Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 9, 1883, Page 7

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Ty THE NECESSITY FOR THE SPECIALIST, DR. H WAGNER, becn.acknowlediced and more #0 at this day other, The vaet field of medical scionce is in‘reasing, and He numerous branches are DIOughs nearer and nearer to perfection, And 10 Ove man can any longer gresp them &l Hence the neoeseity for dividing tho labor, And it is trae beyond all doubt that disease, affecting the gen- nary ergana need #pecial study mare than any- bing else, if we werald undorstand wnd know how reut them propert PR WAL is fully aware that there are ple, who will F diseases n epe- with most_per- ncment and intelligence n mere enlighton- #d view ia taken of the gubject, and that the physic. w1 who devotes himeelf to relieving the afticted and Vg them from worse than death, is nolesas phi- unthropist and benefactor to bis race than the sur- peon o ician who by clcso application excels in wty other branch of his profession. Aud fortunately f humanity, the day is dawning when the false pb wtthrophy that cosdemned the victims of f riwe, ke the bepers under the ;Jonish law, to L ared fOF bikk pResed away. clane, and some eengible A Few Reasons, Dr. you should try the colebrated weihods of cure: D, K. Wagner is & natural physi ©. Waguer's an,” . Fowunn, The Greatest Living Phrenolo ‘Tew can exoe) 3 [°FY Dr. J. Stuus, The Workd's Greatoet Physognomist. “"You are wanderfully proficient inyour knowl odge of discase and medicnes.” Dr J, MATTEWS, 4 UThetficted find ready relict in your pres. Dr. J. Simns. 4 “Dr I Wogner is a regular graduate trom Tallevie Hospital, Now York clty; has hud very ex- tensive hospiud practios, nad is thoroughly posted on i trunches of his beloved ecience, especially oo chronio discasce.” Dre. Brownis & Evive, “Dy. H. Wagner ha imortalized himself by 1#ul discovery of epecific remedies for pri- d e vual diseasee.”—\ Ticinia City Chroy “Thousands of invalids fovk: 10 eee him." onicie, Doctor's long experienco as a epecialist reader bim very tuccessful,'—Ikocky Moun- San Plain Facts Plainly Spoken. + oue timo » discuseion of the secret vice wia en. \oided by the profession, and medical worlis of ew years go would Lirdly mention it 3 day the physician is of & diffcecnt opinion; he it awaro that it ia his duty—lissereeable though it 7 bo--t0 Bandle this matter without gloves and : plainly about it; and intelligent parents and diang will thank him for doing eo. ¢ esulte attending this destructive vioe were for. swerly not understood, ot no properly estimated; an importance beingattached 1o & subjoot Which by 114 nature does 1ot invite close (nvestization, it was t is generally contracted by the young ¢ 6chool; okler companions through “eir example, may be responsible for it, or it may bo woquired through ascident. The excitement once cx: yerienced, the practice will bo repeated agaln an sain, untl atlast the habit becomes firm and com- tely. enslaves the viotim, Mental and nervous of s are usually the primary results of self-abuse. oug the Infurious effects muy bo mentioned lassi- ejection or irrscibility ot temper and gencral The boy eceks eeclision, and rarely joing iu the eports of his companions. 1f be be-a young wan he will be Little found in company with the other vex, and is troubled with exceeding and annoying tashfulness in their presenco. Lascivious dreams, ewissions and erupticas on the face, etc., are also prowinent symptoms. If the practicels violently persisted in, more serious deturbances take piace. Great polpiiation of the cart, or epileptic convuisions, aro cxperienced, a0 ibe sufferer wmay fall into s complete etate of idiocy be- fore, inally, death relieves hir. Toal thiose enguged in this dangerous, practice, 1 would gay, first of all, et it at once; make every yesibio effort 10 do so; but if you fail, if your nervous syrtam i already tob much shatiered, and co quen: ur will-powor broken, take some nerve “onic youin your effort. Having freed yourself from the habit, I would further counsel you to go irough s regular courao of treatment, for it is o great st umravm!utnny one may, for eome time, e ¢ every solittie, give himselt up 0 this fuseinating but dangérous excitement without ruffering from its cousequences at some futuro time, The number of young men who sro incapaciated to £l the duties onjoined Ly wedlook is alarmingly large, and in most of ‘such cases this unfortunate condition of thin be traced 10 the practice of ralf-sbuse, which had been wotndoned years ago. Indeed, & fow months' practioe # this habit is eufficient to induce epermatorrhaa. n Inter years,and/] bave many of uch Cases under treat It the present Gass L 4 4 Young Men Whomay be puflering from the effects of youthtul 4 0F indiscretions will 6o well tonvail themselves the greatost boon ever laid at the altar of suf- ity. Dn. WANER will guarantee to for- * it $600 for every case of Bominid Wediness o ¢ diseame of wy Fiod exd coaacier jwkich heunder- Sk es 10406 falle to cure, Middle Aged Men. There are many &b the age of 80 to 60 who are 1 roubled with %o frequent “evacuations of tho blad. der, often aooompanied by alight smarting or barn. g