erect or go tralling their thorny jolnts over three or four trees, on which they love to hang out thelr gay tasseled flowers, The enormous size of the plants growlng upon the trees Is one of the fiest noticed wondors, It is true that » parasite Is “‘a plant that grows and lives on another,” but somse parasites and eplphites seem only to grow upon the brauches of trees or vines because they prefer second story reeidences. There are many which draw no nour— {shment from the plant to which they cling, while thc number which seem to subsist wholly on alr s & marvel to all. Kven molsture does not seem to be necessary, and the thick green leaves lono nelther luster nor stiffuess ftthey are cut from the parent stock or hung elsewhere. Beautifal orchids, in bloom, may be detached from thelr perches on the trees, and if hung up for house decorations retain thelr color for days or even weeks. The orchid is a most remarkable child of the south, and those who have made them a lifelong study are still unable to distinguish some of the finest varieties from others that are nearly worthless, excepting when the specimens are in full bloom, Many sorts have loaves that closely resemble those found on others, and the roots of all seem only little cords to bind tho plant mecurely on a twig. There- fore tho oniy safe time for one to buy an orohid off the Tndlan forester who carries parasites from door to door in » baske {8 whon the blossoms are suf- ficlently developed to tell both color and fragrance, ROOTS IN THE AIR, He who stands for the first time in a tropleal forest will be struck most forcibly, perhaps by the stngular ap- pearance of the numerous aerfal roots. These slender cords hang in tangled ekeins among the branches, swaying agaiust the light breeze or curilng apaicst the trunk of a tree to mingle with leaves and branches, or, growing thicker and more woody the olser they become, finally themselves afford foot- hold for a fern or an orchid, One is astonished to find how strong these ocord-llke roots are. They hang in mid alr, like swaying threads from a spider's web, and often fall from a branch fifty or sixty feet from the ground, and are strong enough to sus- taln, not ten or twenty pounds only, but even bear a fifty-pound weight without breaking. Some of these air roots descend to the ground, and as soon as they reach the earth bury themselves to act like ordinary roots. After the hungry fingers are able to reach the ground the alr roots capialy Increase in size, Others descend, twin ing around the first, and the mass finally becomes a tree itself in slze, Sometimes the slender rootlets creep close to the trunk of a tree, almost im- bedding themselves in the bark. Some, starting In this way from the point where the main branches of a tree first grow from the trunk, send down air- roots on all sides at once, and finally choke and destroy the orlginal tree to which iu thelr infancy they cling for protection, PARASITES THAT THRIVE ON TREES, There are parasites, so called, which flourish just as well upon a dead tree as any other support, thus proving they are epiphites aud not troe para- eltes, The roots adhere to the bark of the trees and do not penetrate to rob the life blood of others. Not content with this existence, other plants of this strange class draw to themselves atom after atom of dust and mold, so that they wrap around thelr roots and their elevated perches handfal after handful of earth, and still gorging as the appetite grows stronger, they share the common fate of gluttony and come toppling down, thus making roem for ethers. Seen in thelr high seats among the trees, the effect of this horde of parasites sud air plants Is always peculiar in the extreme. The parasites are often beautiful, yet thelr presence oocca- slonally detracts from the beauty of a tree, and the thing grows ludicrous when you catch sight of some huge plant just balancing iteelf, with scem- DEAD ing difficulty, on a loose pleco cf bark that its own rank roots have displaced while it sought a firmer footlng, till now it hengs trembling on a einglo ting stralning thread, Even when one haa grown famillar with it, It all atill remains an enchauted land. One noed not be possessed of any