Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 3, 1883, Page 2

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THE DAILY BEE, OMAHA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1883, | 8 U 18 UNFAILING . AND_INFALLIBLE | IX_CURING Bpileptic Fits, vl" Spasm, Falling Sickness, Convul- slons, 8t. Vitus Dance, Alcoholism, Oplum Eating, Seminal Weakness, Im- | potency, Syphilis, Scrofula, and all Nervous and Blood Diseases. §57To Clergymen, Lawyers, Literary Men, Merchants, Bankers, Ludies and all whoss sedentary employment causes Nervous Pros- tration, Trregularities of the blood, stomach, bowels or kidneys, or who require a nerve tonle, appetizer or stimulent, Samaritan Ner- wine Is invaluable. wonderful _Invigor- ant that ever sustain- od s sinking eystem. $1.50, at Druggists. Rz Ao GONQUERDR priotors, St. Joseph, Mo. | | ot testimonials and circulars send stamp, (18) T, 00l Perfoct substitute for Mother's Milk. The most nourishing dict for invalids and nursing mothers. Commended sicians | Keeps in all climates. Sold by all Send for the pamphlet. T M me-tukth-26t 41 Central Whar! P JE&C‘: g T‘a"-é‘ ;—,}Owwm CANM ((ljsm:»\ruz: WITH N7 N 7 {} WOMAN. s 3 7k ) YDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND. Sure Cure for all FEMALE WEAK NESSES, Including Leucorrhmn, Lr- <egular and Palnfal Metstruation, TInflammation and Ulceration of tho Womb, Flooding, P20~ LAPSUS UTERI, &oc. 9 Pleasant to tho tasto, efMencions and immediss it effect. Itisagreathelpin pregnancy, and 1 o pain durlng lsbor and ot regular pertods. PIYSICIANS USETT ASD PRESCRINE I ¥ @ Fon aLn, WEARNESSES of the generati: althor nix, i fa second (B0 Femedy tha *n hetore the publie; and for all disens DHEYR It .0 tho Greatest Remedy in the Tiorid Y ILIDNEY COMPLAINTS of Tltuer S ¥iud Crent Relicfin ks Une. LYDIA E. HNK“-‘I‘\" BLo Y‘I“tl“)"lwv Good A L1 pame Sme will g1ve tons ant s eyt Cyitem, Asmoa 1 it 22 o C. oo L7 otk the Compound and Blood Pardcr are piv arvd st %51 and €5 Western avenue, Lyan, Hae Ziew of elther, €1, x bottlos for g6, The Compi wert by wall La the form of pilla, or of lo o «celpt of priov, 01 per box for either, Mrs, Pin ™y ey answors all letbors of inquiry, Enclosdn wmno Sand for pamphict. Mention this Puper. YD 8, Prrxaaca Trvem 1 cure Coi L TTSbsTore and Torpblty € £ tho Liver. ‘& e o#~%014 by nll Din g glata. =G0 = Health is Wealth ! Dr. I3 O, West's Nerve and Brain Treatment, o guarantood specifio for Hyateria, Dizziness,"Convul slons, Fits, Nervous Nouralgia, 'Headacho, Nervous Prostration vaused bx tho uso of aloohol or tohacoo, Wakefulness, Mental Dopression, Softening of the Brain, rosulting in Insanity and Jeading to misory, docay and death, Promature Old Ago, Barrenness Loss of power in either sox, Involuntary Losse Spermatorrhoe caused by over exertions of Drain, buse or over-indulgence. Each box tains one mol 's treatment. ¥1.00 a box, or boxes for §6,00. Sent by mail prepaid on recelpt rice i WE GUARANTEE 81X BOXES To cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes accompanied with 85,00, wowillsend the hiasor. our writhen guaranteo orofund the money the treatment does not affect a cure. Guarantees sssued only by C. ¥, GOODMAN mo wi Drue fst Omaha Nob, DR, FELIX LE BRUN'S AND FOR EITHER SEX. This remedy being injected directly to the seat of the discase, requires no change of diet or nauseous, miercurial of poisonous medicines to b taken intern: ly. When used as . proventive by either wox, it is impossible to contract any private disease; but in the caso of those alr nfortunately aflicted we uar- antee three bo are, o wo will refund the money, , postago paid, 82 per bo, or three hoxes for §6. WRITTEN GUARANTEES, iusucd by all authorized agents. Dr.Felix LeBrun&Co BOLE PROPRIETORS, €. ¥. Goodman, Drugglst, Sole Agent, for Omaha, ob. Neb. e wly DR. HORNE'S ’ ek 1 O oY ing Diseases Without Medicine, Paing fu the Back, Hips, Head or Limbs, Nervous Debilty, Lumbago, General Devility, Rhoumatism, Parulysls, Now Sciatica, Disease of the Kidnoys Biscasca, Torpid Liver, Gout, Sexusl Exhaus- tlon, Bemiual Smiaac, Atthma, leart Disosss spepsia, Const] on, ysl , Indigestion, foriia or Rupture, Tnupotencs, Gatarrh, Pilgs, Epi fosy, Dumb Ague. Omaha Testimonial. Ouna, N, April 12, 163, Da. W. J. Houxw, 191 Wabash Avenie, Chicago: | She serenmed, struggled and slipped | his Lands, TALES ABOUT “THE ALL" and Mysteries of Niagara, Correspondence of New York Times. 