seneation, vud & weakeoing of the eystem in & patient cannot aocount for, On examin. urinary deposita o ropy eediment will often be 4, nd pometimes small particies of albumen will pear, or the color will be of thin milkish hue, again sigin to o durk andtorpid appesrance. | Thire are wany mény men who die of this difficulty, ignorant of “ie. Gaizwe, which is the second stage of serminal-weak- eve. D, W, will guarantee a perfoet ciire in ol cases @ud & bealthy restoration of the genito-urinary or- »y free. Thorough examination &nd ad- gremupications should be addressed, Dr, Henry Heory Wagnor, P, 0. €389, Deuver, Colorado, Thé Young 'Mews Pocket Gompanion, by Dr 1 Wagrer, i worth e weight in gold to yesig 196D, Pride §1,%5. Reat by wal to ua) sidrcse Let Your Light Shine. gner, the oclcbrated specialist, of Denver, Larimer street, believes in letting theworld Frow what hio can 4o, and is doing for thousads of bie fellowtren. His treatment for 10t manhood is 7€ 10 win hiln B Bamo that posteri Lousand testimonials from &l over the rom thove be b cured, is proof positive that hedooy Jre tho worst cases of thews Ciseases. The aflicted #reim chrouic and wexuad diseases of every kind will “ind himn their bewt fricod. Read bis wdvertisementin and cudl on bim for ndyice, a8 we wl our city papers, or M i the wut w0y will 00TFoborste s i k) '8 rae trend.— Focky Mounrin Relief to the Affiicted. 10 wedkunes, 46 In scence, the specialists ire the e vho ahweys comes to Ui front wad scocumplish yreat resalts, ‘This remark iy especially applicable to %o Dr. H. Waguer, of this city, 1o etands ut the top of hikp-ofesion, kod the cures be performs for the nfort3uate would seem woaderful if not properly viewed In the light of sientific acouirements. Ho endorsed by the most eminent of the medical faculty. His offi 348 Laramir street, where he will epoedi. My efloct s cure for the Faffering of either a3, DO mat- Wi bow compliontes Wel complant,—Fomeroy s Dusocrat. Chronic Complaints Require Time for a Cure. Perecue ot @ distance who wish tobe treated by Dr. et Deod Dot foed backward because of inability ieit bl 1 they will w to the doctor he will send o list of questions w nubles bim to send wedicines, counsel to thousands bo bias wever soen, He bas p in every eity, town sod vation in Colorado well as alover (ne United lates, Soo hie s fule sdrertisement. —Len: ver Tribune. Shall We Reform ? Eguefic remedies for all diseases s Whe tiseor; rtce Wl present of educated and experieace Yhymiciaos, and o all large communitics they lisve Udir wpecialties, (0 exeel in which they direot their Vtudien wnd practice. Dr. Wagner is & wioocsstul il Svtration of this modern schood of specialtics. snd his prescdented wicows (0 the treatment of private iwancs 46 s wolderfd 4 it is Sattering. —Prof, J. ey ‘Those persons who need medioal relief for the most (0icate of Gl will fiod an scoomplished e o suntal phywclan ln the proon of Dr. Wagner, No. 45 Larluwer street, who is Lighly recommended by th weieal profession home Aad aboard —Pomeroy Twmocrat. Bigotry nd iguoranoe must give way o wisdans, and the wive physicias believes 1a leliing hly Vbt ahine for the plory of kis fellow wen, Printer's 1k e thie torch be can’ best Use 1o giiide e weary Wl sick one L the fountain of health I this wrticle Whould be etrumentsd & 6 “TORCHLIGHT” set up- {4l b 10 guide waflering bumanity to 848 Larinier wlrint, Dopver, (t:iqmn.h;l;l AnEWer e purpose Sk wiich §i wie wrhden. Addros DE. HENRY WAGNER, ¥. 0. box 2069, oF cadl o 49 Lenimer Street, Deover, Coic. T e cirnn b “The Necews' (08 e Bk . | - COUNCIL BLUFFS, L ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEWS, AFTER A CHILD. The Possession of the Littie One Set- tled by @ Writ of Habeas Corpus. The Sad Breaking Up of a Family, There was a petition for a writ of habeas corpus tiled in the Superior Court yesterday which brought to public notice the sad breaking up of a family named The husband and father and Grimmelman left here some time ago and is said to be now in St. Louis, while the wife and mother entered upon a life of shame, and is said to be now an in- mate of one of Cnuncil Blufis dives. As the offspring of their wedded life there remains a little boy, aged now about a year and a half, and who is a bright and \rather handsome little fellow, but has apparently been sadly neglected. Descrted by his parents he was taken charge of by Mrs. Grimmelman’s mother, who in turn handed the child over to a Iady named Mrs. Pack to care for. It is said that when the latter first received the child it was in a deplorable condition, and the grandmother did not or could not furnish the necessary means for its clothing and care. Now the ndmother on the other side of the E?usu. Mrs, E. T. Davenport, proposes to take the child and see that it is tenderly cared for and well brought up, and to make the possession legal, get a writ of habeas corpus. Judge Aylesworth or- dered the little one turned over to her, and it is to be hoped that now the child so cruelly deserted by its parents may see brighter and cheerier days. e — Frenchmen can properly be called ‘‘the knights of the table.” They are good iudfiu in all its refinements and delicacies. In_order