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THE DAILY BE Vital Questions !t Ask the most eminent phytician OF any school, what is the best thing in the world for quieting andl allaying all irri- tation of the nerves and curing all forms of nervous complaints, giving natural, childlike refroshing sleep always? And they will tell you unhesitatingly “Some form of Hops!” CHAPTER 1. any ot all of the most eminent the best and .ml{ remedy that can be relied on to cure all diseases of the kidneys #nd urinary organs; such as Bright's disease, diabetes, retention or inability to retain urine, and all the dis- eases axd ailments peculiar to Women”— “And they will tell you explicitly and emphstically, ‘‘Buchu.” Ask the same physicians “What is the most reliable and surest | cure forall liver diseases ordyspepsia; con- stipation, indigestion, biliousness, malarial fever, ague, &c.,” and they will tell you: “‘Mandrake! or Dandelion!” Hence, when these remedies are com- Wined with others equally valuable And compounded into Hop Bitters, such awonderful and mysterious curativepower is developed which is so varied inits opera- tions that no disease or ill health can possibly exist or resist its power, and yet it is Harmless for the most frail woman, weakest invalid or smallest child to use. CHAPTER 11, “Patients “Almost dead or nearly dying” For years, and given up by physicians of Bright's and other kidney diseases, liver complaints, severe coughs called consumption, have been cured. Women gone nearly crazy! From agony of neuralgia, nervousness, wakefulness and various diseases peculiar to women. People drawn out of shape from excru- tiating pangs of Rheumatism, Inflammatory and chronic, or suffering from scrofula! Erysipelas! it rheum, blood poisoning, dyspepsia, indiges- tion, and in fact almost all diseases frail Nature is her to Have been cured by Hop Bitters, proof of which gan be found in every melichborhond "in the known rld & NOTED BUT UNTITLRD WORMAN. Orrom the Boston Giobe.) \&\\!!‘l \I AN ‘esare, Editors — Tho above 1s & good lkeness of Mrs. Lydia E. Pinl m, of Lynn, Mass., who above all other human belng wmy be truthfully called the “Dear Friend of Woman, s0me of her correspondents love to call her. b smealously devoted to her work, which fs the outcom £ a lifostudy, and is obliged to keep six Iad mistants, to help her answer the large correspondend hich dally pours {n upon her, each bearing its specti arden of suftering, or joy at reloase from it. H( ‘egotable Compound fs & medicine for good and ng #ll purposes. I have porsonally {nvestigated it sz . of the truth of this. On acoount of fta proven merita, it 1s recommends #d presoribed by thebest physicians in the country 0o sayns “It works like a charm and saves mud Ain. Itwill cure entirely the worst form of fallir| * the uterus, Leucorrhosa, frregular snd paintd 2nstruation, all Ovarian Troubles, Inflammation an foeration, Floodings, all Displacements and the cor squent spinal woakneas, and is espocia'y adapied 8 %o Change of Life.” 1t permecates every portion of the rystem, and give #w life and vigor. It removes faintuess, 0a’ ulency #atroys all craving for stimulants, and rolloves weak #es of (hostomach, It cures Bloating, Headachos lervous Prostration, General Debility, Sleeplessnand fepression and Indigostion. That feeling of bearing own, causing pain, welght and backache, i alway ermanently cured by its use. It will at all times, an/ ndar all clrcumstances, act in barmony with the lay ‘at governs the femalo systein. At costs only $1. per bottle or six for §5., and is soid rugglsts, Any advice required as to special cases, Ac names of many who Liave been restored o perted salth by the use of the Vegetable Compound, can b btatned by addressing Mra. P.. with stamp for repiy A her home in Lynn, Mass. For Kidney Complaint of effher sex this cormpound asurpassed as abundant testimonials show. “Mr Pinkham's Liver Pills,” says onn writer, “se “he world for the cure uf Constipation nd Torpldity of the liver. Eez Mool wondars in it special 1ino and tids £a) npound in its popularity. <t hor as an Angel of Mercy whoos s 1g00d o othera, - @ Mrs A.8LD, b COMPOUNDED WITH MINERAL WATER. BEST REMEDY G FARHEUMATIS M, CONST! BILLIOUSNESS KIDNEY COMPLAINT LUNG DISEASES y 1 IMPURE BLOOL ILER & 0., For sale b SOLE MANUFACTURERS OMAHA, NEB. A Bkin of Beauty 1s & Joy Forever. RAMBLINGS OF AN EPICURE. | Discarsive Notes o the Hostlris x| Bating Honses of London and Paris. How the Poor Americau is Fleeoed by the By the Wily English Waiter With Watchtul Eye. A Glimpse of the Paristan