Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 3, 1883, Page 1

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\ 1 % — @ . 200-2tlew THIRTEEN ¥ @ RE ACKNOWLEDGED TO BE THE BEST BY ALL WHO HAVE PUT THEM TO A PR TICAL TEST. ADAPTED TO " Hard and Soft Coal, COKE OR WooD. NANUKACTCRIR %1 "BUCK STOVE CO; SAINT LOUIS. Piercv & Bradford. SOLE AGENST FOR OMAHA, WORTH, SENDING FOR! DISEASES OF THE LUNGS 0 HOW TO CURE THEN. fhich inoffercd FREE.) Lt all spplicants. tane ottt Gor Rupron: N N, ) Buate U you teh Einglich o Gernin I Mention Omaha Bee. I Have Found It! Was the exclamation of & man when ke got a box of Eureka Pile Ointment, which is a ulm‘ ple and_ sure cure for Piles and all Skin Diseases. Fifty cents by mail, postpaid. The American Diarrhea Cure | Has stood the test for twenty years. Sure cure for all. Never Fuils. Diarrhaea, Dysentary, and Chole- ra Morbus, Deane's Fever aud Agne Tonic & Cordial, It is impossible to supply the rapid sale of the same. SURE CURE WARRANTED For Fever and Ague, and all Malarial troubles, PRICE, $1.00. W.J. WHITEHOUSE LABORATORY, 16TH ST., OMAHA, NEB. For Sale by all Druggists Or sent by Express on recoipt of price. miebm SIOUX FALLS ASPER - STONE Company. [INCORPORATED. ] This company is now prepared to receive orders for SIOUX FALLS JASPEI 'ONE, for Building Purposes, And will make figures on round lots for prompt deliv® ery. The compar y is shipping Paving Blocks both Chicago andfOmuha, and solicits correspond- ce and orders from contractors? engaged in paving treets in wny of the western citie. TESTIMONIALS, N SupBRISTESDRNT'S OpFiCE, Chicago, West Div- ) ison Railway, Chicago ‘December 5, 1 i D. Elwell, President Sioux Falls Water Bower Com ny. B Behi iave reosiyeil From your company since October 1, 1882, about 100 caaloads of granite paving blocks and have laid them between the rails of ourstreet railway tracks in the heart of the city have been using paving material in thi city for many eary and | take plensute in saying that in iy opin- +.._ion the granite paving blocks furnished by your com. Caoopny are the most regular in shape and ‘perfect in 5 "orur, and as far as | been able to judge, are of as durable feature as any material that ¥ been offered or laid in the city. Yours, K. LAKE. (Copy.] 8s. Louts, March 25, 1853, TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN— This is to certify that I have examined a piece of granite taken from the Sioux Falls Granite Quarries, and, in my opinion, it is the best stone for strect pav- ing I have seen in America. (Signed) HI Pres. oard Public Improveinénts. Stone for Pév/'ny Purposes. And any person interested in such improvements ¥ will find it greatly to his sdvantage to communicate fl withfus. We invite correspondence on the subject. @ The general management and supervision of the B company's business is now in- the hands of Wun, Me- in. B Address your letters to { A. C. SENEY, wimseu Pres. of Jasper Stone Co Matter of Applicgsion of P. H. Green for Liquor Li cense. NOTICH Notice is hereby ths 25th day of J " SPRER'S Port Grape Wine! Used in the principal churches for communion purposes. EXCELLENT FOR BADIES, AND WEAKLY PERSONS AND THE AGED, Speer's Port Grape Wing FOUR YEARS OLD. Tonic and Strengthening Prop- erties are unsurpassed by any other native wine. Being the pure juice of the Grape, produced under ) Speer's own personal supervision, the purity and genuineness are nteed. The youngest child can partake of its generous qualities, and the weakest invalid use it to advantage. It is particularly bene- ficial to the aged and debilitated, and suited to the varions ajlments that effect the weaker sex. It is in every respect a wine T BE RELIED ON. SPEER'S P.J.SHERRY. The P. J. SHERRY is a wine of superior character, and partakes of the rich qualities of the grape from which it is made. For purity, richness, flavor and medicinal purposes, it