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2 e ee w4 W wr W AYR THE DAILY BEE: -OMAIlA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1883 Zaan n 4T TUITATRATTN AT A ¥ WINPT RETATNTS 4 4 anme e e ——— 12 WOMAN'S NyCRE®, «She is over-worked, poor thin Proud, honorable, faithful, womanly, she determined to keep expenses down,anddothe work herself. Right nobly has she done it, but at terrible Sest. The sparkle that was in her, aye when she was a bride is ;znnv.' saer once plump.and rosy checks are now ho‘low and colorless. She used to step lightly and gracefully, but now she drags one foot after the = with painfulweariness. 91}For ;:\.:Ps:\kc of the family she does not mention hier aching back, nax acutely-painful nerves, her rheu- matic twinges, her dyspeptic troubles, or the heavy weight she fecls in her right side, that tells her her liver is oing wrong. She thinks nobody Enows about all that, and she will suffer on in quiet and unrepining pa- tience. Alas! her secret is an open one, for it tells its own tale Whisper this in her ear, he ought to know it: Madam, Brown's Iron Bitterswill healyour back,calm your werves, killyour rheumatism,drive out your dyspepsia,andcorrectyour livers Dolar a bottle. Nearest druggist. ~ Catarrh. At this season of the year everybody has a cold and some very bad ones, By frequent oxposures the membranesof the nose become sensiti “ catarrh and influenzas are epiden H nber when, I isted of a continy flow {rom my Ringing and Bursting Noises Sometimes the hearing in_my loft ear Five years ago, about this sesson of so Hood's Sarssparilla. 1 was hut I conti o use it until I Mes. Hlia H, Caulfield, in my hoad. wasaffected. the year, | began t helped right awa folt my myself cured. rownell morchant and extonsive miller at Victors, Ontario county, N, Y., writes: 1 Hood's Sarsapasiila for my Catareh, and it bas helped wme. 1 consider Hood's 3arsaparills one of the best veiedios for blood disease to be obtained, 100 Doses Onel|Dollar, with that distressing_com. tarrh, e been Hood's Sarsa- ‘and find it one of the bost I have ars, and “1 have been troubl plaint, remod Ever taken. My trouble has Iastod ten y I uld get any relief until I commenced to uso 1ood's Sarsaparilla.”—Martin Shield, Chicago, Til. 'Dange.[}from Catarrh) Depends upon the amount and extent of the Scrofu- Jous infection. Unquestionably many deaths from consumption can be traced to neglected catarrh. ro is a violent distress, prostrated and coughing BANKER KILLS BURGLAR. Mr, Choate’s Fatal Aim by Gaslight, Thrilling Scene at the Bedside of His Wife—A New] York Cracksman Dead on a Newark Porch, to The New York Morning Journal Newark, Nov, 10, fire low!” That is what brave Mrs, Choate shout- ed to her husband, Homer M. Choate, aying-teller of the Seaboard National Bank, in Wall st., New York, when he had fired one shot ata burglar in her bed-chamber, in their residence, No. 77 Lincoln avenue, in this city, at 1 o'clock yesterday morning. Three little children were sleeping in the samo bed with the heroic woman, and her husband had to fire over hor and her darlings to hit tho oscaping burglar. Mrs., Chonte was the first to hear the soft footstope in the hall. Sho shouted to her husband, who slept in an adjoining room. He seized his ro- volor, sprang into_the hall, lighted the gas, and thieh heard Her sholit: Homer, there's a man in my room?" Mr, Choate ran to her room and saw a man passing quickly toward a window on the opposite side of her bed. He fired at the burglar, but missed him. 1t was then that Mrs. Choate, whohad half raised herself in bed, and who could see by the flash that her husband armed too high, “Fire again and ! shouted. He fired again and saw the burglar dis- appear through the window. Mr. Choate quickly dressed and ran into the gtreet, where he met police sergeant Vreeland, who had heard the two shots. With lights a search was made for the burglar, and his dead body was soon found on top of a grape-arbor, close to the piazza run- ning about the house. One pistol ball had entered his back and passed throujh his heart, and yet he had walked across the top of the piazza to the grape-arbor, a distance of about fifteen feet. Mr. Choate gave up the rovolver with which he shot the burglar. Two cham- bers were empty. He