to stimulate the appetite and keep the digest- ive organs in good order they give pre-emi- nence to Angostura Bitters. ~ When you try them bemure it is the genuine article, manufactared by Dr, J. G. Siegert & Sons. Grimmelman, ——— Why permit your children to die with diphtheria! Dr. Jefferies’, (Council Bluffs, lowa), remedy prevents or cures every case. Send for it. - —— PERSONAL. W. C. Fstep, one of Groneweg & Schoent- gen’s valient men on the road, is now made bappy by the arrivalat his home of a nine pound heir. S. Labhart, of the Union Pacific, has re- turned from Indiana, accompanied by his bride, nee Miss Augusta Weltqr, to whom he wasmarried at Tell City, Perry county, Ind., on the 20th of October. Many friends here are exprossing the usual greetings, and heart- ily, too. Auditor C. 8. Osborne, of Mille county, was in the city yesterday, had a guest of the Pa- cifie, § Rev. Mr. Armstrong, who was so badly in- ured by & fall Wednosday night, was yester- day resting quite easy, and it is thought that there are no internal injuries, though the fractures of boues are quite serious, George W. Hale, of Quincy, Tl., was among yesterday's arrivals-at Bechtele's hotely F. 8. Kretainger, of Chicago, arrived at the Ogden yesterday. E. S. Girard, of New York, is an Ogden- ite. 3 Joho L. Laird and H. A. Warner, of te | Philadelphia, were at the Ogden yesterday. James M. Felt, of Watertown, N. Y., was amorg yesterday’s comers to the Ogden. C, C. Merrill, of Des Moines, was in the city yesterday. Horsford's Acid Phosphate. Valuable in Indigestion, Dr. Daxter T. NuLsox, Chicago, eays: I find it a pleasant and valuable remedy in indigestion, particularly in overworked men,” e ——— MALVERN MATTERS, Sunday Personal Items—A Bruial Assaut on an Invalid—Other Gleanings, Mre, Thos. Boaham is visiting her son Coe, in Council Blufis,—Malvern Leuer. Deputy U. 8. Marshal McCrary, of Council Bluffs, was looking after Malvern matters a fow days ago, Miss Minnie Dort, of Omaha, spent Sunday with Mrs, R. D, S. Padgett. Mrs, J. A, Hake, of Avoca, and Mrs. Wm. Moore, of Council Bluffs, visited Mrs® Cleaver and family at Malvern re- cently, On Monday last Mr, and Mrs. W. A, Hunter celebrated thcir fiftieth wedding anniversary. Among those present were Mrs. C. R. Scott, a daughter of the old couple and her three children. In the evening while the family were seated around the fireside the neighbors came in to the number of thirty or more, making a happy surprise and presenting the worthy couple with numerous gifts. On Thursday last, while D. D, Thomas, of this place, was sitting quietly in a store, A Vanderpool came in and, rush- ing up to him, struck him a stunning blow on the side of the head, knocking him onto the floor. Vanderpool then turned and ran out of the store and dis- appeared. He was shortly afterward ar- rested by Marshal Talbot and taken be-: fore Esquire Barnes for trial, He cheer- fully plead guilty to the charge of assault and battery, and remarked that the only thing he had to regret was that he didn't hit Thomas harder, The 'Squire prompt- ly fined him $50 and costs. Not having the wherewith to liquidate this sum, he was sent to the county bastile for fifteen days. Vanderpool's assault on Thomas was one of the most unmanly and cow- ardly we have ever had to chronicle. The latter was just out from a two weeks' spell of sickness and was hardly able to get around.—Malvern Leader. J. M. Johnson, of Silver Creek township, lost a valuable cow from mad itch, — Buy B. H. Douglss & Cons’ Cepsicum Cough Drops for your children; thoy are barme plessng Lo the taste und will cure thelr colds D. 8. wnd Trade Maark on every drop. | —— GET YOUR WINTER APPLES, L. H, Wray has a car load of barreled apples on the track at the K. C. depot, and proposes to sell them at once cheap for cash. The oconsist of Jenitens, Ben Davis, Wine Taps, Bell Flowers, und Northern Spies. These wishing good apples cheap for winter will notget a bet THE DAILY BEE--FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1883. ter chance. He will sell for three or four days, Sanday excepted, o — Real Estate Transfors, The following deeds were filed for re. cord in the recorder's oftice, November 8, reported for the Bre by P. J. Me. Mahon, real estate agent: Julia H. Clark to George F. Maxwell ot al., part of out-lot 3, Jackson's add.; £1,360. Edwin F, Watta to Robert C. Carter, lot 11, block 8, Street’s add.; $65. C.R.1 & P. railroad company to Peter Hanson, nw J, ne }, 6, 70, 42; a I, Hendricks to Julia A. Spoor, lots 7, S and 9, block 4, Street's add.; $700. Robert Percival to Mary E. Street, out-lot 4, Jackson's add. ; §2,000. Rebecca Washburn to Thomas Rob- erts, part of block 25, Neola; $—— Frank P, Gosling to Thomas F. Grun- an, e b, nw 1, and sw }, nw }, 11, 77, 41; $3,600. Elizo Crawford to Jons Olsen, lot block 11, Crawford’s add; $200, John Eekeryto Sylvia E. Butler, lot b, block 19, Neola; $200. Total sales §8, 11, S — “Tis beauty truly blent whose red and white Nature's own swecthandcanning hand on,"” ' powder imparts a richness the skin as soft as down, | —— TIOWA ITE TPozz _ The Sioux City & Pacific is ready to join in a Union depot at Sioux City. Agent