Pauper Pris Correspondence St. Paul Ploweer Pross. For a week I have beem in the very center of Paris, in the largest hotel of the French capital, built since Eugenie's insane war with Germany. It has arisen on the ashes of the old treasury depart- ment of Louis Napoleon, opposite the Tuileries garden. It is a significant fact that this treasury department, the war department, the Hotel de Ville, the Tuilerios, and the one or two other pub- lic buildings that were burnt, all con- tained vouchers or books recording the plrjuriu, forgeries and thefts of Louis apoleon and his ministers, and that the public buildings that were spared con- tained none ugthuuc evidences of treach- ery and robbery. Does not this at least tend to show that the terrible agra- tion was the work of the usurper'sfriends instead of his enemies? 1 have not been here long enough to learn much that is at once new and in- teresting, but I have met some well- known Americans, and I have made a short study of the means of living hero, a8 compared with those of London and New York. THE HOTELS, The hotels of Paris are far better than those of London. In London only the small hotels are tolerable; in a large hotel there you feel as if you were in a balloon whose aeronaut had tumbled out—in a precarious position, and uncertain where you will land. Here there are twenty or thirty hotels of all sizes, where an A- meri can cango and make himself comfort- able—this one, the Grand, the Bristol, the Chatham, the Castiglione, the Meu- rice, the Binda, and many others. The Grand hotel in London advertises: ‘¢ Americans wanted liere,” and the proprie- tor of the Langham recéntly hung up on the inside of each door: ‘‘Any person who di n this room will be charged 4 No Paris landlord will be guilty of such imbecilities. In Paris, as in London, the guest at the hotel pays only for his room, if he chooses to take his meals out, and here as there the price of a room is from $2 to $5 a day, without regard to the number of occupants. Tickets to table d’ hote, at 6 p. m., are 81.25 to $1,40 each, depending on the hotel; but there is always a dinner a la carte served, which (after 20 cents for the seat) may be as much or little as the dinner wishes. At table d’ hote, of course, all the diners eat the very same things in the very same order at the same time. A good many live at the hotels and take a part of their meals out at cheaper res- taurants, and in this way current expens- es can be reduced to reasonable propor- tions, The London hotel restaurants have a petty trick peculiar to themselves. You seat yourself with your family of four and order, as you would at the best restaurants in New York, portions of soup, fish, meat, etc., for two, supposing that it will be enough. Prosently the head waiter comes to you and says quiet- “You are Americans and may not know the customs of this country. = You are not permitted to eat of each others por- tions. If you all eat of two soups, we shall charge vou for four soups; if you all eat of the two meats, you must pay for four; if you all eat of the one aspara- gus you must pay for four.” “See here,” you probably protest, “whose dinner is this when 1 pay for it, yours or mine!” 1t is yours,” he replies calmly, “if you eatit in the way we direct, but not otherwise, If thero was ton in your party at this table, and, at the close of dinmer one of you should order a plate of nuts, and each of you should take one nut, we should charge ten plates of nuts in the bill."” You are thoroughly mad by this time, very likely, and what your rejoinder is depends on your temper and your bring- ing up. Kemonstrance is vain. You may call them thioves, extortionists, bar- barians, what you like; it makes no dif- ference, A part of the waiter's duty is to wateh you; he studies the geography of your table, the gustatory preferences of your family, and if you offer to each of your two children, who don’t relish their mutton chops, a part of the boef- steak on your plate, you will find three beofstonks charged in the bill. *“What's this?” T said, as 1 passed up my check to had just tipped, hopped nimbly forward and said, “‘Hi seo the ladies " pick 1 some of the gennelman's cherries, si Then I remembered asking them if they wouldn't prefer some of them to their bi but rather unripestrawberries, You liufi no such pig-headedness as this in Paris, of course. MY RESTAURANT EXPERIENCE, In London there are only four or five really good restaurants, of the high class of which there are twenty in New York and ten or twelve here. 1 mean restau- rants which are not confined to the guests of a hotel. In Lendon, as in New York, the waiters in the best restaurants are universally masculine. And there isa freedoom and familiarity, as it werc, to the London waiter which have not yet been naturalized on our shores anywhere, In the most stylish restaurants of London the waiters, getting hungry, will three or four of them, sit dewn around the table next you and have a joyous time eating their dinner too. It banishes the sense of loneliness in a guest and makes him feel that he is being taken right into the DR. T.