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! u——— Dry Goods and Carpet House. THAN EVER OF Have the Ever Brought to the City and at 401 BROADWAY, - Mast: The Largest and Most Reliable House for il Faey Goods IN THE WEST. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. Weber, Lindeman and Hardman Pianos. Western, Eastern, Cottage, Burdette Organs, tmevisit Engii wrier hat in he To- | FOR CASH OR ON TIME PAYMENTS Jg. MU E ARKNESS BROS... arges stack and cho the “howels of mother earth The inaugoial address of President Har rison, well written and with many excel IOWER PRICES Do Not Fail to Call and Examine Stock Before Purchasing, PALACE MUSIC HALL, it e ¢ that a strict ex- | : Inaungural Addresses, HOW SOME PRESIDENTS HAVE INDULGED THE CLASSICS Gen. Taylor, when President, althongh the documient was read and submitted to bis Cabinet, had & sentence, which was ubsequently altered in the print ments, in which it was hoasting hat our country “was at peace with all the world,” and “had amicable relations with the e f mantind.” When 1 the cust patterts ob world " was cmbraced, “the rest of man- kind” must have boen inte for the undiscovered country which John Cl Symmes expected to hring to light from lent things in it, was o much devoted t English classies and to Roman history to create much sport, Tt was a decument like ¢ 1S, that one could safely swear by, for was nothing in the heavens or on the earth like it. Denni- 's was ridicnlous for its big and'un- aning words and his attempt to show his knovi ledge 0 while that of Gen. Harrison was almost as much langhed at, from his drawing on Ro- ,man and Grecian history and the sayings of English authors The inaugural in its fiest paragraph de clares an intention to present to the peo ple a summary of the principles which would govern the new adini tion, and in doing this he thus “It was a remark an early day of that ¢ | of power and trust before aj ing them, they seldom carrying out in the latter ease the pledges and « made in the former. However much the world in of a de ) IN THIS VICINITY Roman Consul, in ed Republi was ol COUNCIL BLUFFS, 000 years since the remark v annals of some of tl electoral governments would d dence.” The President did this, no doubt, te pave the way for nnavoidable hreaking of promises mide in the heat of & canvass. [If the custom of hreaking promises und by eandidates existed in Rome cars ago, how beauuful remark of a dis- man Senate Octavius bad a party and An- | tony had a party, but the Commonwealth {had none. Yet the Senate continued to meet in the Temple of Liberty, to talk of | the sacredness and heauty of the Common- | wealth, and to gaze at the statues of the elder Brutus and of the Custii and Decii, and the people assembled in the forum, LILER, . T0WA, i b | f, COUNCIL BLUFFS, - : COUNCIL BLUFFS RAILROAD TIME TABLE. " The following are the time of arrival and departure | of trains from the local depots. The trains start from the Union Pacific depot about ten minutes earlier A than below statod, and arrive at the depot about ten minutes lnter. Trains on pool lines and K. C. run o a half hour fuster than local St. Louis tyme, twenty min colnl trains run on P. and Li \ N Depart, ¥ Mail and Ex Exprees 9 f Depart. % Overland E . Linook 1 il Leaves Coun f Mail and Ex. . Atlantic Ex b CHICAGU, MILWAUKE Leaves Omaba, ]r Mail and K ¥ b Leave Council Bluffs, | Sa.m. 94 ml m.1p. m. 2 p. m, p.m5 p. m. 6 p. m. Street cars run half h h Chicago, \ £ These card will without st Please orde { For Sioux Clt i ForFort. Neb' For St. Paul GIICAG0, MILWALKER XD ays. Aari . . [ Overland Ex a1 S N\ Baigrant | 0w, |6 P R p / ‘,-—57 HTUARI, ST, LOUIS AND EACIFIC, i Arrive, L i3 a.m. | Mail and Ex.. . m. | Cannon Ball TY AND PACIFIC, . . | Frm Sioux City8:00 | | Frm Fort Niobrara 15 a. m. | Pac 48:40 p. . | Mail {Exeept Saturdays, 5 faster than local ouncil Bluffs Express Mall and ¥ Actvic, Arrive ix COUNCIL BLUFFS AND OMAIIA STRERT RAILWAY, Leave Omaha. cars hegin th ularly duri , and run to vity RAILROAD. OFFICE ENT, OmalA AND CouNeit, BLUYFS, May 12, 1343, pping. your good FFREIGHT