D. R, Howard, of Fontanelle, lost his life while doing service as a switchman one evening last woek. Towa leads all the other States as a hog-rawser, having 0,107,445 head; 11li- 1ol comes next, with 3,970,761, Sac county boasts of the largest herd of Hereford cattle in the United States and the biggest farm 1n the world. Cedar Rapids now ranks as the fifth city in the State, the cities above her being Des Moines, Dubuque, Davenport an; Burlington.; The Citizens’ Street railway company has been organized in Burlington, and promises to give the city a good street railway system. The new asylum for the feeble-minded children of the state, at Glenwood, has been accepted by the board of trustees. The building cost $20,000. The Keokuk Gate City claims to have been presented with a ish weighing seventeen pounds and measuring two feet seven and one-half inches. The directory will show an increase in the population of Des Moines for the year past of 05,000. The Des Moines directory man formerly lived in St. Louis, One Iowa woman has stolen a march on her sisters. She married a Burling- ton newgpaper man, the local editor of The (Gazette, and will henceforth be en- titled to Vogt. Seventeen years ago ex-Mayor Bush, of Dubuque, purchased 1,850 acree of pinelands in Clark county, Wis., from the government at 86 cents per acre. He sold the property last week for $68,000. The Atlantic Telegraph says that Exira voted a five per cent. tax in aid of the Kansae City, Atlantic and Northern railroad after a hot fight, with 88 ma- jerity in a total vote of 348. Theamount is about §25,000. Towa Falls has recently given $50,000 to secure two new railroads. Of this £50,000 was voted to the Burlington, Cedar Rapids and Northern and $20,000 subscribed to a road the Northwestern is building north from Eldora, The old glue factory in Cedar X4Pids, abuilding 50 by 100 féeet, hag oeen sol by Mr. Petrovitsky to Dayi< Blakely,who will convert it into a pwalngflmu!a,axgec— ting to cut in the newhborhood of 500 hogs daily. From a tablc compiled by the State Superintendent it appears that fifty-seven county superintendents were re-elected at the late election. The same table shows that ten ladies were elected to that office, five of whom are married. The upper Towa Methodist conference has within its boundaries 196 preachers, 249 churches, 110 parsonages and 21,000 members. It has 264 Sunday-schools, with 20,000 attendants, It paid about 120,000 for ministerial support, $25, 000 for expenses, and $66,200 for ben: evolence last year. Tne Dwbuque city government has some snap. A special force of 60 extra policemen were put on duty Hallowe'en night, and in consequence the disgrace- ful and unlawful destruction of private property was not allowed or attempted. Hallowe'enism, as carried out in Des Moines, was little less than riotous hood- lumism, The articles of incorporation of the Sioux City Electric Light and Power company, with a capital of $206,000; the Scott County Savings bank, of Daven- port, with a capital of $100,000; the Tri- State Printing company, of Keokuk, with a capital of £0,000; and the Fred Daut Tobacco company, of Muscatine, with a capital of §2,000, have been filed in the office of the Secretary of State. ‘The Atlantic Telegraph says there is a road being built southward from Atlantic to Kansas City, Mo., and that said road is also being built northward from that city to a town called Coon Rapids, on the Milwaukee road. The new road is called the Kansas City, Atlantic & Northern, The cars are to be renning from Atlantic to Red Oak, a distance of thirty-five miles, by Christmas. Twelve miles are now graded, 1t parallels the Rock Island and C., B. Q. branches. “Meno sana in corpore sano.” A sound mind 1n g sound body” is the trade mark of Allen’s Brain Food, and we assure our readerf that, if dissatisfied with either weakness or Brain or bodily powers, this remedy will per- manently strengthen both, $1.-At diug- gists, — something of a Wanrt, Philadelphia Record. =1t is not fully determined whether Mr. Frank Hatton is a mere blister on the neck of the Postoftice Department, or atumor, The doctors are considering the matter and weshall soon know, e — Vain Hope. New Orleans Picayune. Speaking of the weather, a Cincinnati paper says: ‘*Sunshine succeeds slush.” How nice it would be if such were the case in Cincinnati papers. Horsford's Acid Phosphate. Excellent Results. Dr. J. L. WiLus, Eliot, Me., says: “‘Horeford's Acid Phosphate gives most excellent results,” —— The Kansas railroad manages and the board of state commissioners being unable to agree to_uny schedule of rates, the board Las de- cided that the Beloit decision wist go into effect the 10th jnst, THE 10WA CAPITOL. From a Building of Logs in Forty Years to an Tmposing State House. The Twentieth General Assembly and the Chambers to be Occupied. Former State Houses, Des Molnes Special, In the Territorial days of Tova the first laws were enacted in a log tuilding at Burlington. It was destroyed by fire, and few now living remember its \ppear- ance. When lowa City became the capi- tal a pretentious structure wasunder- taken, and it still stands as oms of the buildings of the State university. Back