Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 1, 1883, Page 2

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2 —— e . THE DAILY BEE --SATURDAY, SEP {EMBER 1, 1883. Advertising Chaetallt | What Is the Uwe? mfluth,1:“r1ng|n into vhw‘ the J\mk oqhm (% d:;‘plny );in hnrn(]nm “vrmllll ncd}:nilmnl}l.‘{ r:‘l:’:v’:l:Plclrlc MEDICI i 1 frrgo head, Then, seeing 1s gaze intently upon her, | uss the word “‘curriculum,” and as often as it 8 o st T 52 Slagany th | w’?‘;:'tn‘flh?n‘::r;‘:i:‘mlu-t nahll.:‘l:;'n‘::}fims, she shut her jaw and darkness Tell upon the | used it some of the sisters said *‘Glory!" “ beginning of an article, in an elegant, in- teresting manner., J ““Then run itinto seme advertiseme at that we avoid all such, “And simply call atfention to the mee- jts of Hop Bitters in as plain, }.onest terms as posible, “To induce people o give themonetrial, which sproves their vnfiuv that they will neve r wse any- thiug else.” “Tar Remeny so favorab',e moticed in all T8, «Raligious and secular, in “Having a large salo, a1,d is supplant- ing all ether medicines. *“There is no denying the virtues of the Hop plant, and the proprietors of Hop Bitters have shown great shrewdness “‘And ability “In compounding a medicine whose wirtues are so palpable to every one’s ob- wervation.” Did She Die? “Nol L “She lingoered and suffered along, pin- ing away all the time for )" “The doctors doing her no good;” «And at last was cured by this Hop Bittors tho papers say so much about.” “Indeed! Indeed!" “How thankful we should be for that medicine.” N A Daughter's Misery. “Eleven years our daughtor suffered on @ bed of misery, “From a complication of kidney, liver, rheumatic troubTe and Nervous debility, “Under the care of the bestphysicians, *‘Who gave her disease various names, “But no relief, “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.”"—THE PARENTS, Father is Getting Well. My daughter say ~How much better father Is since he used Ho “He in gotting well after his long suffering trom disense declared incurable” “And we are 80 glad that he used your Bitters.” ALavy of Utica, N, Y. Know ‘That BRowN's IRON BITTERS will cure the worst case of dyspepsia. ‘Will insurea hearty appetite » and increased digestion, Cures general debility, and gives a new lease of life Dispels nervous depression and low spirits, Restores an exhausted nurs- ing mother to full strength and gives abundant sus- tenance for her child, Strengthensthe musclesand nerves,enrichestheblood. Overcomes weakness, wake- fulness,andlack ofenergy Keeps off all chills, fevers, andother malarial peison. Will infuse with new life the weakest invalid. 37 Walker St., Baltimore, Dee, 1881, For six years [ have been sufferer from Blood Discase, 5 paia,and Constipation,andbecame %0 debllitated that I could not retain anything on my stomach, i almost becor Finally, when hope had almost left me, my husband secing Brown's Inon Brrrens advertised in the gover, induced me togive L am’ now taking the third b and have not felt so well in years as 1 do at the present ti M. L. F. Gurrin, Brown's Iron BizTers will have a better tonic effect upon any one who needs “bracing up,” than any medicine made, YDIA E. PINKHAM Q‘ 'ABLE COMPOUND, Sure Cure for all FEMALE WEAK: the Womb, Flooding, PR LAPSUS UTERIL, &e. W Ploasant (0 tho taste, eflicacious and Lmmedtak fa'effect. 1t fsa great heipin pregnancy, and wes pain during labor and at regular periods., IPHYSICLANS USE IT AXD PRESCKIBE IT FREELY, BFOB ALL WEANNESSES of the geperative orgen ‘wither s, 16 4 second (06O Temedy Uhst s 7 wa betore the public; and for all discases of Uk BUETS It 25 tho Greatest Kemedy in the World. Y KIDNEY COMPLAINTS of Either Se ¥Flud Creat Relief in s U, M“?fl& PINKHAM'S BLO overy weutigo of I 00d, at the sme time will givo tos wayeen. A s saarvellous 13 reeuls 55 Western avenus Bix bottles for g Tho Cc went by mal {5 the form of pills, or of | souipt of price, §1 por box for either, M. Fiu ) oeiy answers all lettors of inquiry, Enciom o wamp, Boud for pawphict, Meation this Faper. And hoard the vital foroes that wo wasts Before our day has reached its golden prime, What is the use of mshing with spent breath After old age, ita furrows, its white hair? Why need we hurry s0 to welcome Death, Or go half-way, with hands stretched out, to Care! There is no use. Dear heart, if wa but wajt ANl things will find vs. Let us pause, I say, We cannot go beyond the silent gate That lies & short day's jonrney down the way. So ot us take our time in youth's