§FELIX GOURA U D |bosom of the family. ~American waiters, Oriental Cream or Magical Beautifier. The Oriental Cream Purifies as well as Beautifios Pimples, instead of being familiar and confi- dential, are oftener haughty and reserved, There that splendidly-up-holstered head waiter at the States at Saratoga, now; he looks like a minister plenipoten- deteo- | tiary, All the guests behold him with awe, not unmixed with fear, except Mr, Vanderbilt, the only terrestrial being to whom he ever speaks. He always looks ¥ | over my head. The height of my earthly ambition is to catch that creature’s eyo : fand got & nod from him, If ho were in & London restaurant he would sit right name. | down next to a guest and make Lim feol 9 The distin. ied Dy y of the s thom, fone barmie | given to about twenty comfortable and happy. THE DUVAL ESPABLISHMENTS, The Establishw cap restaurants i overy oy, A b Juo | of Paria—serve an_adwirablo purposs in supertiuous . T. GOURAUD, Sole Canad without injury to the 304 Fancy Goods eal the culinary economy of the city, Each Prop 48 Bond | Of these is a restaurant where an excel- lent meal may be had at any hour of the day at the lowest price at which the food nts Duval—a name | b i about as good. Everything is as neat and clean and respectable as can be in an Establishment Duval; the floor is clean, the table is clean and always freshly eov- ered, the dishes are clean, and the wait- ing maids are as neat as a pin in their plain frocks of black stuff; with a broad turn-down white collar at the throat, a white apron in front, white sleevelets drawn over the hand to the elbow and fastened there with a blue ribbon, a dainty cap of white mull, a top of hair combed primly and smoothly back, and what is this dangling by a long black ribbon over the apron! Sure enough that omnipresent necessity of every wait- er in Paris, a_corkscrew. These waiter- esses are highly proper and even demure. In half a dozen visits I have not seen so much flirting as one will see in a New York dairy. As you enter the door aman hands you a blank bill of fare to be marked by the girl who serves you, and handed by you to the cashier, whom you pay as you leave. Here are some of the prices put in English—and you may have one thing or more as you please: Napkin eie 1e|Coffee, with milk... 8¢ Ordinary bread Bo Butter ine . 10e Soup...... . 4e/Mutton chop......10¢ Ronst beef......... 6c Beefsteak. ........120 Fish. ... ) .10c/ Vea cutlet 10c Tce (for water). 1c/Ice cream. . ........10¢ ce Coffee,with brandy. 8o As each portion, though small, is enough for one person, it is easy to see that one can scarcely spend a dollar at a sitting, except on wines of higher price, which I have not tabulated. These es- tablishments are always pleasantly equip- ped with flowers and centrally located, and they are patronized by the best class of people—merchants, bankers, strangers from the hotels, clerks, etc.—any body who can afford, for it is of course a lux- ury for the poorer classes to take dinner here. They visit humbler places still. THE CMEAPER EATING HOUSES, While rambling through the bright shops of the Palaise Royale yesterday, and inspecting the jewelry and trinkets in that vast bazaar of vanished nobility which Richelieu built 250 years ago, came upon a restaurant snugly set in one of the arcades, where a regular course dinner could be had for a franc and a quarter—25 cents, I tried the experi- ment. The soup was not very flavorous —Iskipped that; the fish was excellent ~—fried soles, about the daintiest fish in the world. A choice of meats—I took a mutton chop, and it was a success, te der and savory, Pommes-de-terre I took some of their little varnished po- tatoes, the same that they serve every- where in Europe, and some aspery paragus, if you please. Meanwhile they brought me half a bottle of claret and topped me off with cheese. It was good, and all for a quarter! Nowhere in America could one get such a dinner for twice that. And, 1 fiid, on inquiry, that there are some twenty of these restau- rants in