early in the 60's the capital waslocated in the western part of Jasper couaty, and after a legislative investigation hid wiped *‘Monroe City” out of even a nominal ex- istence, a commission selected ‘‘Fort Des Moines” as the capital of the new State. There could be a racy story told of this location, and how the east side of the river prevailed against the wast, with vague indications that fricnds of one of the commissioners were all atonce “long” of city lots, The building still used by the state was constructed as part of the inducement to remove the capital hither, and was loosely thrown together or poor brick, two-stories high. Anotherstory was afterward added, and its appearance would justify a Pennsylvania barn in declining to be its neighbor, The bill for the construction of THE NEW CAPITOL was passed by the legislature of 1870, The corner-stone was laid Nov. 23, 1871. Next year it was discovered that the stone in the foundation was faulty, and the succeeding legislature ordered its removal. The founfntion was relaid in 1874, and the corner-stone, with nearly all its former inscriptions chiseled off, was reset without ceremony. The walls rose slowly fromthis on, and it was not till 1880 that the building was covered and the domes built, The glazing was completed late in ‘1881, and, steam heat being introduced, the interior con- struction was set going. The structure measures, including the porticoes, 366 feet from morth to south, and 239 feet from east to west. The building is four stories high, except in the part devoted to the legislative halls and the library, where it is three stories. The height from base line to top of cor- nice is 93 feet, and from the base line to the top of the center dome it is 275 feet, or within twenty feet of the dome roof at Washington. The main dome has a diameter of 93 feet. The feur domes at the corners are 166 feet above ground. The east and west porticoes are each fronted by six Corinthian pillars, and there are four like pillars at the north and south entrances. The building covers an acre and a quarter of land, and 2,769 cubic yards of concrete and rubble were used ‘,{' the foundation. The walls have ta* nearly half a_ million feet of stor over13,000,000bricks have bgp-“id With- in. The consumption of o 1 has boen laid within. The cop-4iption of metal over 1,200 tons, m»"‘§ for heating and water pipes. £HE MAIN DOME s -|.Jed outside last year at a cost of m&flnng over £4.000. Among the more <otable domes thus finished may be in- stanced that of the Hotel Invalides at Paris, and the cathedral of St. Isaac at . Petersburg. The capitol dome at Boston and that of Hartferd are also gilded. The architects here claim that but few of the great domes of the world surpass oursin size Like the building, it is practically fireproof; the vertical part above the stylobate is of stene and brick, and the hemisphere is of iron framewerk composed of vertical eye-beam ribs, tied with horizontal flat iron bands, and filled in with brick-work. Thu exterior of the hemisphere is covered with copper, and the floor of the lentern balcony is of cast bronze, with a railing of bronze and brass. From the lantern windows and balcony one of the noblest views in interior Towa is afforded, and visitors who have the pluck to climb the stairways leading to this vantage point are amply repaid for the effort, In the Senate chamber, which is in the south end, a few days more will allow of the carpets being put down. Galleries at the north and south will allow a vast audience to look down upon the tempor- arily notable fifty men who are to sit be- low,' The Lieutenant Governor’s rooms are at the southwest, and the committee rooms at the southeast. The chamber is surrounded with columns of scagliola work, and the windows will be curtained. The ceiling is frescoed, and at the cor- ners are figures emblematic of agricul- ture, mechanic industry, commerce and peace. At the east and west are large painting allegorically representing history and law. The general effect of the ceiling is considered very satisfactory by visitor: Passing by the cloak-reom the visitor enters the rotunda. Iooking up, the best of the frescoes is sedn—a circle of clouded June sky painted'on the ceiling below the lantern at the dome. At the base of the hemisphere will be ELEVE! LEMATIC STATUES, A Baltimore artist has completed the figure intended to represent lowa, and for which Mrs. Hull, wifeof the Secrc- tary of State, was prevailed upon to al- low her face to be referred to by the artist, The other figures will represent Liberty, Victory, Peace, Law, Justice, Manufactures, Commerce, Architecture, Sculpture, and Painting. The figure of agriculture will carry a face that thous- ands will recognize when they come te see it, J g ) At the east is a grand stairway, Over- head arc frescoes representing America, Europe, Asia and Africa, done in very strong colors. Below are panels to be filled hereafter, and it is possible that Catlin’s equestrian portrait of the Sac chief, Keokuk, may be taken as one of the subjects, Certainly it would be ap- propriate to thus preserve the memory of asavage who never broke friendship with his white neighbors. Turning