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e B PS A LM, [revISED) [ EAR this, all yo people, and give ens all yo invalids of the world, Hop Bitters will make you well and te re joice. 2. It shall cure the people and p sickness and suffering under foot. 3. Be thou not afraid when your family is sick, or you have Bright's dis waso or Liver Complaint, fer Hop Bitters will cure you. 4. Both low and high, rich and poor know the valueof Hop Bitters for bilious, nervous and /2hrumatic complaints. 5. Clense me-with Hop Bitters and 1 shall have robust and blooming health. 6. Add disease upon disease and let the worst come, I am safe if I use Hop Bitters, 7. For all my life have Iheenplagned with sickness and seres, and not until a year ago was I cured, by Hop Bitters. 8. .%h that keepeth his bones from aching 1cm Rheumatism and Neuralgia, with Eep. Buters, doeth wisely. MARCHING TO VICTORY. An Elognent, Vigorons and ery Address on the Progress of the Irioh Canse. The Great Work Accomplished by the Land League and its Leaders, Bright Hope for Home Rule in the N~ar Future, At a recent moeting of the Irish Na- tional League, a committee was appointed to further the interests of the organiza- tion in Nebraska, the committeo con- sisting of John Rush, P, F. Murphy, M. i ‘,],"f.‘.',,,],‘f"f.r'\*‘,li'!,‘.l,\l’.'"{I;L‘,Qi Donovan, Pat Ford and R. P. Rickerby, poisoning, yet Hop Betters will remove| During the evening the meeting was them all, addrossod by Mr, John Rush, who took 10, What wonan is there, foeble and | for his subject sick from female complaints, who desireth not health and useth Hop Bitters and is made we 11. Let nct noglect to use Hop Bit- tors bring o, scrious Kidney and Liver complaints. 12, Keep thy ongue from being fur- red, thy blood ™ jure, and thy stomach from indigestion by using Hop bitter: 1. ALl my pains and sk dnd easo go like chaff before the wind when I use Hop Bitters, 14. Mark the man who was nearly dead and given up by the doctors after using Hop Bitters and becometh well. 16. Cease from worrying about ner- vousness, general debility, and urinary trouble, for Hop Bitters will restore you. TRUE Temperance Is not signing a pledge or taking a solemn oath that cannot be kept, because of thenon-removal of the cause —liquor, Thewaytomake a man temperate is to kill the desire for those dreadful artificial stimulants that car- ry so many bright intellects to premature graves, and desolation, strife and un- happiness into so many families. Ttisafact! BROWN'SIRON BITTERS, a true non-alcohol- ic tonic, made in Baltimore, Md., by the Brown Chemical Company, who are old drug- ists and in every particu- s reliable, will, by remov- ing the craving appetite of the drunkard, and by curing the nervousness, wealncs. and general ill health resuit ing from intemperance, do more to promote temperance, in the strictest sense than any other means now known. It is a well authenticated fact that many medicines, especially ‘bitters,’ are noth- .ing butcheap whiskeyvilely * concocted for use in local option countries. Such is not the case with Brown's IroNBiTTERS. Itisamedi- cne, a cure for weakness and decay in the nervous, muscular, and digestive or- gans of the body, produc- ing good, rich blood, health and strength, Try onebot- tle. Price $1.00, " Health is Wealth Dr. E. O. Wost's Nerve and Brain Treatmont, guarantood for Hysterla, Dizrinoss,"Conval wions, Eits, Nervous Neuralgia, ‘Headache, Nervour Prostrilion caused bx the use of alcohol of tobaoso, Wakofulness, Mental Deprossion, Softening of the Brain, resultlng in ineanity and leading to decay' and_death, Prematuro Old of power in’cithar gox, Tnvoluntaty Lowe ! rrhae causod by ‘over oxertions o brain, self-abuse or over-indulgence. Each tains one month's treatment. $1.00 & box, or' boxes for §6.00. Ront by mall propald on redeiph WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order recolved by us for uix boxes nocompanied with §6.00, wo willsend the urchaser our written guarantee torofund thomoney f the roatmont does not affoct a cure. Guarantece ued only by wie wi DR, FELIX LE BRUN'S AND PREVENTIVE AND CURE, FOR EITHER SEX. This remedy belng injected directly to the eat the diseaso, requires no change of diet or nauseous, mercurial of polsonous medicines to bo tahen intern- ally. When 1sed aa a preventive by cithor sex, it iy impossible to contract any private discase; but in the oaso of those already unfortunstely aflictod wo guar. otee three boxes to cure, or wo will rofund the money. Price