Paris, too, greatly patronized by the working classes here. ~ Then there is a four cent restaurant here, where every comer is furnished with soup, meat and bread. I did'nt eat there, thanks, but I went to one. Men, women and children stand up to a low counter, where bowls of soup are handed them and a bit of conrse bread and a spoon. Then the man behind the counter seizes a long crooked fork, and with it makes a dive into a huge caldron behind him where the soup was made. The fork catches a rag of meat, and he drags it out and flings it intoa bowl. It is a straight game of chance. ~The customer may got a decent bit of meat, and may not, and it is rather pathetic to hear the expres- sions of disappointment. THE PAUPERS OF PARIS, A traveler who wrote a book on Java devoted a whole chapter to *“The White ‘Bears of Java.” It consisted of oneline: t‘There are no white bears in Java.” So ‘he stranger living heve might write, “There are no beggars in Paris.” This is almost literally true, for beggary is made by law a " crime, and a person ap- proached on the street here by an out- stretched hand has only to call the atten- ton of a policomun to the suppliant and ave him arrested and sent to the work- house prison—if he have the heart to do it. But walking down the Rue Rivoli when the far-apart lamps are dim, (and they always are), or in the shadows of the Tuileries’ broken wall, when the night is dark, (and it always is in this worst-lighted city in the world), the pe- destrian will see here and there a phan- tom hand and hear the accents of a low monotonous prayer. Paris has few boggars, but many paupers. Al around the Place Bastile, is poverty wide and deep—ns it always is in a great city densely packed, Only on one day in the year—on New Years day—are these pau- pers free to beg. Then they sally forth ~those who have escaped the workhouse gang; they come with their picturesque rags about them, and with wives and e e e e babies in a wilderness of other rags, and e ARy o clicrriag? Tfif. th(’?']_msh crippled little carts before them waiter, who hovered near and whom |1 #ing doleful merry songs, and laugh miserably and dance rheumatically, and {¢| sccumulate all the petty gifts they can. On that day the town turns itself inside out. Down town goes joyously up town; the St. Antoine invades the Champs Ely- soes. Once, in a while, too, in spite of all barriers, this pauperism breaks forth violently. e The Grangers. Mr. H. O. Devries, Master, Patrons of Husbandry, of Maryland, says: I tried the wonderful remedy, St. Jacobs Oil, on a mare of mine, badly crippled, and a few applications restored her so soundness, 1 was attacked myself with rheumatism, so severe it was agony itself. Three appli- cations of the great pain-cure completely cured me. e —— The Destroyer's Armament, N. Y. Sun, July 17, The torpedo boat Destroyer, built by the inventor of the monitors, has been lying at the brewery wharf, Tompkins- ville, 8. 1,, fora week. She will start for Sandy Hook this morning, where the rmpmhopl that have been in progress lor some time past will be completed, and the latter part of this week preliminary tests will be made of the destructiveness of the boat when operating in deep sea waters, A target set at an eighty yard range will be used for these tests.” It consists of a wide net set on floating reels, and which drops into the sea. It will show the distance and accuracy with which it is possible to throw the missiles. The tarpedoes used wel 500 pounds, and are shot from & gun peculiar construction that required ex- tensive experiments to reach its present effectiveness, which Mr. Ericsson and his employgs think perfect. The torpedo is | placed in the breech of the gun, and is conical in shape, like a minie rifle ball. It explodes instantly on touching the ob. ject fired at, without allowing any recoil, The gun is placed in the bow, and is ten foet under water, so that it is nnpos- sible to disable it by shot from the arma ment. When the charge is exploded, two valves that form the mouth of the | can be served on a cemmercial basis. A o ase imidations. §1,000 rows for dinuer here costs loss than half what it run are forced apart automatically and ot the torpedo pass out into the water. E, OMAHA, MONDAY, JULY 23, 1883. small lookout hole in front of the eabin, the latter being protected by heavy steel plate armor. The range is regulated b; a wheel, which the gunner turns at plea. sure, and is like an ordinary steering wheel, There are nine engines aboard the craft. All these are under not less than seven feet of water, and can not