will be found unexcelled. SPEER'S P.J.BRANDY. Mhis brandy stands unrivalled in this country, belng far superior for medicinal purposes. Itis o pure distillation from the grape, and con- tains valuable medical propertics Tt has & delicate flavor, similar to that of the grape, from which it is distilled, and is in great favor among first-class families. See that the signature of ALFRED SPEER, Pasaic, N. 8., is over the cork of each bottle. y Kennard Bro's & Co., M. Parr, Schroter & " Saxe, James Forsvthie and J. O, Panter. SHRIVER & BELL, Opposite Postoffice. Bargains in Improved Property. nent, 20th and Lo 802 400 and 25th sts.. 2 600 172 House 5 rooms on leased lot. .. 425 170 House 8 rooms on Park avenue, corner, GhOAD. Ie¥vesn's Eha ZEARTA PLRES tods swusse 8900, 167 House near Saunders street, full iot, easy torms .. T 0 166 House 5 roor . 1 600 165 House 8 rooms, 18th and Leavenworth st. 1§00 164 House five rooms, Hamilton street near Charles. .. o 163 Two hon full lots, 26th and Harney... 1 000 161 Tw house near 16th street, corner 6 000 160 House two rooms, full lot, 27th and Doug- 00Y 20th and Clark. 2 300 1663Two acres on Cuming, improved 8600 5" House 4 rooms, barn, 9th street....... . 1200 164 House 2 roon m, etc, 12th street.. 900 163 6 houses, rents for $115 per month, 2 fuil lots on Leavenworth 16th streets. 10 600 162 Two houses 9 and § rooms, barn, ete, full lot, Davenport and 24th street 6 000 ‘House 6 roonus, o 18th, on car line 1800 | 149 House 6 rooms on 30th, near Panl 2 800 148 House 6 rooms, barn, 20th and and Ciark 2 100 147 House 4 rooms, . 1800 148 House 4 roomy, 1 600 188 House 8 rooms, 2 500 186 House 4 room, 1 800 186 House 6 roous 2 600 184 Three houses, Capitol avenue and 10th street each . 1000 160 House 5 rooms, P 1 800 122 10 acres, house, gard 1 800 119 House 6'rooms, 218 160 120 Double house 4 roor 113 Tho houses, full lot, 16th 104 Five ncres, Saunders street ... 3 600 101 3 lots and house, 9th street 1 000 04 House 4 rooms, 10th street, . 600 Two houses, full lot, rent for ¥75 per month, 13th and Cass. ., 5 000 80 House 3 rooms, Dodge and Unimproved Property. 825 Lot Cass and 224 1 7 ark avenue, each 804 16 lots Parkers addition'each #00 to Llot 25th and Davenport ion %600 to tion to the mayor and city council of (Maha, for 1i cense to sell Malt, Spiritous and Vinous No. 1106 8. 0th street, 1st ward, Omaha, the 11th day of July, 1588, to the 11th day of Octo e or protest fled within ' sech i th, A D 155 he said liceume Wil be gt Lo ey I GREEN, Appiicant TiOmaha Bee newspaper will publish the noffs once each week for tw s at the offthe applicant. The city C erewith. 30 L Matter of Application of Michael Leary for Liquor Li NOTICE given that Micheal Leary did upon | ssd, filo his application | M Ouaha for 1l sell malt, Chicago street, Fifth ward, Omaha, 11th day of July 1588, to the 11thday ¢ I there be no objection, remonstrance or prote filed within two weeks from June 26th A. D, 1553, the | said license will be graui Ary LEARY, Applicant. | s at the expense is not to be JewrrT, City Clerk. the applicant. charged therewith. civen that P. H. Gggn did upon D. 1883, file i:¥xmu11|'luu | ue, make wn offer ot 1100 ach, 5 lots in Boyd's addition, cach 100 00 500 50 lots in Patrick's addi 86 lots i Shinn's add 400 to 400 to 1 200 to | Farming Land For Sale Houses For Rent, ESTATE AGENCY. Opposite Postoffice. Four lots on Farnam street, each t on Do t on Cay 1t Jot on Capitol avenue A lot on Capitol avenue, 10th street 9th stroet These are all first-class business locations. Resident Property --- Improved. 1 Heuse 7 rooms, barn, Convent street near street cars. A bargain o1 isedehi e 2 New ho rooms, barm, Targe Tot, near One lof One I i thiree rooms, near high school 1 h, on Chicago st. 4 Davenport street 2 § 2 story house, full lot on Chicago street.. 