by mall, postage paid, 82 per box, or throe boxes for WRITTEN GUARANTERS ssued by all suthorized ageuts. Dr.FelixLeBrun&Co BOLE PROPRIETORS, Sole Agent, for Omah whe wiv Nob © EAT Ilfil-l'.:.vou?lnv. Cures guvsicarcs Debility rators- P OF MANLY VIGOR, ete., whon all ¢ press to sny fons. b druggists. ENGLISH MED[ CAL INBTITUTE, Propriotoms, 118 Ollve Btreet, St | xil, -upll'ly these heroes. The Duty of the Hour, The value of the individual citizen or amount ef subject is measured by the good he imparts to or bestows mpon his fellow man. 1f .we live only for our selves, if we are concerned in that which benefits self only, and are observed only in our own welfare, then the pertinent question naturally prosents itself. For what reason did an inscrutible Providence place us in the world? Nor need we look a great distance, no matter where situ- ated, in order to find the object of our pity, our sympathy or our benevolence, Some men there are, who spend their lives in the accumulation of wealth, and never pause to reflect whether they rob the widow or the orphan in satisfying their inordinate appetite for gain. A few of this class when nearing the portals of the grave and conscience stricken, when looking backward upon the miserable lives they have led, make an effort at roparation, by donatinga portion of their ill-gotten gatherings to endow a college, to promote religion, or to ameliorate the condition of the poor and _afilicted. There aro v - . ST NS J[NOBLETEX AMPLES axr M2Vt indeed, of men who by their native ener- gy and industry, have become rich, and then raised monuments to their memory, which are as as imperishable as their lives have been blameless. Among these may be mentioned the late Peter Cooper of New York, and our own Edward Creighton of Omaha. There is another class of benefactors, whose every act through life tends to make man better, and to raise him up to that standard so graphically ribed by Shakspeare, when he says: ‘“What a piece of work is man! how noble in reason! how infinite in faculties! in form and motion how ex- press and admirable! in action how like an angel! in apprehension like a god!” These good Samaritans not only pour oil into the wounds of the sufforer, but they raise him up and carry him to the hospi- tal of their benevolence and charity. They do not wish to seo man bowed down with labor which is ill-requited, but wish to behold him stand erect and enjoy . the fruits of his toil, and the hap- piness which of ri%ht belongs to it. We have good and noble examples of this class in Henry George and Michael Davitt. But, after all, patriotism furnishes the highest and most enobling class of phil- anthropists. Surely it is naught buv the purest and most disinterested love of country that could prompt Michael Davitt to use his great.energies, his indomitable will and varied talents in gonss gonds| THEJGREATRCAUSE oiis N::;. he has set his heart upon. Whether in prison or out of it, his vast mind is con- stantly at work, not for anylreward he ) may gain forfhimself, nor ik TFor,thio applauseRoflistening senates to com- mend HICKVI »iCi but that he see his country take her lace among the nations of the earth. i‘rulnnd may well take the first rank as furnishing the greatest martyrs to the cause of liberty, for they have ever held that ‘Whether on the scaffold high, or in the bat. tle's van, The noblest place for man to die is where he dies for man. 1 had intended to allude in detail to somo of Ireland’s martyrs, but the galaxy is 80 grand, so numerous, so brilliant, that 1 find it impossible oven to name them within the small compass of this paper. The ages that have passed, from the memorable landing of Strongbow down to the splenetic Spencer of the present day, all along tho corridors of time we find Irishmen walking to the scaffold, the dungeon, or the guillotine, with the firm- ness and bravery that allow no parallel in history. Verily, if the hluo{] of the martyr is the seed of the church, it disputable that 7, *$w8 ;tguwol gid Py ST rHEluLooDOFTINISH MA B not only propagated ro 5] a mnation and transformed them Spartans, worthy of our respect, venera- tion and love. Robert Emmett is pro- eminently of this class, who, raised in affluence and wealth, and possessed of personal charm; endowments, sufti- cient to entitle him to tho highest social rank, sacrificed all, on the very threshold of his bright manhood for the cause of lomption. The Manchester rnish us another noble exam- 1n broad day light, in their enemy’s ple. country, and