very strong Imagination to say, as he atands out upon the parssites: ‘‘All these once grew In their natlve bed, low at the foot of theeo tall trees, Then came sowe gent and with his marvelons apade flang both plant and sufficlent earth to nourish it high among the llmbs,” There they still ledge—the power of enchantment is not yet dissolved, and you whote fas- cinated gazs Is beld in thrall may ad- miro anda wonder, but you will not live tlll the speil Is broken. TROPICAL WROGS, These forest scenes were one day enjoyed by two gentlomen of my ac- qualntance, Oane of the two wes a nataralist, the other a young physi. clan, and both lately arrived from the states, While collecting specimons of vogetable growth and searching for novel insects thoy were muddenly startled by the cry of a will animal, They judged the creature to be abotit two miles distant, and immediately started in pursult, The doctor as- sured himself that all the chambers of his revolver were ia order, while the professor took the precaution to load his gun with a charge of coarser shot than ho had been using for blrds, and the march began, The cry was re- peated at Intervals, and as they drow nearer they bccame more and more eure It was a feline volce and nerved themselves for combat. But now they heard a similar cry In another direc— tlon still nearer than before, and were obliged to make a detour to avold gllnlng themselves between two packs. 'hey advanced with the utmost cau- tion, and not a cracking twig nor a rustling branch told of thelr approach, while the difficnly of thelr progrees increased at+every step. Comlog up with the game they found 1t to be not a taplr, and to their lnfinite amose wment they were eerenaded by the “fellne voices" of frogs. The adven- tare thus proved to be ove of less danger than had at ono time seemed probable. However, it was notso ludicrous a blunder as it may seem to the reader, for even the frogs of some forelgn lands do not at all resemble the reptile that sings among tho rashes of America. Care of Pneumonia. Mr, D, H, Barnaby, of Owego, N, Y, says that his daughter was taken with » violent cold which terminated with pneu. monia, and all the best physicians gave the case up and said sha could not live but & few hours at most, She was in this con- dition when a friend recommended DR, WM. HALL'S BALSAM FOR THE LUNGS and advised her to try it, She accepted it as a last resort, sand was sur- prised to find that it pr duced a marked change for the better, and by persevering in its uee » permanent cure was effected, A FRESH PIUNEER STORY. How a Counterfelt Coin Served to Scare a Man Nearly vo Death in 18563. San Franclsco Bulletin, “‘Speaking of old bums,” remarked Charley Blackburn, of the registration offica, taking out a penknife and ex- tractlng a plug, purchased at the re- duced rate under the new tarlff biil, “did L ever tell you how we n;’Cookttl'l Jim out of Maryvsille in 527" The nn“}erum listeners, gathered about In antioipatlon of one of Char- lle's Inimitable yarns, confessed utter ignorance of the cizcomstances under which Cocktall Jim left Marysville in 1852, “Don’t mind if I tell you, Does anybody object? I'mnot a man as ltkes to bore anybody.” The latenors conaldered themselves not only in no danger of belng bored, but were positively anxious to hear the atory. **Well,” continued Charley, throw- ing one leg over the other, with the air of a man who s determined to leave no detall unem bellished, *‘Cock- tail Jim was the hardest case [ over saw, Daring all the time I was in Marysville I never knew him toeata meal or do a minute's work. He just loafed around Boston Harry's monte saloon and drank and drank and drank—always cocktalls, He never paid for a drink In his life, but lald for the game, and when the crowd was called up he was the first to order. An ordinary cocktall was an insult to him; he had to have 'em with lemon peel In, a enifter of syrup, and with loaf sugar rabbed around the rim of the glass. After loafing around the town for a year he got to be a great nuisance, and the boys trled varlous ways to freezs him But he never lost control of himself, no matter howmuch he drank, and there appesred to be no method of making bim tired of Boston Harry's saloon, *‘Well, one day I arrived in town, having been down to Sacramento for a load of supplies, when I saw from the dlstance a blg erowd of men in the middle of the street with Cocktall Jim in charge, Just & week before that they had elected me justice of the peace. As I drove up, one of the boys says, ‘‘Ah, here comes the judge. Now, we can try him at once.’ T asked what was the trouble. It dldn't take more than two minutes to find out, It seems Oocktall Jim had been fired out of Boston Harry’s early the night before, and slept in the open lot, Ksrly {n the morning he got up, famishing for a drink; the first he mac he met was Pete Warner, ‘Pote,’ says he, ‘I haln’'t had a bite to eat for three hull days Let mo have a dollar’ Pote didn't like to do it. ‘You'll spend it for whisky, won’t you? ‘No, sir,’ says Jim; “'Pon my honor, not a cent, I will go stralght up to the hotel ana eat a meal,’ After talking some time, Pete took out a counterfelt Mexican dollar and handed to Jim. ‘There, he says, ‘get somothing to eat, but no whisky." Jim promised, thauked him and they parted. Pete at once rushed up to Boston Harry's, know- fng Jim would merely walk around a little, and then stop in there to geta cocktall, and told Harry about it, cautionlng him that when Jim at- tempted to pass the dollar to arrest him for shoving counterfelt coln, “In about ten minutes, sure enough, Jime cam In, ordered a cock- tall and unconcerned like, filpped the dollar up and let it fall on the coun- ter, The cock tall was made In the beat style and Jim drank it down, ‘Bat,’ »ald the barkeeper, ‘give me nome other money. I hear from the sound of this that 1t's no good.’ Jim confessed at onc» that the dollar was all the coln he had, a lot of the boys gathered aronnd, the sher!ff was sent for and he was plsced under arrest, “When I arrived Jlm wat about scared to death, The boys had been talking of hanging him right thero, ‘Well, we'll try him,’ sags I. 8o the boys bronght nim along, and In fifteen minutes a jury was impaneled and the witnesses sworn, It was a plain case of passing counterfelt money. Jim told his story, bat the jury didn't believe a word of {t, and toand him gullty without leaving thelr seats “I then addressed the prisoner, telling him how clearly he had been caught passing a bad dollar, some. thing agalnst the peace and dignity of thestate; but, presuming he had a mother living who had thought rome- thiug of him sometime, or a loving ister, or & law-ablding brother, I would be merciful and give him the htost ponalty the law allowed, I n sentenced him to twenty.one years in the state prison. ““When he heard this Jim falrly howled. His red, swelled eyes just ouzed the tears. But it was no use; the sheriff snatched him and began to move through the crowd. I got down frpm the dry goods box and began to edge up toJim. ‘Can you run? I whispered. ‘Run?' he whispered back, ‘I can run llke a qnarter horse.’ ‘Well,’ s I, ‘there 18 some doubt about this, but I couldn't help it, you know. The law says mo and so, and we jodges have to follow the law. Now, I'll tell you what I'll do,’ saya I, atill whispering, ‘I'll call the sheriff off as if to epesk to him, and when the coast {s clear you run for the river as though the devil was after you. The boys will shoot some, probably, but don't mind that—just ekip * “‘So I called the sherlff to one slde and Jim gave a jump. I swear, gen- tlemen, that man went like he had wings, The road was knee decp with dust and the Yaba 800 yards away, but he cleared the whole cussed dis- tance, with a hundred men yelling, hollering and shooting in the air, and in five seconds when the dust cleared off, he was nowhere in sight, We never saw him afterward,” When the langh had subeided, some one aeked him what became of the counterfelt dollar, “‘Oh,” sald Charley, ‘“That wes pald into court. The foreman of the jury, the sheriff, the district attorney at- torney and me went down the atreet aud passed it off on the first barkeep- er we met.” Why use a gritty, muddy, disagree- able article when Hood’s Sarsaparilla, 80 pure, 8o clear, so delightful, can be obtalned. 