4 9 4 room house'on Harney street, near new court house ) 10 6 room house on’ Davenport street, well improved. Easy terms 12 6 roomn house, 2 lange lots well {mproved 18 House 12 rooms, 15 las street. .. 18 Four room house an street . 2 800 17 Two room house on Farnam street. . . 960 18 Three room house on Dodge street.. ... 1000 19 House 6 rooms on 19th near Webster No, 1 condition. <ysditasist 8 000 20 Three houses, 4 and 5 rooms’ each, near Brownell Hall 4 560 21 Brick house, 9 rooms, large lot, neat st. 20fftouse 8 rooms, fuli Tot, $400 cush, ‘ance monthly payments. 24 Good brick house, 7 rooms, 27 Eleven room house, 3 ncres, improvement Hood house and Tot on St. Mary's avenue northwest part of city A 200 well improved bt ) s 2000 88 Three brick houses, 5 and 6 rooms each 7 500 House & rooms, 4 1ots, West Omaba. ... 2 600 House 7 roomws, 2 story, one block from ms, 5 lots, near street cars wellimproved 3 ¢ 63 House, barn, 10 acres of ground, V. art of thecity. ... L & % 64 House, barn, 1 acre in west Omaha “well improved ¢ R 81 Two new houses ty room each well improved. Easy terms............. 1600 82 Nine room house, lot 60x300 feet, fine con dition. . 3 5 Eleven room house, full iot, 5 biocksfrom ost ottice, well improved.............. 97 House 5 rooms, large lot, weil fmproved in southw: 1 103 Eleven ro Vi 1location, 111 House of 4 27th and Do 126 Two houses, 1 proy Hou New ho Omaha . L 144 House 8 rooms, one-half lo cary, cash...... .. 150 Four houses, 4 to 12 Tot on on California 1563 Three houses, 5 to 8 o t on’ Dodge street, iin ents’ first e Ko e e, Lot near Farnam, bearing fruit, grapes, 4lots, near park, ¥00 o ... 4lots'on 17th street, cack 17 or 18 lots in west Omah Lots in west Omaha §200 6ot on Madison ave: Lots in Lake's additie to sult purchasers ... . Lot near 0th and_Hickory 4 Lot 86x142 feet cheap, Bancroft street... 450 Choice lots in North Omaha. 4 Acre Tracts, CLASS (A). half acre in North Omal M y desirable th Saunders, s improved, o One acre in northwest Omaha Two acres on Farnam street, per acre 2 500 4 acres n s Park,'per acre 1200 Tw ry you wish e 1'we will find you'a purchaser in short tim Business property, residence property, suburban property and farms for sale at all times &t bargains. City an ity propert) and exchange. Rents in all parts of the city. Renting houses a spec mon-th. BENZON & COLLIN REAL ESTATE AGENTS. 211 South Thirteenth st. Opp. Omaha National Bank. 13x100, Bth street L] house, lot 50150, 9th street house, lot 50x140, 10th street . . lot 824x04, 17th street. it 82x04, Dorcas street it 60x125, Montana street it 50x140, 10th street. . gestzee ased ground, Cass st. 275 California street 500 10th street 6 000 17 Lot 00x132, Tenth stroet 5 000 18 2 story store building, lot 22x132, Douglas street . 5, 26th street ) Capitol avenue ! Calitornia strect Dodge stroet , Davenport street Seward streets. . 8 500 2 500 700 $125 per acre, §100 cash, Lalance nt property is adapted to gardenin AGENTS WANTED FOR Tho Omaha . newerns it ounisa e sbove | NAVAL AREENT (N Wobray Battles, notice um\.e‘m’flsl\ for two w New and graphic Pict Fights of the world. By J. 8. N, Address J. € | Adams Strects, ¢ History of the great Sea lical Director SHIP McCURDY & Cor, Co , L exquisite whole world, Dyspepsia, Diarrhas, Fever and Ague, and all disorders of the Digestive Urg: fow diops fmpart @ delich t for the genuine article, manufactured i:( DR, J. IEGERT & BONS, W, WUPPERMAWN, Sls gt Buccemer b0 J. W, o PECK'S REAL | | International Banking Company, 61 Broadway, N, ¥, .