A INT, made for the me_ through to dest icktime fis thereby in Ve €. B& Q. I Ik A. B. WEST, GENERAL AGENT. Chicago time, Wabash trains run on u. m. 11:05 a. m. nion Pacific r trips at 0 duy at 9, Burlington & Quincy ar " | sgent for Peerson & Hill patent Inside Blind. Western Cornice-Works, C. SPECHT, PROP. 1111 Douglas St. 5 not as in the days of Camillus and the Scipios, to cast their free votes for annual magistrates or pass upon the acts of the Senate, but to receive from the hands of | the leaders of the respective parties their | shave of the spoils, and to shout for one or |the other, as those collected in Gaul or Egypt and the Lesser Asia would farnish the larggr dividend. The spirit of liberty had fled, and, avoiding the abodes of civ- ilization, had sought protection i the wilds | of Scythia or Scandinavia. And so, under the operation of the same causes and in~ | flnences, it will fly from our Capitol and our forum. A calamity so awful, not only ! to our country, but to the world, must be | deprecated by every patriot, and every | tendency to « state of things likely to pro- | duce it if not immediately checked. Such | a tendency has existed—does exist.”” | And s0'on to the length of the entire in- | augural, the good old man, for none doubht- ed Gen. Harrison'’s goodness of heart or v of his patriotism, went on, draw- | ing his illustrations n Roman history =W and English writers. The address was pre- | pared at his home, and written at his is- |ure. A day or two before his_inangaml, ST, LOUIS PAPER WAREHOUSE. : ? Graham ' Paper Co_,?m)!e;r‘ e ror fassanaca of Wb ster, by his devoted fri Harvey) met Gen. Harrison, and suguested Omaha, Neb. MANUFACTURER OF Cornices. Galvanizea Iron garDormer W Roofing, Specht adjusted Rateh and the general agent for t i g Fen “restings, Bulustrudes, Verandas, Tron Bank Railings, Window Blinds, Ce ards; alxo zeneral | the pu 217 and 210 *North Main jst., St Louis, WHOLESALE LEES IN /PAPERS, 3! PRINTERS’ STOCK, 3 P“Certainly,” said the President, “and pease 7 |let me tako yours” So tdcy exchi | documents. Next morning vihien they@iet, | Gen. Harrison said to Mr. Welwber, 41 should read your ird BOOK, NEWS, Tl APPING | had sketched out an “imaupural” for | Mr. Webster had_been selected for Sere- ten. “Will you allow me to take it Ipme | mine everybod, ald W you it, and thiat T dy® not. This i ths oy official paper Pt I propose to wifte, (021 | do not intesd to interfere with my Socre taries; bat thisis a sort of acknowlcdy megt on my part to the American people of the great honor they have conferred up- on me in electing me to the I'residency, und, although mgi inangural is not so suit- et any | alle as yours, still it is mine, and I propose T, ity papern e, | t0 let the people have it just ax T have it to visit the city for treat- | written it. I must deliver my own in- edicines can e went by 1oall or express every- | ytend of yours.” DR. WHITTIER, 617 St, Cherles St,, St. Louis, Mo, Elm street, N “FOR TABLE USE.” The Natural Mineral From Birresborn onthe Rhine, the highest medical authorities. FRED'K HOLLENDER & 00, Sele agents for the U ew York, You wiilbe sarsa T gou el Hop Bicters, pave sour Iife. it has saved 8. and Caunda, 115, 117, 118, 3m KAISER WATER, Recommended b wherc, “wurublo ewses guaruateed where doubt x| = \ypon My, Webster found that the Pres- Nervous Prostration, Debility, Mental and Physical | ident was bent upon using his own inaug- Weakness, Mercurid and_other affec | uml (I quote from the book,) Mr. Webster Skin and Bones, Blood Impurities amd desired to modify it, and get in rome Skin affections, Old e wnd Ulos wpedi- | things that were not there, for, as it then nts to Marriage, Rh tention to cases from overworked brain. al attention. Dise Imprudence, MARRIAGE: ;i G-UOIIDE. why, cattses, m postaze or st i DR et N o ete., is and intere paper. In reply to vidence of hnmbug about this, the advertisers are vory hi mtisw, Piles. Special at- | stoed, he said it had no more to do with SURGICAL ’(he affairs of the Amerimb gOvernment and people than a chapter iff the Koran, Gen. Harrisou