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2 1 1 THE DAILY BEE -OMAHA, SATURDAY, OCTUBER 27, 1888, your Life Worth a Dollar? LIB Perhaps that seems a high price for it, considering how poor your blood is, and how your whole system is rostrated,debilitated, and enfeebled. eople have been heard to say, under such circumstances, that they would not give the toss of a copper for the choice between life and death. But when it comes to actually drawing near the grave,a man naturally draws back, and says he does not want to die. Life is very precious, and even to a broken-down man it is worth saving. One dollar will buy a bottle of Broun's Iron Bitters. That one dol- lar may start you on the road from mis(‘ry tc recovery. A man must take a very mean view of himself who is not willing to invest that much in making one serious effort to rescue himself from deadly debility, and to step into the enjoyment of sold health. Brown's Iron Bitters vital- izes the blood, tones the nerves, and rebuilds the system. Its work is well known. Invest that dollar in a bottle. 8 CREAT ENC SH REMEDY. Cures rrvaichs Debilly QreiTau LOSS OF MANLY VIGOR, Spermatorr. haa, cte., when all other reme W dies’ fall. A oure guaranteed $1.60 a bottle, large bottle, four timen the quantity, 5. Hy ex prom to any address. Sold by all druggists. ENGLISH MEDI CAL INSTITUTE, Propriotors, 718 Olive Street, St Louls, Mo. — “I Bave seld Sir Astley Cooper's Vital Rostorative ot years. Every customor spoaks highly of it. 1 unhesitatinglyendorse it as a remedy of true merit. “C. F. GoopMAY, Druggist. Feb.1 1888 VIR‘mae-sod!y M 7. 1.1 E 3 I Adrgg’zgqlzon WORLD. Mrs.S. A Allen's WORLD'S Hawr Restorer 1§ PERFECTION? FPublio Benefactress. Mm. S. A. Aviux has justly camed this title, and thousands are this day rejoicing. ~vera fine head of hair produced by her unequaled preparation for restor- ing, invigorating, and beautifying the Hair. Her World's Hair Restorer y cleanses the scalp, removing drufl, and arrests the fall; the is changed (o its natural g it the same vitality and luxurious quantity asin youth, /71 GOMPLIMENTARY. “My hair is now restored to its youthful color; I have not a gray hairleft. I am sat- isfied that the preparation is not a dye, but acts on the sccretions. My hair ceases to fall, which is cer- tainly an advantage to me, who was in danger of be- coming bald.” This is the testimony of all who nse Mrs. S, A, ALLEN'S WORLD'S HATR RESTORER. #Que Bottlo did 4" Thatis the <orcewon ol meny who have had Wi gray hair reatored to s nitural rd their bald apot co with i, afier asing che Mus, 5. A. Avnen's Wouo's Hat Rusionuw, Itis nota aye, COMPOUNDED WITH MINERAL WATER, BEST REMEDY. SHAL N, THE 'WORLD' FOR RHEUMATIS W § DYSREPSIA, 'CONSTIPATION, BILLIOUSNESS, KIDNEY COMPLAINT, LUNG. DISEASES. SEDENTARY DISEASES, IMPURE ‘BLOOD ILER"& CO.y PROPRIETORS, AND v SOLE MANUFACTURERS, OMAHA, NEB. GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 1878 BAKER'S Warranted absolutely pur Cocoa, from which the excoss o Oll s been removed, 1t has three times the strength of Cocon mixed with Btarch, Arrowroot or Bugar, and &s therefore far more cconom. cal. It s deliclous, nou,ishing, strengthiening, easily digested, aud admirably udapled for invalids us well as for persons i health, 8old by Grocers everywhere, 3100010 pue syueoepy euIp 18 Aq o veg J07 BETTER wo HEAPERrua SOAP ALL ‘House-Cleaning Purposes. T WILL CLEAN PAINT, MARDLE, OII, CLOTHS, BATF TUBS, CROCKERY, KITCHEN UTENSILS WINDOWS, &c. IT WILL POLISH TIN, BRASS, COPFPER AND STEEL WARE OF ALL KINDS. In the O1d Barn, Uppon the old barn's scaffold high, With dreamy gaze on fragant bed T watch the swallows coms and go With twittering notes above my head Withott, upon the half-shut d Tho Phabo sits in silent mood, Prospecting for a place to build Her nest and rear her quiet brood, The hens upon the seedy floor, Are scratching for the seattered grain; While chanticleer a challonga hears, And answers back in deafening strain, Old Charley in the stall below Keeps grinding at the clover hay, And tries with many an angry stamp To drive tho saucy flios away. But hark! a pleasant sound T hear, Of children coming down tho lane And now they strive with flying feet To see,who first the barn will gain A gush of laughter greets my ears, As up the ladder, lithe and gay, Thoy como to seek for hidden eggs And frolic on the fragrant hay. The little rogues are wild with joy At finding fathor's hiding-place And thus my pleasant day With smothering kiss a [Boston Transcript. —— HONEY FOR THE LADIES. Newmarket jackets, both long and short,are again in high vogue. The blouso bodice ranks next to the Ca- margo bodice in popularity. Russian furs will be much worn this