be reached by shot or shell. The Destroyer in 90 feet long, and has cost Mr, Ericsson about 1100 per foot, or upward of $70,- 000. He says that ten such vessels could destroy the finest navy extant, andamply srotect the harbor of New York from the eaviest invading force known to modern warfare, e GARFUNKEL'S RUSA. A Girl of Seventeen Sues a Boy of Six- teen for Breach of Promise. ew York Tribune, His name is Abraham Garfunkle, and his age sweet sixteen. Yet was he sued for breach of promise, and yesterday the trial was had before Judge Nehrbas, in the city court. Miss Rosa Traurig, sev- enteen years of age, by her guardian Jos, Siegel, of No. 134 Ludlow st., was the maiden in the case, Of course the dear little boy had to be Mr. Wolf Garfunkle filled both toward the youth. The Garfunkles live at No. 204 Broom street, and Miss Traurig with her guardian, Joseph Siegel, through whom she sued, at No. 134 Ludlow street. Miss Traurig only demanded 2,000 in damages for the fracture to her henrt. Tho entire Garfunkel family, consist- ing of father, mother and four children— two boys and two girls—were in court, and as they stood in a row before the judge formed agroup that would have interested a photographer. The sixteen- yor.old Gartunkel, defendant, was the oldest but one of the children. There was not yet a sign of a hair on his face. Miss Traurig, the plaintiff, a good-look- ing, plump young lady, dressed in car- dinal red and wearing “a hat with a red feather, was surrounded by.a number of friends, male and female. ~Only in June she became acquainted with young Gar- funkel, and on June 30, she swore, he promised to marry her. She was in a situation, and at his urgent request gave it up, that they might got married at once and begin housekeeping. She went to much expense making preparations for the wedding. In the beginning of July the boy backed out, she said, and refused to marry her. She then got a lawyer, and Judge Nehrbas issued a war- rant for the arrest of young Garfunkel. He was taken into custody like any older crusher of maidens’ hearts and locked up in Ludlow street jail in default of bail. There he lay until the trial came off yes- terday. The boy’s story under oath was that on June 30. Joseph Siegel, the girl’s guar- dian, called after him at his father’s house and ‘meoting him in_ the hallway asked him to come over to his (Siegel’s) house, which the boy did. When he got there he found agood many people, and Joseph Siegel, he alleges, gave him beer and whiskey till he became intoxicated. He was then made to sign a paper which he was no¢ in a condition to understand or even to read, but which he found after- ward to be a contract of marriage between Miss Traurig and himself. The first time he saw her, he swore, wedding., He danced with her on the oc- Judge Nehrbas first took up the ques- friends could not prove him over sixtoen, they could not hold him to his promise, even if he had made one. Both sides, therefore, braced themselves for the ef: fort, Miss Traurig and her abettors to prove him over that figure, or at least that limit. The latter assumed the onus of establishing their case first. Wolf Garfunkel, the boy’s father, took the stand and swore himself seventy-five years of age and young Abraham sixteen. The boy, he said, was born in 1867 in Gallicia, in Austria, and the Garfunkel family as a whole were only two years in this country. Sarah Garfunkel, the lad’s mother, likewise swore him sixteen. Yet when the lawyer asked her how she knew she replied that “they told her so.” This r’:m considered evidence enough for the boy. On the other hand,Joseph Siegel swore that he knew Abraham Garfunkel five or six montas, and that the father had told him more than once that the youth was twenty-one. Leonard Traurig testified to like effect, and Miss Taurig herself being recalled, said that young Abraham had assured her confidentially he was as much as twenty- two and perfectly able to_contract mar- ringe. He had told her that he was in the jewelry business and had a store of his own. "As to his being made drunk at her guardian's house, it was all false she said; he drank no beer or liquor there. He had begged her to marry him at once and the contract of marriage was drawn at his request she said, and signed by him yoluntarily. Judge Nehrbas found that the boy was under age, and on that ground dismissed the complainant aud gave him his liberty, whereupon there was much rejoicing among the Karfunkels and a correspond- ing depression of spirits on the other side. e — HumaN Broon.