surrounded by all the power and vindictivencss of that enemy, they risked their lives to rescue their leader. Their glorious anthem of “God Save Treland,” will ring down along the avenues of time, and will yot be sung by a regenerated punYlu. for 1f thero be auything to inspire valor, or to PROMOTE PATRIOTISM, it must be the disinterested conduct of these heroes, Surely the poet was right when he sung, ““For deurer the grave or the prison, Tlluw'd by one patriot name, Than the trophies of all who have risen On liberty's ruins to fawe,” 1t is true that Ireland, faithful to her traditions, and loathiug tyranny as in- tense us she loves liberty, must necessa. The galling or which she groans has never fi: LRI [ boen imposed upon, any othor nation John Bull is as ferocious and cruel as he is avaricious and bloodthirsty. Not one throb of human sympathy has ever vi. l“r.la Astle; Vital Restorative to e e St ke by 5 14, . Goonman, Drugglst. Owahs Feb.1 1888 v 18-mbe-eodly brated in hisinhuman heart. The words of my eloquent countoyman, Edmund Burke, are as applicable to the typical into [ b; Englishman as they were to the henions Hastings, when he says: *‘In the course of all this proceeding you will not fail to observe that he is never corrupt, but he is cruel; he never dives with comfort but when he is sure to create a famine. He never robs from the loose superfluity of standing greatness; he devours the fallen, the indignant, the necessitous, His extortion is not like the generous rapacity of THE PRINCELY EAGLE, which snatches away the living, strug- ling prey; he is a vulture who feeds upon the prostrate, the dying and the dead. As his cruelty is more shocking than his corruption, so his hnmcrinfi hos some- thing more !ri?htlul than his cruelty. For whilst his bloody and rapacious hand signs proscriptions and sweeps away the food of the widow and the orphan, his eyos overflow with tears, and he con- verts the healing balm that bleeds from wounded humanity into a rancorous and deadly poison to the race of man !” What a true picture of the English- man, governing Ireland! And what wonder, as I hear said, that Ireland, THE NIOBE OF NATIONS, writhing in the th of agonies in flicted by this brute, would rise in the solemn silence of night, or in the gloam: ing of the early mbrning, or in the dusk of evening and strike down her enemy, though she confronts him in the thorough-fares of the Phaenix Park? Do you call the deed of the Gth of May, 1882, cruel, murderous, cowardly? Well thon, England has been guilty of ten thousand acts, aye, ten times ten thous- and, more cruel, more infamous, more damuable! And now comes the pith of my address this evening. Irishmen! you who love your native land, and who love her patriots—you who admire the Irish mar- t,r, and who loathe the Irish spy—you, expatricated fellow - countrymen, who, like me, have been driven from the home of our fathers—who have left Ire- land with a vengeance—I ask you, will the latest hero in the drama of Irish liberty, walk to the scaffold, without an effort_on your part to save his precious life—TI refer to THE INDOMITABLE O'DONNELL] There is no use in mincing matters. I have heretofore been plain spoken, and now I declare here to-night that no act is recorded in the checkered pages of Trish history Tam more proud of than the kill- ing of the dog Carey, in the antipodee. His loathsoms carcass deserved a more humiliating treatment than that received at the clean hands of O’Donnell, but when we contemplate the surroundings; when we see this creature of damnation silent- ly stealing from the gaze of his fellow man; when we behold him skulking be- hind English prison bars, as affording the only refuge to be found in the British dominions; when we see him go abroad the ship, which is to carry him from the scenes of his disgrace and his perfidy; when we view him aboard ‘that ship and, certain that he has eluded the vigilance and the vengeance of the men whom he plate all this, and find that in the very acme of his hopes, in the moments of his fancied security, he meets the avenger, 1 say God bless the hand of the brave O'Donnell, and cursed be the Irish race if it make no effort to save the man who has purged Irish society of informers forever. Too often have we been led by designing villains whose base purpose has been to fatten on our credulity. We have been wont to make leaders and demi-gods of scoundrels, whose sole ob- ject has been to learn our secrets and then TO BETEAY US., If such vermin are made aware that