Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 29, 1883, Page 2

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A -GREAT-PROBLEM TAKE ALL THE Kidney & Liver Blood RHEUMATIC ‘REMEDIES, Dyspepsia And Indigestion Cures, Ague, Fever, And Bilious Specifics Brain & Nerve FORCE REVIVERS. Great Health RESTORERS 1n short, take all jthe best qualitios offlall these, and the best qualities of all the best medicines in the ‘World and you will find that HOP BITTERS havo the bostjourative qualitios and powers of all concentra- ted in them, and that they will cure when any or all of these, sngly or combined, fail. A thorough trial will give positive proot this. HURBDE A I Have Found It ‘Was the exclamation of & man whon he got A box of Euroka Pile Ointmont, which ln-lnm:ud sure oure for Pllos and all Skin Diseases. ly conte by wall, The American Diarrheea Cure ¢ Fao 5tood the test for twenty years. Sure cure for |Il' N;“v:l Falls. Diarrhaos, Dysentary, and Chole- or! Deanc's Fever and Azng Tonic & Cordial, 14 1a tmpossible to supply the rapkd salo of tho same, SURE CUR WARRANTED For Fever and Ague, and all Malarial troublos, PRICE, §1.00. W.J.WHITEHOUSE LABORATORY, 16TH ST., OMAHA, NEB. le by all Druggists GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 1878 Broaklst o, Warranted absolutely pur’ Cocoa, from which the excoss 0. Oll bas boen removed. It has thres times the strength of Cocon mized with Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, and §s thercfore far moro economi- cal. Tt 1a doliclous, noarishing, strengthentag, casfly digested, and admirably adapted for invalids as well as for persons in health, W of the Q Thore in i orvin Fiowtoi ST, LOUIS PAPER WAREHOUSE. Graham Paper Co., 217 and 219 North Main 8t., St. Louls. ‘WHOLESALE DEALERS IN }PAPERS, ¥ ENVELOPES, CARD {BOARD AND PRINTERS’ STOCK, 47 Cash paid for Rags and Pape Stock, Sorap Iron aad Motals. Paper Stock Warehouset, 122 £0 1227 North Sixth sept21d-3m- DR. WHITTIER, 617 St. Charles St., §t, Louis, Mo. REGULAR GRADUATE of two medical coll has boen_engugod longer In the treatment of CHHONIC, NERVOUS, SKIN AND EL0OD than other physician in SL. Louls, as city papera show ‘and all 0ld" rosidents know. - Conultation. ires and fnvited, When It i inconvantent to vilt the ity for treatment, modicines can bo sent by mall or expross everywhere. Curablo cases foad: whero doubt Sxista 16 1 frankly stated. - Gl oF Wite. Nervous Prostration, Dobility, Mental and Physical ‘Wonkness, Morourial and other affections of Throat, [ 5,1 _looa impurities and_Biood Poison ing, Bkir_Affootions, Old Sores_and Uloors, Ty ments noannyC BURGICAL to marriage, Kheumatism, Pllos. _B) %0 cases from ovorwork in. BOOK, NEWS, ve attention, " g 100, I e MARRIAGE: i, O TDE, whomay 'hy.-n:. onsiquoioes and oure. . lod lw'llb::. DUFRENE & MENDELSSOHN, ARCHITECT PN Rr%mn again; there will come the mother, now gray and bent, who has never forgotten MEMORIAL ADDRESSES. An Eloguent Tribnte to the Scldier Dead &nd the Cause for Which They Died, Delivered by Ju;l;;‘:"n—l-vw- W.Savage at Beatrice, Neb, May 80, 1883, Sonson succeeds soason, year follows par; and more and more the scenes of America's great conflict, seem to us as though beheld through a mist. The clash of arms, the trampling of horses, the shouting of captains, are like a vision of Tsainh, the prophet. Amid green fields, never reddened with fraternal blood, beneath peaceful bkies which look down upon no fields of ours, on billuwy prairies, whose most natural sound is the lowing of cattleand the twit- ter of birds, it is not strange that we forget how short is the time since the roar of the cannon disturbed the world, and tho widow and orphan mourned for the slain who should return to them no more, 1t is well for us, therefore, that one day in the year has been set apart, to renew our memories of the groatest strug- glo the world has ever seen, and to re- mind us of the great debt the country and civilization owe to the men whose graves we decorate and whose lives we recall to- day. fhnve called it the greatest struggle in the world's history. Desolating wars have been waged before, hosts of armed men have fallen in other bloody conflicts, many a time have the tears of women and the wailings of children followed in the track of the rapacious conquerer; battles have been fought to gratify a monarch’s ambi- tion, to repel hostile invasion, maintain the quiet of the hearth and the freedom of the home, to propagate religion false and true: for good reasons and for bad reasons; but this which we commemorate was a struggle to extend the blessings of liberty, not to ourselves, our children, or even to our countrymen, but to an alien race distinet in color