fair bowers, The summer season is o brief at hest; Let us look on the stars and pluck the flower, And when our feet grow weary, lot us rest. Let us take time for love and its delight; Tt is the one sweet thing that pays for all The bitterness of life, for Sorrow's blight, For Pain's despair and Death's funeral pall. Tn that lost era when the world was new, Love was men's first pursuit and life's excuse. w hias that timo come back to mo and you Why should we seek for more? W hat is the use? inua WHEELER, SULARITIES. A negro at Augusta, Ga., catches fish by diving. A sucker that whistles is canght in Walker lake, Nevada, Two sunflowers i Lancaster, Pa., measure respectively forty-eight and forty-nine inchee in circumference. Walter Curtis, of Bath, N. Y., opened his mouth so wide when he yawned, the other day, that ho dislocated his jaw. A brook trout 82 years old is kept in a by James Sherman, of Lafayette, N, Y has lost its spots, and looks aged and faded, A bell weighing 3,333 pounds, the largesto56 ever made on the Pacific’ const, w‘:l/cn,‘i ro- cently at Mare island Mavpgerd e o fog- signal alarm on Alcatraz island. A well-developed cancer on the lip of a Kingston, N. Y., dog was successfully removed by a surgeon, who chloroformed the canine before commencing the operation. A stone weighing twenty two tons, the largest ever taken from the Ulster quarries, passed through Kingston last week. Twenty- two horses were required to draw it. Henry Clay Thurston, of Mount Pleasant, Tex., the tallest man in America, is seven feet seven and one-half inches high, fifty-three years of age, and weighs 280 pounds. Dooly, Ga., is excoptionally blessed with curiosities. It has a dwarf, twenty-eight years old, four feet high and fifty-five pounds fight. Near by a giant towers six feet seven in his stockings, A baby whale has been taken te the West- minster aquarium in London from the St. Lawrence, The creature is about fifteen feot long and 500 pounds in weight, and seems well and lively, although its five companions diéd during the voyage to Liverpool. pakehiche ) Aatomtinln The Demand of Culture. A wistful light lay in her eyes As sho gazed o'er the hoaving sen, well t | And her slender hands were tightly clasped Around one up-bent knee, Intense the glance the moonbeams showed . An I stooped till her breath camo fast; $he asked in a voico of music low, Are poaches cheap at last? Boston Advertlser. o —— HONEY FOR THE LADIES, The ld-fashioned Garibaldi waist is being rovived, vest tennis hats are made of gray rk straw, faced with cardinal,and trimmed with pescuck feather ends and 'sen- gull's wing. Hand painting has come o ho so much the fashion tliat mahy Iadies of lelsnre who do very beantiful work dave their money by decorating their own dresses. A Long Brauch bello recently wore four dif- foront costumes beforo dinner. She had evi- dently lost her appetite and heon advised by a physician to take exercise. Dark blue is and will he a very popular color for tho promenade, Redfern is just at present muking the handsomest of theso suits of royal blue ladivs’ cloth of the finest quality. Dr. Hamilton says that at least once every day girls should have their halters taken off and be turned vut like young colts, *‘Calis- thenics may be very genteel,” ho avers, “‘and romping very ungenteel, ' but oue is the shadow, the other the substance of healthful exercise.” Dark red waistcoats and rovers, closely cov- ered with gold braid, are considered very stylish, A wilver gray dres ombroidered fn silver, with white watered silk vest, likewise embroidered, is » unique and delicats looking dress for special ocoasions, but one that soon bears its date, The latest ‘‘snake story” gulnk the rounds the Irnw is _headed, “A Young Lad ightly Embraced by Serpent.” Such inci- dents “are not rare, But the young lady doesn't know at the time that he is a serpent. Sometimes she doesn’t discover the fact until after she marries him,—Norristown Herald, A rancheress of Washoe valley, Nevi has invented a novel method of preserving eggs for winter use. During the summer she breaks the eggs, pours the contents into bot- tles, which are tightly corked and sealed, when they are placed in the cellar, neck down, She claims the contents of the bottles come out as fresh as when first put. in, The top of the buttoned kid disappeared long agoup the feminine sleeve, and it has since been w mystery to know where it went to. Perhaps, however, the matteris oxplained by the announcement from Parix that & lady