reluctantly consented to let Mr, Webster take it, and he spent a lnrge rtion of the next day in modifying it. e was engaged to dine with Mr, Seation, ! [of the firm of Gates & Seaton, of the Na- tional Intelligencer, one of the warmest of Mr, Webster s admirers, When Mr, Web “Rarts of the | gter came in Mrs. Seaton remarked to him, Wnd strenthened,” | g ho arrived late, that he looked fatigued and worried. Mr, Webster was wr? that she bad waited dinver for him. ‘“That is of mo consequence at all, Mr, Webster," “Akwly _.’;"3’&; ‘:‘.r.lri';‘sla';l;.:ivu.,l » | 8aid she, “but I am sorry tosee you so won ¥ wholulo Even. riedand tired. I hope nothing has gone 7 7| wrong. Ireally hope nothing hus hap- NEBRASKA LOAN AND TRUST €0 ned.” “Yon would think thi sometbing - K:d happened if you knew what I have HASTINGS, NEB, done, l{avc killed #2venteen Roman Pro- consuls as duu.llnn) h‘llllelln, every one of them !” That is, he had purged the inaug $250.000. urdl of that many alluufinm to them, If the anecdote is true—Mr. Webster is its t author—the inaugural of Gen. Hurrison must have been @ condensed edition of Gibbon's Rise and Fall of the Romun E | pire instead of an insugural address of American President.—Cincinnati Enguirer. e Capital, - - JAS, B HEARTW 1. CLAKKE, V W . WERNTER. ¢ DIRECTORS. Oswald Oliver E. €. Webster Pratt, Jis. B. Heartwell, P rREF o7t %0 o Yy D. M. MebiiTinnes | It is seldom that you will feel unwell {or uffer from indigestion if you use | Brown’s Iron tters First Mortgage Loans a Speoialty | Sawuel Aloxander, Al — ARCOAL FOR INFANTS.—~During one of | the discussions on the alimentation und perasent home st | g eases of infunts, which occupy 80 wuch can bo negotisted o | attentionin France, M. Jules Guerin stated ol that the addition of a little charcoal (whout 2ol thestate throush | e g teaspoontul of Bellue s or other fine e | 1y powdered charcoal) to u nursing boltie full of milk exerts o most remarkable cur- wive efficet upon the diarrhaa of infants, | He has repeatedly scen children, who had hecome exhausted by seven or eight days . noof an o te dinrchoa, regain the appearance of health in two or 1 + he same time the charcoal i {ded, 1k ik wuld ulso be diluted 1€ or a third of sugared water : 1 tukin mixture without uo vowiting being | induced, = = e = yps e =G e ) - < s ! e | A ved-headed lasy in Kentucky, | But St. Jacobs Ol used bre 4o M SEULROR $ D%, LAlncoisbit Cured the back she had b 2 Mention Omaha B W the jutaps of Miss Ducl | velop similar instances of violated confi- fnithfully it has been | y pd and confiant, | give them the |and read it fo-night? . asked Mr. Wenter. | i ‘ | 7 ibstead of | wite | THE DAILY BEE---WEDNESDAY JULY re of Discase, Gymnastios as a O Bocrhaave, the great Dutch physician neribed on the wall of his nre-Too 1 geve the medicine, God euved the dis e He was far in advance of the doc fors of his era, and promulgated ideas which were then novel, but which scieuce lias since made conmon place. E In an age of dosing, when quantity was as much thought of as quality, he said “When I reflect on the immunity of bardworking people from the effects of wrongliving and overfeeding, 1 cannot help thinking that most ot our fashionable dis eases might be cured mechanically, ins of chemically, by climbing a bitterwood tree, or chopping it down, if you like, rather than swallowing a decoction of its disgusting leaves, Each sclioolhoy now knows that physi- el vigor is the basis of bodily health, and only b retained by exercise. But in ya fow physicians cared to utter Vit they themselves knew it. nowing that an ef« { sick, provided gym- They used these to pro- An old Greek doctor, Asclepindese, is quoted as an authority by Dr. Oswald to enforce the idea that gymnastics will cure disease. The philosopher had found that health it e preserved, and if lost restored, by physical exesciso alone, and not only discarded the use of internal remedies, but made public declaration that he would forfeit all claim to the title of physician if he should ever fall sick or die but by violence or extreme old age. Asclepindese kept