and in blood, oppressed for ages, supposed to lie under the ban of a scriptural curse, unable by their own exertions to win freedom or to maintain it if won for them, 1t was not a fashionablée cause of quar- rel, it excited little sympathy among the rich and the powerful; the monarchs and the nobles of Europe disdained to counte- nanco it; some of us even, who took part in the fighting, chose to call it a contest for national unity, and a quarrel for a strip of bunting; but the common soldier knew better. ~The stern hard-working sons of Massachusetts, marching to the fray, sang no pieans to the starry flag, no “Union Forever,” but ‘“‘John Brown's Body.” They heard through ages of tyrrany and slavery 'and wrong the voice of the Lord God Omnipotent, ‘‘Loose the bands of wickedness, undo the heav; burdens, let the oppressed go free, breal every yoke.” nder this sign they fought, in obedience to this command they fell. "They knew that to save the country the ulcer that was eating into its vitals must be extirpated: that the perpet uation of slavery meant disunion, its ex- tinction meant national life. TIn this the people were wiser than the politician, the soldier saw clearer than the statesman. True, there were those who said, *‘we will not fight for the negro,” but they fought for him all tho same, *‘We seek to save the country and not to meddle with exist- ing institutions,” but when the country viv‘;- saved existing institutions had van- And now on this vernal day, long con- secrated by pious custom to the memories of the dead and to patriotic recollections, we come to reaflirm our belief in demo- cratic institutions, and our faith in an enduring, solf-sustaining and self-vindi- cating republic. And as a beautiful token and emblem of our gratitude, we scatter anew the flowers of spring upon the graves of those who died .lgkn for their country and for the slave. How sad and yet n‘z:w '.preoioun are our recollections of them! "H&:‘ mournfully sweet are the echoes that o When memory. plays an old tune on the heart!" To-day the ?uiet homes of the depart- ed, clad in in their fresh robes of green, shall be visited by hosts of those who re- member and venerate the protectors of their land. There will come the bearded man, whose earliest recollection is of the father, in strange martial garb, who kissed him and marched away into the south, never to return to the wife of his bosom and the boy of his hopes; there will come the sad eyed woman who remembers with ever increasing tenderness the bright- faced lover who pressed his lips to her virgin mouth which he was never to pross the blue eyed boy who seemed so young to breache out his short life under the battlements of Donnelson orjinthe swamps of Chickahominy; there, too, will come the gray haired man who recalls to-day the comrades who fought and fell at his side, onvying, it may be, their quiet sleep low in the ground, their free- dom from the turmoil, the envy, the hate and the accursed grudges of this world, For they are at peace forever; there shall no drum-beat summon to the strife, for them hereafter shall no bugle blow, upon their heads no iron hailstorm ehall ogsin beat; the busy hands are folded; the active tongues are still; the throbbin, hearts shall never more be vexed vitfi strife and contention, From their sacred tombs I hear pmllafio voices say- ing: “Violence shall no more heard in the land, wasting nor corruption within thy borders; ' but thou shalt gall thy walls Salvation and thy gates Praise.” 1t is the custom to honor on this memo- rial day with especial distinction only those who actually put on the armor of the sol- dier and served in the field. But the thought will always intrude upon us that mz.n{ of those who suffered most and gave most to their country in her hour of m lie in graves unmarked save by the of domestic lova Rachel weeping for her children, Naomi bereft of her husband. Many women who exclaimed in their agony and desolation, *The Al- qfihty hath dealt very bitterly with me,"” {:udad up their lives for their country no certainly than those who fell pierced hzil'ml.hh or torn by shells on the fields of L e, No history te'ls of their broken hearts; their griefs are torgotten exvept by Him who never forgets, but we whose duty and pleasure it is to remember all the heroic spirits of war are inexcusable if we neglect the sorrows of the women ves were sacraifized by it. 1 rocall the meek face of fir ' il coniry tows by ow Eng. ion she Just at the outbreak of the rebell- had warried a friend of her child- hood and youth, a brave oung doctor. who tore from all hope and the sweet joys of domestic life to play his part in the great confiict. The long anious years of the war