northward, one enters the Representatives’ hall. The appearance of the room is like the Senate chamber. At the four cornerr are figures rospective- ly representing Knowledge, Vigilance, dnion, and Constancy, At the east is the portrait of Gen. 8. R. Curtis, while at the west is seen that of Gen. M. M. Crocker. In the southern angles are portraite of Chief Justice Charles Mason and Caleb Baldwin; while in the north are the features of Hon. James O, Carle- ton and Hon, Rush Clark, both having served as Speaker of the House in early years. The heads above mentioned have tLe effect of medalhons, and the remain: [ jpace is filled with flower. basketa tied with a drapery of bright ribbons, Within the portraita is aheavy molding of plaster, and withing this are portraita of Washington, Lincoln, Lucas, and Gov, Grimes, ese_portraits have the effect of alto-rilevo. hile the por- traita are regarded as faithful to tho originals, the general effect is not re. garded as so pleasing as that of the Sen- ate chamber, The next session of the Legislature will be held in the new chambers, the carpen- tors having just about finished. At the west from the rotunda is the vast cham. ber to be occupied by THE STATE LIERARY, and Mrs, Maxwell, the librarian for sev eral years past, is much gratified that the removal takes place during her custodian- ship. The room is nearly ready for use, murthv books will be removed fmro next menth, sf‘m will not permit any description of this part of the building, except to say that the marbles of which the vast strotches of wainscots in these three chambers are fashioned Some from every country in the world except from Africa, and that the furnaces by which the build ing is to be heated are ina building across the street from Capitol square. The com duit through whlcg the heating and ven- tilating pass is high enough for a tall man to wut ., The basement and first story are be di- vided into suites of rooms for the various states officers andjofficial bodies. The gov- ernor's rooms in the first story will be reached from the west, and will be ready soon. ['At the left, from|the same flight of steps, one enters the rooms of the secre- tary of states, also to be ready by New Year's. On this floor will be l{u\ auditor and treasurer of state, the superintendent of instruction, the adjutant general, and very ample provision for the supreme court, as well as rooms for the Agricultu- ral and Horticultural society. The base- ment will be utilized by other officials, The expenditure, in round numbers, so far has been $2,000,000, which includes the removal of the first foundation, the salaries of the members of the board and 80 on, the further cost will not exceed £5600,000, which does not include any estimate for work on the grounds, But it is probable that when the grounds are graded, planted to trees and shrubbery, and surrounded with sidewalk and fence, the estimate will be somewhat exceeded. And when paintings are done in the panelsaround thegrand stairway, andsome statuary placed in the grounds, the cost will approach3,000,000, about one-feurth of what the unfinished capitol at Albany has absorbed. ing ample s B ———— GOLD AND BLOOD. The Rumored Approaching Marriage Between George Gould and Miss Carrie Astor, Cleaveland Leader. A member of one of th% New York clubs, who hae beenin the city for a few dayp pan, 8id yesterday to a Leader repp<ter Wwho happened to meet him at sae Kennard house: ] goe that young George Gould isre- orte?, as<ngaged to Carrie Astor. 1f ) 18 ¥nto, it shows that George is about good a man as his father, for the As- torsand the Goulds have been as far re- moved from each other as the two poles, and it is more of a feat for the young man to get Miss Astor as a wife than for the elder Gould to become possessor of his millions, Unless one has lived in New York, it would be difficult to be- lieve that the lines of society were as finely drawn as they really are.” What to an outsider seems_trivial, and unworthy of a serious thought, to a New Yorker be- comes a matter of immense importance, and the social struggle now going on be- tweer the old Knickerbocker families and the new rich, who are headed by the Vanderbilts, is as intense as was that waged between the representatives of the regime in France during the second em- gire and the shoddy aristocracy created y Napoleon III. Its true the Astors have not long been numbered among the old aristocracy, but the very shortness of their reign makes them very tenacious of their priveleges. John Jacob made the first money, and his son William B, in- creased it largely, while the present rep- resentatives of the family, John Jacob and William, not only have the wisdom to care for the family millions as well as their predecessors, but they have also given prestige to the name socially by marrying into the old Knickerbocker families. Mrs William Astor has the blood of the Van Hensselaers, Schuylers, and Livingstones combined in her veins, and 8o, from & New York standpoint, her children are as good as anyone. The heir apparent of John Jacob Astor is at the present time the United States minister to Italy, and it is his cousin, & daughter of William Astor, who is geing to adorn the Gould millions. It will thin the old Dutch blood to mix it for two successive generations with money, but they evi- dently think it can stand it, or else you may be sure they would . not venture it a second time, Carrie Astor is by no wise a beautiful woman, but she is level head- ed, and is what is known as ‘good form,’ She is quiet in her dress, and in her pub- lic appearance there is nothing about her to indicate her wealth. She is always seen at the parades of the Coaching club, and a stranger might recognize her if he would | look for the plainest-dressed wo- man present. She has always been sur- feited - with attentien, and, 86 I said, she has born itadmirably, She scems as fresh and “ingenious as a girl froma country village. 