winter by people who can afford them. Hoop earrings, set with diamonds and other jewals, are very fashionably worn, Cloth toques, and velvet jockey caps will bo worn with costumes of cloth and of vel- vet. Many a woman who docs not know even the multiplication table, can “‘figure” in so- cloty. Fashion journals are busy discussing Thanksgiving dressings and other holiday stuffs, There is a new style in the cut of fur shoulder capes and perline, which s quite unique, In order that your husband may not forget to bring in coal, place the hod near the door where he can fall over it. The bangles worn by the girls are not real coins, but counterfefts, Our opinion of mlxmo of the girls will bo given in a later edi- tion. One of the belles of Oshkosh, having become estranged from her aflianced, n young gentle- man of Fond du Lac, found her way to Chi- cago, and acospted employment in a dry goods store, whore her aunt found her and took her away. Dr. MacGregor,a favorite Scotch divine and a frequent visitor at Balmoral, has shocked a great many people by saying that there is no reason why young mien and women in Scot- land should not, as on the continent,bathe and swim together. In some Eastorn countries the faco of the bride is never seen until after the marringe ceremony. This is believed to be a very wise policy. Letan Eastern girls face once be seen and no power on earth could forco & to marry her, A pretty Irish 2 rl's kiss may be sweot but is co«tl{. John Kennedy, of Lockport, New York, kissed pretty Mary McCartney of that town with her consent. She construed it a: an engagement, and when he married another rl she sued him for breach of promise and the ury awarded hor $400. Mary could afford to bo kissed often at that price. Velvet will be the rage for this and the com- ing soason. The handsomest of tho imported costumes in velvet for autumn wear aro totally untrimmed save in the matter of buttons, which, to make up for this simplicity of style, o often vory boautiful and vory exponsivo. Sijver is the favorite metal for these buttons— th designs copiod _frequontly from buttons worn in the time of Gereo I, and those worn at the court of Louis XVI. Hunting hair pins is the newest diversion of an album, the pins through 1 name, stylo of written be The Coustitutionalist, of Augusta she and other Southern women have found meuns of earning an honorable livelihood here, and then she goes on to sa; has surprisod ‘me—that notwithstanding the hardships they go and friends, 1ot one young Iady who has come here to do aud South again. difference b try: Here y no one thinks less of own bread, a woman works to some extent in a ci Times. Her volce w tho boys in Pittsburgh, The Commercial Ga- zotto says: ‘‘Last winter it got to be quite the thing for a fellow to coax his young lady frionds to give him hnir pins, but now thoe craze is to got thom without the girls knowing what you are about. If you can steal the pin out of her hair, that's the way to do it. If you can pick up one that has fallon from her head, that's a deal botter. Somo fellows have fol- lowed a girl for squares, just because a hair pin looked as _though it meant to drop soon. What do Gha{ do with them? Put them into hey ot sorap books, and push 0 needles. Then the girl's auty and estiminted age are low. A Southern woman writes from this city to Ga,, that ne other thing and the longing for nome dare, desires to live in tho And right hero lies the cardinal wcen the two parts of the coun. 1axe woll paid Toe your work,and ou for earning your South, the knowledgo that hor_own living, puts_her clojaside.”—{ New York In th T —— Crelo . ¢ Kisses, She touchos my cheek and I quiver T tromblo with exquisite pains; Sho sighlike on oversharged Tives My blood rushes through my v She smiles—and in mnd tiger fashion Aw n who-tigor fondles hor own, T clusp hor with fierconess and pa sion, And kiss her with shudder and groan, o —— The Season Over, They sat long in the shadews of even, And talked in a lover-like way; He said something thut sounded like Heaven, She inuravred an indistinet nay, He told her the summer wes ended, That their joy was nearing its close, ‘the zephyr was blended, And she gave him a half-open rose, . . . . . . ext morning they met near the river— ““Somo strauger,” hosaid, “‘came lrat night,” “Ab, indcod!"haid the girl in & quiver; Do you know that young woman in white,” Liuttered little, then bravely, Oh, yes, we aro promised to wed. And the tan, do you know him!"—then gravely, *Welvo baon marriod siuce last apring,” she said, —~{New Orloans Piccyune, ————— PEPPERMINT DROPS. A grim old father at Evansville set a trap for troublesome lover, and caught him tho rst night. 