said that several of the mu..5 story windows had been left open because o FEFANGaT R OVERS heated the rooms, and in some way the burglar-alarm was disconnected. It was easy then for any active man to climb to the topZof the arbor, cross the top of the !tinzm and enter through a window. The burglar had left his shoes and coat in the arbor. At 11 o'clock Mr, Choate was taken to epells, the eyen woop, the nose discharges copiously, and the head soems to split. In such cases Hood's Barsaparilla corrects the ca- tarrh by its_direct nction in discharging the poison from the blood through nature's great outlets, s that healthy, sound blood reaches the membrancs and is wholesome. Hoods ‘Sarsaparilla Sold by drugglats, $1; six for $5. Prepared by C. 1. HOOD &C0., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mags. ‘Health is Wealth Dr. E. 0. West's Nerve and Brain Treatment, uaran oed specifio for Hyste 2Convul" #lone, Fits, Nervous Neuralgis, Prostration caused bx % Wakeful: Mental reasion, Boftening of the Brain, resulting (n inssnity and Jeading to misery, decay’ and death, Premature Old_Age, Barrenness Lose of power in'sithor sox, Involuntar [ oausod by parmatorrhaa over exertlons o ' brain, selt-abuse or over-indulgence. Esch $ains’one_month's troat tment.. §1.00 & box, or boxes for 5,00, Rent by mail propaid on reoelp) rice ; by (GUARANTEE SIX BOXES ' To cure any oase. With each order recelved by uy for six boxes accompanod with $6.00, wo willsend the fusebaser our writlen guarantes toretund tho money 1 the treatment doos not alfect & oure. Gy 1 ued only by C. F. GOODMAN me Wi~ Drup’ist Omaha Neb DR, FELIX LE BRUN'S ANID PREVENTIVE AND CURE. FOR EITHER SEX. Tuls romody belng Injocted directly $o the seat o disease, requires no change of dlet or nauscous, rial of poisonous modicines to be taken intern: When ‘1s0d s o proventive by either sex, It Is vate diseaso; but In the ally. Timpossible to oontrack Sy pri case of those already unfortunately afficted wo guar- antee lm'l:'ll Ml'“:nflml cure, or I:;’ '!I-}I l’!’u;: the money. Prico by mall, postage paid, 82 per box, or Imn‘nxu for KL s WRITTEN GUARANTEES ssued by all suthorlzed agents. Dr.FelixLeBrun&Co SOLE PROPRIETORS, C. F. Goodman, Druggist, Solo Agent, for Omaha Neb, roag s i i Avi - A vistim of safly Impendepcn, cauaing orvous debi ey mix; et -"f\'- oolf ire, which e wil sei R e et ‘Address, J. H. REEVES, © Chatham 3t New York. court, where he was released on his own recognizance. Many persons viewed the body in Woodrufi’s morgue. John Boy- lan, a New York clothier, recognized the dead burglar as a man who had called at his house and asked for a loan, saying that he had pawned his letter carrier's uniform. Ex-Coroner Vreeland said that the burglar was one of the men who boarded a Broad st. car at midnight and asked where Lincoln-ave. was. At the ‘‘gulley road,” a very lonely spot on the edge of Woodside, the tashionable sub- urban site of Newark, the men alighted. One of the men had a thin face, was twenty-five or thirty years of age, of medium height, had on reddishebrown clothes, and had a light moustache, The other man wis short, had dark clothes, and his whiskers and moustache were red- dish. The description of the first man is that of the dead burglar, who is supposed to be a New York cracksman. It was at first attempted to arrange the questions botween the NortherniPacific and the other Pacific roads by leavin, each free to do such business as it coul get, but stipulating that all should do it at the same rates. This would have given the Northern Pacific entrance into San Francisco and the Central Pacific entrance into Portland, and would have aflorded the people of each of those communities the advantage of the services of two dif- ferent conceins, even if they worked at the same rates. But difficulties of one kind and another forbade this solution. Human nature is weak even among rail road men, and if the corporation had been let into each other’s territory there is no telling but what in a moment of degraded appetite for a slice of the traflic going to a competitor some freight” or passenger agent might have ‘‘cut” a rate, and then upon the umlucky heads of the world would have been precipitated the horrors of a “wm‘"——whicfi is what railroad-men call that state