dragged slowly on. 1f she mourned for him, her bright face and cheer- ful talk never disclosed it. He clung to hispost of duty; even the child whose face he was never to see could not beguile him from his work, till his health gave way, and _he was ordered to his Northern home. Then it was that her radiant joy at_tho anticipated meet- ing showed how she had grieved and longed for him. In a few days he was to be at home; the dull New Hampshire hamlet would be glorified with _his pres- ence; his sickness was a joy to her, for it would bring them together. How she would cherish him, her brave young hero, with the dark eye and deep voice musical with lovo and tenderness! On his manly bosom she would repose at last, and her troubled heart that had been so bruised and torn would rest again. What plans for nursing the broken constitution! What dreams of love and fondness in the ounion to the strong heart that was beat- hg for her alone! Ah! that heart was still forever, Just as the hour for hisde parture came came also the order for the attack on Fort Fisher. Invalid though he was, he insisted on bearing his part in that glorious assault. With the hero poot he could have exclaime: “T gould not have loved thee, dear, so much. Loved I not honor more.” He disdained even to follow his peaceful profession in such a crisis, and marched with his men to the parapet where he fell dead, with a bullet in his faithful, loving heart. She never grieved outwardly, No human vision beheld the tears which those gentle eyes shed. Calm and stead- fast in the discharge of her daily duties, she taught her child to lisp its father's .name, tried to engage herself about the little business of home life, and to become interested in the annals of her quiet neighborhood. But the shot that had struck her husband had reached her ten- der bosom, too. One summer afternoon, wearied with the struggle, she laid herself down to rest, and after a while the prattling child was heard complain- ing that her mother would not wake. They found her dead, her handkerchief drenched with the tears she had been shedding—dead by no accident, no dis- easo, dead of a broken heart. Husband and wife rest together under the New England pines, and if earthly love remains with pure souls after death; if they who suffer and weep on earth aro hereafter to rejoice in & mobler and happier life, they are reunited where the blast of war shall never separate them more, I think, too, that on this day, socred to memory, we should remember not the dead alone, but the living alse. Somo- times it seems as if those who lie beneath the menumental stone or the green turf are to be congratulated rather than mourned and regretted by us who remain behind. Some of those who escaped dis- ease, wounds, death in the camp and on the field, escaped only to find poverty, sickness, old age and destitution awaiting thera in the future. And for these evils many have not even the poor consolation of a wreath of flowers on Memorial Day, or a look of sympathy from those whose safety, comfort and pro perity were as- sured by their services. They may well envy in their destitute old age the hap- T oD N 100V change the thrilling and glorious memo- ries of those days, however indistinct, for a woll-filled purse or two sound legs, or even for astrong and unimpaired con- stitution? Why should we repine if health has gone, and money and renown have missed ws? We have a life to re- oall worth centuries of money gotting. An hour of battle was a life in itself, For ourselves, then, we do not com- plain, if our lives are obscure and forgot wn. We had our reward atthe time, Wo have it now cvery day and hour. We find it in increased knowledge, en- larged views, and I trust, also, in a con- seiousness of duty performed. But we have duties, also, to ourselves and to each other which it is well to re- call on such a day s this, Wo owe it te ourselves to grow old, if God vouch- safes us length of days, with wisdom and dignity; the petty trials of life should not embarrass those who passed through the furnace which purified a nation; we who have seen so much misery and so much joy should have hearts open to all human sympathies, wo who have boen such stern instruments of punishment, should know now to forgive also, so that as the years pass on we may be able to say:— *“Time has laid his hand Upon my heart gently, not smiting it; But as & harper lays his open palm Upon the harp to deaden its vibrations.” Wo owe it to each other to stand by the fellow soldiers of our prime i weal and in woe, in sickness and in health, in ‘When You sre in Trouble, Don't be dismal! Your liver is {nr[:id, perhaps, and you may be said o be biliovs. The way to help out of the