1 have lately seen aflidavits by those who saw the T'alls ‘run dry" for hours on Maroh 31, 1848. A wind had driven in | an unusually Iarge volume of water from the lake down the river. Then it had changed suddenly and diminished the downward current. At the same time an ice-dam obstructed the flow. 8o it hap pened that a man and his daughter were enabled to walk dry-shod nearly one-third across the lip over which the waters plunge. The point of the reminiscence 18 this—the channel was far from clear, 1t was full of enormous and jagged rocks, such horrid needles of projecting flint that the reporter shuddered to think he had sailed over them in the Maid of the Mist ““The Falls” have been “‘written ur” and down—overy year since blushing brides and “‘blarates Britishers have frequented them. Your correspondent has very lately given a sympathetic no- tice to the taking ways of ~the aboriginal hackmen and seductive shop girls, And | any quality of figures and geology can be | had—by those who want them—on de- mand. ~ But the emotional histories of “the Falls,” the crimes and tragedies, accidents, rescues and escapes along its banks have, I believe, never been done justice. Simple suicides are, of course, too numerous to find place in even a par- tial glance at such events of contempo- rancous human interest. But some sui- cides are exceptional. Of course, a sui- cide who leaps into the rapids means business. He does not expect to be res- oued and have things smoothed out be- cause he soaked his clothes. ~ And yet it is vory strange to read the veracious chronicle of the man who quietly, delib- erately and strongly swam to tho giddy verge. And when a brave rescuer would have saved him, this man who sought death as others shun it, actually swam further away. There is a theory that capable swimmers cannot drown so long a8 they have the power to swim,any more than an ordinary man can stop breathingor digesting. But to swim toward death is the, very next thig toward not swimming from it. Equal deliberation was shown by one woman suicide, Sho calmly tested the current with her parasol before gathering her skirts for a plunge. Still another is pecu- liar from the fact that it is ene of the somewhat rare cases in whichtwo persons have been known to die deliberately to- gether, and which some doctors think go far to disprove the doctrine that all who take their own lives are insane. ~ One suicide might become insane suddenly and without warning. But that two should be simultaneously so silly is more im- probable than that they sanely meant to die. This couple were middle aged, of social position and sufficient means. They were also both married, though mnot to each other. There had been a little scandal, and their bodies were found to- gether below the falls. That is all that isknown. Perhaps they were insane. At all evonts, it is a somewhat ghastly fashion of elopement which they souglit to test. There were daring men before Captain Webb, and of course they found their way to Ninga Onv jumped from the bridgo 192 feet, to the swirling current. For fifty feet he fell likea plummet. Then he turned over twice. At last he struck the water with an awful slap—what the boys call a ‘“belly-whopper.” After reading an account of the fatal acccident one of the numerous Mrs. Partingtons asked if the man died. So T say plainly this man died, probably before he reached the water. And yet perhaps that idea, too, has gone to meet the exploded le- gend of William Tell. But such little accidents only stimulate the reckless. Another jumper soon appeared, as soon another swimmer may. He wore a har- ness over his shoulders. To it was at- tached a wire running loosely over a cylinder on the bridge. That ~kept his foet straight toward Davy Jones’ locker, and he survived the leap to his consider- able personal profit. From the bridge to the water he went in four