of affairs when one road offers to do business for the people at lower rates than other roads, The danger that anything so distressing might occur, and that the railronds might got to underbidding so that an emigrant could move his family and his goods into California for less than $1,000, or the grape-growers of Los Angeles might put their grapes into the Boston market for less than £800 freight on a car-load, has been averted by the adoption of the sim- Ylu system of the Duke of Omaha, The ’acific coast has been partitioned out among the railroads. California is to be- long exclusively to the Central Pacific; Oregon and Washington exclusively to the Northern Pacific. Neither is to com- pete for business in the other’s territory. n pursuance of this agreement the after Nov, far as through traffic is concerned. the same way the Contral P sengers for Oregon or Washington, Choate residenc from the avenue house. oyes, H{Ae said that quickly that she thad no time to and the gas was lighted. was for her children, Judge Dogue hasordered Deputy Sher- Detective Reneer to use all measures to capture the burglar who es- caped, and to employ New York detect- ives to aid them. At 10 o'clock last night the dead burglar had not been identified. An inquest will be begun on Monday iff Davis an afternoon, | —— Instructive Reading. Northern Pacific has given notice that it rotires from California, as N o will after this take no tlmmzh freight or pas- Last evening a Journalier visited the 1t stands 70 feet back @ lonely cluster of overgreens, and it isa square frame Mis, Choate has dark hair and , round At?ure and a pleasant face, he whole sceno passed so be afraid, Besides, her husbund was near, Her only fear rules of econemy, and tore from the loco- motives the honored names of our local great men and their other brass orna- ments, Nowadays the conductor is only some promoted brakeman or switch-ten- der—a mere train starter and ticket- taker. As now trains are stopped by the engineer with a pressure of his fingor on the air-brake valve lever, so the du- ties of the car officers consist in helping people and bundles on and off, taking ares and calling the stations, These duties are shared in common by the conductor and his one or two assistants, and there no longer ex- ints the once wide difference between the master of the train and the sooty menial who twisted the brake-wheel, tended the the part of general utility, We repeat it, the great commandef in-chief has van- ished. Ah, then the title of Conductor meant something. It wasnot a hollow name. The bearer was a man of honer and distinetion, He swelled through the reeling nisles of the roaring train in princely pomp. When oading a charge, he dashed through the smoky, firey blasts of the platforms, sprang into the car and slammed the door after him with a flourish, brakemen, checkmen, newsboys and peanut peddlers gave way in awe. He wasattired in the finest silks, wools and cottons of the Iatest fashionable cut. Upon his snowy shirt-front gleamed a large gem of purest ray serene, In the fingers of his left hand, 80 arranged as not to hide the great seal ring, was crimped a parcel of bills, 1f he bore a lantern it was as clear as a star, and his name conld be seen cut in the glass. His eagle eye darted from side to side as ke seized upon the fares. person of afluence and influence and passed a pleasant word; now he frowned upon a common man; now he pierced to the heart with a glance some timid pas- senger who had already paid. When he sat down to rest it was in the ‘‘ladies’ car”’—that rolling palace of barbaric ex- clusiveness, within which no male man dared set foot unless in servile attendance upon some member of the fair sex, The conductor’s presence was felt from the engine-tender to the rear platform. The train started, stopped, backed, crawled, and flew at the waye of his hand. admirera wondered how soon he would become sole proprietor of the road; other {mmnus circulated stories that he owned arge interests in all the cityjhotels,while others darkly hinted that it must take vast sums of the company’s money to keep up such magnificence. But he has gone. Sic transit gloria mundi. | —— Don’t complain but use St. Jacobs Oil, and be cured of pain, e — Better Ask Ma, Cheyenc News, If the young