—On the purity and vi- tality of the blood depend l‘lu vigor and health of the whole system. Disease of various kinds is often only the sign that nature is trying to remove the disturbin cause. A remedy that gives life an vigor to the blood, eradicates scrofula and other impurities from it, as Hood's Sarsaparilla undoubtedly does, must be the means of preventing many diseases that would occur without its use. Sold by dealers, e INDUSTRIAL ARBITRATION. of an Effort to Harmonize Dif- 'ween Labor and Capital, The Bucce ferency New York Tunes. The sucoess of the efforts to settle the difforences between the coal miners of western Pensylvannia and the companies which employ them an event of no small importance. On the first of May the operators proposed to reduce the price rmd for mining coal from 84 to 3 cents a bushel, The miners did not acquiesce in the reduction but to the number of eight thousand determined to strike work, Shortly afterward a bill passed the Penn- sylvania legislature providing for volun tary tribunals for the settlement of dis- putes betwsen employers and employed. | It was determined at once to test the prac- tical utility of this measdre, and the miners resumed work pending the arbi- tration. The tribuual apppinted for the | purpose, and made up of gepresentatives of both sides of the contrgversy, made a thorough investigation off the “condition of the trade and the claifgs of both par- ties, but failel te agreed The matter was then raferrad to ‘he wiwire who had was two months ago at his elder brother's Epllepsy, cusion pnd never spokg,to her or saw her @ Spasms, Convul- since, n “Ellous. Falling tion of the boy’s age. 1If the girl and her that he made them believe he was; the boy and his folks to bring him within lheen agreed upon, A prominent banker of Pittsburg, and he decided upon 3} nts a bushel as the price which the op. | erators could afford to pay and still make | | asmall piofit by adopting certain practic- | economies in_the conduct of their | business, and which the miner's under the circumstances of the case, to be will- [ing to nccept. The miners expressed | their satisfaction with the decision and | their willingness to continue work at the | new rate, and it is believed that the oper- ators will acquiesce. e children, find M ellen’s INVALIDS, a8 wel | ost satistac g arti- | | . Tts me dapts | most ¢ h, while its ngthening properties are wonderful. It t | may be had of your druggist. | e Tom Thumb's Life. Stratton came to the notice of P. showman describes him as being under | two feet high, weighing less than sixteen pounds, beautifully formed; a blond, | with ruddy cheeks and mirthful eyes. | Barnum introduced Stratton to the pub- | lic on Dec. 8, 1842, by the name that afterwards preceded him around the | world—Gen, Tom Thumb. He paid him | 83 a week, with e | engaged for twelv but long before his term oxpired Mr, Barnum paid him 25 a week. In Jan- uary, 1846, Tom Thumb now getting 850 a week and expenses, set sail with Bar- num for Burope in the Yorkshire, a sail- ing ship. The little general proved a hit | in England, France and Germany, and | he was exhibited ‘‘before the crowned | heads.” In the autumn Tom Thumb re- turned with his manager, who was then | proprietor of the muscum that bore his name, and early the next year the mite returned again to Europe. ~Barnum took in §5,604,91 in twelve days with him in Philadelphia, and §976,97 in one day in Providence, Mr. Barnum took him to Havana and made a great deal of money there. After the dwarf was put in chs of agents of Mr. Barnum who had no d sire to spend his life in travel. In 18 Barnum took Tom Thumb and Cordelia | Howard, achild who was famous as little Eva _in Uncle Tom's Cabin, to Europe, | and in 1862 he engaged Lavinia and Min- | nie Warren, two tiny sisters, to the for- | | mer of whom Tom Thumb lost his heart at the showman's home in Bridgeport. The fact that Tom Thumb and Lavinia Warren were to be married redoubled the popular interest in them, and Barnum off- ered them 815,000 to postpone the wed- |ding a month. This was_indignantly re- fused. The showman resisted the temp- tation to have their wedding viewed by the public at so much a seat, though he said he could have made $25,000 by ex- hibiting the ceremony in the Academy of Music. They were married in Grace | church and held receptionafterward in the Metropolian hotel. ~ This was in_1862. Of late years the name of Tom Thumb occured “outside of the museum show bills, He and his wife escaped with their lives, but lost some.money and jew- elry in the burnimg of the Newhall house at Milwaukee. Gen. Tom