| B. TUK el T 8. | QRAY Hamm on changs ‘:1 BLack by & o i R e L ] ntural color. Acts 17, Bold Uy Dongglsta, of sent by 2 renaoh | SOMETHING EVERY _LADY OUGHT TO KNOW. ¢ Complexion, no flwr it may n’s lia iss dle “'Ifi flnmnflyru:x; e, whic %‘foeklu,n'lr’nu % ‘". ness, gar Flusity e elicate and’ na are effects m‘;lh;t its use is suspec anybody, No. Tady has The ’flglcn: to a 5'0'2’:“: 0y when the Molk \ Balm is sold by all druggists for 75 cents. " . o The only kuown speciic for Eplleptic its, Also for Spasms and Falling Slokness, N¢ v ‘Weakness It {nstantly relicves and curee, . Clestises blood and quickens sluggish circulation. lizes germ of disease and saves sickness. twin brothers. Changes bad breath to good, remov- Ing the ccuse. Routs bilfous tendencles and makes clear complexion. Equalled by none n the delirlum of fever. A charming resolvent and a matchless laxative. It drives Sick Headache like the wind. §#-Contains nodrastic cathartic or oplates. Relievee (WE[RIVIE 1 Clo[MQIVIER[0] | the bratn of morbid fanctes. Promptly cures Rheu | matism by routing it. Restores lite-giving proper | ties to the blood. Is guaranteed to cure all nervous disorders. g#~Reliablo when all oplates fafl. Re freshes the mind and invigorates the body, Curet dyspepsia or money refunded. | Diseasea of the blood own it a conqueror, Eadorsed 1n writing by "Bty thoutand Jeading Cltisenn cloriymen uhd physicias 15 U: B and Fatope. §F"For sale by all leading druggists. §150. (13 For Testimonials and circulars send stamp. The Dr.8.A. Richmond Med Co. 8t. Josaph, Mo, “T Hostetter's Stomach Bitters meets the re- A CELEBRATED uire pr perfectly blere ing the 2 tiew ure veg edy,embi hree proper. reventive, £ tonic and an altera- ve. It fortifies the against discase, Ornte nd re- vitalizes. the - Sorpid stomach and liver, and effects FIVE GOLLARS ! YOU CAN BUY A WHOLE 5 Per Cent, Imp, Austrian 1000, Gov't Bond,Issne of 1860 These bouds are guaranteed by the Imperial Goy- ernment of Austria, and bear inferest at the rate of 6 per cent per annuin, payable semi-annually, hey are redeemed in two drawlngs anivally, in which 100 large premiums of 60,000, 10,000, 5,000 Etc., DRINS ARE DRAWN. Every Austrian 5 per cent 100 florin bond which does not draw one of the larges premiums, must be redeemed with at least 120 Floring, as there are no blanks, and every bond must draw something. "The next drawing takes place on the [ 1st Day of August, 1883. nd every i ht from us ou or bofore the led to the whole premium that ored Letters, and on. coure one of these bonds for the For orders, elroulars, or any ther inforniation, address No. 207 Broadway, Cor, Fulton Street, New York City, EHEstablished in 1874. N. B.—In writing, please state that you saw this in | the Omaha Bee. feb 7.1y of each rd: jonth to e Plicanta us may desiro to teach at. tho public schools n Donglas county. Quarterly examination first Sat- urday in February, May, August and November, NTS, e (A Condensed Assortment of the News 1 590,000 ; gold certificates | 87,001,000; Decrease for the year, & | was held to-duy, after the adjournment Neatre | coiver of the broken fi {eontaining the following points: — Aggro. | bers of the Board makes the total unse- " | board of health was read, stating the dis- MORNING, JULY CENERAL NEWS. of the Day. Home and Foreign Events Boiled To- geth The Public Debt, WasniNGToN, July 2-The decrease of the public deht™ during June was 18,008,000; cash in the treasury,8345, 888,615,000 certificates of deposit, &1 tenders, £346,381; fractional currency, | 823,000, B — The New Navy. WasniNgron, Juwy 2, Bids for con- tracts for the new naval cruisers were op- ened to-day. John Roach was the low- est bidder for all four of thevessels. He hids for the Chicago $889,000; Boston, $619,000, Atlanta, 617,000 and Dolphin, lliu‘u\wll boat, 3,6000. The contracts will be awarded him, There were only four bidders for each vessel. | ——— Down With the Poles, Osuxosy Wis., July 2. Thisafternoon the Mayor ordered the chief of police head of the five department, to cut down the telephone company’s poles. One pole was cut down, and a number of wires romoved from three poles in. the presence of a lnfin crowd, The tele- phone men climbed the poles and vonted any more chopping. Litigation is expected. - — Noted Thieves. Scrantox Pa., July 2.