seconds—the only time on record. Another foolhardy foat was performed by some of the reckless men who decorate al- most inaccessible landscapes with possibly truthful but most certainly inapropos puffs of ague pills, liver-pads SEALR A lodged forty rods above Goat Island. For four years it lay there, seomingly as beyond human reach as the north star, It touched the vride of certain shameless and professional ad- vertisers, who were famous for their van- dalism, that such a chance should be wasted. So when the rapids were thinly frozen over they made their cautious way to the log, and soon there was a gorgeous sign fixed 12 feet by 4, a hideous eyesore, inescapable, on tho very forefront of one of the world's grandest spots, i. e.: *‘Go East via Lake Winnipiseogeo R. R Their deed almost met it deserts. They treated the log too roughly. A hole was made through the ico and the current soon did the rest. It was even betting that they would never get ashore. But thoy did. This was not a fatal accident. OF nccidents some very strange ones are rocorded. One lady stooped for u cup of water, lost her balance, and was out of reach and over the Falls almost before her amazed husband knew what happened. Another lady stooped to pluck a flower on the brink of Table Rock. She was taken up dead from the rocks below, A rhyming, irreverent tourist on the sam y recorded a bit of oleglac poetry which would have made him & wavk in Philsdelphia, Ho simply wrote At the carly agoof twenty-three Was pitched into e-ter-ni-ty, In 1870 an accident equally sad and foolish occurred. An engaged couple went behind the falls, into the Cave of the Winds, without'a guide. The lad, actually sought to bathe in a pool which even the guides never visited, Her lover lost his life in ng to save hers. Per- haps the most dramatic accident was the (ulllu\\ing: A playful young man caught up o charming child who was watohing the tumbling waves. ‘‘Now, Lizzie, 1 am going to throw you into the water,” he said, and swung her back and forth, n d He gazed after her, rea! what he had done and leaped. Rescue was hopeless. Perhaps he did not de- serve death, and at least consure may die with him Of cacapes, there are one or two nar- row almost beyond belief, and which in- volye stories of skill and bravery well worth telling. Not many years agoa ainter was at work on Second Sister's sland, when he fell into the water, He was o'd and weak, and while his position was not very dangerous at first, he soon Diar 81 —1 purchased one of your Electric Belts in Deuver, Colo., Deoember, 1852, ° It relieved the pain scross my kidneys and 'stengthened thew o that ive 0o more trouble. Thesploal irritrtion it re- Y. fdee s 810t o sarkis fr s our o or plies, und":hu-. ucurulgia, d female paralysis, with whow 1 am mu.lma,'.'ndm; T 1 n ‘Raspeotully, .n:. %N, FoliTeR, MAIN OFFICE Dastidtas ™™ Pha #t O, F. Goodman's Drug Store, 1110 % = floated down and toward wmidstream, when, just as he seemed hovering on the brink, and exactly forty feet from it, if conte| @ caught on a rock, How long would his Some of the Accidents, Tragedies |into the boiling tide, coil of rope. One end he left in trusty hands and with the other he plunged When he reached | the poor painter the old man still held in his hand the putty knife with which he had been working. He shifted the knife into his pocket, tied the painter to the rope, and they reached the shore safely. In another case a boatman was crossing the river above the falls, when a fog sud- denly came up. He lost his bearings, and knew he was drifting to death. His cries alarmed the village, and bells were rung for him to row toward them. Then an ore broke. His only hope then lay in a paltry anchor, and a common rope, which was, moreover, much worn. He examined every foot, nay, every inch of it; he tugged at the knots at each end Time and space were precious but he could not affor1 to make a mistake Then he threw it oyer. It bumped along the stones, and his heart beat each time it failed to catch a grip. At last it caught and brought the boat up standing, while the tense string throbbed like the bass gutof a harp. For the moment 1t held Jow soon