1t was a barbed wire gate. Jay Gould denies the report that he is golne to start a new watering place. ‘The old stand in Wall street suits him well enough. We have concluded not to fool around Mos- sachusetts until after the ideas of November. Wo have a sneaking suspicion the blamed thing is loaded. This Is the time of yoar when every well. squipped traveler carries a fall overcoat, win. tar overcoat, & waterproof, a pair of artics, & muffler and a fan, A OChicago commercial traveler says that in » small village in Northern Michigan ho found a notice piuned on the door of store which read: *‘Gone to bury my wife; will be back in thirty minutes. A juryin Glendale, Montans, that had been hung for two days on » case, suddenly azreed within seven minutes recently when the sheriff informed them there would bo & horse race on he street within an “Yos," said the bigh-sc the letter surreputiously.” “No'you didn’ eplied her brother Jim: “‘you sneaked up tn tho par'or tablo and jabbed it in ywur grip- sack."—Oil City Derrick. "Tho roariug orators in the November States, hy nousishing their throats with goose groase wnid quills, may b able to hold out until the wd of the campaign. But the raspiog wbumpal winds must ba very trying. A health journal advises: **Do not lie on 1 girl, “I removed e left side.” It may be unbealthy, but what | th wman to do whon Lo is lying on the extreme Sdge of ‘the bed, with & twelve months' teeth: ing baby wedged in the small of his back? Turn _over and spoil the infant!—[Drake's Travelors’ Magazine. A Southern Dakota sxchangs complains bit- terly of the poor quality of whisky old in a town thero, It doesn's seem to have entered the editor's mind that a good way out of the difficulty is not to drink the ,whisky, —Tis. marck Tribune, Tt is time Dakota was admitted as a State,n man in that Territory haaing discovered that cow fod on hops, malt and corn, can be made to produce the best quality of lager beer, in- 1 of the material out of which butterine is ufactured. It is a noticeab) t that y is made in the town ¢ ntly being _determ to cale o of Judge Gary that the city brate the de ! ordinance requiring distillers to pay a license is illegal — Songs of Cowl FIRST COWBOY. 'm the howler from the pra I s of the West; f you want to dis with terror, look at me. I'm ‘chain_lightning, If 't, may I he blessed, I'm the snorter of the boundless perarie, Chorus. a killer and a hate He's the great annihilates He's the terror of the boundless pe. rarie, KECOND COWBOY, I'm the snoozer from the upper trai T'm the reveler in murder and in go I can bust more Pullman coaches on the rail Than anyone who's worked the job before, Chorus,-—He's a snorter and a snoozer; He's the great trunk line abuses He's the man who puts the slesper on the rail, THIRD COWBOY, I'm the double-jawed hyena from the East; I'm the blazing, bloody blizzard of the States; I'm the celebrated slugeer; T'm tho beast; 1 can snatch o man bald-headed while ho waits, Chnm:‘ He's the double-jawed hyena; He's the villain of the scena; He can snatch a man bald-headed while he waits, —{Post-Dispatch, ———— BINGULARITIES. A child was recently born in Port Orange, Fla., with eighteen grown teeth in its cums, A Eufaula, Ala, man has trained some ducks to pat “juber” and some chickens to dance to the measure, David Burkett, of Big Creek Gap, Tenn., ‘who is said to be 18 years old, weighs only 30 pounds, and is 18 inches high, A Groenland seal weighing over two hun. dred pounds was recently captured near Stamford, Coun., by two fishermen, Mrs. Wade and her daughter died at Mount Cory, Ohio, from using water from a well in which a poisoned rat had been drowned. A horse namod Hawk, which was in the State fair at Chico, Cal., rocently, is a pioneer aud has o history. In 1853 he took the first premium as the beat 2-year-old, and has be m oxhibited at the fair overy year since, He is now 82 years old, and moves (of courso) as sprightly as a colt, Lizzie Belle Stevens, of Livermore, Maine, aged 13, who was frightened some time ago by finding a snake in a box of shavings, has dicd of tho fright. Shelayin a delirium for tr weoks, raving about the snake most of the time, and then typhoid fever set in, The snaka was put in the box by a smart youth to “acaro the girls.” An editor of a La Porte, Towa, paper has a curiosity. It is supposed to be an animal,but tho fore part of the animal is shaped some- thing like a crawfish, with the exception of legs, and much resembles ona in color. The hind part was moro nearly the shape of a mouse, with » long tail which curled over,each end being fast to the body, the whole lookin a4 if a shell animal, with peaked head, had been deposited when real young upon a red pepper leaf,and as it matured the leaf became a part of the body. There is now on exbibition in the window of a jeweler's shop in Boston a mounted rattle- snake, which attracts much notice because of its unusual size, and also from the fact that this reptile was killed at the Blue Hills in Milton, unly four or five miles distant from the city. 