woman of the period be a little less “‘previous” and consult her mother before throwing herself into the arms of the first man she fancies, her after lot would be a good deal smother. The recent Burlington case is much in point. One young Lesem, of Quincy, Il1., put up at the Union hotel in Burlington, Lmn, last Monday, in company with a Miss Stroud, a girl of 20. She had come with him in order to get married. In the evening a mock justice of the peace met thom at the hotel and professed to marry them, giving the bride the usual certificate. The newly married couple remained together until Wednesday, when the husband informed the bride that he had another wife living, to whom he must return. In spite of this, how- ever, he came back on Wednesday night and left for good only on Th ¢day morn-, ing. Upon consulting an attorndy - the girl found that the supposed ‘‘justice” was no justice at all, and that her social status was decidedly toocomplicated to be pleasant. With regard to the young scoundrel Lesem, who did this deed, it is Fluumt to know that he is liable to meet his doserts, for the marriage is valid ac- cording to Iowa law, and renders him lia- ble in a criminal action for bigamy. This, however, will be but poor comfort to the girl or her friends. Her reckles- ness in consenting to marry a man so every day in all parts of the country. It is an outcome of the American system of allowing yonng girls to form intimacies with men without the supervision or ad- vice of their natural protectors, who in the nature of the case ceuld have no other design in interfering than to pre- vent future trouble and disgrace. Every young woman should remember night and morning, and at every moment [{m tween, the incontrovertable truth that mindful of her happiness as her own father and mother. e —— Tested by Time. For Throut Diseases, Colds, and ~ Coughs, BRowN': ‘TrockiEs have proved their ef of many years. Price 20 cf BALDNESS, What Occasions it, and How it Can Be Avoided, Boston Medical Journal O, Lassar has continued his observa- tions of the nature of premature bald- ness, and has further convinced himself of the communicability of at least the form associated with “dandrufi, When the hairs which fall off in such cases are collected, rubbed up with vasclive, and the ointment o made is rubbed among the fur of rabbits or white mice, baldness rapidly makes itself visible on the parts 80 treated, That this is not due to the vaseline was shown by anointing other s with the vaseline alone, which produced no effect whatever, He con- siders that the disease is spread by hair- dressers, who employ combs and brushes to their customers, one after anothor, without any regular cleansing to theso articlos after cach time they are used. During frequent visits to the hairdressers, it can scarcely fail that brushes are used which have been shortly before dressing the hair of one aflected with so common a complaing as scaly baldness, Females, he thinks, are less often affected with this form of baldness, because the hair- dresser more frequently attends to them at their own homes, and there uses their combs and brushes. In order to prevent, stoves, lamps and windows and played like a soldier | Now he smiled upon a | | tributes Some | nearly nau‘lnfer to her is paralleled | 000, never in life will she have any friends so | —r— OCCIDENTAL JOTTINGS. Wyoming. The Cheyenne, Black Hills & Montana rail- rond has been incorporated. Work on the Soda works at Laramie is progressing slowly. About forty men are em ployed. The slaughter of game by sportsmen con. tinues, and the plaine are dotted with the rotting carcases of deer, elk and buffalo, In the month of September the Laramie ostoffica sold 0,747 three-cont stamps 1. In October it disposed of 15,405 two-cent stamps— $309,90. The Cheyenne Leader says the Union Paci- fic company {5 now employing Chinamen to " conductors on the Oregon Short Line, e of whom are suspected of forgetting to hand over the fares paid by passengers, 1 to An opium eater uamed Clark attempt creninte himself in the Metropoli Cheyenne. During one of his stupor down in bed and set it on fire, It covered in_time to bounce him_out of the house with his clothes half burned, Mrs, Harvicker man ranch at_Sloan's A smeak thiof recently raided her