difficulty is to take Srown's Iron Bitters, which sets disordered livers at work in good style, Don't be cross and angry! digestion is bad, and that upse lisposition. If you will try [ [ron Bitters, you will find the digest- ve difficulties driven away in short rder. Don't be despondent! You are weak because your blood is thin, and you cannot face trouble, or think you cannot. Brown's Iron Bitlers will put iron into your circulation, enrich- ing the blood, making it a royal red color, and giving you the strength you need. The troubled, the weary, the de- spondent, the nervous, the debilitated and the bilious find rest, repose, re- freshment, and reconstruction in the use of that prin-e of Tonics, Brown’s Iron Bitters, The druggist charges a dollar a bottle for it. 10 OUR CARD BASKET. Your life and in death. Our hearts may be n{:en to all classes of our fellow men, our charity glowing towards all forms of human suffering, our good will boundless a3 the universe, but there isa brother- hood of memory, a free masonry of the past, into which the unitiated may not enter. Shoulder to shoulcer as we pier lot of those who were wounded or contracted disease in the tield, for whom the doors of a soldier’s hospital are open or who can roceive at stated intervals a few dollars of pension money. They can sometimes even envy the dead who are exempt from want. - They may ex- claim as the poet of tradition saug, four- teen hundrefro years ago:. ‘‘Happy are they who die in their youth when their renown is heard. The feeble shall not be- hold them in the hall, nor lavgh at their trembling hands. Their memory shall be honored in lflnf, the young tear of the virgin shall fall. But the aged wither nwnly hK degrees; the fame of their youth while they live, is all forgot. They fall in secret. Happy are they who die i their youth, when their renown is areund them.” I know how tosome this may seem like the language of complaint,and I may bereminded that it is not seemly for us whoserved to seek to enhance ourservices or to murmur, because they seem to be inadequately rewarded. But if I am worthy to speak of the dead, may I not (p}leml for theliving? Was it unseemly in ideon, after the slaughter of the Midi- anites, tosay to the men of Succoth, **Give, I pray you, loaves of bread to the people who follow me, for they be faint.” Only a fow years will pass, and they will seek sustanance at the hands of "their country no longer' The number of deco- loved, from rated graves grows fast from yeur to year. The veteran drops to earth ke tha maple seeds which the winds of the spring scat- ter down upon us at every lmm". A fow more Memorial ‘Days, and the strangers who try to keep up our beauti- ful custom will hardly Lnow upon what groen mound to strew their offerings, Even now, of the hosts who marched down to the James and the Cumberland and the Gulf, but a poor fraction are left to claim a living, But among them how many there are not entitled to a pension, for they are not wounded, and the dis- eases which may afflict them are not traceable to old age or subsequent disas- | PO ter, rather than enlistment, but how many are in need! I do not believe the poor adago, that “‘Republics are ungrateful.” It is a false rendering of the old proverb which ascribes ingratitude to Kings But we mayadd that Republics sometimes are thoughtless. I know of men who helped to save the country, who helped to strike the fetters from the slave, who are now soeking vainly for such work as their | feeble hands may be able to do; whose lives are wretched with present sufferin, and anxiety for the future, For such hope the time may come when the only questions asked him seeking a pension will be: *‘Were you a faithful soldier 1" *‘Are you in want 1" Then will Memorial Day have a new and more graceful meaning, Then will the flowers oftered to the dead be but the type and emblems of our bounty to the living, And every American patriot will rejoice when he knows that they by whose sacrifices he is enabled to accumu- late » competence in peace are them- selves fr from the stings of penury and the blight of disease. But I turn from a topic so capable of misrepresentation, and on which I may easily say too much. I turn to the com- rades of those blissful days when victory exhilirated and defeat did not depress us; when heat and cold and hunger were not infrequent, but not unwelcome visitors; when the blanket in the fence corner was asvoluptuous as the couch of down; when o white shirt was a holiday attire, and a paper collar was & luxury; when youth AN m-anf‘h were ours, and wealth and fame and happiness were all to come. back upon it, Details in to be con- fused in our memories. ome of us can say with Cassio, *‘1 