any branch they enter has an O'Donnell whose vengeance is as certain as their crime is henious, they will either never enter our societies or their designs for evil will be impotent and harmless. Lel us then take up subscriptions to defend O'Donnell, There is something grand as well as histeric in the name. See to it that it be propsrly honored. But we have otherduties to perform. It is asserted that the Irish race are now united, a feature of the Irish politics which, up to the present, seemed impos- s'ble. 1} this beso, why is it thatat least 600 Irishmen in the city of Omaha are not members of the National league? —or, I should ask, rather, why are there 80 few who ever make the least sacrifice to ameliorate the condition of Ireland? I remember that in THE OLD LAND LEAGUE, although comparatively successful, the same coldness and indifference was man- ifested. Are the same men, for all time, expected to do all the work,and the great majority to remain passiye look- ers-on! For my own part, while I will not dare to say what I have done, I will say that while I live I shall not cease to contribute my mite towards tho regener- ation of my native land, Nor shall I hesitate to afliliate with any society which has an honest, earnest desire to work for Ireland. My opinions may differin minor details from those of the majority, but I shall be unworthy of the name of Irishman, if I do not allow the majority to lead; and thus hold my individual convicdons in abeyance, without any sacrifice of princi&de. It may be urged that no practical good is derived from societies, This is as false as it is projudiced. The events of the past four yoars httost in the most logical manner how much has been done, even PEACEABLE AGITATION, oars ago the landlord would not tenants unless the latter, hat in addressed him with o cringing, fauning demeanor. To-day he is afraid to approach the tenant lost he may meet the doom of a Leitrim or a Carey. = Hap- oy transformation! But that is' not nhA Il‘Im direct result of the land act, the product of the Land League, is & net sav- ing to Irish farmers of $50,000,000 an- nually, But that is not all. The outer worl(f knew naught of Ireland’s internal wisery, nor the curse] upon her, of Eng land’s iron hand of dispotism. Theapos- tles of the Land Loeague went forth, and soon the finger of scorn of the civilized world was pointed at England. So that that great lover, that omnipotent factor in the world’s politics— fimh ic opinion— | denounced England, All the way from the Valdai Hills to the Sierra Madra. But that is not all. The most wonderful reformation of all is that the most ad- vanced thinkers of England itself are forced to the conviction that IRELAND MUSNT HAVE HOME RULE, Ixishmen, you ever dream that England’s political economists would openly concede the proposition that Ire- land ought to have the power of manag- ing her own aflairs’ And all this has been nccmnyh-hml by the Land League, backed by the co-operation of other Irish societies! Forster tried to put the Land League in prison, but he could not im- prison an idea. At one time he had five l'numlrud Land Leaguers in jail, and a New York paper of the time said, “‘It seoms he is determined to crush the‘ had 80 basely betrayed, when we conten. [#nd bequeathed to their offspring their t | that they shall never be satisfied with TdE DAILY BHEE--OMAHA, MONDAY., “BP {BMBER 24, 1883, Land League.” Whereat The Blade retorts as follows Crush the League Foster, ho thundered, Here do 1 hold in jail Over five hundred, Yeot, hark to their battle cry! “Onward,” to door die, Defying hell, and T Curso the five hundred! “Onward Toledo Chirse the Teague. Not, though the people saw Every home pllundered, Fearloss to do and dare Rose they up everywhere, Facing thelr robbers ther, Defying the army, while all The world wondered, And from their vengeance doap Vengeance to long asleep Landlord and iackey Fly liko a flock of sheep S attered and sundered After a bloody reign bl I wquished, fleo, Jubile o tive hundred, THE FIVE HUNDRED are still in the breach. Parnell and his followers are still undaunted Nay, more; they becoming stronger more aggressive every day. The begn- ning of the end is approaching. The handwriting is upon the wall. vither the pow 1d nor the powers of Hell can keep Ireland subjugated. TIre- land is educated. If peacoable agitation will not do, then by the %god of battles, dynamite and the torch, the dagger and the bullet must take its place. The time has come that Ireland shall assert