'This specimen is one of more than a dozen said to have bcen killed on one farm the present season. At the time of his cap- turo the follow had ovidently appensed the craving of hunger with a rabbit and a frog. ‘J. W. Davis and Robert Bnghr,nl Russel- ville,Ore.,” says The Enterprise, “while hunt- ing In the mountains toward the headwaters of the Clackamas, came across a small boiling spring. They cooked their niwl and boiled their coffco in'it by partially immersing the Jn examining the bottom of the spring y saw o whitish looking snake with pinl eyes, which they thought was dead. One of them took a stick and threw it out on the wrass; both were amazed to see it glide swift- i back into the boiling water. ardly be- loving their own eyes, they repeated the ex- periment several “times with a like result. Davis and Rugby are farmers, well known, and men of ¢ racity, and are willing to attest the above under oath — Human Natune, ar man crept to my side tter wintry time— to buy a drink,” he cried, *Ploase give me sir a diwme.” If ho had craved this boon forlom To buy his family meat, I had passed on in silent scorn And loft him on the strcet. I tossed the money in his hand And quoth **Ax o'er your wine Within the tippling room you stand, Drink thou to me and mine.” He let an earnest ‘‘thank ye” drop-- ‘Then up the street he sped And rushed into baker's shop And bought a loaf of bread. 1 know not why it was, and yet, So sudden was the blow, 1 folt emotions of rezret That he had duped wo so, Yet, had the hungry beggar said That he we4 sore in need Of that necessity called bread, What man could pay him hoed? e — CONNUBIALITIES, Ono day last week o woman but twenty- five years of age, was married for the fifth time in Sacramento, In some parts of Russia it is believed that if the bride tastes the cake on the ove a{ the wedding her husband will not love or. The Philadelphia bridesmaid who put a piece of wedding cake under her pillow, but pming hungry, took It out and ate it, is re- coveriug. Peter Bogart and wife of Downaville cele- brated the seventy-fifth anniversary of their marriage. Thero is only a few days’ difference in their age, which s 96. 1t is only after .:Jgnl is engaged to be mar- ried that the law of etiquette gives her the rivilege of asking her lover if her new shees Bon's Hiake s fass look big. A marriage nof in l‘I‘W‘Vi"H paper is as follows: * Miss Mary Purso of North stroet surprised her parents by bringing home a nice young husband, The old folks have sur. Tmised for some time that wedding was i view.” A Now York widower aged 80 and & widow aged 75, were married the other day, We suppose that is a fair illustration of what is meant when persons are spoken of as lviing to agreen old age. Mrs, L, H. Stovens, having twice married the same man, has just secured her second di- vorce from him at Grand Rapids, Michigan, 81,500 being awarded her, She lived with her husband, in all, fourteen years. Miss Emily Thompson, & reigning belle of Roanoke Gm{n'.y, V:‘:owu married the other day to Napoleon B Ainsworth, he being & lul{hhxul Choctaw Indian, a college graduate and a successful lawyer. Tho strangely- mulzl.d pair have gone to the Indian Territory to live. An widower in Connecticut met, loved and wedded & lxloomllg lass many years his ) But the old man had & 6on in the unior, Wut who came home, captivated the heart of his step-mother, and the two eloped, leaving the hushand and father to ruminate over the folly of January wedding May. 'Twas ever us, o Breamen had taken her After Miss M to James Knowles in the place to be wmarri Roman Catholic church ad Lake Geneva, Wis., & bird flow in at the window and alighted on the head of Miss Mary Brenunan, one of the bridcemaids, and then flew to the bride's shoulder and rested there until the ceremony was ended, It then disapper-ed out of the window, A tole rram from Eugene City, Oro., to the Portlana Oregonian records the marriagze of Hulins Miller's widow, the mother of Joaquin Miller. She is over 60 years of aze, and her new hnsband has juct ed his majorit Tho affair crested a sensation in Lane county, where she bas & con residing. He opposed the match, but the widow tersely remarked that sho was the one being married, and expressed herself as delighted with her young love. As the cars n Eastern road stopped at Syracuse, N. Y putly, appronched the Drakem whereabouts of a preacher. the time happened to be shaking hands with