and was about moving off the plun. der when Mrs, H. pulled her persuader and made him throw up his hands, * He was made to unbutton and take off his coatand vest, like a small boy who was proparing for a pain ful interview with his parents. The pockets of the man's garmonts were searched, and in thom was found nearly all of the small porta- s articles of value that belonged in_ Mrs. Irossing case and olsewhere in hor private apartments, Dakota, The tin district near Harney's Peak is about. four miles suare, A mine of soap hus been discovered at Coop- eratown, Griggs county, The discovery of coal has set Chamberlain into a flutter of excitement, “I'he mining industries of the southern Hills are in 4 most prosperous condition, Tn addition to its gold placers a valuable coal mine has been uncarthed near Lisbon, The orn Pacific railway company dis- 000 pec month to its Manden em- ployees. The Canadian half-breeds in the Turtle mountain conntry are taking out naturaliza- tion papers. The contractor for the capitol building at Bismarck still hopes to get the building in- closed this fall. The business men of Sioux Falls contributed pt. Willey, the chiof re- cently convened in Fargo, decided to build a college in North Dakota. and Bismarck wants it, Only 434 ballots were cast in Sioux Falls on the constitution, out of a registry list of over 1,100 names. ~The birthplace of the constitu- tion gave 174 for and 255 against. About the pluckiest man in Dakota is A, Pratt, who drove a_wagon all the way from Herkimer county, New York, to Huron, a distance of 2,300 miles. He was about four- teen weeks on the journey. Forestburg, Sanborn county, supports four land agencies, one physician, four attorneys, Wakonloimad Dot alic organizations, a brigade of mechanics, several stores, one lum- beryard and two newspapers, with a third in prospect. There has heen forwarded from Vermillion station during the year ending November 1st, 3: 9,000 bushels of barley, 7,000 bushels of oats, and 4,000 bushels of potatoes; also, 78, 260 dozen eggs, 206,000 pounds of butter, and 26,200 pound: hides. During the same time the total amount of freight received was 13,120,000 pounds, and 5,166,000 pounds for- warded, The Pembina county commissioners have petitioned Congress to appoint two additional Fadgos for that disteiat, the present business of the district has increased so enormously that it is impossible for one judge to properly dispose of it. There have been over 2, cases during the present year. The distr comprises 57,000 square miles and a popula- tion of nearly 20,000 people. Itis estimated that the quarter section of mn|]mn which the capital is located at Bis- ck will sdll for £300,000. At an auction sale of lots on the 22d of last month, nearly $15,000 was realized the tirst day from the sale of sixty-thiee lots. They would have sold for a great deal more, but the late decision of Judge Edgerton as te the validity of the loca- tion of the capital makes men of money shy about investine in Bismarck real estate. . Colorado. Arapahos has voted 825,000 toward making the Denver exposition a permanent institu- tion, ‘The municipal expenses of Denver for Octo- ber were £33,400, and the recelpts were $18,- The cattlo men of the State have decided to hold a cattle show in connection with the Den- ver exposition next year, The Grand Army debt remaining frem the National encampment in July has been re- duced to less than $6,000, Considerable work is now being done in the vicinity of Leadville in the line of stealing portions of machinery from idle mines, The unpaid bills of the A. R, reunion do not prevent Denver figuring for the National Republican convention to meet in that city. There are in the State 15,000 men constant- ly employed in operating thle railroads. This (Kmx not include those engaged in construction or building new roads. There were 279 hawk heads delivered to the , | county treasurer of Boulder county during the month of September, for which ‘the regular bounty of 25 cents per head was paid, making @ sum of $69.75, The Associated Press would have the public believe that the failure of Culver, Page Hoyue was largely due to investing in mining in Colorado. rfi'hls is a mistake. The fact is that & fow years ugo Mr. Culver invested about $25,000 in some mini; i property at Cap- ital City, and he has realized ~haudsomely on it eversince. To-day the property is very valuable,and Mr, Culver is holding it at $400,- 000. A sale is pending, and he will no doubt got this nmount.