her prerogatives. Too long has she lain chained to the rock, a prey to the vul- tures. She has arisen from her lethargy; she must vindicate her cause, uphold her ancient honor, demonstrate that she is a nation of heroes, and hurl the hated enomy of her race from her shores for- ever, even though in the attempt she may be called an assassin or a murderess! The man who tells me that societics have done no good for Ireland has lessin- teudigenco than that useful and much abused animal whose long ears have ob- tained for him more than his share of ridicule and contempt. Look back into IRELAND'S HISTORY, and see what it was that kept love of country alive in the breasts of an out- raged nation. Was not the object of the penal code the same, although more fierce, as that of Gladstone in his emigra- tion scheme? O, who will read that code, dressed in all its native barbarity and tiendishness, and not hate England with an undying, indestructible hate? But while England, during her Queen Bess and her Georges, was executing that code, in all its literal accuracy, there were Irish societies plotting the over- throw of the devilish engine of destruc- tian, and sometimes these brave fellows broke forth like the hurricane of the for- est, and for a time swept all obstructions before them. Of course superior brute force and demoniac zeal finally conquered them. But they sold their lives dearly, hatred and their patriotism. The mem- orable 1798 is a good example, when glorious Wicklow and Wexford rose in their anger. Was their defeat an argu- ment against future attempts? Say rather, do we of to-day pride ourselves more upon any epoch of history? Then Sassanach felt the power of the people and their Sogarth Aroon. Ha! it is no wonder that England dreads a combina- tion of THE PRIESTS AND PEOPLE. ‘Who then Fears to speak of '08, ‘Who blushes at the name, When cowards mock the patriot's fate, ‘Who hangs his head with shame? Woe are proud of these attempts and these failures. ~They demonstrate the fact that Ireland belongs to the Irish and the union, eveu though the lion were to sheathe his claws in velvet, even though the demon of Erglish misrule were to disguise his satanic character. Itis the union of the tyrannic with the helpless, of the robber with the robbed, of the vulture with its prey. But those failures serve another purpose, They demon- strate the character of the Irish people —their hopes and aspirations, their per- severance and patriotism. They more- over inspire every succeeding age to re- newed efforts, and as long as Ireland is in chains, so long will there be Irish so- cieties whose object will be to sever the links and make Ireland free. We may be lectured upon our fpelishness by philanthropists and economists, Scotland and Hungary may be pointed to us as models, but we announce clearly and dis- passionately that we shall never sell our country for a mess of pottage. We must encourage Irish societies., They ALT OF IRISH PATRIOTISM, Some months ago a great convention of Inshmen met in Philadelphia. It was probably the greatest political gathering that ever assembled on the western con- tinent. 1t was composed of all shades of political opinion, from the most radical | to the most conservative. I was not pleased at some of their proccedings. Neither was England, for she watched, with all the scrutiny begotten of ambi- tion, and had a_vindicrive hope that the convention would terminate in a row. But it did not. Hence England’s dissat- isfaction and my pleasure, for 1 have buried out of sight all my objections, and am willing to aid by every legitimate means, the successful accomplishiment of the plans then formulated. It comes with bad taste for an Frishman to sa; that because things are not done to suit him, therefore he will have nothing to | do in the premises. Indeed it is a mere subterfuge, and given only to account for his supineness in_ Irish affairs, At that convention Parnell was appointed as leader of the Irish race. Iaccept his leadership with pleasure, His name carries with it ideas of pluck, encrgy, courage, determination, hatred to Eng. land’s despotism, and an undying pat- riotism, The great organization ever which he is placed, seeks the dom of Ircland by peaceable agitation, | We make no threats. We uso noharsh | language. We eschew revolution, We | we no dynamite, but —— England must acquiesce to our demands, IRISHMEN OF OMAHA, see to it that every man of your race is in active sympathy with the League. Use every effort to uphold Parnell, The| fight