a reverend, and promptly informed his inquirer of the fact, when the gentler.an immediately buckled onto the astonished parson, and, tak- ing him into the car and up to o lady, bade him e them on i preacher, after a few words of information, procoeded to do, and the happy couple were Soon whirling on their journey, none the less dissomposed for their strange wodding. —— Old Mrs, Grimes, Tane: “Old Grimes is Dead.” Old Mrs, Grimes is dead. Alas! ‘We ne'er shall see her 0 Sho was the wife of good old (rimes, Who died some years before, A very worthy dameis gono, Since she gave up her breath; Hor head was white with frosts of time, She lived until her death, Though rough the path, har willing feet Eler walked whero duty led; And nover wore a pair of shoos Except when out of bed, Busy sho was, from morn till night, Spite of old Time's advances; Although hor husband loft het here Tn easy circumstancee, Good Mrs. Grimes is now at rest, She'll rest through endless ages; The sun is set, her work is done, ‘She's gone to claim her wages. —[November Century. e ———— MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC. Blessed is the lot of a great tenor. Cam. poni's income is 810,000 amonth, with no end of hugging thrown in. Marcella Sembric donna, sings in Fre Mr. Abbey's prima h, Tealiau, German and Russian, plays artistically on the plano and violin, and yet sho only 26 years of ace. Li sh lives, say fifteen years more, until she is 130" she will be somewhat accomplished. If the reports are true, Mme. Pappenheim has lost one of her most glorious features as u prima donna. Woe allude to her flesh. Sheis said to have grown quite slonder—a fact that will amaze most of her American admirers, who remembered her as a very stout woman, The prevailing topic of conversation in the- atrical circles and among lovers of the art dramatic for some weeks to come will be the represontations to be given in all the large cities of the Union by Henry Irving and his company. He is acknowledged to be the onl; Tepts seutative logitiinate sotor of the Hinglish stage. Marie Antoinette’s harp has come to light in an old curiosity shop in Berlin, Fleury, the Queen's valet, carried it off as a souvenir, but being reduced to great poverty, he was forced to part with it, and sold it to a lady of Hrmmwicl(; after which it passed through various hands. Tho harp is richly inlaid with ivory, and still bears the name of the maker. Anna Dickinson has been having more hard luck. Her season in the interior of Michigan was nearly spoiled by the neglipence of Man- er Wentworth, who has finally abandoned the company to take care of itself. The dates at Kalamazoo and one other large town had to be cancelled. It is understood that Miss Dickinson will drop “Hamlot,” and place most reliance hereaftor on **Anna Boloyn,” A roturn to the good, old-fashioned melo- drama is demanded. The people are weary of the sentimental gush and maudlin emotion which have taken tho place of old-time blood and thunder, We want loss weeping and slob- bering, and more shot-gun and _shoct-iron ef- foots. Wo pine for the villain of our youth— the ovil-minded person who carries » green bag and a billy, who_throttles the herome, and throws har Jff a beetling precipice; whoso port- ner in erimo is the low-comedy fellow who poers in at the windows, and is_invariably ac: companied by’ rain, thunder, lightning, and wierd music. It is ho—this dear old vilain - who crawls down_to_the footlights with the stolen will in his hand, and there discovers the good young man who loves the heroine, whereupon he cries in tones that forover haunt our memory, ““What! You here, Reginald de Courtney!” - —— The Oonflict, Batween disease and health, is often brief and fatal, It is better to be provided with cheap and simple remedies for such common disor- ders aa coughs, colds, &c., than to run the risk of contracting a fatal disease through neglect, DR. WM, HALL'S BALSAM is a suro and safo remedy for all diseases of the lungs and chest. 1f takeu in season it iv certain to cure, and may save you from that terrible disease, consumption, ~ It has been known and used for many years in America and it is no exag- geration to say that it is the best remedy in the world for Coughs, &, Ask for Dr. Wm. Hall's Balsam for the lungs,and take no other, Sold by all druggista. — Long Yip, a Chineso laundryman of Oil City, has zone home to China for a bride, Not even a Chinamau will marry an Oil City girl. —[Philadelphia Call. The Uil City girls don't have to marry Chinamen or Philadelohians. Oil City Blizzard. Ll It always does ita duty, says Hon, Wm. F. Cody, (Buffalo Bill), of St. Jacobs Oil. 1t cures pain. —— Miss Susio Withers, “protty, lively and sov- enteen, got