would it part? He shrank m feeling along the strands. He more afraid not to lest he should read his fate in the twine tense and twanging under the current. Inch by inch his fingers traveled to his arm’s length, So long as it held there he was safe. Time and time again through the long night he did this, but never, he said, without a heart like lead and hands quivering like a leaf. When morning dawned, as at last it did, he was easily ed. In another case the danger to life, though considerable, was not imminent. A tug was towing three scows, when ono went adrift. With admirable promptness and address the captain of the tug cut loose the rest of his tow and steamed ahead of the drifting barge. There he held it by steam power, and when the sthers came along a line was passed, the throttle was thrown dead open, and it was sought to make way up stream, But they had drifted fairly within the grasp of the spirit of the waters, and for a time it seemed he would not let go his own. Finally a foot was qained, in a fow minutes another, and then the tug of war was virtually over. An ‘‘escape” of another sort was that of a murderer. The Sheriff was behind him, the river in front, aud only the wires of the old bridge at Lewiston to help him across, Hand over hand he began the passage. ~ His hands quickly blistered, and then they bled. Again and again he rested his arms by hanging by his legs. At last he reached the opposite bank and lay panting full an hour before he continued his flight. The feat was certainly a remarkablo one for an amateur. There is no telling how many crimes are hidden in this deadly river. But one, comparativaly recent and very remarka- ble, has never been completely told or solved. One morning a body was found. Over theface was a handkerchief. Around the neck was a rope, tightly drawn and knotted at the back, and the end frayed. In the head was a bullet hole. Whose was the body in life, and how had it come to its foul ond? It appeared that one O. L. Rowell had registered recently at a hotel. He had complained of the loss of $800. His room had not been slept in and his clothes were found on the bank. ‘s jury found that the body was s But presently Rowell turned up, or rather a detective turned him up, and his conduct was explained by family matters not pertinent here. Then it was thought the to one Close. The description of its height, head, neck, hands and feet agreed with Close’s, and he had had a “present- iment” that he would soon be missing. “‘Pregentiment” was scarcely the word, for it soon appeared that he was an eloper and a bigamist, and had no use for any remains ostensibly his. Then it was unufhtmidcntify this foundling corpse with a certain H. T. Raymond. What Raymond did before he was missed I can- not, say, nor can I finish the story. It must remain artistically or inartistically, incomplete. The body was never posi- tively fathered, so to speak, and the mys- tery remains. But a certain old sawabout murders will doubtless continue to be quoted. fr —anm— PRIZE-FIGHTERS' RESORTS. Some Hard Hits Registered by a Peculiar Machine at Coney Island. The favorite resort for pugilists at Coney Island is the ‘‘pounding machine" on the western sands of the islet. The New York Morning Journal says: Priz fighters, who come down in great num- bers to get tho salt sea airand brace up for the ring by eating Rhode Island clam- bakes, make it a rendezvous, and it is a sort of a headquarters of the sporting fra- ternity. The elite of the prize ring, the gallery of Police Gazette notables, and the bon ton of the walking matches walk in front of it and discuss ‘‘soap” McAl- pine and “Fiddler” Neary, Herbert, Slade, and the marquis of Bressord, Billy McGlory, and Lord Queensberry. The enterprising owner of the nmcf;inu with his fist, butting it with his head, or running and jumping in such o manner as to hit it at once with both of his feet, It | is & machine consisting of an eider-down cushion at one end and of various springs and rods in the middle, insome way con- nected with a graduated scale, which | mensures the force of a blow struck upon the cushion, A man may learn his pro able power in knocking