his word, for he lived upward of a century, and died from the offoets of an accident. He nved to pre- cribo a course of gymmastics for every | form of' bodily ailment. nastic exercises, mote health and prevent di — AIDRUGCIST'S STOL - € Chapman, Diuggis ites us: T have for the past ten v gross of DIL WILLIAM HALL AM FOR THE LUNGS. Tewn sy it whiat T camnot say of muy other me { astoner speak of it bt to Mo Newlung | Whoopiug Navo used it in my own family for muny i fuct, always have o bottle in- the wedicing CARBOLICSALVE, AL o hVbtarh Gt alt Rheom, 'T' Sores, Ulvers e A hands, Chilblaing, Corns, and all kinds of | Skin ) kles and Pimples, Get HENRY OLICSALVE, as all oth- count ot | They worked a racket on young~ Griph at his boarding-house recently. | tected him raiding the pie closet and found that he had got away with & mince pie, some cookies, some doughnuts and some cheese. The landlady and her daughter together ' resolved on vengeance. They waited till Mr. Griph had devoured the food that he had taken and had made his appearance in the sitting room. Then the landlady | “Mary, you know that mince pic that we | made out of the meat we hought of the| strange bu ich_proved tg.be | | mule-meat ? * * Swild | | you do with it?” “Put it aside to | o old Jdly cookies thut the kerosene ith them " “Put Griph, recollected that there was er taste to those cook- | |ies, and kingof Telt like a man who had | | just starta Jin mllllm m;seriwlo(kn fil]fl‘ | sea vo But he tried to shake the Ifi-vliuuyr “ |lady, ‘yod know the cook earelessly used sowe very had eggs to make some dough- | uats?” I put the doughnuts aside for (the tramps, too; and I guess when they come to eat 'em, they'll think they've | swallowed an earthquake.” Griph felt| that he had. The sea-sick feeling scemed | to_grow instead of shake off. He grew | pale and shivered. The ladies were de- | lighted. “Mary,” said the old lady, “when u give those things to the tramps, don’t cheese that's with "en, for I | put poison in it to kill rats” Then Griph | heard, uneasy. “And Ma continued, “you know th the cook carelessly sp over. What did you them with the | to the President that as he (Harvison] was [ wanted to be sick. With a melancholy | overwhelmeed with busiuess, Mr. Wepster | howl he sprang up, rushed to his room and | " for }im. | took an emetic that nearly brought his feet | up. And he had a chill and headache and tary of State. The General replied 1t it | went to bed and stayed there for two days. | was unoecessary, as he bad it alveads viit- | And most of the time the lundlady wad | har duughter laughed consumedly. Vitiated blood needs cleansing. Theve all such cuses, S [ only one remedy | maaritan ine. Miss Jennie . Warren, 740 W, Van Buren St. Chicago J1.%ays *Samaritan | Nervine cered me of &, 21,50 at | Druggists, SN —— . A dog in New Mexico returning one | ®vening with his sheep to the fold, discov {exed that his master was still in his shanty | and Y%ept very quiet. The next evening it wits the same, But after penning up the |sheep the dog smelled ubout the door, | seratched, Yurked, snd even howled, as he | | was very huxgry, but his muster did not | |move. The dog true to his appointed | duty, went out With the sheep ou the third day, but that night when he drove the flock into theis pen Wi lust one to attempt {to get in beeame the victim of the dog's | Bppetite., This method of providing for | his own wants became a jaii of the fith- ful dog’s duty. Every ewening the last sheep to try to enter was seed by him |and served for supper and breu) fast apa N | for dinner the following day. The o |to which the dog belonged wis lua i tary part of the territory, und out' bf-the track of travel or visitation. For two | years trow (he time of his aster’s Geath “ascertained by data left by the lotter— the fithful dog tended the flock commited to his charge, and had fresh mutton for his |supper every' night. The flock was uai | decimated by this steady drain upon ifs resources, On the contrary, it incres in numbers, and when at the end of two years from the time of the death of the proprietor, the