—[ Denver News, Idaho. There are 175 men at work in the Shoshone machino shops. Tt iy estimated that 8,000 gallons of whisky have been wold in Hailey tho past season. A new body of ore hus been struck in the bottom of the shaft of the Silyer King mine, It is about threo foet wide, and rich, The Elkhorn mine produced, duriug the month of October, 852,000 gross in_ores ex- tracted and shipped to the Philadelphia smel- ters, Tho entiro cost of mining, shipping, ete., amounted to 88,000, leaving a net profit to the owners of $44,000, Outeide of Ketchum there s probably no mining camp in 1daho at the prosent time car- rying on mining operations with the vigor of S e Sadrad suth ke emgloged on and In the Bullion mine, and au_average of wo car louds o ore are'shipped dally. Forty men are employed in the Mayflower; twenty in the Jay Gould, and twenty in the Idahoa, his makes & total of two hundred and eighty- five miners in four mines, besides numerous lesser forces in the vicinity, Montan cific is 83, Miles City eleven were saloons; and the only thing that put the fire out was whisky, The Utah & Northern freight office at Butte last month remitted $115,000 to head- quarters as receipts on freight shipped here during the month. The assesernent roll of Beaverhead county this year will show about £2,300,000 property, ax against 81,800,000 last year, The tax levy is twenty mills. An assay office has been established in Liv- ingaton, notwithstanding the fact that nearly wll the mining properties of Gallatin county are owned at Bozeman, The new industry of Montana is the goat business, Two hundred Angora goats have been purchased and brought from California to stock aracch on Shields river, The commissioners of Yellowstone connty have completed the work of equalizing the as. sossment roll, It is expected that the valua- ion of property will amount to £2,000,000. o of assossment on the Northern Pa )0 per mile, being somewhat less than that fixed at Gallatin, Miscellaneous. A Mrs. He ) be heir to A farmer in § sacks of beans from thirty acres per acre. nossy, of Virginia, Nev., is said 000,00, nta Barbara harvested 1,010 about #135 The San Gabriel valley or: op will this year amount to 30,000 boxes, as against 60,000 ast yea The location of the late authracite find with- in twonty miles of Los Angelos is not gener- ally known. Next year will see alargely increased area of agricultural land wndor cultivation through- out New Mexico, Sixty thousand dollars were paid to the workinguen in the Mare Island Navy Yard on Friday, the 0th inst. Tho grape crop of the Mesilla valley was disposed of at an average of six conts a pound., This is about_double the price obtained for Keeley Island grapes, "o Puget Mill, Comy have on their ks at Port Ludl ., the hull of the yet ' built on vhe coast, a vessel of 700,000 feet Tnmber carrying capacity. She fs all planked aud the men are planing her off, and in a month or six weeks she will be ready for sea. HIEEETETy A Quick Recov It ives us great pleasure fo_stato that the merchant who was reported being at the point of death from an_attack of Pneumonia, has entirely recovered by the use of DR. WM. HALL'S SAM’ FOR THE LUNGS. Naturally ho feels grateful for the benefits de- rived from using this remedy, for the lungs and throat;and in gving publicity to this statement we are actuated by motives of pub- lic benefaction, trusting that others may be benefitted in & similar manner, On sale by all Druggists. s e Huntington's Poor Memory. Now York Journal. “‘Huntington, the New York railwa, magnate, is a very cautious man,” a Wn{l street operator told me recently. ‘‘He never gets left where prudence will save him. For instance, not long ago an ac- quaintance of mine who had been having some transactions with Huntington went into the latter's offico and attempted to carry a certain point by persistently claiming that Mr. Huntington had said s0 and so during a previous conversation. My memory is very poor on such things,” said the magnate, **Mine is excellent; it is as fresh as if it were yesterday, "remasked