recently attended a ball viven in that city by & foreign count, ina costume of white kid fitting liko o glove. But isn't this carrying tho buttoned kid rather oo far? Fuovier o L. ‘Mornogramy ure now embroidered in very heavy work, but are small in size. They are sxeauted in comparatively plain stylo, without any arabosque or floral” device surrounding thom. Handkerchiefs in shot muslin are car- riod with dresses of the same material, and are warked with one of the brightest colors of the muslin, The effect, howover, ix not good, and colored and figured handkerchiefs, like colored silk underwear, are_ merely o passing eccen- tricity of la mode™ " GRAHI owen, "PE’__. o cream spotted muslins, printed with sprays of scarlet or pink geranium blossoms or bunches of small china asters, are much worn, and are usually cut o la Watteau, They are both qualnt aud pretty looking, and, ' pro perly made, look ws 1t they hid juit boen en out from between the lavender and pot- pourrl of your grandmother's chest. When ot fn Watteau style theso drsses aro mado short waisted, with loose bodices, and a wide bebe sash tled around the waist. = b uvh wre LOw mado of tine stockinette cloth, which has the advantage of fitting the figure very closely, The most popular shape of this garment 1§ double-breasted, and has » small stand-up collar and revers like a gentlo: man's cost. The skirt is draped on the tips like » panier-polonaise, and is mado very bunchy and full low in the back The collar, cuffs, and pockets are often finished with vel- ot, and sometimes with jet as well, There is also the inevitable sash in the back, from which no out-door garment for_feminine wear seems able inst now to escape. ... A% Caps 11 some countries donate the status of the feminine wearer; hair-dressivg in Jupan tells of the lady's condition, There, a girl at the age of nine wears her hair tied vp in s red scarf, the forehend being left bare, with the wxception of & couple of locks, o each ide. When she is of marrisgeable uge she combs her huir forward, makes it up in the shupe of & y or fan and d i with sllver cord and balls wirhes for a second huslh wround a tortoise-shell | able widow cuts her are said to be rare, A widow who twists hair while an inconsol- r short. These last The Sandwich Tslanders appear to be toler- ably good judges of & woman's swile, A Hawaiian newspaper in describing such an aflair, said: *Her rich, red lips parted, and there flashed upon_the Lundscape two rows of Doautiful white teeth. Blowly her mouth opened wider and wider, ~ Doeper grow the dliaples 1n har bronss cheeks. Tirightar danced the sunheams in her eyes, until & stray ray, darting through the foliage of an overhanging bough, illuminated the deep cavern of her scens,” Too much cannot be said in condemnation of the habit —so common among woien —of whils making chauge. It is not only disgust- ing, but dangerous, There may be nothing offensive in the appearatice of the coin, and at the same time it may carry with it the seeds of contagion of the most deadly description. The same rule applies to anything which is passed promiscuously from hand to hand, or mouth to mouth, Surely no person wi<hes to unnecessarily run the risk ptracting dis- A o ease, and although one ve excaped con- tamination in the past there ix no assurance of future impunity. 1t is well to be warned in time. The English collar known as the “Direc- toire” is becoming a very fashionable additi to w dressy toilet. These collars are very wide, reaching nearly over the shoulders, and made of brocaded net. The edges are finished with a broad, reantily gathered ruffle of Re- Taismahos o uther ri T fancy 1nge of the cresm tint. Above this is a band of insertion, very open in patern, and nearly covered with ting rl beads, ugh this is ran & black vel- vet ribbo the pearl bended bands. upon the band T in and out l\|||n|lr This s repeated around the throat, which is drawn up snugly ht together with a cluster of velvet Joops aud long ends of the skme, which fall far below the waist. Sometimes the i the net, of which the collar itself is o in also pear] beaded. These make unusually protey and becoming additions to- the toilet, and are appropriate for alinost any occasion. They can be made ‘‘at home” :at “about_one. third the price asked for them at the fancy stores. i and brouy B Musings (A’ Tt We Loving and graceful willows Shiter the gray-old mill, And-—ye gods{ but when To settlo g tailor bill, re.) 1t | Over Ao wky, raindripping, o golden rainbow 1s bent, nd