out an antag nist, for b cents. John L. Sullivan has registered the most powerful blow on the machine of any person, living or dead. He struck it with an impact which caused the hand of the register to spin in | u dizzy way up to b65 pounds, The next hardest hitter in the country is William E. Hardin, who registers a blow at 545 l,uuuds when heis in good condition. A ong-cared Kentucky mule, parleying with the machine, once struck it with tremendous violence. His graceful argu- ment was measured on the scale by 537 pounds, showing him to be almost s tro- mendous a hitter as William E. Hardin, The owner of the machine, a one- logged pugilist with three missing fingers and ear, full of reminisconces of rix fights and affrays on steamboat barges and moonlight picnics, makes $10 a day by closo and caveful attention to busi- noss. Ho says that his principal and best customers are negro preachers, who show an especial fondnoss for hitting the | machine, An ordinary man can strike it with a force which registers about 150 pounds. — *For years Mrs Lilia Pinkham has been contending with the terrible hydea known as Disease, with what sur- prising success many who were in the serpent’s coils will testify. Often has the powerless victim been snatched from the open jaws of the destroyer. In 'y records are te be belisved, | ymiting the heads of this monster Mrs, ody belongod |© shows ita_various uilitios by atriking it | husband, prince of Meining, hi THE GERMAN ROYAL FAMILY. Empress Augnsia's Predilectign for Medicine—The Crown Prince's Home -Art Treasures. Globe-Democrat writes: devoted to the Augusta hospital, which founded, notwithstanding her increasing feebleness and withdrawal from social du- ties. Every day while her majesty was in the city she visita that institution, and is kept informed of all that transpires there. Her carriage is casily distinguished from the other royal turn-outs by the ex- treme lowness of 1ts body, that the inva- lid may endure as little exertion as pos sible in getting in and out. Another carriage always follows it to be at her service in case of accident, Mrs. A, A, Sargent, wife of the American minister, in also paying a great deal of attention to medicine. Speaking of her presentation to the empress a year ago, Mrs, Sargent remarked last evening. “‘Her majesty surprized mo by asking about my daugh- ter, Lizzie. She had heard that Lizzie began the study of medicine in California and was continuing itin Zurlich, “Weare much interested in medicine,’ the empress added, and then spoke of the civil war in America and the Franco-Prussian war, saying that the Germans had gained much valuable information from the Americans as to the treatment of sick and wounded soldiers, which was put to good use in their last war. She spoke of the Augusta hospital, and expressed a wish that my daughter would visit it. 1 assured her that Lizzie would be pleased to do so. The empress speaks English rurfcctly‘ I did not sec her again until ast February, at a musical soiree at tho emperor's palace, Her majesty was sit- ting in an invalid chair somewhat aside from the large salon where the guests were agsembled, but in such position that sho could sce and hear everything. Of course, all wont up to her chair on enter- ing, Again she nstonished me by saying with evident pleasure that she under- stood my daughter had visited the Au- gusta hospital. 1 marveled at her memory. It was with great satisfaction that I assured her I had accompanied my daughter torthe hospital, and that we T A e pleased with its arrangement and conduct.” The empress returned to Coblenz last week, after having spent about ten days here to visit the great Hygienic exposition which was opened under her protection. Her majesty appointed the jury to award the preiniums, and on two ‘mornings no visitors were admitted, in order that she might be wheeled around in her invalid chair to view the display. A series of lectures is being given by eminent men on topics relative to hygiene. As the weather has been very warm, one of the addressess was given in an open pavilion, that the empress might be pre- sent. She remained in her carriage the entire