1f George Gould isreally to marry, her, his fortune is ragde, for he has been a fairly prudent fellow, and will be obliged - either to drag after him or cut any undesirable persons, as viewed from an Astor standpoint, His former associates have been largely of the horsey and theatrical order—people whom he can know ornot know, just as the freak takes him. He has fought shy of the middle ‘class, who are so near the boun- dary line of ‘good’ society that they can nllrim. walk in and possess the land. To Jay Gould this warriage will be even more pleasing than to his son, for it vir- tually decides the long fight that he has had with Vanderbilt in his favor. West- orn people say, when they hear a New Yurl?:ru speak of the Vanderbilts as prominent shoddy, ‘O pshaw! that's sour grapes;' Dt 1 3all you, they are ehoddy, and, are stupid, Why, worse than all, thei William H. Vanderi of his fortune to have a son as cool-head- ed and clean cut as George Gould, ““The brains of the Goulds and the po- sition of the Astors will as efiectually keep the Vanderbils from the social u- premacy they desire as would prison walls were they placed behind them. As long as the Venderbilts supply fashionable New York with a species of social cirous, people will go to their houses. When their imported nobility go honie and they are lelt to their own resources, they will ractically drop ¢ and be forgotten, he firet reception given by Mr, Vander bilt in his new house was one of the most disgraceful things I ever saw. ke was jostled first to one side and then to the ilt would give half| SR g 7 FURNITURE e TH B CHEAPEST PLACE IN OMAHA TO BUY Furniture ]S AT: DEWEY & STONES They always "have the largest and best stock. NO STAIRS TO CLIMB ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR TO THE DIFFERENT FLOORS. The use of the term * Show Lino" in connection with ibe corporate name of great road, b asevere kidney trouble, aud having noticed ein one of our papers af the wonderful cures Rupt's Remedy had performed inmany cases of drop- s bisdder and kidney troubles, wd fading & bottle other. People came and went without conveys an idea of ust whab inquired of each other and compared |ished by thy greateet railway in America, if he did not know what to make of his ble by far than that of many of hia so- | Dakota; and asi ta main lines, branches and conne aul Chicago, Milwaukee, La Crosse and Winona. Geerge Gonld js a lucky fello Milwaukee, Waukesha and Oconomowoe.. Chicago, Clinton, Rock Jaland and Cedar Raplds, {118 box of stra\v pasking, I concluded I would try it, | Davenport, Calmar, St. Paul and Minnoapols any reference to him. To be sure they SHOR had his cards of invitation to be present, roquired by the traveling but that was all. They talked about his|| lic—a« Shert Line, Quick and the best of' acoomm netes as if they were at the c_:]mnin%:r some public exhibition of paintings. e 1 man stood in themidst of all the cen- | | g HICAGO, [WJILWAUKEE surroundings or of his company. _To do A d S P I him justice, I \{ as wc\l own that n t' aul. his position, while ludicrous tua specta-| 1 (0 na operates over 4,500 miles of road m called guests, who had apparently lefttheir | {ions reach il the e Bopee g =) good manners and self-respect at home. | deecription of Short nd Best Route between But I have left my original subject, and il Chicago, Milwaukee, Aberdecn and Ellendalo icayo, Milwaul:ee, Eau Claire and Stillwater: Milwaukee, Wausau and Morril, Chicago, Milwaukee, Madison and Prairiodu Chion. Chicag ukee, Owatonna and Fairibault, Chicago, Beloit, Janeaville and Mineral Point. Chicago, Council Bluffs and Omaha. Chicago, Sioux City, Sioux Falls and Yankton Chieago, Mibwaukee, Mitchell and Chamberl audicommionced 0 twie it, when, to surprise, T10und | puneag Slespers and the Finest Dining Cars fnth: at the first bottle benefited mo so much that 1 do- | world are run on the mflnllnuclthag ‘E z ded that T would continue it use, and T kept on MJI-WAUK%E#%I. PAUL %‘ An n is paid to passen ‘cou A. V. H. CARPENTER, house as they would of & museum, and LlNE. tionsell "of WRB ey fesme staring in a half-dazed manner, as tor, was at the same time more respecta- rthern Lllinois, Winconsin, Minnosota, lown and Chicago, ko, St. Paul and Minneapolis. I willend as1 began, by saying that w."