100 doses $1.00. Tanned Human Skin in Evidence. Spesialto e Chisago Herald. BostoN, Juae 8,—The Rev. Father Gigault, of Lowell, testified before the Tewsbury Investigation committee to- day that for six years he has peformed the last religious rites over the bodies of all the lamates who have died in the Catholie faith. The governor then oftered the wit. ness & plece of tanned human skin, on which was tattooed a orucifix and the name of C. T. E. Klund, with the farther inscription, ‘‘Fodd den, 7th March, an 1820.” Father Gigault sald he did not rec- ognize it. ‘The governor sald he would stop the doubts of those doubting Thomases who still doubt that the ekin of the state’s dead pavpers have been tanned, He continued: *‘I will show that they allowed the man to make the mum- mery of funeral service on that man’s body when that body was sent to Har- vard medical school, and that the plece of ekln wos taken owt with his name upon it, corresponding to the register 8o that there can bs no doubt tu it. The prlest of thelr church says ‘ashes to ashies, dust to to duat,” That form should be changed to ‘ashes to ashes, and the duat to Harvard college.’ ” The chairman said that they had seen tanned human ekin before during the Investigation, bat thatit was never connected with Tewksbury, The champlon driver Dan Mace, Who never was “‘left” in a race, Says for cuts and spralns, And all bodily pains 8t, Jacobs Ol holds the first place, Missouri War Rellce, Springfield (Mo,) Herald. Should the Wilson Creek reunion come off, in all probabllity there will ke on the field two of the original aix- pounder cannon of Capt. Totten’s famous Federal battery that fired the first artillery shot in the engagement and falrly opened the fight on the memorable 10th of August, 1861. Another Interesting old war rello that would be shown is a twelve-pounder amalgam gun which formerly belonged to Oapt. Bledsoe’s Confederate bat- tery, and was well known throughout Gen, Price's army as ‘‘Old Sacra- mento.” This gun, according to our County History, was captured by Col, Doniphan’s Missourian’s from the Mexicans at the battle of Sacramento, December 25, 1845, and glven to Lafayette county by Col, Doniphan, Col. Bledsoe, of Lexington, utilized it during the war as & most important piccs of his battery. “‘Old Sac” s now in Memphls, Tenn,, where it was left in 1862, and where It has been S il S JOSEPH, MO, un als 81 ars send stamp. HAS THR BEST STOOK IN OMAHA AND*MAKES THR LH—WRST PRIORS IMPORTANT IMPROVEMENTS Have now been finished in our store, mal ing it the largest and most complete FURNITUREHOUSE in the West. An additional story has been built and the five floors all connected with two HYDRAULIC ELEVATORS, One Exolusively for the uso of Pasgengers. These immense wm's': rooms--~three stores, are 68 feet wide--are filled with the Grand= efit display of all kinde of Household and Office Furniture ever shown. All are invited to call, take the Elevator on the firat floor and go througéthe building and inspect the stock. S. SHIVERICK, 1206, 1208 and 1210 Farnam Street, Om=sha ‘| MINING MAOHINERY, BELTING, WOSK, BRASS AND IRON FITTINGS PIF RETAIL, MANUFACTURER OF GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES, Window Caps, Finials, Skylights, &c. THIRTEENTH STREET, - - - OMAHA, NEB HENRY LEHMANN, JOBBER OF WAL, PAPHER, AND WINDOW SHADES EASTERN PRIGES DUPLICATED. I8 FARNAM ST. - - OMAHA —DEALERS IN—— HALL'S SAFE AND LOCK CO. Fire and Burglar Proo f &5 L. JE" JER N AULTS, O OB R &, 8 O . 1020 Farnham Street, OMLAFIA. - - - NEIF OMATEA Menicar [Jispensary 1 Offices and parlors over the new Omaha National Bank, 13th, between Farnam and DouglasStreets. A 5. FISHBLATT, M. D., - PROPRIETOR. Dr. Fishblatt can bs Consulted Everv Day Exoept Fridays and Saturdays, thess two Days being devoted to His Disnensary at Des Moines, lowa. Bpecial attention given to diseases of the THROAT AND LUNGS, CATARRH, KIDNEY AND BLADDER And Fomals Diseases, as well ag ALl Chronic and Nervous Diseases DR FISHBLATT Has lecov. red the greatest cure inthe world for weaknoss of the back and limbs, Involunta discharges, impotancy, general debility, nervousness, lanzuor, contuslon of ideas, palpitation of the heart, timidity, trombling, dimness of sight or glddiness, diseases of the head, throat, nose or skin affoctiona of the liver, luugs, stomach or bowels—those terrible disordors arising from so itary habe its of yourh, and secret practi es more fatal to the victims than tho songs of Syrens to the marip.