remember a mass of things, but nothing distinetly; a quarrel, but nothing wherefore,” but who of us, E:ur as ho may be, diseased as he may , crippled as he may be, would ex- in | %0 good-nature It seems strange and unveal as we look | hard. stood once, 8o now we will confront the hosts of sorrow; so now we will stand in the presence of the only conqueror who is never defeated, and march down into the dark valley of the shadow of death, soothed and steadied by the familiar touch of the elbow and the cheering words of brotherly love and courage. And when the last veteran who saw a rebel flag unfolded upon a field of battle shall have gone to his rest and his re- ward; when a new generation, a peace- ful, prosperous, united and happy people shall have been spread from ocean to ocean, and from gulf to gulf, let us hope that they will learn from the lives of their fathers, from our story of disunion, contention, battle and victory, the lesson —that nations are great only as they are human; that justice and power go hand in hand; that the banner of freedom and progress is the banner of success. e — The Conflict, Between diseaso and health, is often brief and fatal. It is better to be provided with cheap and simple remedies for such common disor- ders as coughs, colds, &c., than to run the risk of contracting a fatal disease through neglect, DR. WM. HALL'S BALSAM is a sure and snfo remedy for all disoases of the lungs and chest. If taken in season it is certain to cure, and may save you from that terrible disease, consumption, It has n known and use for many years in America and it is no exag- geration to say that it is the best remedy in the world for Coughs, &c. Ask for Dr. Wm, Hall's Balsam for the lungs,and take no other. Sold by all druggists. — A Screet-Car Incident, Chicago Times. It was in a Madison street car, and every seat was occupied when a sickly- looking woman entered with her babe. “Room for the lady; make way there, please,” said the conductor, and the crowded passengers pulled backward oa the straps to let her into the aisle. Only one man was sitting, and all the other men, and the ladies, too, looked as if they expecten him to rise. But he didn’t— not just then. He was a big stont fellow ina heavy coat, and he had a good- naturcd.snub nose and a dimple in his fat chin, but'all the other passengers silently ooted him a ve ulfial‘l) fellow, not half a8 he looked. After awhile they began making uncomplimen- tary remarks, but -he didn’t appear to notice them, and he continued to take as much comfort as circumstances would Eormib. Just as the men on the platform ad grown so indignant that one or two advised the conductor to ‘‘throw him out,” a cheery little nervous man, with a long black moustache and a Ben Butler eye, jumped on the car. ‘‘What's the matter! What's the matter?” he briskly queried, And then, on being informed, he slapped his hand on a schoolboy’s shoulder and triumphantly exclaimed. “Gentlemen, I'll fix him; let me set my oye on him, and if stands it he is more than mortal. Its a glass eye, and its too big for the place its in, but I wan't have 1o other, not me. _Many's the time I got a seat in a railroad train all on account of that oye, and if you will just wateh tme you'll see how I ‘work it.” He crawled in till ho got beside the fat man, Then he fixed his awful eye. It was enough to make an ordinary man rervous—so big and staring and glassy was it. But the fat man aidn’t move. He winked reg- nlarly and smiled seraphically, and, in- | s deed, seemed to enjoy returning the dead oye's stare. The glass-eyed man tried numerous dodges. Ho closed his good eye and opened the other one wide. He ked his head dewn to within a fow inches of the nose of the fat man while Yi“u“di:s to pick up an advertising card. @ got re in the face and excited, and made some of the more recent additions to the passenger list think him an escaped lunatic, but without effect on the dim- pled personation of selfishness. Some of the spectators laughed, and then the glass-eyed friend got mad. ‘‘By the great high jinks” he began, but he stop- ped, for ho noticed a laughing lady pull- ing the fat man's sleeve. [Che fat man arose and followed heront as if in need of help. ‘“‘He's my husband,”said the lady, as she passed the astonished fiend, ‘“‘and he's a little deaf and entirely blind, “‘I'll never do it no more,” said the fiend. Then he swore he'd buy a green shade. a iy orsford’s Acid Phosphaie, Beware of Imitations. Imitations and counterfeits have again appeared. Be sure that the word *‘Hogs- rokD’s” is on the wrapper. None genu- ine without 1t. A Mistake Somewhere. “My dear,” said Mrs. Muggins, “I don't believe the grocer we deal with is honest.” ¢‘Why