-Among the conviets taken to Philadelphia to-day was Chas, Westcott, convicted in the Lacka- wanna court of larceny. He is one of the two sons of D. E. Westcott, who with his wife created n sensation by cruelty to- ward their sons Charles and William, The boys seemed to have » mania for stealing. | — Thé Duellists. FREDERICKSBURG, VA, July 2. ~R. A, Bevine with E. Chalky, one of his sec onds, arrived thismorning and passed th day in scclusion. They left on the tr to-night. The impression is that Bev will surrender himself to-morrow. | —c— The Broken Larders, Cricaco, July 2.- A meoting of the creditors of MoGea h, Everingham & Co of the call board. Juo R. Bonsley, re- | submitted u ties in Chicago, report of assets and liabi te amonut due individuals and fir 808,384; deduct $68,473, mangins su ertd and to be surrendered and o allowed, leaves the amountdue men g of the A PN | afwhing a unsecured. He foundnotes of the tirm at various Chicago banks for $395,000, secured by lard as collateral. He estim- ated this collateral would net £385,000, leaving a deficit at the banks of $150,000 This added to the amount due the mem- cured liabilities in this city $1,344,911. . —— The Hill Investigation, WasHiNaroN, July 2. -Gen. Stein metz, the expert, continued his testimo ny before the Hill investigating com- mittee relative to the cost of the extra work of Bartlett Robbins & Co. on the New York post oftice. He said $400 would have been a faiv price for the or- namental work on the staircases on which $800 was charged and other items were sealed down about the same proportion. Dawson, of Boston, then took the stand and met the allegations of Manly, Cooper & Co. and testified he never offered that firm §4,600 or any other sum to withdraw their bid, but a representa- tive of that firm asked witness what he would give to withdraw the contract. Witness refused to make an offer and the conversation closed. — The Tewksbury Stiffs, Boston, July 3-—In the Tewksbur amination to-day, a letter to the wosal of dead bodies was placed in the \ands of Thomson Marsh, Jr 19, 1873, to Oct. 1st, 1882, There wero delivered to American colleges 494 adult and 36. childrens’ bodies. The whole amount paid by colleges for services c nected with this was 88,827, of which 5,914 went to Mannings for transpor- tation, $614 to T.2G. Hall, or assistance, and 81799 to Thes. J. Marsh for person” al oversight. e Revenue and Mail, WasuiNeToN, July 2,—~The President left for New York this afternoon. He has signed the commission for newly ap- pointed collector of internal revenue and issued letters of designation to col- lectors retained under the recent consol- idation, During the fiscal year just end- ed there has been i net increase of post- oftices established of compared with the previous fiscal y The an- nual report of the mail division of the pension office shows a record during the | fiscal year of 53,411 applications for pen- m, an increase over the previous year b nteen thousand letters d from congressmen. | — The Wounded Ricumoxp, Va, July 2. The Informa- tion this morning from Lt. Gov. Lewis's residence in Rockingham county, where Elam was taken after being wounded: is that the wound is much more aggrivated than at first reported, and Elam's condi- tion is crautical. The ball struck near the right hip and passed inward and downward through the body and Iu.l-_:mlI in the left thigh passing en its course very near the bladder. The ball was ex tracted last evening. Mditor, — A Ravish ched. Bowwixa Greex, Mo., Juwy, 2nd Bill McDowell, the negro, who brutally ravished Mise Kate Dwyer the adopted | , Geary near Louisiana, | Monday was foreibly taken | 1 here yestorday by a mob of 100 m Louisiana and vicinity and 75,000; logal | , | Experience will come tous all said he had served a terw in the peni tentiary. —— Shot by a Wretch, Aununs, N, Y, Juey 2. Abram Cop perrall a famer of the