time. “Unser Fritz" and his family are at their new palaco in Potsdam for the sum- mer. Last Thursday he rode over to the park of the Charlottesburgh palace to meet the kaiser, who observed the usual custom of visi the anniversary of her birth. Son and grandson together entered Queen Louise's mausoloum, and remained _some time in sorrowful meditation. The kaiser re- veres and loves his mother’s memory. This mausoleum, of solid marble, is ono of the wonders of the city. The en- rance, which leads to the chamber con- taining the sarcophagi, is lighted with blue glass, which has a fine effect on the marble. At the left a slab in the floor bears the queen’s name, date of birth, death, inscriptions, ete. At the right side of this hall a similar slab is inscribed with tho name of Friedrich William ITI., or « %\., e % rected the mausdfeum * tor her re- mains; his -own were subsequently laced beside them. The chamber is very eautiful, the walls and ceiling being pure white marble. Scriptural texts in gold adorn the wall. Facing the entrance is an altar,reached by three or four steps, in a half-circular niche in the opposite wall. Above the altar is a fresco of the dead monarch and his queen. They are represented on their knees before the throne of heaven yielding up their crowns to the deity. From the altar steps one gets the best view of the reclining figures, Queen Louise being at the right. ~ The sculpture has never been surpassed. It is the masterpiece of Rauch. A young lady of our party exclaimed: How gracefully the queen looks with her feet crossed. I wonder why they didn't cross the king's feet, too?” “My child,” replied the chaperone, “‘it it is natural for a woman to cross her feet when she lies down to sleep.” “Isn't it natural for a man?” “I do not thing it is. Is it Mr——7" ““I mever thought of it?” answered the gentleman, “but I will watch myself when I go to sleep to-night, and tell you to-morrow." The park and palace are very interest- ing and must once have been a superb residence. The crown prince’s eldest daughter, Princess Charlotte, and her r,reside here inwinter. The widowed Q1cen Elizabeth, sister-in-law of the present emperor, was the last sovereign to occupy it. The of the bauqueting hall vepresent fr gilt stucco. The walls of another room are almost covered with porcelain plaques. There are porcelain figures on brackets, and also on the mantels, tables, and on the floor about the wall. The arrangement is exquisite, 8 in e Stretchy Religion, Detroit Free Press. An old couple, man and wife, were along the wharves a day or two ago hunt- ting for an up-shore boat, and the woman explained to a steamboat agent: “It's a very stormy season, and we ex- pect to be seasick, and we druther go on boat where the captain is a religious man.” “Well, that's all right,” he replied. “Wae've got one very religious captain on our line, and his boat sails to night.” *Can we go down and see him¢’ “Oh, yes. Koep right down the street until you soe the boat.” The couple walked on and finally boarded the steamer. The Captain and all hands were busy with the cargo, but the old folks walked up to him and the woman said: ““Capting, you have been reconumended o us a8 & religious man,” “The—1 have!” he promptly growled. They looked at each other with conster- nation depicted in their faces, and then 1d man said: ‘apting, what church do you belong *See here!” roared the official, ‘‘if you've come to bleed me for some charity, or want me to sign a petition, or expeoct this boat to carry @ lot of deadheads up the lake, 1 won't stand it! What do you want! Out with it, now, and no infernal chawing around. I'm blanked if I ain't e O e Ao yould hia | Piukham's Vegotablo compound s far resoue him, how! The crowd was|more efficacious than the processes of po- helpless pntil 4 guide appeared with a | tential and actual cautery. bothered by more dashed lunatics than A‘:ky other blanked man on the dashed es!” Man and wife retired te consult and, A Berlin correspondent to the St. Louis The empross is | ng his mother’s tomb on | g after getting ten feot away, the said “Henry, he's not a religious man,” “Well, I dunno.” “But he swears