ranch was visited, aud the remaing of the owner found, the dog was still at his post of duty, jealously guard- ing his flock, and driving them to the best pastures overy and to the fold at night, hefore which he slept, o keep the wild sheep-eaters of the pluins uta civil dis- lance. — Baby's Appoar. OWhiat makes 1 ery and folks say ( d yo 4G | » | Physiologically, soup has great salue |for those who Burry to and from pheir | meals, as it allows an interval of conpari- tive test o the faintivg stomuch Hefore the more substantial bee and mutthn s attacked, rest hefore xolid food being g im- portant s rest afte Lot a hungry aud weary mewhant or lnwyer begin ldly with roast heef, and what is the rgult’? Pho defeat is oftea s sndden as wis (e tack. When the body is weary, the jow- ach cannotstand the shock of an i1l ted hali' pound of b Uil a smalfplate of 5oup he taken, vourishuent will sda b introd wd strength (o reeeive qoore | ubstant wi will folloy | e WSOHeFLY, A 1 o ) { it )| ated 1 Hll licted. The remarkib) f e, v uen and children as deseribed by ostis monials, prove Hood's Sarsaparilly 4 vel able modi ntaining remedial i which eradicate Scrofula from the Blood 100 doscs #1.00. Nold by all dealors, (. 1. Hood & Co., Lawell, Ma 1| It is one of the curiositiea of natural They de- | aid to her danghter: | the tramps.” ‘That, made Griph, ~60 A | preacher—-I now ask, brethren, what can And, Mary” said the old | | have had tl | be published « \ o 1883, Choice Thoughta, Moral order Fortitude other virtues Strive and encoury ision is a virtue of the highest is the guard and support of ¢ amind and will o e persuaded contrary vetter judgment 1o youx The heart is the only thing that is bet ter by being broken Clioose those companions who admin ter to your improyement 1t wnould ¥ finding reasons why other people e good-natured Take life just as God gives it to you, and e it beautiful as you can. The noblest deeds are often done where 1m0 eye but God's can see them Allowing the “blues” to master you is a sure way of cutting your life short man who sits down on the road to and waits for a tree ride is sure to | | be 1ot One of life's handest lessons from the | cradle 1o the grave is waiting. We send | our ships out hut cannot patiently await | their return | s, be fhey in ever 80 humble | ces, but what have some quality | of mind that entitles them to an equality | with their fellow-beings. A man who is unable to discover any er- rorsor mistakes in the opinions he former- ly held, is not likely to advance very fast in the requirement of knowledge. | To succeed in any of life's endeavors, be our talents what they may, we require per- severance, decision and tenacity of Wim reach the full measure of success. From the very hovels of poverty and destitution, we may, with Self*relinnoe, wreathe about our heads lnurels of undying fame and receive as o reward for our lal © crown of eternal life. He understands liberty aright who makes his own depend upon that of others. True liberty does not permit the enfran- chisement of one's self throngh the enslave- went of somo one else, You will seldom find an attorney at law ~he knows better.—Vanity Fair Relic. A correspondent of the Chi Tnter Ocean signs hersell “Alyce Carlysle.” Bhe | makes us smyle. | history that a horse enjoys lis food most when he hasn't a bit in his mouth, [ A facetions young man calls u certain | female institute a “Vennor weather pre- | diction,” becanse it contsins 80 many misses.—Norr. Herald. Ip she lungs of a potter who recently | died ins Wales was found fordy-elght per |cent. of silica. He must have been o grit- ‘ ty fellow when living.—Lowell Courier. “Durn the dog!" he said, “I'll settle his for him when I go down there to see fg..,,, to-night.” And he proceeded to sat- | urate the seat of his pauts with strychine. “Europe is treading on a volcano, old X. in his paper aloud. “Papa, 8 voleano?" asked the youngest. it in something to tread on my boy. “One touch of nature,” etc. 1 do to move yon in this world of wicked- ness ?” Array—“Send round the ’at, guv'- nor. That'll move ‘em.” ‘“There's some things as old as the hilly anyhow,” said old Uncle Renben. “Wha are they ?" asked his niece. “They’re the valleys between 'em, child,” solemnly ans- wered the old man. The Elmira Adveruser says that 300 es of red tape are yearly required to run the Washington departments. A few miles of the hemp might be introduced we helieve, without much detriment to the service.