town Victory was shot three times with a large navy revol- ver yestorday by Lew French a young farmi laborer whose suspected infimacy with Copperralls wife wasthe cause of the tragedy. The wife was present at the shooting and ordered French to fire Both are under arvest. The vietim will die, all three shots taking effect in his body. Donatic July 8. Enoch Pratt ox of the public free library, t, to the city of Balti gave his check for $833,:533, ho invested in- city bonds for sup- port of the library. The building is nearly comploted p— TELEGRAPH NOTES, Articles of incorporation of the Peo- ple's Railway Co. of America wore filed with the Secretary of State of Indiana yosterday. It will also be filed to-day with the Secrotary of the Interior at Washington, The capital is 175,000, 000 J. T. Brown, jr., late U. 8. Marshall of the Eastern district of Arkansas, was sentenced for forgery and perjury on vouchers, while deputy, to five years at Detroit and a fine of 81,5600, Mrs. Grover, of New York, was fatally shot by boys piaying with & toy cannon in the street. The Bartholdi Statue committee ap- peal to the people of the United States or funds for erection of the pedestal. The hay and grain crop of Maine romises to be the heaviest in the state or years. John Holland, ex-president and chief wrecker of the Mechanics and Laborers Bank, of Jersey City, is sentenced eight- een months in state’s prison, wfi h judgment has been affirmed. The Dauphin county, (Pa.) almshouse building, the laundry and school house only accepted, were bumed. Inmates all saved. Coyningham and Baltin p mines, at Wilkesbarre, are now flooded’with water, over 200 feet deep in the former, The embankment supporting the nain_ track of the Delaware and Hudson coal land Co. caved in, the k has fallen down and another house is in imminent danger. W. H. Vanderbilt has added £100,000 to the endowment Vander. bilt University, at N The management of the Southern ex- luninnu closed a contract with Edison to ight the exposition building and annexes with 4,600 incandescent lights, 16 candle- power each, the plant to be larger than that at the don electrical exposit - —— THE OLD WORLD. B A PR L DT N (s SUTRLT L v sayn the dootors thimk thers ia no iriifiod: into dangor of the death of Count de Chambard, The French government has decided to expell from France every member of the l)r‘umm family, if Count de Paris makes a demonstration. Deaths from choless in Damietta Mon- day, 148, An Alexandria dispatch announces the death there of Fagan, said to be a refu- gee from Damietta, The autopsy estab- lighed the cause of death to have been cholera, Healy, Parnellite, triumphed in county Monaghan The Chamber of deputies asigned July 10th as the day for debate on the Tonequin question The Upper House of the Russian diet has, by a vote of 64 to to 16, adopted the government chureh bill, et Do the Dying Suffer Painy People do_not like to_think of death, It is an unpleasant subject; but it con- stantly obtrudes itself, and there has been much_speculation as to whether mental or physical pain attend the final act. Observation teaches us that there is little pain of either kind in dym;? ne of these days, but it will come too late to benefit those who remain. It seems to be a kind proyision of nature that, as we approach the dreaded event, our ter- rors diminish, and the coward and hero die t‘ailikxl—feurllnu!, Ilndi‘fl'erle)m E:‘r l:l sij 3 to physical pain, Dr, Edwa lfl‘!’lnrke, in J‘v{aionn,"“my’u: “The rule is that unconsciousness, not pain, attends the final act. To the subject of it, death is no more painful thun birth. Painlessly lessly we go; whither we know not. Na- ture kindly provides an anwsthetic for the body when the spirit leaves it. Pre- vious to that moment, and in prepara- tion for it, respiration becomes feeble, generally slow and short, often accom- plished by long inspirations, and short expirations, so that the blood supply is less and less oxygenated, At the same time the heart acts with correspondin, debility, producing a slow, feeble an often irregular pulse, As this process 8 on, the blood is not only driven to he head with diminished force and in less quantity, but what flows there is londed more and more witli carbonic acid gas, & powe anesthetic, the same as that from charcoal. Subject to its influence the ne: entel lose consciousuess and sensibility, ap- rent sleep creeps over the sysien en comes stupor, and the end."