into » buggy with Mr. Smead, of Lynchburg, few days ago, and rode with over the Caroling border, where they were mar- ried. The bride is a neico of ex-United States Senator Withers, — ronchial Troches for Cnughu “The only article of the kind which has done me good service. I want nothing better, —Rev, K. H. Craiy, Utisville, LY. Sold only in boxes, — Miss Pope, the young woman of Waukesha, Wis,, who miarried William Conlin aud. loft him on the same day, says that she did so be- causo ho asked her if she had furniture, win- ter wood, money to pay the rent and sim- ilar questions beforo they woro. marriod an hour, e — Horsford’s Acid Phosphate, Beware of Imitations. Imitations and counterfeits have again appeared, Be sure that the word “Hors- ¥okp's" is on the wrapper. None genu- ine without 1t. e — Many young ladies, with plenty of time on their hands, are just now busyiog themselves by |mlm.lu‘( small bright flowers of every de- scription In tiny clusters upon yards aud *ud' of white and pale-tinted satin ribbon. lhese ribbons they will use later to decorate :ml!{r dancing toilets of Indian silk pauze and ulle, e ———— Has Confidence, case personally known to me the success of Aurdock Blood Bilters was almost incredible. One lady described them as worth hundreds of dollars. I wyself have the greatest confidence i them.” ¥, 8, Scratch, Drug- gist, Ruthven, Ont. the custom in the South to cowhide men who abuse their wives; and every time a married woman utters & shriek her hus- band grows nervous until he feels sure he has satisfied the crowd that it was the sight of a mouse that made her vell “In one 1t is becomin — - Weak people should use Samaritan Nervine, the great nerve conqueror. “‘My wife's 3 years nervous affliction,” says Rev. J. A, Edie, of Beaver, Pa., was cured by Samaritan Nervine." $1.60 at Druggists, ——— e e Wm. W. Funk, who "owns a farm of 540 acres adjoining Webster City, and whish is valued at 850 per acre, has been taken to the insane asylum. His trouble is attributable to catarrh, which finally beca ne so bad as to affect his mind Epileptic Fits, H N Spasm, Falling vl Sickness, Convul- slons, 8t. Vitus Dance, Alcoholism, Opfum Eating, Seminal Weakness, Ime potency, Syphilis, Scrofula, and all Nervous and Blood Diseases. 7=To Clergymen, Lawyers, Literary Men, Merchants, Bankers, Ladics and all whos sedentary employment causes Nervous Pros- tration, frregularitics of the blood, stomach, bowels or kidneys, or who require a nerv tonic, appetizer or stimulent, Samaritan Ner- ed a sinking system. vine s invaluable. Thonsands $1.50, at Druggists. 'DEBHB The DR. S, A, RICHMOND MEDICAL CO., Solo Pro- se“QIIEROR. ] inetors. St. 10soph, Mo. proclaim it the most aF tatimanare G PO IX CURING wonderful "gor- ant that ever sustain- THE PHILOSOPHY OF HEADACHE, THESTOMACH, THE BOWELS AND THE LIVER ARE RESPONSIBLE_FOR EVERY PANG THAT RACKS THE HEAD. REGULATE, TONEAND MONIZE_THE ACTION OF THESE ALLIED OR- Guowa TATRANTS, SELTZER APERIENT. ARERIENTE 501D By ALs DRUGGISTS: WILBOR'S COMPOUND OF PURE COD LIVER OIL AND LIME. ——e—— P Wilbor's Cod-Liver Oiland Lime, — The great popularity of this safe and efficac- ious preparation is alone attributed to ita in- trinsic worth. In the cure of Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis, Whooping Cough, Scrof- alous Humors and’ all Consumptive Symp- toms, it has no superior, if equal. _ Let no one neglect the early symptoms of disoase, when an agent is at hand which will cure all com- plaints of the Chest, Lungs, or Throat. Man- ufactured only by A.B. WiLnor, Chemist, Boston. Sold by all druggists. T —— NEBRASKA LOAN AND TRUST CO HASTINGS, NEB. Capital, $250,000. JAS. B. HEARTWELL, President. £ & VTR Moo C. P. WEBSTER. Cashicr. ~ RECTORS: Oswald Oliver E. C. Webster, Jas. B. Heartwell, D. M. McElHinney.| “irst Mortgage Loans a Specialty This Company turnishes & permanent home institn. hero school Bonds and other logally issued Mu. pal Securities to Nebraska can bo negotiated en avorab lo terms. Loans made on mproved all woll settled countios of the state through hle a0al corresvondenta av I Have Found It Waa tho exclamation of a man when ho gob & box of Eureka Pilo Ointmont, which is a simplo and_sure oure for Piles and all Skin Discases, Fifty conte by wall, postpald. amuel Alexander, A. L. Clarke, “ieo H Pratt, The American Diarrhea Cure Haa #00d the test for twenty years. Sure oure for ll_ Nover Falls, Diarrhaea, Dysentary, and Chole- Morbus. Deane's Fever and Azug Tonic & Cordial, 1t ls impossible to supply the rapld sale of tho same, BURE CUR WARRANTED For Fever and Ague, and all Malarial troubles, PRICE, $1.00. W.J. WHITEHOUSE LABORATORY, 10TH ST., OMAHA, NEB. For Sale by all Drugqists A POSITIVE: Wit