! Chicago, Milwaukeo, Beaver Dam and Oshkosh. Chicago, Elgin, Rockford and Dubuque. lain. Fock aland, Dubuque, St. Paul and Minneapolis. every attention igors taking {6 until 1 had used in all six bottles, and my | Guy ermpioyes of the company. appetite la ood, all pains in the back wnd side disap- Veared, and forone of my years (1 am now 80 yoars 8. MERRILL, Gen'l Manager, old) 1 wn able to attend to my business, and am o BN, nm'l;(‘t:nm" Btrong aud vigorous, s many of my friends and | 9 T TLAR) T e W“-.Imm neighbors can tewity that know mo well. I beg te Iso, that mhgy of our neighbors have used of my triends who has furt parchasad a bottle of Gup- »y, Kinsman & Aldén, of Portnd, eays be‘would not be without it at any price. TEE BAKER'S WAY, Mr, Alfved Nadean, No. 02 Liscoln strcet Lewi Me., writcs us, May 24, 1883: ‘I have been everely witicted for a long time with idigestion and tiver complaint, aud ot times all that 1 ate 8o distressed me that I coukd not bear the eightof food. 1 had triod a good many different remedies for my com- plaint, and tney all failed, until oue day Mr. Martel, one of our druggists in Lewiston, recommended Hunt's Remedy, a8 he knew of 80 many who had used it hero with groat sucoess for kidney, liver, and ur- inary troubles, as well s indigestion, and upon his recommendation i finally concluded to try & bottle, ONE OF THE BESTHPHYSICIANS. and commenced taking, with very little faith in it. | 1 bave beenusing Switt'sSpecifiein my practice for b btk 5 ha hasod | auite wlong time, and Lregard it the best combination The firét bottle belpod me 8o much thiat I'purchased | B8 L 8 VIR0 e 6o dio 18 W enbirely venaiable o more, it hasdone 2 & wonderful anount of | il Composefthesxtrata of routa wh good, and cured mo of incigestion. 1 can eat. al | in thy soction of Georgia, T am t;mnu:‘:-nmvfi - 3 et 4 | tOry from the time the tormula was obtained kinds of food now, and can truly recommend Hunt's | g% 300" 13'lya cortain and safa. romedy for all Remedy e a iure cure torindigession, liver and kid- | kinda of blood poison and skin humor, and in the ney disewnca” b of cases in whiols 1 bave usedftand seen it Os I [ ised, there hav never beew failuro to vure, "1 haso t in oG FRACTIOAL \RXFRBIRNOR | (ot 12 D emeas avo Tu 0o, Biom o8 No ttage Street, LW §yion it, atter 1 had most signally failed by: the. most and prominent citizen, imparts .‘mumvad methods of treatment withmercury and 14, 18 lodidide of potassium, These cases have been cured “Having loarned of the valuable qualities of Hunt's | SYoF Bfteen years, and have nevor had any return of the disease [n themselves, or in thelr ohildres Remedy in & practical manner, I beg to state thut I FRED A. TOOMER, M. D, consider 1t remedy of great werit, nd can most v Ferry, Houstao C6., G, cheertully recommend i¢ to sey one troubled with | o 11t 18 the best selling remedy n my storoand Kidoey or liver disease.” 08 of peopiefbuy it. 18 has become & household. remedy with many of aur best cit ——e d WARLTER A TAYLOR, Atlanta, Ga. 2 el St Specific—ofton gros i ten da retall, und to all classece. Bome of Atlanta’s best’ ple use it regulary as o tonic and slierative, JOSIAH BRADFIELD, Atlanta, Gn. Our treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed freo to applicants. THE SWIFT 8PECIFIC CO,, Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ca, DR. WHITTIER, 617 St. Charles St., St, Louis, Mo. A REGULAR GRADUATE of two medloal collogos bias been_engaged longer in the treatment of ¥IC, NERVOUS, BKIN AND BLOOD Diseasco than other physician in St. Louis, as olty papers show and il 614 reakdents know. - Coneultetion. frée ad invited. When it is inconvenient to viait the city for treatmont, medicines i bo seat by mall or ¢ Curablet ters doubh ankly étatod. Nervous Prostration, Debility, Mental and Physica Weakniess, Morcurial and_other aflectioun of Throat, 100 #iupurities and_Blood Polson ments to marriage, Rbeuratism, Pilok. ; tention t cases trom oyerworked brain. A UNIQUE ENTERTAINMENT Dr. Sau Ab-Brici, » conerted Ruddhist teom far awny India, will give one of hiy unigue Oetal entertalnwents a the Baptistchurch, - - MONDAY EVENING, NOV, 12, AT 7} O'CLOCK; Exopsses, [nd: T fl%fi» rocpia Vo ey g sopt 26-dawly. Westem Comice-Works, IRON AND SLATE ROOFING. O XIDE. why, ca f, consequences and B Postage or wtamps. troducing all ther oostumes avd ho He shows how they eat and sloep, snd woo o ry. Heuings the'f songsand tells their stories. Better than a h CHICAGO co. I:'lnl \\Ah::\..:: UJ: 40, § TUN, 15 £ [ oA A% 01 A e T . vilund Kitof Tools, 810 AT LOWESE IR \HoG R At A 1121 Douglae Bt, * + Omaha, Neb. MANUFACTURER OF Galvamizea Iron Cornices lp.fl'!‘h tent ' Jibtchot Bar And Braoket ShME, be general agent lor the abovo line of o f'". Windos Bhads, Colar G Rt inen) o Pocrsonss Hil” stest Tasida. Bitoa. g Nebraska Gornice —AN] flrnamamalm Works! MANUFACTURERS QF M. R. RISDON ; CAVANZED AON_ GRS (Gen' Insurance Ag REPRESENTS: Phaots Asursnce Co., 0f London, Ossk 7 Woeatehctor, N, ¥., Copital.. ... The Merchante, of Rewark, N. J. .wmm Girnrd Flre, T nmnbfim.g‘pfl ! 1m OFFICE:~Room 16, Owiba Netionsl Benk ‘Bolld: g Telepbose ho. ET6 - A viciim of early improdend. agps, A T ey e R0 e a Iron PATENT METALIC EKYLIGHT, ron Fencin fi ! WM, GAISER, Masages. C. SPECHT, PROP.

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