not?” asked Mr. Muggins in sur- prise. “‘In the first place he does not fill the mnl,'uu jug near as full as the ether ene di *‘So much the better,” cheerily ex- claimed Mr, M., who hated to be chang- ing tradesman every week. **The girl is not 80 apt to spill it.” “‘And the soap he sends us is very **1t will last the longer.” “But,” i rs. M., *‘his scales are out of order. The last bag of flour we got was very light weight.” *[ think you must be mistaken about that. The bread you made from the bag was a8 heavy as usual.” Mr, and Mrs, Geo, W, Hoagland’s Re- ception to Mr, and Mrs, Wat- son Wyman, The Lord Bishop of Montreal to Attend the Consecration of Trinity Cathedral. The reception given by Mr.and Mrs. Geo. W. Hoagland, Thursday evening, was the principal society event of the week. It was for Mrs. Hoagland's nephew, Mr. Watson H. Wyman, and his bride, Iate Miss Alice Gay,only daughter of Mrs. James P. Gay, of Cincinnati. The beautiful residence was lit from the ground up, and the number of those who were present to offer their congratula- tions to the newly married couple was large. The greatest admiration was called forth by the array of presents, many of which were from Cincinnati peo- ple and very elegant, We cannot refrain from mentioning a few. With the com- pliments of Mr. Wyman's old associates in the office of the Aitna Insurance com- pany, of which his father is secretary,was a large water-color, a Spanish scene, on an ebony easel. From the groom, diamond bracelets; from the greom's father, diamond brooch and car-rings. Mr. A. W. Wyman, the treasurer of the United States, sent from Washington some_Parian marble figures. Some_exquisite Dresden china was re- ceived from Mr. Robinson and Mr. Hardin, and sets from Mr. and Mrs, Frank Rano and Mr. Harry Kinney, of Cincinnati. A flower vase, Judge and Mrs, Foraker; knives, forks and spoons, complete set, silver, L. W. Gay. Of the presents from friends in this city were, an after dinner coffec set of spoons, Lieut. Treat; cut glass pitcher, Mr and Mrs. Lewis Reed; chinaset, Miss Berlin; fancy thermometer, Miss Laura Hoag- land; Bisque plaque, Miss Emma Hoag- land; scouce, Mr. and Mrs. Homan; water color, Miss Julia Knight; candle- stick, Mrs. Burley; bronze lamp, Senator and Mrs. Saunders; French clock, Mr. and Mre. Hoagland. On thesame evening the concert for Miss Lizzie Calderwood was given at the opera house and that pleasing young singer introduced again to Omaha audi- ences, before whom it is hoped she may appear often hereafter. She will remain in Omadha now, with the intention of giv- ing instruction, and she will be willing to make concert engagements outside of the cityalso. She has been engaged as soprano at Trinity cathedral. Miss Cal- derwood will sing to-morrow morning at the Oathedral, for the first time. She sings, ‘“Jerusalem, Thou that Killest the Prophet,” from the oration of St. Paul. Arrangements for the grand ceremonics attending the consecration of the new cathedral are not entirely complete, but it is understood that a large attendance of the Nebraska clergy will assist and several bishops of other States, including Bishop Burgess of Springfield, Bishop Whipple of Minnesota, Bishop Garret of Northern Texas, and Bishop Perry of Towa. Bishop Garret will preach ~the sermon. Mr, Woolworth has also re- ceived a letter lately from Bshep Sweet- man of Montreal announcing his inten- tion to be present at the consecration. A ecial chorus is being trained to assist the cathedral choir on this occasion and held its first rehearsal last evening. Al- together it will be a very interesting ser- vice, on Thursday iaorning, November 16th. e — The Supt. of the Zoological Gardens, Mr. Hatry Piper, Toronto, says: “My case was aggravated rheumatism. I cur- ed myself by the great St. Jacobs Oil.” i Nebraska City paupers are “up to snuff.” The county cmnmlnllunnrn dole out to them a hundred-pound bag of spring wheat flour at a time, The quantity is all right, but the qual- ity is what annoys them. They don't wish to raise any disturbance over the matter, so thoy quistly take the flour to the nearest store and exchange it for fall wheat flour, payig the difference in price in hard cash, e —— A good name at home is a tower of strength abroad, ~ Ten times as much 0od's Sarsaparilla used in Lowell as of any other, e ——— Among the effocts of Blundell, the young man who recently skipped from Lincoln to the pecuniary loss of the telephone company and a number of business men, were found a Fow- ler chart describing Blundell to be as honest s tho day s lowg, aud u benutifully writian letter from o Lincoln lady thanking him for a most forvent prayer made in ono of the churches. e ———— Ladies! Phisicians