—N. Y. Com. Advertiser. The Clean spaper. There is a growing feeling in healthy communities against journals which make it their special object to minister to a per verted taste by seeking out and serving up in a seductive form disgusting and licen- tions revelations. There is good reason to believe that th Al NCWSpRPEE iS more highly prized to-day than it was four or ive years ago. It is also safe to predict that as people in all ranks of life, whe protect their own, at least from contami- nation, hecoming more conscious of the pernicious influence of & certain class of Journals, called enterprising beeause they are ambitious to serve up dirty scandals, they will be careful to see that the jour- nuls they permit to in the family cirele are of the class that never forget the proprieties of life. Already men and women of refinement and healthy morals ir attention ealled to the per- nicious influence of bad literature, and have made commendable efforts to counteract the same by causing sound literature to d sold at popular prices, Theso eflorts sre working a silent but sure revolution. The best authors are more generally read to-day than at any previous date. The sickly sentimen- tul story puper and the wild ranger and pirate story books are slowly but surely yielding the field to wortbier claim- ants, To the praise of the decent nows- paper, it may be_said that where it hos & place in the family and has heen read for years by young ns well as old, it has de- Veloped such u healthy tone and such a discriminating taste that the life-nuture of the slumslis no admirers. Fortunate- ly the number of such families is increas- ing in the land, and, a8 they increase, the Jjournal that devoted itself ro sickening revelations of immorality will he com- pelled to find its supporters solely among these classes who pratice vice and crime or | wre umbitious to learn to follov sucl ways. WE SHOULD HELP ONE ANOTHER. ME. NoRMAX HOa1, of No. 109 Chestnut stroet, Wpringficld, Mass., writen April 19, 1553, waylig: “Haying the afietion caused by kidney and liver diswases, wnd atter enduring the aches, palng, weak- dent thereto until ness and deprossion wly and A wiro nearly dist scted, 1 sought for reliof and a cure for my troubl, and was told by a fricud who Dk b cured by 1+ hiuiself, tiat the bost and enly temudy, and upon his recom | ¢ firntMew sure cure was Hy wl taking it, and t mendation 1 com ¢ Wivion 1n @ vers marked o use bk justified all o inproy ed iy ber, wnd & continy of it that it wis & sure of the khdneys that my fricads claied for it and permanent onro for all disoe AMES, Short Line Farnam Street Oakhurst ! Oakhurst ! Oakhurst !| Choico and Desirablo location for homes, Lots 60x124 $6 an alley. Terms one- fourth Oaal, balance long time. Eaay Pagtients. Reasona ble priecs J. I. Redick’s Sub-Division. Elegant Building Sites, | CHICAGO, Milwankee & St. Panl RAILWAY 1€ now running ite FAST EXPIESS TRAINS friom Iummmm-u NCIL BLUFFS with Pullman’s Magnificent Sleepers. g Cars i the workd tto CHICAC J ar iy point bevond; o if yon are PATL OR MINNEAPOLIS, Take the BENT | the CRICAGO, MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL v || Ticket oftive located at Paxton Hotel, at b stroets and At U, P, dlopoty Omaha. in another colim . MILWAUKER, ing north to ST 1OUTR, and Fourt [ and at Millard } ~ General Pas GEO. W, HEAFF feneral Sup't At G0 1 PLAIN TALK! We are aware that we are combating a proval projudice of the profession and people when we that we can and do cure diseases of the blood wi vegetable remedy! W ourselves were not. e convineed. Rut does it make anything less & wmply becauso yon do not believ Turm to history and read the wccounts of the dis- and application of steam, railry Vero not those who preached ¢ to wocom ‘o do not ask that you accept our word! We bring corroborating testimony. In sbort wo demansteate by ving, rolinble. « ttessen that every word we say in true. Ak voursell the question, could men oecupyiug the polltical, social and Anancial position these men do, Aford to endorve those engaged in a work of de- oeption snd of fraud? Now let them A Every word we say in regard to our remedy true, and the certificates we publish are from uwn ob anddnbted seracity. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC ¢O. ATLANTA, GAL JAN. 1, (582 pecijic Co., and ng part of the stock of said compang word ultered by them. 100 Lots, 7b6x142 and 00x142 to alley. ‘Terma one-third cash. Balance low rates of interest and long time. HANSCOM PLACE 150 Choice Lots. 50x150 on Easy rerms, TUTTLE’S SUB-DIVISION 5-Acre Lots. $625 One-fifth Down. at Six per Cent. Interest, Cunningham’s Sub-Division 2 1-2 Acre Lots, Balanco Long Time at | MAR, RANKIN & LAMAR Wholesale Druggists, LAvAR, RANKIN & rens of our State, %, and o ha ier and standing Al By W.ENGLISTL Wyor of Atlan ;I PORTER, Castior Merchants Bank. U, ROMARE, Cashior Mlanta Nutional Hank 3i.0: BACOX, Speaker Fouse Reps, Ga ALF. H. COLQUITT {Governor of Ga. Write for a copy of the littke Lok -trae, $1,000 Reward will be paid to any chemist wi will find on the analysis of 100 botles & X o particle of Mercury, Iodide Potassium, or any ‘ine eral ubstance, THE SWIFT SPECIFIC €0, ENDERSO, : d 808 Wyndotte St’ | years' practico - twelve i KANSAS CITY, MO. 2'm«.g~':. "Authorized by the state to tread’ Chronie, Nervous and Private discases Axthaa, Epilopsy, Rhcumatism, Piles, ‘Tape Worm, Urinary and Skin Dis- easen, Beminal Weakness (night losses) xual Debility (loes of wexual powers cte. Cures guaranted o money refunded. ¢h low. Thousands of cases cured. No injurious medi dnes ued. No business. All modk- cines furnishe 1ty at a distand Oon- sultation free_ uigy confldental —call or write age experlence are Wnportant. A BOOK and for both sexes- illustrated aud elroulars of otbee things sent sealed for two 2 e ) FREE MUB UM, ®3teod wiy A regular graduate in medicine. Over sixtoem DR, FELIX LE BRUN'S poisonous medicines to b unod a8 & preventiv contract any private » alrendy unfortunately - boxea to cure, o wo will Tetund the y mail, postage paid, 82 per box, o¢ three Loxes for §5. i WRITTEN GUARANT] Jsaed by all authorized agents. Dr.Felix LeBrun & Co MOLE PROPRIETORS. C. F. Goods 2, Druggist, Sole Agent, for Onaha, Neb, mie wly Health is Wealth. 2 1-2 Acre Lots, EVERY 10T A CORNER¢ EVERY LOT A CORNER, 8425 BOSTON & ALBANY RAILROAD. aud divor, Several of wy frivuds I Byriogtiold hay ba il o ot Saredd W3¢ e, third Down, Balwice Long Time, .46 ik s st #b, s el it | L ow Tuterest. Very Easy Paymonts, 1y dut [ 10 1w W rocompnend Hunts It the highost possible bapus, MANUFACTURER'S TESTIMONY, | ( i [ " Suburban Propcrty, | CHOICE LLCATION RARE INVESTMENTS, GROWING AND AVAILABLE Dr. K. C. Weat's Nerve and Brain Treatment, s guarantoed speciic for Hynteria, Dizziness2Con slons, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Teadache, Neorvoua Prostration caused by tho use of alcohol of tobaood, Wakofulpess, Mental ?’WNI Boftening of the Brain, resultlng in insanity and Joading to misery, Premature Ol Age, Barrenuess decay’ and d Loss of power in Losse Hpermatorshaa by ‘over. exertions of brain, self-abuse or over-indulgunoce. Eachh )« taing notith's treatment. $1.00 & box, o Loxes tor $6.00, Hent by mail propaid on receipe price. o, GUARANTEE SIX BOXES Tocurawny cass. With each order reccived by e for wix boxes accompanied with £5.00, we willsend the urchaser our written guarantoo to refund the money f the treatment docw ot affec isatied only by wko wly The Ploneer and only Vapor Cook Btow that' has sond the tost of years and given entiro and porfoos sabataction, Over 100,000 Now in Use! New Patent Hull Oyen. cmovable ronderiug our buriiees Buruer ou two New For Summer use these ¥or terus 10 ugents, price Address stoves list Mflfiu‘ 3 "Ry 20,0 ke 2 SULE VAROR STOXE c0., 5 eland,