Thumb long ago grew in height, became stout, and beard. He was prudent, lived comfort- ably and saved money. A SPECIFIC FOR. EH l Sickness, Bt. Vitus Dance, Alcohol- ism, Opium Eat~ Euil, Ugly Blood Discases, Dyspep- ia, Nervousness, EEBE heumatism, | Nervous Weakness, Brain Worry, Blood Sores, Biliousness, Costiveness, Nervous Prostration, Sample Testimoninlk, “Samaritan Nervine is doing wonders. | Dr. J. 0. McLemoin, Alexander City, Ala, Dr. 1. It Laughiin, Clyac, Kausas, | erecorcdwicre phyiiclanaalled.” " For testimonials and circulars send stamp, The Dr. S.A, Richmond Med. Co., St. Joseph, Mo, Sold by all Druge an Scrofula, Kings ick Headache, Kidney Troubles and Irreqularities. $1.50. “1 feel ity duty to reccmmend it A Correspondence freely answered. 6% The ECONOMY And Mose and Steaw PRESSES! Strictly Portable BEST AND CHEAPEST Satistaction guaranteed money refunded. lished 1867 in use. The old d S lurgost Hay Pross Factory I 14 his cotintry. tor s illustrated ciroular. GEO. ERTEL & CO., Quiney, Iil. _y Mowaey st me Sl b B WL P3% Hostetter's Stomach Uwfihfl! & Bittors mects tho ro- 1 CLLESRATED quirement of the ra. tional medical philos- ophy which at_pros- ent provails. 16 1s o tectly pur vege- bleremody,embrac ing the hreo propor. ties of aproventive, o " tonic and an altera- 5 tive. It fortifies the body against discase, invigorates and re- vitalizes the torpid tomach and liver, d effects & salutary nge in the entire STOMACH 8 F PrirERS = NTH‘_QHEAT ENGLISH REMEDY, NERVOUS "0 mavsicar,« [bilty when all other reme- A cure Ll’”‘"‘”"’“" wttle, large bottle, four e quantity, 8. By ex: press to any address. Sold by all druggists. ENGLISH MEDI ITUTE, Proprietors, 718 Olive Street, St Vital Restorative BELLEVUE COLLEGE. Under the care of the Presbyterian Synod of Ne a Soptowmber 10th. Classical and Sclentiflo courses with preparatory department; also, | fusical and Art Dopartment, all open to both sexes. Tuition low. Location beautiful and healthful., - Only fr paha on the B & M. R K irculars, PROF. W. J. BOLLMAN, Jy18d-eod misaky John D, Peabody, M. D,, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. OFFICE ROOMS, 8 and 5 1607 FARNAM, URING THE NEXT TWO WEEKS FineChamber Suits WALNUT, ASH AND MAHOGANY GREATLY REbUCED PRICES. THIS 1S THE Bamm i Kovember, 189 and e GTeatest Bargain ever Offered in Omaha, for such Goods. CHAS. SHIVERICK, 1206, 1208 and 1210 Farnam Street, Omaha Neb. Jenses for himself and | sued through his father, or guardian, and | mother, for four wecks. Then he was re- months at 87 a week | E. B. CHAPMAN & CO. Wholesale Grocers ! 1213 Farnam St., Omaha, Neb. Double and Single Acting Power and Hand PUMPS, STEAN PUMPS, Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery,§ Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fittings, Steam Packing at wholesale and rejail. AND SCHOOL BELLS, Corner 10th Farnam St., Omaha Neb. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH WILSON’S MEE! 100 | censed to be the smallest mortal on exhi- | bition. He wore a mustache and a| 17 Build all kinds of Steam Boilers. Smoke Stacks, Breeching Tard, Water and Oil Tanks, and do a genera plate-iron business. Repairing done in City Having had many years experiencein the trude in dif, atistaction, having the best shop and tools in the State. Wi Works| - NEBRASKA. Country. Al work Done at Eastern Prices and Warranted ! Second-hand Boilers will be kept o of the country, Iam confide; ILSON Proprie T SINEOI.D, ACTURER OF Galvanized lron Comices, Window Caps, Finials Thirteenth Street = Neb OMAHA, =~ . . A. M. CLARK, Painter & Paper Hanger SIGN WRITER & DECORATOR. WHOLESALE & RETAIL IWALL PAPER WINDOW SHADES & CURTAINS, Cornices, Curtain Poles and Fixtures. PAINTS, OIL & BRUSHES, 107 South 14th Street, EBRASKA. cuted. unications to GATE CITY PLANING MILLS! MANUFACT EKS OF Carpenters’ Materials, —ALSO— Sash, Doors, Blinds, Stairs, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window & Door Frames, &' First-class facilitics for the manufacture of all kinds of Mouldings. Plan $ Onder from tho countey wil b, cuted e 42, Mwialing. B, ecioty A AJMOYER, Proprietor. PIANOSKLORGANS On Long Time--Small Payments. At Manufactorers Prices. A Hosps, Jr 1630 DODGE STRE OMAEIA, Particular attention iven to re airing. Satis ect (x ¢unranteed. J. H. CIBSON, CARRIAGE AND WAGON MANUEACTORY. CORSER TWELFTH AND HOWARD TREETE, INEB. Resideuce, 1714 Douglas - + Omahas, Neb PERFECTION IN Heating and Bakiwug Is only attained by using "CHARTER OAK Stoves and Ranges, WITH WIRE GAUZE OVER DOORS, {For sale by MILTON ROGERS & SONS, OMAHA-