and chemists have ana- Iyzed Pozzoni's medicated complexion powder and recommend its use to their wives and lady friends. What better could be said of i, — The ESchuyler Herald says the sugar and syrup mannfacturing mmp‘u&ln that place commenced operations about three weeks avo, during which time it has manufactured about n,ooofdlun- of syrup, and expects to make about 4,000 gallons more before the season closes, Aside from this the factory will turn out about 7,000 gallons of vinegar. Angostura Bitters is known as the great regulator of the d‘feufi\‘u organs all over the world, Have it in your gl your st or grocer for the genuine article, manufactured by Dr, J, C. B, Siegert & Sons. A machine has been ln\'uuud in London for making short ladies long, aud loug ledies longer. It i, warranted to stretch the human forw at least three and & half inches, without injury to the health, This will supply a lony felt want, Real Estate” BARGAINS Gity, Suburban and Farm Propenty. We have a Fine Tract near Center of City Which is a Bargain, SPECIAL. 111 §1,600—Lot in Kountse's 84 addition, good three room house, barn, well, stc. Onethird cash, balance 8 per cent. 112 800—One-half lot in Kountze' 84 additlon, good 8 room house, with shed kitchen. One-half cash, balance to suit purchaser. 118 $2,800—Lot 00x185, Rogers’ addition, Dorcas St., 10th. Good 7 room house, stable, cistern, 8500 cash, balance £0 suit pur- cent. 114 §3,000—Three acres on 18th, one half milo south of Hoscall's 6 room houso, stable, fino trecs, good wightly location. Ono-third cash, balance to suit, 116 #4,000—Two acres facing Cuming ard Burt, five blocks west of Creighton College. Good & room house, stable, well, fruit and shrubbery, one- third cash, balance to suit. BEDFORD & SOUER. 116 82.150—Fall lot with 5 room house on_16th S b en Center and Dorcas. Good cellar, bat coal house, rn, sidewalks, shrubbery, ete. Great Bas & Bargal 117 #8,500—Besutiful lot with 4 room house, good collar, large closets, etc. Sightly location, 118 £3,800—Lot 07 , with 7 room cottage on Sher- man avenue, between Sherman and Clark streets. Good proverty. 120 §2,300—Two boautiful lots in McCormick's addi- tion, on Farnam stroet. 119 £8,300—Reeso Place, Park avenue, full lot new two-story house, 7 rooms, good oellar and coal sheds, city water, trees and all improvements. Bargain. 121 $1,250 Cash—Lot 36x138 on 11th St, in Kountze's 4th nadition. House 4 large rooms, lot_beauti- fully located and is really worth much moro. Reason for selling, must have money. 122 §1,260—Each throe beautiful ots in Reeso Place, Park avenue on eady terms. 124 $1,800—Half lot on Saunders street. Good house 4 rooms, good closets, pantry, stable, well, cis- torn, poich front and rear ' Prico §1,00, two- thirds cash. This is & bargain, Must be sold by the 20th or will be withdrawn from sale. Improved Property. No 6 §3,600—12 room house, cor. 18th and Calfornia streots, 0 closets, cellar, city water, outhouses, ote. $2.700—6 room house on N. 13th street, closets, coliar, clstern, well, ete. BNDHORD & SovER. $31000—Good alx room house on Davanport, bet. 234 and 24th, two story, 0 osets, pantry, cellsr, clstorn, well, uit and shrubbery, stablo and outhouses. 6 $3 100—Full sizo lot on McCaudlish place, with wo frame cottages, one 5 room, ono § room. For sale or exchange. 16 §2,100—Good two and a balf acre lok with five room cottage, brick cellar, well, fruit treos, etc. 17 One of the bust threo _ory brick business ho on Farnam stroet. Terma private. $3,200—New? room house on N. 184h streok. All modern improvements. Good location. Cheap. 9 $5,300—New two story house, Queen Ann_style. Al modern huprovementa, ciy water, 1ot 100z 2 'Two full lobs 84, Mary's avenue and 20th, with 8 houses. Will bo first class businces property. Terms easy. 4 $4,760—Lot 66390, with 4wo houses. Cheap. 0 £2,600—Two houses in Nelson s addition, on Cen- tor strock. Outanusas, clstern, fruit trecs, etc. Business house and los on Douglas street, bet. 14th and 16th. Terms easy. 4 Now 8 room houso on Chicago, bet. 24thand 25th. ‘All fmprovements, 3 Two new houses, one six and orher 8 rooms. Firet-class and modern improvements. Torms Easv 86 §2,700—Lob 100x132, College Street, Rodick’s subdivision, new 6 room house. Well improved. 88 $2,500—Lot' 50x150, Convent streot, 8 reom cot. tago, largo basewent suitable for rooms, barn ete- 89 82,900—8 :00m house, Thornell's addition, barn, well, clsturn, good {mprovewents, $500 cash, 81,800 on long time. $4,200—7 room houso on Davenport, bet. 10th and 17¢h. 46 Lot 176x500 on Sherman, large house, barn and other improvements. Lot withou$ improve- ments is worth the money we ask tor it. 47 Two new houses and two full size lots on Park avenue. Hob and cold water, and & modern first clase improvements. wes would cost what we ask for whole. IExtra good bargain. 