is with the Irish in Amorica. Our brothers at home look wistfully across | the western waters for support and en- couragement. Ibeg of you in the name | of the martyred dead, in the name of Ircland’s beauty and chivalry, in the | name of her glorious history and the | struggles of the past, in the name of Giod do everything in your power to cement fellowship, to promote patriotism, to sol- idify the disintegrated, and to march to the assistance of your motherland in this her final struggle in one grand army of liberation, whose war cry will open the portals of liberty and make Irelan *'A NATION ONCE AGAIN," {East, especially, are many p GOWNS FOR SCHOOL GIR 8. Healthfaland He! in F 11 Costumes Mere vor Now Than Ever Before, New York Letter in Hartford Times. One of the most gratifying signs of gard to school dress. It has heretofore been considered enough to discourage a lavish display of jewelry, but a girl could be thinly clad in cold weather; she could change from thick wool to thin silk; she could encase her arms in skin-tight sleeves and pull her dresses together within a quarter of an inch of herlife—and no one thought of protesting against her folly, But gymnastics in school have accom- plished something; they have established the fact that with ordinary dress the girl cannot raise or use her arms, and it has at last dawned upon teachers and intelli- gent mothers that she ought to be able to use them elsewhere than in the gym- nasium. The principal of one of the most fashionable schools in New Ydrk will not permit her pupils to wear a dress of any material save wool or cotton—the former the latter in mild weather, if y choose. A girl wearing a velvet suit lay was sent home with a messa; t her dress must be changed to one adapted for school wear, The mother of the girl returned with a reply that it was ® last year's suit which must be utilized or it would be out grown. The teacher was inflexible, She said the school room 1o place for cast off finery; that the moral effect was bad and the final result worse than the present loss, The lesson was a salvtary one. A school in Massachusetts recommends to its 200 virl students a sensible school dress of which the following are some of the features: First, it1s to consist of single layers of clothing, so that warmth shall be equally distributed over the body. Secondly, it should be sufliciently loose not to impose restrictions upon the free and active use of the muscles. Third, the material should be soft, unexciting in color and undistinguishable in pattern. Fourth, the design should suggest rither than outline the figure, unless the mate- rial is elastic, and should be divided into few parts in order to be free from distrac- tions. Fifth, it should avoid whatever is unnecess: or that takes time and strength that could be better put mto work or play. The combination undergarment of kmtted wool or cotton, or both, the skirt of pleated wool attached to a lining waist cut with a spring over the hip, and a polonaise or a woolen *jersey” supplies all the requirements for such a dress. 1f the polonaise 15 employed, the lining waist may be extended so as to require only a deep pleated flounce of the wool to bring it to the length of the walking skirt, thus rendering it lighter and cheaper. The polonaise should be pleated at the back, a part of the fullness taken out of the waist and cut with a whole sack front which could be belted in. The sleoves should be cut very high and somewhat full at the top, so as to surround the arm at the sockst and allow free move- ment. All dress skirts made of wool should be attached to a lining waist, as this equalizes both warmth and weight. TR ALCure of Pneumonia. Mr. D. H. Barnaby, of Owego, N. Y., says that his_daughter was taken with a violent cold which torminated in_pneumonia, and all the best physicians gave th caso up ind suid she could not live but a few hours at most, She was in this condition when a friend recommend- ed DR. WM. HALL'S BALSAM FOR THE LUNGS and_advised her to tryit. She ac. cepted it as a last resort, and was surprised to find that it produced a marked change for the bobter, and by persevaring in 1ts tne s porns: nent cure was effected. ————— VORACIOUS TALES. The Feats of Sword Swallowers, Fire laters and Stone Chewers. From the London Telegraph. Not long ago Ramo Samo earned a subsistence by swallowing swords, and in getting his living came by his death. Indeed, things much more wonderful than thisjhave been achieved, if we are to believed all we are