tober 18, '76. One box No. 1 will cnre any casein four days or loss. No, 2 will cure the most obstinate case no matter of how long standing. Allan’s Soluble Medicatsd Bougies t med- No nauseous doses of cubebs, copabia, dal wood, that tain to produce’ dy; ying the coa 'l | orugyists, or mailed on_receipt particulars send for circular, 3. .CURE. _ “E83onu Nurcet, New Y, . P IETSOIN @ Xy Parts of the hlm\ufflk, 3, developed and strengthened, ete., dsan inte paper In rop no evidence of On the contrary, ichly endorsed, Interestod irculars giving ‘sll_particu- "‘I‘ E Medical Co., P, 0, box 518, ~(Toledo Evening Dlaae. mll-ly Jersuns may lars by addres Buftalo, N. Y. DUFRENE & MENDELSSOHN, ARCHITECTS SFREMOVED T0 OMAHA NATIONALBLD ST, LOUIS PAPER WAREHOUSE, Graham Paper Co., 217 and 219 North Main St., St. Louis. WHOLESALE DEALERS IN IPAPERS, (¥ BOOK, NEWS, 1 WRAPPING ENVELOPES, CARD BOARD AND PRINTERS’ STOCK, S47Cush paid tor Hags and Pape. Stock, Sorep Lrow and Motals. Paper Stook Warehouses, 122 to 1227 Norih Sixth ook woptald-Sm- advanced m a few days. eal Estate BARGAINS S o Gity, Suburban and Farm Property. We have a Fine Tract near Center of City Which is ne= Bargain, —_— | SPECIAL. 111 §1,500—Lot In Kountse's 3 addition, good three room house, barn, well, sta. One.third cash, balance 8 per cent. 112 §800—One- half lot in Kountze': 3d addition, good 3 room house, with shed kitchen. One-half cash, balance to suit purchaser. 118 $2,800—Lot 00x185, Rogers’ addition, Dorcas St., near 10th. Good 7 room house, stable, cistern, grape vines, etc, 8500 cash, balance to suit pur- chaser at 8 per dent, 14 #3,00—Three acres on 13th, one halt mile south ot Hoscall's 5 room house, stable, fine trees, good wightly location. One-third caah, balanicd suit. #4,000—Two acres faclng Cuming ard Burt, fhe Dlocks west of Creighton College. Good 6 Foom house, stable, well, fruit and shrubbe $hird " oash, balauce to suit. BEDFORD & SOUER. 116 §2.150—Full lot with 5 room house on_15th St., between Conter and Dorcas. Good cellar, barn, coal house, cistern, sidewalks, shrubbery, et Great Bargain. 137 93,600 —Beautiful lot with 4 room house, good cellar, large closcts, etc, _Sightly location. 118 §3,800—Lot 07x182, with 7 room cottage on Sher- man avenue, between Sherman and Clark street. Good pro; 120 §2,800—Tw tion, on Farnam street. 119 $3,300—Reese Place, Park avenue, full lot new two-story house, 7 rooms, good cellar and coal sheds, city water, trees and all improvements. us + one- Tty. beautiful lots in McCormick’s addi- rgain. 121 §1,260 Cash—Lot 36x188 on 11th St, in Kountze's 4th addition. House 4 large rooms, lot beauti- fully located and is really worth much more. Reason for selling, must have money. 122 81,250—Each three beautiful ota in Reese Place, Park avenue on eas; 5. 124 $1,300—Half lot on Saunders street. Good house 4 rooms, good closets, pantry, stable, well, cis- torn, porch front and rear Price $1,300, two- thirds cash. ~This is o bargain, Must be sold by the 20th or will be withdrawn fromsale. Improved Property. No 6 $3,500—12 room house, cor. 13th and Callfornia streots, 8 closets, collar, city water, outhouses, eto. £2.700—8 room house on N. 13th street, closots, cellar, cistern, well, etc. BEDEORD & SOURR. $21000—Good six room house on Davenport, bet. 234 and 24th, two story, © osots, pantry, cellar, cistorn, well, uit and shrubbery, stable and outhouses. 6 $3 100—Full sizo lot on McCandlish place, with two frawe cottages, one 5 room, ond 8 room. For sale or exchange. 16 #2,100—Good two and & half acro lot with five room cottage, brick cellar, well, fruit treos, etc. 17 One of the best threo ory brick business ho on Farnam street. Terms private. 43,200—New 7 room houso on N, 15th strect. All modorn improvements, Good location. Chesp. 9 85,300—New two story house, Queon Ann_style. Al modern lmproveionts, clty water, ot 100% 2 Two tull lots St. Mary's avenuo and 20th, with 8 houses. Will be fifst class business property. Terms easy. 4 $4,760—Lot 68x96, witl, two housea. Chenp. 