48 §2,000—Lot 82x150, cor. 17th and Center, house rooms, barn, water, troes, outbuildings. ‘Webster. Nleefmqmn;. Terms eany. 80 91,800—Lot 6, block 8, Shinn's 2d addition. One and » half story house. Terma casy. 52 §8,000—Good 7 room house on Sherman. Modern iniprovements, stablo, well, cistern. A bargain, 58 $6,000—Full 1ot, one 8 room and ono & room bouse, new, 6 blocks from the opera huuse. Very cheay 33 §13,600—Splondidlos on Dodge, uear 15th. Cheay 83 #3,000—Large house and small cottage. ~Excel: location full siwe lot Davenport near 19th. | 49 82,600—Five room houso, 18ta bet. California & ¢ 85 $4,000—Lot 60x260, good 6 room house, modern ‘mprovements, noar business, on Skerman ave. 92 $1,500—Two lots, 126x140, with house stable eto. Barkor's sub-division. 03 §1,600—Lot and a half, good house, Redick's sub- division, (corner.) 85 Lot with 7 room house, Chicago, bet. 18th and 4t 1 01 1,500—Lot and 6 room house, Horbach's addi- tion, well, cistern, eto. Kvorything in good re- ar. 102 gsg—not and 4room houso, Leard, ber. 16th and 17t Unimproved Property FOR SALE BY BEDFORDZ&'SOUER. No. 2 $1,00—Lot 60127, Tndiana and Division. 8 $700 each—Two lots 66x182 each, on 11th. Cheap, and 2 lots 63x132 each on 10th. 11 §260 each—7 lots in Yates & Roed’s addition. 23 §7,200—12 full size lots, Hauscom Place, one block west of Park avenue. 550 each—Two lota on Park avenue, Bargalria. Business lots on Dodgo, hetween 11th and 12th, 31 8400—Lot in Shinu's addition, on Soward street. 85 £,000—Full lot, Reed'alst addition, on 25th and Chicago. 46 £5,000—8ix good lots in Hansoom Place. Bar ins. 54 {):.wo—l.nt 60x120, on Farnam, near 20th. Ve cheap. 50 Four scres in Wost Omaha. 00 €550—Lot in Isaacs & Selden's addition. €0 $1,600—Fine lot, Reddick's addition, Park ave. 84 $400—52 toot of block M, Shinn's addition. ,Fine view. 86 §2,200—Lot 44x800n 10th. Business property worth twice thie price asked. 04 §3,500—Full size graded 1ok on Chicago, bet. 13th and 14th. 98 $300—Good lot, high location, eouth 10th. 100 §3,00—88x18% on 10th, bet. ‘Harney asd How- axd, 108 §760 each—Two_ extra good lot in _Hansoom s addition, Cood high location. Bargains in Farms & Lands 0. A3 827 por acre—160 aoro improved tarm, near Cres- ton, Towa, 10 acres woodland, 46 wcres corn, 95 acres Timothy and Clover. 18 $4,000—40 acres &-4 of & mile weat of Ft. Omaha W houses, two barns, granary, corn crib, two wells, .00 bearing fruit troes, 800 grapo vines. Will sell or exchange. 14 §7,000—200 acres, half mile N. W. Elkhorn, 140 acres in cultivation, balance pasture. Four room house, stable, etc. ' Terms easy. 51 $960—160 acres good land, 4 1-5 milos trom Bur- lington, Coffee county, Kansas, Will exchange foc Omaha property. X 01 §8,400—240 acres adjoining city of Wilber, Salin's county. All under fonce and well improved. This property Is choap at $10,000, 68 §20 per acro—400 acres, 3 miles from Watorlod, Douglas county. Part in_cultivation, balanos ‘meadow, all good land, Wil sell or will arrauge with catle man for oo partuership, or wil oou tract to foed 300 or 400 head o oattle. 70 to 82—10,000 ncres in Morriok county, Good &l ablo land, and will bo sold from $8 %o $0 por ncre. 80 §7 per acro—Will buy 160 acres in Codar Co. 98 815. por acro—20 acres 2 miles from Hamburg owa. 07 §15. per acre—Improved near Logan Tows, 104 Several bundred aores in Cuming Co, Neb. 105 Six thousand acres in Stanton Co. Neb. 107 810° per acro—2200 acres timbered land in Ray Co., Mo three small farms on tais land, balance £00d cottonwood dimber, which will more than For sale or exchange pay far investment. Ommaha property. SPECIAL. 108 $2,200—Lot 219x220, cor. 17th _and Bellview St., south Omaha, near Hoacall's Park, brick house, four rooms, well, cistorn, stable, cellar. All in ood conaition and noarly now. 09 25 per ncro—400 noros 10 Washingten county, 6 miles south of Blair, on line of O. 8t. P. M. & 0. railroad. Station ub corner of this land Good stream runniug water. 100 acres in cultivation, 80 ncres grass, 180 acres timber—oak, hickory; walnut and olin. Small houso. good ‘fruit and abundance of grapes, 1s parsly fouced. One of $ho bost farms in the county. If purchaser wishes, will scll homestesd adjeinin good herd of cattlo, £&Call and examine other property nob lsted. BEDFORD & SOUER, 21 K. 14th. bet. arnam and Uougiss KIRKW00D. Lots in this addition are selling rapidly, and prices will be again advanced m a few days. 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 SXIDE 14th Street, bet. Farnam and Douglas.

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