—New York Express. — Soclety aud Solitude. A correspondent writes that she thinky her health would be much better if she did not get solonesome, and asks if lone- someness is not the cause of 2 morbid condition bordering on disease? To which we answer, that man naturally seeks society and 'also solitude, A har monious change from one to the other ir essential to the best health, ll ve is too much society he ' wear out premiaturely. It i no, sy ¢ arrange life 0 s to have just encagh ot each, If every hour brings a swarm of Wmpany, the result vpon the moral ature is unfavorable, If, on the other wnd, man is o uch isolated freu. his ellow men, hie ocial nature suffess, and ihe mental faculties are not properly de- veloped. Lonesome people who live in e country should make friends of na- Wre; animals, plants, and trees, These apt o hanged to a tree. McDowells confessed the crime and one or two other acts of | J. g } County Sup't Pubile Iustructions, the same character in different places and | secome to them, ina certain sense, sos clety, A horse and dog make very Where | BAD BREEZES. Wisconsin, New York, New Jersey - and Massachngetts Visited by Lo- cial Storms. Huudreds of Buildings Wrecked and Trees Uprooted. Destructive Storms. Porr Jervin, N, Y., July 2,—At 4 o'clock to-day the thermometer stood nearly 100 degrees in the shade. At half past four a heavy wind and rain storm struck the village from the west md did much damage to trees, fences and smallfbuildings. At Hancock the Erie freight house was totally demolished and the Catholic church blown flat to the ground and other houses damaged. Bixanaveroy, N. Y, Jul A ter- rific rain and wind storm visited this see- tion this afternoon. Many large trees were uprooted, houses unroofed and blown down. The Catholic church and other large buildings were damaged. Mitwavkes, July 2.—A severe storm swopt Ozankee county at six this morn- ing, demolishing buildings at Necadah, Fon du Lac, Belgium, Fredonia, Oak- field, Larmertine, Princeton, Port Wash- ington, Hartford, Ripon, NewCastle, Muyville, Brownsville Keawnskeem and a dozen other towns, In Belgium and Fredonia alone over two hundred build- ings were;blown flat. At Oakfield nine miles south of Fon du Lac, hardlv a chimmey was left standing. WiiLiamsrows, Mass., July 2. —A tornado swept through Williamstown val- ley at four o'cluck this afternoon and wrocked the new college where the alum- ni dinner was tobe eaten Wednesday. Had it been that day hundreds must have boen injured. Loss to college about $6,000, many barns and outhouses were swept away, - —— The Apple Tree Borer. ‘This pest has proven a rather format: able one in some parts of the country, but formidable as it is, there seems to remedies for,and preventatives for its ravages, A writer in the Country Gentle- mcn gives his remedies as follows: “Carefully remove all sprouts, suckers and grass from the roots of the tree. Keep the bark near the surface smooth and clean by frequent scouring and rub- | bing with the naked bands. Do this at least once a week in May and June. This will brush off the eggs and de- stroy them. Another method is to taka |a pint of sulphur, a gallon of soft soap, pint of sulph llon of soft |and cnough tobacco water to make the mixture of the consistency of paint. Apply this with a brush, in May or June, on the body of the trees at