0 $2,600—Two houses in Nelson 8 addition, on Cen- ter street. Outnouses, cistern, fruit treés, ete. Businesa house and lot on Douglas street, bet. 14th and 16th. Terms easy. 4 Now 8 room houseon Chicago. bet. 24thaud 25th. All improvements, 3 ‘Two new houses, one six and orher 8 rooma. Easy 86 82,700—Lot 100x132, College Street, Redick's subdivision, new 5 room house, Well ‘improved. $2,600—Lob 60x160, Convent street, 6 reom cot- tage, large basement suitable for rooms, barn o 39 ¥2,800—8 (0m house, Thornell's addition barn, well, cist.rm, good improvoments, 8600 cash, 1,800 on long time. $4,200—7 room house on Davenport, bet. 16th and 17th. 46 Lot 176x500 on Sherman, large nouse, barn and other improvements, LoY without improve- ments is worth the money we ask tor it. #7 Two new houses and two full size lots on Park avenue. Hot and cold water, and & modern first class improvements. Houses would cost what we ask for whole. Extra good bargain, 48 $2,600—Lot 82x160, cor. 17th and Center, house 4 rooms, barn, water, treos, outbuild 49 82,000—Five room house, 13t bet, Webstar, Nico property’ Torma éasy 50 81,600 Lot 9, block 8, Inu's 24 addition. One and a half story house. Torms easy, 62 $3,000—Good 7 room house onSherman. Modern improvements, stable, well, ciste: A bargain, 58 $6,000—Full lot, one 8 room and ono & room e, 6 blooks trom tho opera huuse. Very cap. 32 §15,600—8plendidlot on Dodge, near 15th. Chea) 63 §3,000—Larxe house and small cottage, el lout location full size 1ot Davenport near 19th, 1 105 Six thousand First-class and modern improvementa. Terms |1 85 $4,600—Lot 60x260, ood 6 room houss, modern ‘mprovements, near business, on Sh rman ave. 0281, Two lots, 126x140, with house stable eto. Barker's sub-division, 93 $1,000—Lot and a half, good house, Radiok's sub- division, (corns 95 Lot 14th. 01 1,600—Lot and 5 room house, Horbach's addi- tion, well, cistern, eto. Everything in good re. ir. 102 $050—Lot and 4 room house, Tard, ber. 16th and 17th er. with 7 room house, Chicago, beb. 13th and Unimproved Property FOR SALE BY BEDFORDI®SOUER. o, 2 $1,000—Lot 60x127, Indiana and Division. 8 §700 each—Two lots 60x152 ench, on 11th. Cheap, and 2 lots 66x182 each on 10th. 11 §260 each—7 lota in Yates & Reed's addition. 28 §,200—12 full size lots, Hanscom Place, one block west of Park avenue. ench—Two lota on Park avenue. Bargains. Busineas lots on Dodge, betweon 11¢h and 12th, 81 8400—Lot in Shinn’s addition, on Scward street, 83 §3,000—Full lot, Reed's1st addition, on 25th and Chicago. 48 $5,000—Six good lots in Hanscom Place. Bar ains. 54 gi,mo- Lot 60x120, on Farnam, near 20th. Ve cheap. 50 Four acres in Wost Omaha. 60 8550—Lot in Issacs & Selden’s addition. 69 81,600—Fine lot, Reddick’s addition, Park ave. 84 $400—52 feet of block M, Shinn's addition. Fine view, 86 $2,200—Lot 44x00un 10th. Business property worth twlce the price asked. 94 $3,600—Full size graved 1ot on Chicago, bet. 13th and 14th. 98 $300—Good lot, high location, south 10th, 100 $8,000—83x132 on 10th, bet. Harney and How- aad, 103 §750 each—Two_ extra good lot In {Hanssoms addition, Coodhigh location. Bargains in Farms & Lands No. 10 §27 por acre—160 acre improved farm, near Cres- ton, lowa, 10 acres woodland, 45 acres corn, 25 acres Timothy and Clover. 18 $4,000—40 acres -4 of a mile west of Ft. Omaha tWo houses, two barns, granary, corn_crib, two wells, .00 bearing fruit trees, 300 grape vines. Will seil or oxchange. 14 §7,000—200 acrcs, halt mile N. W. Elkhorn, 140 acrea in cultivation, balance pasture, Four room house, stable, etc. ' Terms easy. 51 §960—1€0 acres good land, 4 1-= miles trom Bur- lington, Coffee county, Kansas, Wil exchango for Omaha property. $3,400—240 acres adjoining city of Wilber, Saline county. All under fence and well improved. This property is cheap at $10,000. 68 $20 per acre—400 acres, 8 miles from Waterloo, Douglas county. Part' in_cultivation, balance ‘meadow, all ¢ood land. 11 or will arrange with cattle man for m-rnnumhlp. or will con tract to feed 300 or 400 head of cattle. 70 to 82—10,000 acrea in Morrick county. Good till ablo land, and will be sold from $8 to §9 per = acre. 89 87 per acre—Will buy 160 acres in Cedar Co, 96 $10. per acro—820 acres ¢ miles from Hamburg awa. 97 $15. peracro—Improved near Logan lowa. 104 Several hundred acres in Cuming Co. Neb. cres in Stanton Co. Neb. $10° per acre—2200 acres timvered land in Ray Co., Mo three small farms on tnis land, balance g00d cottonwood timber, which will more than pay far investment, For sale or exchauge Omaha property. SPECIAL. 108 §2,300—Lot 219x220, cor. 17¢h and Bellview St., south Omaha, near Hascall's Park, brick house, fourrooms, well, cistorn, stable, collar, Al in o00d conaltion and nearly ob 28 por acro i 100 acres in cultivation, 80 acres timber—oak, hickory, Small house good fruit and 0 acres grass, 1 walnut and elin. ce of grapes. 18 partly fenced. One of farms in the county. If purchaser i soll howestead adjeintn good herd of cattle. 42 Call aud_ cxamine other property nok isted. BEDFORD & SOUER, 21 B, 14th. bet, Arpam and pougirs KIRKWOOD, Lots in this addition are selling rapidly, and prices will be again These are without a doubt the most desirable lots n Omaha, and will certainly double in price before spriug, All who havei seen them are well pleased and pronounce them cheap. BEDFORD & SOUER, Real Estate Agency, HAST SIXIDXE: 14th Street, bet. Farnam and Douglas.