like a pirate.” ““Yes, Maria, but you see this is out west. We don’t swear and belong to the hurch too, up in New Hampshire, but they may do differently out here. He swears but he looks like a man to depend upon in a storm.” “Shan't we look for another?” “T guess not, Maria. I guess the re ligions out here in Michigan are kind o’ strotchy, and they allow swearing on steamboats and around the depots. We'll go by this boat, and if he don't swear any worso than he did to us, mebbe providence will let him squeeze through on the up trip and sink him when he comes down,” | —— OF THE WIRES, A ROMAN How the Telegraph Strike Interfered With Love's Young Dream. ‘“Adelbert!” The moon came softly through the trees, and the gentle breeze that touched her fair young face wafted thither the sweet oder of the fragrant clover and of the still more fragrant sty. As she put her arms around his neck—-those arms that had never known what work was, except on that eventful day when the cook eloped with the hired man—there came into her eyes a tender, loving look that told all too plainly how dearly Cleopatra Wood loved him. As she spoke the name with which this paragraph be- gins and gazed into his eyes with a tender, yearning, lend - me-a -quarter-till-next- week look, there was something that told of an empty somewhat somewhere. The name she had spoken was more to her than the last cigar to an old smoker, and when she uttered it and received no re- sponse her heart was wrenched with its terrible agony. “Will you not,” she cries in low, agon- izing tones. “‘Alas,” said Adelbert Jones, trying to tear himself away from 8o terrible a scenc, “I cannot;"” and releasing her tender hold upon him, he sank upon the ground with a dull thud. *Can you not send me one short mes- sage?” she said. reat heavens, do not drive me to suicide,” he answered. **Must I tell you? The telegraphers are all on a strike, and I cannot, cannot do it.” “And will the strike never end?’ she pleads. “Not till Jay Gould joins the salvation army,” he mutters between his clenched teeth, and with a groan he leaps into the darkness and disappears. S T T TS The wifo of a printer in New Haven has applied for a divorce on the ground that he had no style about him He wouldn't brace up, had no dash, cut no figure, had no point, lived up to no rule, was of bad form and make-up, wasn't a man of letters or up to the period, was a poor type of the genus, was out of quoin, and couldn’t impose on her any longer. e —— WouLp not be_ without Redding’s Rus: e ve, is the verdict of all who use it. Pric cents, e i “When the swallows homeward fly,” “When tho bloom is onthe rye,” and the corn is gently waving, Annie dear,” I will meet you at the gate,” though it may be rather late, and the hundreth time pour taffy in your ear. e HORSFORD'S ACID PHOSPHATE. A Valuable Nerve Tonic. Dr. C. C. OumstEAD, Milwaukee, Wis., says: “I have used it in my practice ten years, and consider it a valuable nerve thic." e — Tell me, ye angelic host, ye messenger of love, shall swindled printers here be- low have no redress above? The angels flapped their wings and said: “To_you a heap is given; delinquents on a printer’s book can never enter heaven.” L — In making the assertion that Pozzoni’s med- icated complexion powder i entirely free from injurious or deadly poisons, we do it upon the authority of a thorough chemical analysi is one of the oldest face powders in_the Amer- ican market, and is used in the families of some of our most prominent medical men who have personally acknowledged to the proprie- tor that they not only ider it harmless, but esteem 1t highly benificial i not only for the use of 1 for the “lord of creation’ himself, druggists. f Sold by all T e O An Arkansaw paper says there are two chief reasons why farmers are poor. This statement is_true, and the two chief reasons are: First, that the farmers are not in_very good financial condition; and second, they have no money. LR, An Immense Industry. The Baltimore American remarks edito- vially that the renowned preparation, St. Jacobs Oil, is sold in twenty-six different countries of the globe, and is known and praised for its great merits in twelve dif- ferent languages. b Il “Well,” said the lady whose husband had run away with the school ma'am, “there’s one consolation; I know the inside facts of this scandal, and that's more than those spiteful old maids across the way do,” Vertigo, Hy i 8, mvulsions—all nervous disorders in fact—are cured by Samaritan Nervine, “This certifies,” writes D, D, Christ- man, of Oswego, Ind., “that Samaritan vine cured me of Epileptic fits,” At Druggists, 0, Ne i at the moon in the sky.” Tl hit, young man; that's where to g it. Don't t f to gaze at it under the bed or in the coal cellar. Stick to the sk It is the easiest thing in the world for a father to give his daughter a check for $10,000 on her weddi y, but it is the hardest thing in the ld for the bride or any other person to get it cashed, — How can you remamn a suffer dyspepsia when worse ca are boing cured by Hood' Try it. r from urs i “Hadn't I better pray for rain to-da; deacon?’ aid a Binghamton ministe Sunday, **Not to-day, dominie, 1 think," was the prudent reply; “the wind isn't right,” A Russian tra ' the Malay penin sula, claims to have found in use there the simullest *‘coin” in the world. It is a minute wafer, made from the juice of a tree. Its value is about the millionth part of a dollar, —— Very ut. Why do we defer till to-morrow what we should do to-day ? Why do we neglect a cough till it throws us into consumption, and con- sumption brings us to the grave? DR, WM. HALL'S BATSAM i sure to oure if taken in soason. It has never been known to fail. Use it thoroughly according to directions, Perse- vere till disease is conquered, as it is cer- tald o be, sven if 1t should reqiis s oz bottles, is no better medicine for Pul monary disoeders. Boid oy ! woman . Carpenters’ Materials poet sends us a poem beginning: ‘T | Has the Bes; Stockin Oma;;a and M . CHAS. SHIVERICK, EF'urniture. Bedding, Mirrors, Feathers and everything per- taining to the Furniture and Upholstery trade. Passenger Elevator to all five rooms. CHAS. SHIVERICK, {1206, 1208 and 1210 Farnam Street, Omaha Neb. akes thz; Lowest Prices WILSO ler Al Mee _?nTlirk.- OMAHA, - - NEBRASKA. Build all kinds of Steam Bollers, Smoke Stacks, B g Tard, Water and Oil Tanks,and do | genera plate-iron business. Repairing done in City and Country. Al work Done at Eastern Prices and Warranted ! Second-hand Boilers will ho kept on hand. Having had many yoars experioncein the trade in of the country, dent | can give satisfaction, having the best shop and tools in th cor. 19th and Plerce Streets. nt parts ate. Shop J. M. WILSON Proprietor. Double and Single Acting Power and Hand PUMPS, STEAM PUMES, Engine Trimmings, Mining Mncl\inery,!iBolLing. Hose, Brass and Iron Fitti Steam Packing at wholesale and rejail.” HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS. Corner 10th Farnam ‘St., Omaha Neb. - A. M. CLARK, Painier & Paper Hanggr SIGN WRITER & DECORATOR. WHOLESALE & RETATT WALL PAPER WINDOW SHADES & CURTAINS, Cornices, Curtain Poles and Fixtures, 107 South 14th Strect, OMAHA, - - - NEBRASKA GATE CITY i PLANING MILLS! MANUFACT EHS OF —ALSO— Sash, Doors, Blinds, Stairs, Stair Railings, Balnsters, Window & Door Frames, &1 First-class facilities for the manufacture of all kinds of Mouldings. Planing and Matching » specialty Orders trom the country will be promptly executed. ) Address all communications to A. MOYER, Proprietor. FRESE O¥TSTERS J Booth’s ‘Oval’ Brand AND | D. D. MALLORY & CO0’S “DIAMOND” BRAND. Freosih Fish at Wholesalo. o D. B. BEEMER, Omaha. g { MANUFACTURER OF B Galvanized ron Comices, Window Caps, Finals,- Skylights &M Thirteenth Street [ MANUFACTURER OF FINE 1 Buggies, Garriages and Spring Wagons, ¢ My Repository is constantly filled with a select stock. Best Workmauship guatanteed. Office and Factory S. W. Corner 16th and Capitol Avenue, Qmaha ] 1' PIANOSKORG ANS On Long Time--Small Payments. At Wannfacturers Prices. A Hospe, Jri | 1619 DODGE STRE ' PERFECTION IN Heating and Baking Is only attained by using 'CHARTER OAK™ Stoves and Ranges, WTH WIRE GAZE OVER 0DoRs, Forsale by |, ived | MILTON ROGERS&3)N3 A OMAHA-

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