the surfack and two or three inches below. It will be a good thing for our farmer friends, “I;m aro lcontv’s;u l:;lmz ln‘i!llntg lorch-rdn, ta hear these facts in mind at the proper time. The borer is the larvae of a tle called naturalists Saperdo ipla o hutches the , and the works his'way jnto the tree, maki crooked ge way, and u%plni very life, The chips voided these crubs may often be found at the :pot | where he grub entered the tree, and sumetimes a few drops of dark, diseol- | ored sap may be seen oozing from the i“"“""‘ Once in the tree the grub soon ruins it, and thus it would seem that ‘an ounce ‘uf prevention is worth a pound of eure.’” s | A Birort Sermox.—1'he ascent of Jack | and Jill to fetch the water fromits foun= | tain head leads us to consider: 1. The | attraction of the heights. 2. The u ward impulse of the sense of want, The profit of pursuit. 4. Misdirected eflorts, 5. By this memorable catastro- | phe, we are led to consider—the penal- |ty of overloading. In conclusion, this | authentic history indicates that no man. rises or falls in the world by himsen,. When Jack fell dowr, Jill carse tume bling after. Momentous 1sues hang on -.‘\er¥ step we take in life. The false step by which we fall iscertain to involve some ‘one else in our disuster. There- fm;e ouglln :vu to })B ever mindful of our goings, that our footsteps may not slip, ‘ie those of Jack and .KI'L A Pleasing Woman, What i more charming than anm agreeable, graceful woman? Here and there we meet one possessing the fairy- like power of enchanting all about her; sometimes she is ignorant herself of the magical influence, which is, nowever, for that reason on.y the more perfect, Her lights up the home; her ap- s like a cheering warmth ; she passes by and we are content; she sta; a while ‘and we _ars happy. To beh her isto live: she is the aurorz with a human face. She has no need to do | more than_ simply to be; she makes an we came; whence we know not. Pain- | pae), “of the house; paradise breathes from her; and she communicates this delight to ull without taking any greater trouble. than that of existing beside them. _Is not hers an inestimable gift? [ — Hoo's SARSAPARILIA signed to meet the wants of a large por- tion of our people who are either too poor to employ a physician, or are too far removed to easlly call one, and a still larger class: who are not sick enough to require medicad advice, and yet are out of sorts and need a. medicine to build them up, give them an ap- petite, purity their hlood, and ofl up the ma- ehlner‘ of their bodies 50 it will do Its duty willingly. No other article takes hold of the system and hits exactly the spot ki HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA 1t works like magle, reaching every part of the human body through the blood, giving to- all renewed lifo and energy. My friend, you need not take our word. Ask your nelghbor, who has just taken botté. He will tell you that * It’s the dollar I ever Inve: > Lenaxow, N. 1., Feb. 19, 1870 > 1. Hoop & Co.: Dear MEessns. Birs - Although g galust patent medicines in general, 1 was induced, from the exccllent reports I had heard of your Sarsaparilla, to try a bottle, last December, | for dyspepsih and general prostration, and 1 ave recelved very gratifying resulis from is use. L am now uslug e second y rnd consider it a very valuable remedy for udigestion a Its atendant troubles. ¥ . CHURCHILL, (Firm of Carter & Churchill.) 537" A gentleman who ) has been suffering from Ga’”Od | ovunan 't ok “seer 10 Pounds says: ‘“HooD'S SBARSAPARILLA s putting: new life right into me. T have galned ten ronnd- since I began to take it.” Hastaken WO bottles, + HOOD'S BARSAPARILLA Is s0ld by all drug. “iends indeed, and rarely give ofinse, N glsts. Prico $1 per bottle; six for $4. Pro~ DA hu 0 T HWOAD o0 v PP PR Vitlata, body of the,.. i

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