to-morrow, O golden rainbow, T must fix up my last month's rent. Over the daisy-decked meadows The dear lambs are frisking gay, And wpeakiag of sheep reminds me Of the butchers’ bill, due to-day. In the blossom fields of clover The cattlo are lowing low, And my milk bill is ripe to-morrow; Which gives me pain to know. Tho blue-bellyaro blosoming sweotly, And sweetly tho blue birds sing, And I think of my wife and the unpaid bill For the bonnet sho got last spring. —Puck, DROPS, PEPPERM Oysters and fall poetry will soon be in sea- won. The baggazeman is bracing his muscles for the season of returning tourists, Two hundred million cucumber pickles will o put up this year for_ the American school girl. 1t has been found that very old eggs, when cracked, explode with a loud. report, emitting poisanots guses, Wo got this”itom from u chemist who boards. The Philadelphian guzzles buttermilk; the New Yorker, hot water; the Bostoniun, cider; the Loulsvilllan, applejack; the Milwaukeean, bear; the Chicagoan, whisky, Those cowboys might doa more laudable thing than the mere capturing and holding of a president for ransom. lLet them slay the man who has been feeding the country on trout stories for the last two weeks. “The badge of his profession: *No, sah,” ex- citedly exclaimed a southern darky dominie, “‘dat whitewash on de sleebs ob my cout neb: nor come from de roost ob a chicken house Dem marks, sah, am do badge of my per- feshun, sah,” Washington is largoly deserted by the gov- ernment officials of high degreo, bat the coun- try goes Tight on prospering and to prospor. Oin & pinch the American people can get along comfortably with very little attoution from rulers of any kind. Ex-Commissioner of Agriculture Lo Duc thinks domesticated ostrichos will soon be preferable to mules for stroet-car sorvice, and when worn out will be valuable for beof. This, beats Lo Duc’s tea, which tasted like wormwood and acted like arsenic.—Boston Post. "Tho first ice-cream over seen in St. Louis was served at o wedding sixty years ago. Now a 8t. Louis youth has to purchase 5,000 plates of ice-creaa” before ho can get anywhere near the popping point, and yet people pretend to wonder why there aro 1ot 5o many marriuges as formerly. “Oh! Yos," said the Western editor' “busi- ness is very brisk out our way. Have to work the presses twonty-four hours a day to suppl the demand, and na for. advertissra—well, T gavo orders last week to kick them out if the uwsked for over ten lines. By the way, just had my pocket picked. Lond me a dime, will you?” A humane person wrote to a New York pa- per & communicatibn which he evidently in- tended to bear the caption line, ““A Plea for Homeless Dogs.” The truthful compositor, who could not tell a lie, spelled the word “‘plea’ with a capital ¥ He was right. Most home- losw dogs have ‘em, “The dire effect of Uncle Rufus are already visible in the Region over which his_influence oxtends, A gentleman who traveled eight days in the great Yellowhtone park reporss that he didu’t see a single living specimen of wild ~ animal, excepting _chipmunks and sr‘numl squirrels, and not an Indian, dead or ve. A young gentleman writing from Long Branch asks whether it is *'good form” to hol¢ a bird with one's fingers while eating it. If the “'bird” is the regulation watering place spring chicken, it is *'good form” enough, but poor policy. Sy e R something and use both hancs,—Rochester Post-Express, A romancer at Great Neck, Long Island, has seen the story of the able-bodled liar who makes artificial eggs and goes him one better. He has patented & machine for hatching arti- ficial eggs and bring out veritable chickens, feathers and all, o things, only, he loaves to be regretted. One is that he does not hail from Great Cheek instead of Gireat Neck; and the second is that he did not invent a m to make chickens without any egge, artificial or others. e —— Dun Laid by de Co'n, Do old gray gooss is er walkin' down do ane— We's dun Iaid by de co'n; An’ she waddles in de wet an' squats in de Fy i We's dun laid by da co'n— De old sow roots war de taters was dug— ‘We's dun laid by de co'n; An’ do dominicker hen am a chasin' ob de bug— We's dun laid by de co'n; De ole cow balls As her calf she calls, A’ de possum dog wags his tail; 1 goes wid my pipe ‘ar the apples is ripe, An’ chucks "em inter de pail. De old yaller houn’ am troubled wid flees— Vo's dun laid by de co'n; An'it's too late now fur robbin’ ob de hees— We's dun laid by de co'n; De ole bell sheep ain't afeerd ob de curs- Vo's dun laid by de co'n; Fur her ole gray back's all covered wid burs— We's dun laid by de co'n, De lark ho cries As he rises and flies, An’ de white boy shoots wid his gun; But do bird keops on O'er de tps ob de co'n, Case de boy he neber touch one. Arkansaw Traveler, At a tho other giantess, aross and L six foot and threo inches high, and all for Jesus.” The strength of man's tendency to sleep in church was illustrated recently in Lowiston, Me., where a burglar was found in sound tools scatf around him, The Biblical Recorder says that colored preacher in a recent” sermon, wi g : Placing small coin between the teeth or lips | comes the money £ | popular Parisian actress, who was th b | of pap slumber in a pew of 8t. Peter's with his kit of oung who had just “Anghow," said & young I returned from a uumL pieni. been frightened at a _snake in the G “den, but she never hud a nasty, hairy ca crawl down the neck of her dress.” ’. A _combination of umbrella and fishing pole, the lattor being in sec hiddory by the wbrella folds, has b nted, 'The in- ventor i n, who likes to take long walks for quiet meditation on Sun day. The New Orleans Picayune says: Tt is a strange Providence that blows down a church and Jots n shot-tower stand.” The editor of the Picayune has evidently never sitended s church fair and paid 85 for a colored ol doll A shot-tower never plays that sort on fts congregation, clergyman who married the woma ay to Osmond Tearlo, the actor, in Donver, excused his_participation in the wedding of two divorced people by saying “he hud assurances which he deemed sufficient be- fore he conkented to marry the pair.” The best information obtained showed that the “‘assur- ances” which he deemed sufficient were five $10 bills, Missionary work among the Chinese of Wil- Jiamsburg has met with a serious set-back. wdiy; while several of the Celestials tending Sunday school, their places of s were broken open and despoiled of oods, wares and merchandise, chiefly he ‘“wash,” The robbed ones have ntly backslidden and proclaimed their determination not to go ‘‘churcheo no wore,” A Methodist church in Monticello is oy tatod with a moral question of many and in- tricate ram tions. A bell was wanted for the building, a order to raise funds for its purchase thy ung people of the congrega- tiongave n series of ‘‘sociables” at their homes, at which there was usually afiddle and dancing. Fifty dollars were cwlifluted in this way, but when the sum was offered to the p: tor he refused to accept it, on the ground that it “had been raised in an ungodly way.” Then one of the brethren declared that the money raised by “‘dancing sociables” was no more un- godly than that raised by tho regulation “church festival, with its grab-bag, and ring- cake, and other lotteries,” The outspoken brother was at once charged with holding views “‘opposed o Christianity a8 teught by the Methodist creel,” and was arriigned before & committes of all the Methodist clergymen in the vicin- ity. After o hearing he was acquitted; but the pastor refuses to budge from his position, and still dedlines tho £50, The finding of the committee leaves many important points of the discussion unsettled. Tlley declared that when the brother pronounced a “dancing so- cinble” no more ungodly a source for _church revenue than a “‘church festival” he did not hold views opposed to the Methodist creed. ‘The abstract question of the ungodliness of both socisbles and testivals was not touched upon at all. Then, no decision was reached as to what disposition should be mado of the 850, Tn a moment of vexation t| young people_might decide to usa it in a y nic which shall be a wild debauch of free ice crewn and lemonade, with the not re- mote possibility of poisoning the whole com- munity, e —— MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC. Mme. Modjeska’s soason opened in Des Moines this week. Joseph Jefferson has gone to the Catakill mountaing. It is his first visit to Rip Van Winkle's ground. John T, Raymond will be seen at Haverly's, Chicago, the week of September 10, in his new comedy, “The Rockett.” Thero is & new primn donna from Australia, Mrs. Gilbert, en routo east. She has an anti: podean reputation and will probably find a good opening in America, “Beuvenuto Cellina,” & grand opera by Hector Berlioz, from which the popular over- turo of » Roman carnival was taken, was pro- duced Aug, 3 in Leipzig. The real name of Marcella Sembrich, the 1 s to bring to Amer- a. She was born in Mrs. Anna Louise Cary Raymond has con- sented to sing once more ublic —this -time at Portland, Me., at a complimentary concert tendercd to her friend, Miss Bryant. Mr. Grau promises to open his soason at the Fifth Avenue theatre, in New York, Sept. 10, with a new operetta by Lecocq. His compa- ny will include Mlle. Aimee, Mile. Angele, le. Nixon, M. Mezieres, M. Duplan, ete. win Booth's tour opens at the New York Star Theater Dec, 10, Horace McVicker will be the manager and James W. Morrisey the husiness manager. Miss Affie Weaver, Gus, Levick, and Fred Bock will be in the company. The Viennese will soon hear Wagner's and Isolde,” with three of the great amatic vocalists—Frau Materna, Herr celmnnn, and Herr Scaria. M. Theo- doro Thomas expects to be in Vienna when this event occurs, Miss Emma Thurshy has positively declined to accept several flattering offers to sing in opera, has also declined an offer of £10,000 per year to sing in St, Bartholomew church in New York, and_will make a concert tour through the United States the coming season under the manugement of Mr. Maurice Stra- kosche. . The Boston Ideal opera_company the com- ing season will be much the same as last. 1t will number 50 peaple, and the principals will Dol an Jast vearoMyzon. W.. Whitasy) Tom Cart, H. C. Barnabee, Geo, Frothingham, W. H. McDonald, Herndon Morsell, Marie Stone, Geraldine Ulmer, Mathilde Phillips, and Lizzio Burton, with 3. S, Studley, leader of the orchesa. The unhappy fate of Mlle, Feyghine, the mistress of the Duc de Morny, and shet herself through the heart as he was on the eve of abandoning her, has been utilized in the s»m of a play that is to be performed at the Odeon theatre the coming season, The drama is in three acts, and entitled “La Comme,” a term applied to the wealthy libertine world, which it is de- signed to represent in the person of the heroine's betrayer, Sixteen of the musicians who have been en- gaged by Mr. Abbey for his Metropolitan Opera Houwse in New York arrived last Wednesday in New York, to be followed by twelve more, who will sail Sept. 12, together with forty members of the chorus and of the ballet. Sixty more of Mr, Abbey's people are booked to leave Hamburg Sept. 25 by the Silesia, and all the rest will sail Mr. Abbey himself will leave Europe Sept. 6 by the steamer Britaunic. The ‘Mubm'»ullum opera house will be opened Oct. 19 with Nils on as Marguerite, Campanini as Faust, Scalchi as Bh‘:fijllld Del Puente as Mephisto, 1t is promised that in stage-mounting, proper- ties, chorus, orchestra ballet, and all other accessories this performance of *‘Faust" will successfully rival the ‘‘Faust” productions at the Grand Opera in Paris, Remarkable Escape. John Kuhn, of Lafayette, Ind., had a very narrow em;lpo from \;uth. \ Tll‘h Il- his own story: “One year ago I was in the last stages of C‘f.nmun,.ciun. DR TR b s e my case up. I finally got so low that our doc- tor said I could not live twenty-four hours. M’y friends then purchased a bottle of Dr. W, HaLu's BALsay ror THE LuNes, which benefited we. I continued until I took nine bottles, I am now in perfoct health having used no other medicine. Henry's Carbolic Salve. The BEST SALVE in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns. and all kinds of Skin Eruptions, ete. Get HENRY'S CARBOLIC SALVE, ‘as all others aro but imitations. Pric nta. e —— Mayor Stevens, of Cincinnati, is described us devoting two hours each day to office seekers, They are admitted to hitn one at time through & wicket gate. Behind him sits an v\finw“uliliulun. seemingly working indus- triously at o desk, but really to prompt his honor i to the worthiness and consequence of the callers, which is done by slyly passing slips Al . Mr. George Dodge Speaks. This Gentleman lives in Emporium, Pa, aud says, “‘One of my men, Sam. Lewis,whils working in the woods spained his ankle so bad he could hardly hobble to the house. Used Thomas' / clectric Oil and was ready for work the next morniug. I bave never yet seen so & medicine.” y My Univer. = BEFORE TAKINO, waiLassitude, Pain AFTER TARING, n the Back, Dimness of Vision, Premature Old Age, and many other diseases that lead to Insanity or Con. sumption and a Premgture Grave. BrwARR of advertisdments to druggsts from whom the medicine is bought do not reund, but refer you bo the manufacturem, and the sequirements are snch that they are seldom, if ever, somplied with. Sce thele webben guamates A trial of one single package of Gray’s Speaific wil convince the most skeptical of ita real merits, On account of counterfoitems, we tmvo adopted the Yellow Wrapper; tho onby gentine. gar Full partictlam in our pamphlet, which we do sire 0 send free by madl o evory onie. g7 The Spe- cific Medicine 18 soki by sl druggiste at #1 per pack- age, or six packages for 6, or will be sent free by mail on the receijt of the money, by addresing THE GRAY MBDIC! Butfalo, N, F Jv 19m%e etund money, when 8old in Omaha by C. F Goriman, The uncovering of an ancient wreck on Her- ring Cove Beach, Maine, by the washing away of the sand that has of late years covered it, revives speculation. Tt is known to have beeri there more than a century, and it is believed to bo of twice that age, ~The model is obso- lete, and there is no iron in its fastenings. — Lynn, Mass., always was a good place for health, but it has become a modern Bethesda since Mrs, Lydia E. Pinkham, - | of 233 Western Avenue, made her great discovery of the Vegetable Compound, or panacea for the principal ills that afflict the fair creation. This differs, however, from the ancient scene of marvelous cures in this important particular: The healing - |agent, with all its virtues, can be sent to order by express or mail over the world, A Charley Ross case, in which a Scotch lad was stolen from a wealthy family, has come to a conclusion in his identification, thirty years later, in the Buenos Ayres army. On being restored to his aved parents he could not speak their language, and was far removed by coarse axperientes from, the refinement o which he had been born, But they were overjoyed. - —— Glad to Hear it. “For several months I endured a dull pain through my lungs and shoulders; lost m spirits, appetite and color, and could with dif- ficulty remain_from my bed. My present healthful condition is due to Burdock Blood Bitters.” Mrs, E, A, Hall, Binghampton, e e Diamonds are a source of mixed joy and anxiety to the women at the watering places. The fear of robbery is nover absent from the owners of the jewels, apd the hiding place sometimes proves bad—as when a wife at Saratoga saved her trensures from thieves by putting them into an umbrella, and lost them through a sudden shower, in which her unad- vised husband used the shelter. e MOTHERS REGRET WHEN TOO LATE the death of their infants, caused in many instances by improper food. There need be no hesitation in using Mellin's Food, as long trial has proved it the very best article for children deprived of the natural fount, It is indorsed by eminent physicians, and may be had of niost drug- gists. — A luckless nobleman in a small French provincial town had his legitimist feelings strongly aroused by hearing a band playing “The Marseillaise.” He threw up his window and hissed vehemently at what the character in ‘‘Little Dorritt” would have called the “allonging and mmhonr{ng” of the band. The crowd threatened and _the police warned, but he continued to hiss, He was borne away to prison. — Great and Small Agree. Mrs. Mary E. Billings, of Newport, Ind., says that her little boy, Eddie, was helpless from rheumatism, and a few plications of the great pain-banisher, Jacobs Oil, cured him. The Jews of school, in W taught the mechanical and artisan trades has already turned out 1,500 skilled m s, Last year the school had over 250 pupils, £ whom 40 were learning_to bo carpenters or 5 blacksmiths, 60 shoemakers, Horsford’s Acid Phosphate, Makes a Cooling Drink. ler of ico water put a teaspoonful of Acid Phosphate;add sugar to the taste. (] S other & monument inscrib- with anti-Christian sentiments ought to b erected in a Christian cemetery is raised by the Pittsburg Post, which is informed by & correspondent that the grave of D. M. Ben- net is to be thus marked in Greenwood. Ben- ot waa an outapoken nfidel, and it is propos- ed to carve some of his characteristic sayings on the granite pile which admirers have' con- tributed to erect. — What we Can Cure, Let's not Endure. The questi: If we can cure an ache, or @ sprain, ora pain, or a lameness, or a burn, or a bruise, or a bite, by using Zhomas' Eclectric 0il, do it. Thomas' L clectric Oil is known to be good. Let's try it. —— Henry Study, on dying at Ransom, TIL has left a strangely acquired fortune of $65,. 000. He was a cripple from birth. At the close of the war he l“nlmml the uniform of a soldier, made up a pathetic story of having been wounded in battle, and went on a tour as & beggar, He was wonderfully successful, by reason of his clever talk and miserable ulp. pearance, and in three years accumulated the amount mentioned, He ever afterward lived idly on the interest. THE U Admiration OF THE WORLD. Mrs.S. A.Allen's WORLD'S 3 Hair Restorer 1S PERFECTION! Public Benefaotress. Mm. 5. A. ALLi bias jusily carned this title, and thousands are this day rejoicing over a fine head of hair produced by her unequaled preparation for restor- ing, invigoratis nd beautifying the Haur, r World's Hair Restoret quichly cleanses the scalp, removing Dandruff, and arrests the fall; the hair, if gray,is changed to its natural color, gaving it the same vitality and luxurious quantity es in youth, COMPLIMENTARY. “My hair is now restored to its youthful color; T have not ay hairleft. I am sat- isfied that the preparation is not a dye, but acts on the sceretions hair peases to fall, which is cer- ily an advantage to me, who was in d coming bald the testimony of all who use Mrs. S, A. ALLEN'S WORLD'S HAIR RESTORER “Oune Bottle did it." Thacis n,,‘- Expreasion of any who have had their gray bair restored 10 its natural color, “and their bald spot covered b e alter wsiag one baitle of Mis. S. A. AtLen's Worio's Hatk Rustokex. 1tis not & dye, INE. Tis Great Exo TRADE MARK i8N REMEDY. An unfailing cure for / Semfnal W enk. / poss, Spermatore. ! » Tmpotency, nd ' all Diseases that follow as & AT\ woquience of Self- H 2 Abus a8 loss of’ To All Floors. 1206, FURNITURE! One More Special Sale And the Last for This Year. Until September 1st, we will ofter some Special Goods in all Depart-. ments of our business at Greatly Reduced Prices, to Close Out. No such BARGAINS have ever before been Offered in a General Line of FURNITL RE. Passenger Elevator| CHAS, SHIVERICK, 1208, 1219 Farnhan Street, Omaha, y T. SINEOL.D, Galvanized lronCornices, Window Caps Finiak MANUFACTURER OF Skylights &0 Thirteenth Street Nel ivolvi from Chic: tween Chic: TEEIRTT COINGC EAST AND WEST. nt Day Coaches, Parlor Cars, with Reclin ing Chairs (seats free), Smoking Cars, with ing Chairs, Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars and ithe famous C. B. & Q. Dining Cars run daily to and & Kansas City, Chicago & Council Bluffs, Chicago & Des Moines, Chicago, St. Jo- seph, 'Atchison & To o, Lincoln & Denver. Through cars between Indiatapolis & Council Blufls via Peoria Al connections *made in Depots. 1t 1s known as the great THROUGH CAR LINE, Finest Equipped Rallroad in the World for all Classes of Travel. (T. J. POTTER, 3d Vice-Pres't and Gen'! Manager PERCEVAL LOWELL, Chicago. P T, T TN A W T A T R o /Dy o — AT N AN WA S T -~ ‘j‘ ka. Only through line be- Union Col “BURLINGTON HOUTE" (Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Rallroad 3 e COINC NORTH AND SOUTH. Solid Traing of Elegant Day Coaches and Pull man Palace Sleeping Cars are run daily to and from St Louis, via Hannibal, %\:’lnc , Keokuk,} Burlington, Cedar Rapidsand All r’.{pu o Paul and Minneapolis. Parlor Cars with Reclining] Chairs to and from St Louis and from St Louis and Ottumwa. Only one change of cars between St Meines, lowa, Lincoln, Nebraska, and enver, lorado. 1t 18 universally admitted to be the G S N and Peoria and to Louis and Des Pass. Ag" 1l a1 OMAHA, Build all kinds of Steam Boilers. Smoke Stacks, Breeching Lard, Water and Oil Tanks, and do a goners Mate-iron business. s WIT.SO Sl I Repairing done in City and Country. Having had 1 J. M. Wi NS Al work Done at Eastern Prices and Warranted ! Second-hand Boilers will be kept on hand. of the country, Iam confident I can give satisfaction, ha cor. 19th and Plerce Strects. s years experioncein the trade in different parts the best shop and tools in the State. ILSON Proprietor. Works| NEBRASKA. Shop Double and Single Acting Power and Hand PUMPS, STEAM PUMPS, Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fittings Steam Packing at wholesale and rejail. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS, Corner 10th Farnam 'St., Omaha Neb. J. A. WAKEFIELD, { WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALEK IN Lmber. Lat, Shingles, Piekers, SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LINE, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, OMAHA, NEB Paints, 0ils, Varnishes and Window Glass C. F. GOODMAN, ND DEALER IN OMAHA, NEBRASKA. Wholesale Druggist! OMAHA, JOBBER OF HENRY LEHMANN Wall Paper and Window Shades. EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, 1118 FARNAM STREET, M. HELLMAN & CO, Wholesale Clothiers! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, OMAHA NEE. NEBRASK.

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