told. In the year 1826, one, “M. Chabert,” describing himself as *‘the continental Salamander,” performed the following feats at White Conduit gardens, having partaken of a learty meal of phosphorus washed down with a copious draught of oxalic acid in a solution of arsenic, he drank of a jorum of boiling oil, and with his naked hand helped himself to a serving of molten lead by way of desert. On another occassion the ‘‘Monsieur” walked—like Shadrack, Meshach, and Abednego, in the Book of Daniel—into a fiery furnace, staid in some considerable space of time, and came out whole and unburnt. He represented the furnace as hotter than it really was, though as a matter of fact he took in with him a raw beefsteak and brought it out broiled to a turn. Strutt, from his own personal knowledge, gives the case of a professed fire eater, named Powell, whom he had seen perform during the latter part of the eighteenth contury, and who was well known in different parts of the kingdom at that period. Powell used to eat burning coals from the fire, He could place a bunch of lighted matches in his mouth and blow the smoke of the burning sulphur through his nostrils; and he thought nothing of carrying a red-hot iron held between his teeth around the room. When Powell wanted to broil a steak he took a piece of lighted charcoal and laid it on tep of his tongue, om top of which he placed the beef. He would then re- quest one of the bystanders to blow up the fire with his broath until the meat was cuoked. This gentieman's soup con- sisted of pitch, brimstone, and molten lead, which he liked best in a state of liquefaction, blazing furiously. Strutt has another case a cotemporary artist, whe, says the veracious chronicler, “amused the public and filled his pocket by eating stones” which, it is said, he actually gracked between his teeth and afterward®swallowed. Then there is the Tinker of Twitham, in the old c medy of | “The Two Maids of Moreclake, | “‘lick out burning firebrands with his | tongue, and drink two pence from the bottom of a full bottle of ale.” Our old friend of country fairs and race cources, the Anglo-North American Indian, with his trick of making ameal of lighted tow, is not, by comparison, the wonderful ar- tist he would have us think to be, In the sons who follow the profession of eating powdered glass end swallowing swords, and who certainly would not make two bites ata poker. — Every lady uses | medicated com- slexion powder, 1t i household treasure. he mm\.uu finds it impossible to go down town without first rubbing it on. 1f the baby crios sho goes for the puff-box. If the ‘“‘old man” comes home ruffled or chafed, because busivess is dull, &c., Pozzoni’s powder cools and allays his troubles. Then all is gladsome . H@s the Best Stock in Omaim: an& Makes the Lowes Prit | lin: f S ith Re i whocould | FURNITURE \Mirrors, Bedding, Feathers, And Everything pertaining to the Furni- ture and Upholstery Trade. PASSENGER ELEVATOR '[:HAS, SHWEHIEK, { 1206, 1208 and 1210 Farnam St. To All Floors | OMAHA, N A K. DAILEY, MANUFACIURER OF FINE ‘Buggies Garriages and Spring Wagons My Repository ls constantly filled with a scloot stock. Best Workmanship guaranteed. Office and Foctory S. W. Corner 16th and Capriol Avenue, Qmaha S W RISINGHINE N O 1" (Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Rallroad.) (AT A AN AW, 3 S = NS N o=, AN 3 Sl : R e YA Ll a5 NN 7 COINC EAST AND WEST, , COING NORTHN AND SOUTH. szant Day Coaches, Parlor Cars, with Reclin Solid Trains of Elegant Day Coaches and Pull |man Palace Sleeping Cars are run daily to and| |ve seping Cars and- from St Louis, via Hannibal, Quincy, Keokuk,) |llu~ 101 & Q. Dining U rundaily to and [ Burlington, Cedar Rapids and Albert Lea to St from Chicago & Kansas City, Chicago & Council | Paul and Minneapolis; Parlor Cars W‘:.ll Reclining ‘l!lufl's. Chicago & Des Moines, Chicago, St. Jo-|Chairs to and from St. Louis and Peoria and to| iseph, Atchison & Topeka. Only through line be-|and from St Louis and Oflztumws. Onl¥ onej ‘lwwn Chicago, Lincoln & Denver. Through cars|change of cars between St. Louis and Des) [between Indianapolis & Council Bluffs via Peoria. | Moines, Iowa, Lincoln, Nebraska, and Denver,| All connections “made in Union Depots. It 18 Colorado. known as the great THROUGH CAR LINE. 1t 18 universally admitted to be the Finest Equipped Rallroad In the World for all Classes of Travel. [T. J. POTTER, 8d Vice-Pres't and Gen'l Manazer PERCEVAL LOWELL, Gen. Pass. Ag't, Sy PERFECTION A I N Heating and Baking Is