- ers of Ulyscs, blighting their most radiant hopes or ntizipations, rendering marriage imposaible. Those $h:t are sullerlng from tho evil practices which destroy their montaland poysical sy causing teme NERVOUS DEBILITY, The eympto.as of which are a dull, distressod mind, which unfite them from pertorming snolr buste ness and soctal duties, makes happy marriago lmposs.ble, distresses the action of the heart, causing flushesot heat, de. ression of piri*s, evil forebdings, cowardics, fesrs, drosms, restless' nighte, dizalaess, forgettulness, uunatural dischsrges, pain {n the back andj hips, shorh breathing, melan: choly, tire easlly of company and have proferemce to be alone, feeling a9 tired in the morning as when retiring, saminal woakncss, lost manhood, white bone dopoait in the urine, nervousness, con- tusion of thousht. trembling, watery and weal eyes, dyspepsia, constipation, 88, paln an: Weakness in the liimbe, 0. 830uld Consult me immediately and bé restored 80 perfooh healohs YOUNG MEN ‘Who bave become yictims of solitary vice, that dreadful and destructive hablt which annually aweeps to an untimely grave thousands of young men of exalted talent and brilkisnt intelloch wha miglst otherwise entrance listening senators with the thunders of their eloquence or wake to ocsta= cy the liviog lyre, may call with fail coufidence. MARRIAGE. Married persons or young men contemplating marriage be aware of p:x'llul we knees, loss procroative power, mpotency, or any other disqualification speadly reliev Ho who placse him Belf urder the care of Dr. Fishola tmav religiously confide in his houor aa a gentleman, aud conf dently rely upon his skill as & physician. ORGANAL WEAKNESS Immediately cured and tull vigor restored. This dlsirsssing affliecion—which venders lite a burden snd marriage lwposs'ble, is the penalty paid by the victim for improper Indulgence, Young people ap to comwit excessos from not belng aware of the dreadfal consequences that may eosue, Now who that understands this subject will deny that procreation is lost sooner by those fal 1nto into improper habits than by prudent? Besides being depeiv d of the pleasure of nealthy off+ springs, the most serious and destructive symptoms of both body andmind arise. The system be- comes deranged, tho physical and mental fanctions weaken; Lossof procreative powers, nervous inability, dyspepsia, pal Elhlnn of the heart, indigestion, jconstitutional dlhufl!umdn‘ of the trame, cough, consumption and death. A OURE WARRANTED. Persons rulnad I health by unleained protenders who keop them trisin month after Lmonih taking polsonous and {njurious compounds, should spply 1 iately, DR, FISHBLATT graduate of one of the mst eminent colieges of tho United States, has eftscted aome of tha most astonishing cures that were ever known; many troubled with ringing in the cars and heed, when asloop, great norvousness belog slarmed at certain sounds, with {requeat blushing, attended some times with dorangemens of the mind were cured immediately. TAKE PARTICULAR NOTICE., addronson il thoso who have Infnred themsolyes by tmpropar Indulgance ‘and soiikary th bady and wiad, unditing them for busines, study, so-iaty or marriag ‘the melanch .}y offcts produced by the early habits of vouth, via: Weaks im s, pains {n shs hoad and dimaess of sight, 103 of muscular ‘powsr, palple yspopsia, narvous irritability, darangemeas of digestive functions, debility, tation of consuwption, PRIVATE OFFICES, JOVER THE OMAHA OMAHA, NEB, QONSULTATION FREE. Charses moderato Medical treatmont. Those who res de at a dist through mail by simply sending thier symptoms wi Auadress Lock Box 34, Omahs, Neb: NATIONAL | BANK, d withia the reach of all who nesd scf ud aunot call, will recoive prompt Fomtage. IO EE O AN SINGHLE 4 CT N G POWER AND HAND e T NG EP @55 ) Steam Pumps, Engine Trimmings, PACKING, AL WHOLESALE AND s HALLADAY WikD-MILLS CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS Cor, Farnam and 10th 8treets Omaha, Neb, — M"‘ =

Other pages from this issue: