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Indeed! | “How thankful we should be for that | medicine.” A Danghter's Misery, “Eloven years our daughtor suffered on abed of misery, “From a complication of kidney, liver, rheumatic trouble and Nervous debility, “Under the care of the best physicians, “Who gave her disease various names, “But no rehef, “And now she is restored to us in good health by as simply a remedy as Hop Bit- ters, that we had shunned for years be- fore using it.”—Tur PareNts, Father is Getting Well, My daughter says: “‘How much better father is since he used Hop e is gotting well aftor his long suffering from disease deglared incurable” “And we are 8o gl A Lavy of Utic at he nsed your Bitters.” " , - D pe D S ‘DIA_E. PINKHAM'S VEFETABLE COMPOUND VLZETABLE COMPOUND Sore Cnrve for all FEMALE WEAN NESHE fucluding Lencorrhan, 1» regulnx and Painful Menstroation. Yofoummation and Uleerntion of the Floeding, PRO- LAVSUS UTLERE &o. W Measaat (o aste, efilcacious and fminedns ¥ew patn duiing rogular periods PUASICIAN USE 1T ASD PESCRIBE VT FREEL © tho publio; and for all discases of b4 ¢ ONTYS 1648 Lho Greatest Zemedy (n the World. Y EIDNEY COMPLAINTS of Elther S ¥ind Creas Relietin Xin Usor LYDIA BLOOD PU L 1ot Ty et 1 avie e will @1V tono ant & et i Lo O 0 Dlood Pusefer are m avenus, Tyon Mae bottles for 85, The Co { the forn of pitls, oF of Tozen wcuipt of ja i, L1 por box for elther, Mre. Pit ) aely anevinry all lotters of inqulry, 030 o s for paniphlct. Mention this aper. 1 Prias_core Cons Cr tho TAver. 8 oo’ dhy ell Den g glate~e0 @) €F Ly 0.1 en $200 A YEAR CAN BE SAVED IN THE LIVING EXPENSES OF THE FAMILY by tho use of Rex MAaxus, Pho Humiston wservative, It presorvos Meat, Fish, Milk, C: and all kinds of Animal Food frosh weeks, oven in the hottest weathor. proved the testimonials of hundreds who have tried t. You can prove it for yoursoll for 60 cents. You will find that this isan article which will save you & great deal of monoy. NO SOURED MILK, NO BPOILED MEAT. YO STALE raas, 1t will keop tnem frosn i BWOot 1O IALY aByS o8 ot impart the slightest forolgn taste to the treated. 1t 1s %0 simplo i operation that ix_as harmle ily & fraction meat, fish, butter or Thin b no humbug: 1t i3 endorsed Prof. Saml W. J v . Bamplo pounds sent pre-paid I oF expross (a3 wo profor) on recciat of prico ur oxprows office. Vianding milk, butter a ¥ Anti‘Mold, 60e. por | oam; Queon Tor cgge, nd Aqua-Vitas for fluid extracts, 81y or Ib. THE HUMISTON FOOD PRESERVING €0, fvi0-m&odwim 72 Kilby 8t. Bosten, Mass. ottest! | vears' 1 Uhicago. uthorized by the state to trea mic, Nervous and Privato diseasos, lop, Pilos, “fape Worm, Urnary and Dis i casos, Seminal Weaknoss (night losos), lows nfsoxual pove tlar graduato in Over sixteen ctice —twelve in Cures gua Thousands onto pationts at 4 ntidentisl - call or writo; ago o A BOOK for hoth sexeg experionoo are | llustrated —and clreulars of othor things sent. scald portant. fox two 8 oent stamps. FREE MUSEUM K m od vod-w BURBE A I Have Found It! ‘Was the exclamation of of Eureka Pile Oiutument, oure for Piles aad all Skin mail, postpaid. The American Diarrhwa Cure s i Hus stood tho test for twenty years. Bure cure f sl Nover Fails. Diarrhsos, Dysentary, sud Chole- 7 Morbus. Degne's Fever and Ague Tonic & Cordial, It ls Impossible to supply the rapid salo of the eawe. BULE CUKE WARRANTED For Fever and Ague, and all Malarial troubles. PRICE, #1.00. W.J.WHITEHOUSE LABORATORY, 10TH BT., OMAHA, NEB. For Sale by all Druggists Or sent by Expross ou recelpt of price. Ao | pilot ba |deal of trouble we found it neces | pense of gas |to cross the German ocean, w panorama ere we | TALE OF AIBALLOON, nons Gives an Ace yage 1o Holland, Mr. Joseph i count of His | . The Hague, Aug. 4.—The balloon ““The ascended at Maldon, E t Flushing on Wednesday I'he ronants were Sir Claude de Crespigny and Mr, Joseph Simmons | The latter gives the following account of his_voyage ’ Before the start from Maldon several yons were launched in order to ascertain the direction we were likely take. The pilots indicated several cur- rents at a low altitude; but as at the mo: ment of starting the wind gav good ary to leave the ground with great ascending power. Every attempt made to utilize the currents wonld have been at the ex v ballast. We had desired therefore y fuot There every ounce of ballast and every as had to be cautiously nused. not much time to enjoy the glorious found it necessary promptly to reach Holland or Belgium. Fortunately the atmosphere over Eng land was clear. The start was made at eleven o'cl We kept nearly over the middle of the Blackwater, At twenty minutes past one we over Bradwell, LEAVING ENGLAND, At half-past 1 passing over the shor ing our bearings, we found we were going straight toward Rotterdam, and if the wind continued would probably reac Holland before dark. The bottom of the en in every dircction. and shoal “was casily marked. They formed a curious ne work. We could see two men near Ha wich very distinetly. Six steamer neath us appeared almost in collision. The bell on the buoy east of Blackwater was continually ringing. The sound was very clear to us. We are at an attitude of 9,000 feet. The lightship east of Blackwater is about the size of a flea, but very distin Al- though the bell is constantly ringing we can now and again hear shouts from the decks of the steamers. We throw out sheets of paper and find wo are still mak- ing a trifle] southeastward. Our safoty and the attainment of our object depends upon being able to continue this course. At half-past 2 p. m. we have not spent an ounce of ballast or touched any valve. Our altitude at this moment is 10,000 foot. Our foot are cold. We appear to be overhauling mist to the southeast. At fifty-five minutes past two we are unnhruunfu(l in mist. We can see nothing but ourselves and the balloon. were clock we were just A COMPANION BALLOON. A fow minutes later we have a mag- nificent picture of the balloon in a cloud. Wo can seo our vis-a-vis doing everything oxactly as we do—even to our fingers hauling the ropes and grappling the ble, which I have let out, distinctly produced. I call Sir Claude's attention to this apparen rage He cannot see it where he is sitting, but on_coming to | Princess Mary or Queensborough. 1 had almost forgotten to mention that the cold was intense, over the mouth of the west | Scheldt at an altitude of 17,000 feet. 1 | had 400 pounds of ballast left when we came down, and our journey could have been prolonged but for our having prom ised Lady de Crespigny that we would do onr best to descend on reaching the coast. We landed at 7 o'clock. R ‘s Good Luck. Robinsen, banker and 1 street, New York, who was Iaid up three months with severe rheumatism, says: “‘I bought a bottle of St. Jacobs Oil, used it, and in two days was completely cured. I thoroughly be lieve in the great remedy. —— WEBB'S GREAT FEAT The Noted Swim Across the English Channel — A Remarkable Achievement, The London Standard gives the follow of the late Capt. Webb: would appear to have been a passion with him, and in 1876 he conceived ‘the extraordinary notion of crossing the En glish channel from Dover to Calais. “Swimrming impracticable, Many atteinpts had been made, all r ulting in failure, but Capt Webb refused to believe that he should not succeed, and, as a preliminary trial of strength and endurance, he swam from Blackwall to vesend, covering the distan 18 miles—in essayed the journey from Dover to Ramsgate, and 4 hours, 52 minutes and 44 seconds. Gain ing confidence from this success, he suc- ceeding in accomplishing this more diffi- cult task in 8 hours and 45 minutes, Both these efforts of endurance and skill took place in 1875, and apparently satis- fied with them Capt. Webb now finally mined on attempting the channel Friday, August 13, was the day fixed upon. The swimmer was to have started at daybreak, and at that time the sea was calm and_apparently in- viting, but something in the atmospheric appenrances suggested a doubt whether similarly quiet we upon for twenty-four consecutive hours, and a postponement was agreed to; but only for a short time. A few minutes after b o'clock on the same evening, though the sea was lumpy and a fresh breeze blew from the southwest, Capt. Webb, having previously been rubbed with porpoise oil, took to th water, diving from a boat at the Admi alty -pier at Dover. He was closely a companied all the way by a boat with two personal friends on board, and a lugger, in which were a number of gen- tlemen who had undertaken to see the completion of the task—if it was com- pleted. The daring swimmer struck out strongly and cheerfully, and for an hour or two made good progress and scomed in excellent condition. His first eshment was some | roast beef, which he consumed without | my side ho soes the rope as distinctly as Tdo. My blue serge silk looks now | quite green, and continues so for many | minutes. The atmosphere is a very deep blue above us. The ges in the b tly cloar and the great do solid and a: rything is in perfect tranquili san hear the beating of our hear Our ears are oc blocked, but we remedy this by widely spening the mouth. 7 At 4:30 we think there is a slight sound, as of surf We are very slowly descending. At 4:40 wo emerge on the under side of the clouds, and can sec something looking like a const line to the southeast, We are still on the same course wo started with. A DISAPPOINTMENT, At 4:30 we have approached near enough to find our imaginary coast line a long sweop of shoal, but this encourages us to think that wo had passed mid-ocean. Another long line of shoal now appears ag'if by magic. We are in full view of six steamers, As we suppose, these are all coming from the east. On a nearer approach we see they are sailing vessels. They appear to expect that we shall re- quire their services, for they are tacking and dodging us. At ten minutes past five two steamers are distinctly visible, both going west- ward, At ton minutes to six Sir Claude cri “‘Look there! Is that another shoal?” We discuss the matter with much interest. 8ir Claude cannot believe it anything but the mainland. 1 soon began to think the sume, but it continues for a long time vory indistinct, and as I look very fixedly at it for some minutes it appears to alter its shape and 1 conclude it can be noth- ing but a stack of clouds. Instead of in- creasing in distinctuess this long sweep now grows a little more dim. At the same time we have other indications which make us think we have changed our course, Sir Claudo says two or three timos that he does not despair now of the streak turning out to be land. His dis- tant vision was more distinct than mine. IN CLOUDLAND, At ten minutes past six we are both porfectly satisfied. in view of the const The sun peeps be tween the elouds, and under the influ once of his rays the balloon instantly | shot upward with fearful rapidity. Sir Claude said: “Do you not smell gas es- caping?” But 1 jul not, Had it not been for this safeguard of his the conse- quence wight have been serious, In a fow soconds we were over a vast arean of what looked like mountaing of snow, solid enough to walk on, The grandeur of this scene it would be ufter folly for me to attempt to describe. Not the slight- est movement could bo dotected in any part of this vast cloudland, Every mountain peak seemed to stand there fixed forever, The temptation was too great to go down and leave this grandeur until a greatertomptation came—the pos itive sounb of the surf immediately be- neath, We now opened the valve and rushed downward with great rapidity, A fow seconds are sufficiont to bring us down from our highest position-—17,000 feet—low enough to have spread before our delighted vision the beach of Wal cherven island, on the north side of the Scheldt viver, and the mainland of Hol land shutting us in to the south, REACHING LAND, We had already passed the mouth of the Scheldt, I considered we were now safe enough, and sketched Walcheren while flashing just beneath us. Posple were now hailing lustily from all points. The balloon brought down splendidly at Flushing, the grappling iron taking firm grip in a ditch surrounding a wheat fiold. The ditch acted as a fence round the Ll loon to keep off the great crush. When we had emptied unlgpwkud the balloon we went through the streots, which were thronged with people all the way to the Hotel Wellington, where we entertained for a short time. After getting some re- froshments we proceeded to the landing s ‘mmc-l, as befo difficulty. But the wind increased, the sea grow more rough, and a little after| heavy rain began to fall, impos and with a glass of cod-liver oil the cap: | tain continued his voyage under the most | disagreeable weather. Indeed he od giving up the struggle, but the wind took place at suns Again, however, the wimd r fell and the sea became greatly move | troubled. A short further trial as made, but all agreeing that there was no | hope of improvement, Capt. Webb finally left the water at midnight, feeling warm | and looking still fresh and vigorous, not- | withstanding his extraordinary exertions, | Although the sea proved thus too rough | for him, and the wind and thoroughly unpropitious, still more th half of the passage was accomplished and the captain seemed convinced that he suggest- | s alull in | went on. e, the rain | L ney. So another- trial was determined upon, and successfully undertaken on August 24, Then the waves werc quict, the tide favorable, th able, and when, at 1 o'clock on that day, Capt. Webb dived from the end of the Admi- rulty pier, amid the cheers of a consider- ablé concourse of people, it was with a strong belief that he would accomplish his journey in about fourteen hours, As a matter of fact, it took him 21 hours 4 minutes and 50 seconds. He was accom- b, by o lugger and row- hoat, containing the judges and some of his friends. ~ His refreshments con- sisted of beef-tea, coffee and brandy. There was nothing very noticeable in the passage until about 9:30 on the night of the 24th ~ Webb called out that he had been stung on the shoulder by a jolly-fish, asking for some brandy. ~At that time, it is recorded, thero was & per- ptible weakening of his stroke, and it was foared that eight and a half hours in the water andthe chilly air of the evening were beginning to tell upon him, A few minutes later, however, he shouted that he was all right, and felt no more of the sting. Again, just after midnight, the wind freshened, and at Y'elock the reports were not reassuri a8 said the swimmer was getting perceptibly weaker, and the diver prepared himself to render prompt assistance. But the administration of a little brandy ved Webb, and he again pursucd his monotonous wa shore of Calais came into view wind and tide both fought against the struggler in he water. Once more there were signs tof weakness, again anxiety among his friends; butat lust, aftor muny misgivings, Webb touched ground, welcomed by the French crowd that weak, but, as the boatman expressed if, “olly in his talk” up to the end, He went to bed immediat. slept soundly, and the medical aid volunteored wis declined as unnecessary On returning to’England Mr. Webb' was received with great enthusiasin, and a very considerablo sum of money was subscribed and pre. sented to him, Since that time Capt, Webb has per: formed many remarkable feats. He won afive days' swimming race at the Lam- both baths; and in March of the same year he remained in the tank at the of sixty hours, with an winntes. Then in the following August, at Scarborough, hLe remained sevent four hours in the water with only a fow minutes interval, Even this was eclipsed byswhat he did last year in America, wlhitre, at the horticultural hall building, Boston, he remained 12813 hours in a tank, less 04 minutes for rest, In 1881 Webb war defeatod by W. Beckwith ina six days’ swim or ten hours a day 1 Westminster aquarium, but on” O« iterval of 21} | Webb defeated Mr. A, Jennings in a five hours' gwim, accomplishing a_distance of five miles 600 yards, As we have stated, Just before leaving for America, Webb was again defeated by Beckwith, having been compelled to give up the struggle in consequence of suffering from congestion stage and there procured berths on the of the lungs, THE DAILY BEE---TUE ing account of the principal achievements | nlso was, at the time, regarded as utte |'1, | her could be counted | well | from It was now | ible to attempt taking solid food, | ¢ weather so | mer As the | nd was cordially | be seen to oceult saturn, lined the beach, On landing ho was very | occt Westminister aquarium during a period | their claims. 1881, at Hollingwortn lake, Lancashire, | DAY, AUG PAVEMENT, GRANITE the Principal Streets, Chicago Tribune The system of granite pavement recent ly adopted by the city and now being car ried out_on sections of Madison, Wash examined byaTribunereportor yesterday. Two kingds of granite are being used, one | from thé Wisconsin quaries and the ot} | from the Fox island in Mai The Fox front of th e from the Fox island x island granite i 3 vhen polished, while th polished pillars in county building quarries. The with a pink tint in the rough. The granite seems to b [ equally perfect. The Wisconsin id to be uniform in chai has been rejected by t board | public works for being softer than the | standard, but the kind that is now being laid down seems to be of excellent qual ity. The system of laying down the pave | ment is about as fc ws: When the old wood pavement is taken away the street is excavated toa depth of about sixteen inches. A layer of broken stone seven inches deep is first laid down. This stone eomes from Stony Island, where it is broken by steam crushers. On top of |this there is n layer of coarse gravel |about two inches d > whole is |then rolled with 3 roller. A layer of sand one inch deep is | put on next Then the granite blocks jare laid down edgewizc, the average measurement of h block being ten inches in length, four inches in width and six inches in depth. A coat- ing an, light lis then put on which fills us the interstices, A coating of asphaltic cement comes next, and a very light layer of sand completes the work Similar paving is used in Boston, New York, Portland, Bangor, and some other | Eastern_cities, T phaltic cement | has not been used in other cities, that | mode of finishing ing originated with the city engincer here. His idea is that the pavement should be kept perfectly water-tight in order to prevent any ion underneath. This pave- | ment, it is said, will keep good for about fifty years. The section at present being done are: Randolph street, from Clark street to W sh avenue; Madison street, State street to Wabash avenue; Washington street, from Dearborn street to Wabash avenue, and State street, from Jackson street to the river, The plan followed is to work at only one block on each street at a time in order to incom- mode the flic as little as possible. About thirty men can do one block in a week. | INVESTME —One of oue prominent business men said to us the other day: “In the spring my wife got all run down and could not eat anything; ing your store I saw a pile of Hood's a in the window, and I got a After she ising appetite, and did her ¥ She took three bottles, and it was the best three dollars I ever in- vested, C. I, & Co., Lowell, Mauss. A Goon ———— TRIPLETTS, A TRIO O A Woinen w Philadelphia Record. A number of charitable ladies from Philadelphia and New York spending the Island Heights, a lovely sum- ort on Tom’s N. J. are ac- engaged in raisit ations of and clothing for a Mrs. Johnson, residing in a small cottage at that place, could safely undertake the whole jour-|who has just given birth to the third set of triplets. The latest arrivals are thr chubby, crowing children, the very pic- ture of health—and all girls, The-only way that they are distinguished from each other is by their clothing, which some of the ladies had mischieveously [ marked *“Faith,” Hope,” and **Charity [ The parents are both large and well-form- ed persons, and Mr. Johnson is employ- |ed asa laborerwon u ueighboring farm. The six other children of Mr. and Mus, Johnson are all stout and healthy, and are all under 8 years of age. The cottagers and boarders in the neighborhood have given parlor enter- tainments, taken up collections and have resortec to various other means of reliev- \g the family, who are poor in cireum- stances, A large purse has alweady been raised, — *Amon the most eflicacious of reme- dial agents are the medical preparations from the laboratory of Mrs, Lydia E. Piukham, Lynn, Mass, —— e August Moon, “The August woon fulls on the 18th at 8:10 o'clock. The waniug moon is ir | conjunction with Jupiter and Venus on | the 1st, and with | time on the 20th. She is at her nej point to Mercury on the 3d, and to U nus on the 6t near Neptune, On the 25th she is in close conjunction with Saturn at 1:36 o'clock | in the afternoon, passing 1% In some portions of the gl 32° and 70" south declination, a the dark side of the ward the lesser lumi est between d where carth is turned to. wy, the moon will This will be tho fifth occultation of Saturn that has ed during the year The moon completes the planctary circuit by her conjhnetion with Mars on the 27th,” | ca— rd's Acid Phos) [ Send to the Rumford Chem Providence, R. L., for pamphlet. free Works, Mailed Givls W A Dakota letter in one of our exchanges has the following merry allusion to a current subject: **Now, as regards the gentler sex who came here to ‘hold down’ All over the Territory you will find these little shanties of them stylish and pretty youn, ake up a night's lod month or oftener. 1 have of misses from the Eastern States, |are out here ‘*holding down’ section. Others who live neare lowa, or Minnesota, or Dakota, make monthly pilgrimages to their ranch, or, wmore likely, go once in two months and onee son numbers who the | remain two nights, endure this sacrifice te their comfort and the shock to their nerves a few times, and bocome owners of valuable real estate. A Dakota girl that isn't holding down a claim or two is a curiosity. The only drawback to the Eastern girls is the fact that they must publicly declare that they are over twenty-one before md::i can file their application. A hun and sixty aci of land, you know, is not much of an ington, Randolph and State streets was | r| A pure, new Wisconsin granite is of a strong pink tint | on steam | bout | had taken it a week | r the seeond | On the 24th she is very | min, south, | UST 14. 1883, - - [inducement to an Eastern girl for such here it is It Is Being Taid Block by Block on |altogether diflerent, for it only lasts six v the |an admission But out months and at the end of that tin | young ladies go right back to eighteen and twenty again. Indeed, it is looked upon as really romantie, despite the fact that wolves howl around at night and | zophers play hide-and-seck through the | shanties like rats,” ANl Admire a Handsome ¥ y clean skin will make any face hand nything which stren directly affe | y | and enriches the blood the isl anite that is being used on Ran- | (jiolo person, Al eruy dolph street is the same as that' used n [appear when Zurdock Bl J the new board of trade building. The | d. They are a veget: of in fmable valus i — A Father Who Forgot His Baby. ago Herald, “Yes, we find a great many things,” | said the conductor, as he looked over the ontents of a lady’s purse which he had ound on aseat in the next ca “What do you do with them “Turn them over to the chief " There is al | ways a fuss kicked up and he generally | finds owners for things. Yes, many peo Iple are very careless when tr " They leave all sorts of things in the cars | —canes and umbrellas oftenest. I sup- | pose you've heard the old yarn about the | man whb got on the train and felt as if |he'd forgotten something After the | train had started, you remember, he hap- | pened to think he'd left his wife sitting |in the depot waiting-room. Well, I had a 1cal case about as bad as that last man at the end of the trip. pring. A man and woman put their | baby to sleep on the scat behind them, | and when they reached their destination | & lot of friends met them and carried off | their bundles and traps, but everybody forgot the b A telegram caught us t the nex n, and the agent took care of the little chap until jthe careless father came with a buggy. Some people would forget their heads if they weren't fastened on. z p———— Thunder it Down the Ages, ches, That for lameness, for rheumatism, for for pains, and for Sprains D7) Oilisa_positive and reliable remed Dr. Thomas' Lelectric Oil can be purchased of any drugvist e Styles in Bagg: | Philadelphia Times. “Where's that trunk been?” saic porter yesterday, pointing to a dis tled hulk that had evidently putin to refit from the sea of summer travel, “I should think that bundle was yanked off somewhere up the Northern Central. There's a man at Elmira, I think it is, whom we always know by the way he leaves his handles—always tears ‘em out on the same end on one side. When a trunk is split along the back it's pretty sure to have been along the Con- necticut ceast. The Stonington transfer splits trunks like a buzz saw, but when youget the trunk stove in at both ends, with the hinges off and the lock col- lapsed, you can be pretty sure it’s been in Canad: There's where they do smash baggage. You see, they get so | durned mad handling the chests of draw- and washstands and wooden boxes pass for baggage in that country y trunk as a natural signal out the good |ers that A enemy. | ones uy for ofti ey your private mark?” asked | the reporte “Oh, we don’t smash baggage here. | smashin’, like the shakes in s in the next town. But inst these sum- said the bag- atogas, any 1y, model village of two-story wooden houses | about him. ty and ystom, there is none eq 1, which promptly and per- 1 lost vigor; it never fails, & druggists. ——— rop of Watermelons. Charleston (S, News, August Sth. The first crop of watermelons, which more numerous than profitable to the xhausted, and the en- rop of the South Georgia melons, which was also unprofitable to the grow- ers, having also been exhausted, the pric of the fruit has advanced and the demand from the north and west considerable in- | creased. The South Carolina railway company are dispatching e trains to transport the melons to Charleston for shipment north and also to western | points, The recent rans have helped the second growth of the melon vines, and the indications at present are that the melon-growersalong the line of the South Carolina railway, between Branchville | and Augusta, will not be as “‘short” as it was at one time thought they would be. The supply of the fruit in the city is very scarce, | growers, has bee |t — The Doctor's Endorsement. Dr. D. W. Wright, Cincinuati, 0., sends the subjoined professional endorsement: *'T have prescribed DR. WM., HALL'S BAL- SAM FOR THE LUNGS i - ber of cases and One n particnlar was given up by several | physicians who hiad Deen called 'in for consul- | tation withmyself. The patient had all the symptoms of confirmed consumption—cold ht sweats, hectic ng cough, He commex 1y to ot bot* and was soon usual health, so found 1 LL'S BAL: R THE aluable g coughs The Denver police have declared war on £ diluted 1 They must take out i peddle the pure article, license Pueblo s justly much elated over her new | | t nver's new artesian wells are n gallons A colored baby 1s of Denver flowing a how is one of the attrac TORPID y DISORDERED LIVER, BOWELS | tnoss aflor catlng, aversion to rtion of body er mind, ¥ructation Wrine, CO mand thousé of 4 remedy t £ onthe Liver, AsaLivermedioino TUTES PILLS Lavo 110 oqual. Thelr uotionon the Kidneysand Skin 18 150 prompt; romoving all impuritios through theso three ¢ scave engers of the system,” producing appe- tite, sound digestion alir 8Lools, skidanda yigorous body. TUTT'S calse N0 Nuwused OF GHNING NOF With daily work and are u porfoct ANTIDOTE TQ MALARIA; TUTTS HAIR DYE, RAY nus OR WHISKEES changed in. t fere stantl; iL0S8Y BLACK by a siagle ap- g:lmt!o:a 'of tiis DYE. 5old by Druggtats, sent by ex| on reoeipt of §1. 44 y Strect, New York. TUTT'S MANUAL OF USEFUL REGEIPTS FRRL, gageman, looking in a kindly way at the | | | | FURNITU And the Last for This Year. Until September 1st, we will offer some Special Goods in all Dopart- ments of our business at Greatly Reduced Prices, to Close Out. No such BARGAINS have ever before been Offered in a General Line of FURNITURE. Pssmugar Bvatr | CHKS, SHVER, To All Floors. J 1206, 1208, 1210 Street, Omaha, ~ A. M. CLARK, Painter & Paper Hanger SIGN WRITER & DECORATOR. WHOLESALE & RETAIL Farnham OMAHA, - - . FRESH O¥sTHRS Booth’s Oval’ Brand AND D. D. MALLORY & CO0’S “DIAMOND” BRAND. D. B. BEEMER, Omaha, Frosh Fish at Wholesalo. A.EL. DAXTILETY, MANUFACTURER OF FIN Buggies, Garriages and Spring Wagans, My Repository is constantly filted with a select stock. Best Workmanship guaranteed. Office and Factory S. W. Corner 16th and Capitol Avenue, Qmaha WM. SN YDER, MANUFACTURER20FSOFISTRIOTLY FiRST-CLASS DEALER IN Lumber, Sash, Doors, Blinds, Shingles, Lath ETC.; LOW PRICES AND GOOD GRAD: Call and Get my Prices before buying elsewhere. Yards, corner 9th and Dougla Also 7th and Douglas. PIANOSKCORGANS On Long Time--Small Payments. At Manufacturers Prices. A Hospe Jr 1619 DODGEISTRE GATE CITY MANUFACT EAS OF Carpenters’ Materials ALSO— , Doors, Blinds, Stairs, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window & Door Frames, & t-class facilitios for the manufacture of all kinds of Mouldings. iders from the country will | tly executed all communications to Planing and Matching a specialty A_MOYER, Propri 'PERF ECTION IN Heating and Baking Is only attained by using F ™~ v Stoves and Ranges, WITH WIRE GAUZE OVER DOORS For sale by MILTON ROGERS & SONS OMAHA. One More Special Sale - LOUIS BRADFORD, % PLANING MILLS! | f