only attained by using , CHARTER OAK Stoves and Ranges, WITH WIRE GAVZE OVER DODRS\ For sale by MILTON ROGERS & SONS, OMAHA- OMAHA MEDICAL DISPENSARY 7/ OF FICE AND PARLORSS OVER THE NEW OMAHA NATIONAL BANK, Thirteenth, Bet. Farnam and Douglas Sts. OMAHA, NEB. A, S, Fihblatt, M, D., PROPRIETOR. SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO DISEASES OF S X Throat and Lungs, Catarrh, Kidney and Bladder as Well as all Chronic and Nervous Diseases. DR. FISEHBI.ATT . Has discovered thefy reatest cure in the world for woakness of the back and limbs, involuntary discharger, impotency, general deaility, nervousness, languor, confusion of ideas, palpitation’ of o heart, simidity, trembling, dimness of sight or giddiness, diseases of the head, throat, nose or skin, aflections of the liver, lungs, stomach or bowels—those terrible habits arising {rom solitary habits of youth, and secret practioes more fat: the victims than the songs of Syrens to the mariners of Ulyses, blighting their most radiant topes cipations, rendering marriage impossible, o g from tho evil practices which destroy their mental and phyeical systel causing 3 NERVOUS DEBILITY, The symptoms of which are a dull, distressed wind, which unfits them for performing their business at social duties, makes happy marriago impossible, distresses the action of the heart, causing flushes of he depression of spirits, evil forebodings, cowardice, fears, dream dizziness, forgetfulnes ° unnatural discharges, pain in the back and hips, short easily of company an have p 0 be alone, feeling as tired in the mornl ness, Jost man. ood, white bone dey dyspepsia, constipat! bo restored to perfect heal in the urine, neryousness, confusion of thought, trembling, watery and weak paleness, pain and weakness in the limbs, ete., should consuit me immediately th, YOUNG MEN Who hase becows victims of solitary vice, that dreadful and destructive habit whicn annually sweops te an untimely grave thousands of young men of exalted talent and brilliant intellect who might otherwise cntrancs listening senators with'tho thunders of their eloquence oF wake to ecatacy the living lyre, mav call w'th full confidence. MARRIAGE. Married persons or youngmen contemplating marrisge heing aware of physical weakness, 10ss of procreative power, mpoteniey, or any other disqualification speedily relieved. 1o who places himselt under ‘tho car « ¢ or, Fishblatt may religiously onfice in his honor as & gentleman, and coufidently rely upon his skill a8 & physician, st ORGANAL WEAKNESS 4 Imwediately cured and full vigor restored. This distressing affiction—which renders life burden and inpossible, 18 the penalty paid by the vietim for improper indulgen < — Young people are apt to it excesses from not being aware of the dreadful consoquences that ensue. . Now who thab uds this subject will deny that procration is lost sooner by those falling ‘into improper habits than by prudent! - Besides being deprived of the pleasure of health ings, the most serious and destructive sy mptoms of both body atd wind arise. /1o syston hecomos i ysical and mental funotic weaken. Loss of procreative powers, nervous irritability, dyspopsia, palpitation of the boart, indigestion, constitu ional debility, wasting of the'trame, eough, cons on and death. A CURE WARRANTED. Porsans rulnod in hoclth by unlearued protendors who keep them trifing mouth fatter month takirs poisonous aud injurious compounds, should apply Immediately. DR, FISHBLATT, o8 of the United States, has effected some of the most astonish- Tng cures that ere e 1 oubled with ringing in the ears and head, when asloop, gre: rvousness, being ala , with frequent lushing, attended sometimes with deras t of the mind were ¢ o AN Dr. F. addreases all thoso who have injured th ruin both body and mind, w.titting them for ty ¥ "These are some of the melancholy effocts produced 1y habits of ‘youth, viz: Weakness of the back and limbs, pains in the head and dimugss of sight, loss of muscular power, palpitation of the heart, dyspopsia, nervous irritability, derangement of, digestive functions, debillty, consumption. graduate of one of the most eminent coll riage. PRIVATE OFFICES, OVER THE OMAHA NATIONAL BANK, OMAHA . NEBRAS A CONSULTATION FREE. Charges moderate and withio ithe reach of all who need scientific Medical troatment, Those who reside at a distance aud car.ot sll, will receiye prompt. attention threugh mail by joy. No fawily should be without it. seuding thelr symptoms with postage. "B Address Lock Box 34, Omahs, Neb,