my acquain- tance. “The fact is, my memory is so poor 1 dare not trust it, and I never dispute my friends in whom I have confidence,” con- tinued Mr, Huntington. ““Thank you, thank you, 1 know I am right, T know I am!” ejaculated my now comfident acquaintance, who was delight- edly thinking that by this little stroke he would be a few thousands better off than if he hadn't suspected the railway man's defective memory. **Very likely you're right—very likely,” quietly said Mr. Huntington. But— William! William, bring your book, turn to January 4, 1883, and see what it wasT said to Mr. W.” The stenographer stepped out from be- hind his little screen, brought out his lit- tle book, and my friend’s little game was up. ‘“Your memory isn't as good as you thought it was, is it? "said Huntington ‘‘William perhaps you had better write out what the gentleman has been saying here to-day and read it to him, so he won't forget it.” As Huntington grinned at this cruel sarcasm my discomfited friend suddenl; remembered he an engagement with his broker, and hastened away. ——— Evidence of the Best Kind, Richard T. Robinson is a druggist living in Racine, Wis. Here is what he says, ‘‘Afflict- ed with laryngitis I was unable to articulate a word distinctly for fully two months. A lib- eral application of Z%homas’ Eclectric Oil com pletely cured m Am pleased to recom mend it, o ——— “Wuss Than That.” Wall Street Newe. The other day a lone man sat in the railroad depot at Elmira, having a lean gripsack at his elbow and his battered hat drawn down over his eyes. ““Come from York?” queried an old chap in a gray wool suit as he sat down heavy on the bench beside him, ““Yes,” “‘They say the stock market down thar’ has bin rayther pertwrbed of late?” con- tinued the old man. “Yes."” “‘Happen to perturb you any?” “Perturb! Pevturb!” growled the Yorker. ‘‘Why, you old ass, 1 was cleaned out of $48,000 inside of three days, and am now hunting for a rail- road job in the West. Isn't that perturb- ed?" “Well,” answered the old man as he scratched his head from north to south, ‘I should say that it was wuss— consider- ably wuss,and I'mblowed if I don't travel with you, I've jest lost 340 at bunko, and we kin squeeze hands and sympa- thize,"” SAMARITY, NERvINE ‘ A SPECIFIC FOR Epilepsy, Spasms, Convul- slons, Falling Sickness, 8t. Vitus Dance, Alcohol- ism, Opium Eat- ing, Syphitlis, Scrofula, Kings Fvit, Ugly Blood Diseases, Dyspep~ CHARLES SHIVERICK, Furniture! ®|TC., Have just received a large quantity of new CEHAMBEIIR SUITS, AND AM OFFERING THEM AT VERY LOW PRICES rassENcEr sLevaTor | [HS, SHIVERICK, 1206, 1208 d 1210 F St To All Floors. _OMAHA, NEB. WM. SNYDER, | AT MANUFACTURER OF OF STRIOTLY FIRST-CLASS CAIes, Bnagis Rued Wagms 1810 and 19% Hamoy Strect and 403 8. 15th Strect, —~OMAHA, NEB ) ustrated Catalogue furnished free upon applicatian.. s, Houselkeepers | OMAHA DRY HOP YEAST! WARRANTED NEVER TO FAIL, | f' Manufactured by the Omaha Dry Hop Yeast Co. | 2718 BURT STREET, OMAHA, NEB ‘M. HELLMAN & CO, Wholesale Clothiers! '7301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREE1 COR. 13TH, \ OMAHA, . . . NEBRASF Double and Single Acting Power and Hand i PUMPS, STEAM PUMPS Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fi Steam Packing at wholesale and rejail. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHU; AND SCHOOL BELLS, Corner 10th Farnam St., Omaha Neb. J. A. WAKEFIELD, AWHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lmber, Lath, Shingles. Pi SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY, Near Union Pacific Depot, - 4 OMAHA, NEB EFRESH OYSTERS. Booth’s ‘Oval’ Brand FRESH FISH AT WHOLESALE. D. B. BEEMER, Agent,Omaha, (s il 3 = , fl DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF ~of y* SAFES, VAULTS, LOCKS, & 1020iFarnam Streot. Omah. Anheuser-Busch . BREWING ASSOCIATION Some uf the testimonialafrom differeit pece Tho largest weget found fu. Coeur ' Alewe as far as possible, the commencement of diggings is worth ST sia, Nervousness, (| vle relative to Zhomas' Kelectric Oit, and th i i L G Dp ‘CD@D Hoadacke, - RN | ol & s “con s when' dsirosd by | st et abeenn syt he Baie should b "y re aro now sleven daity yapers in Mon- | ((G{O{MQUIE Rheumatism, CELEBRATED headache, earache, and toothacho are as inter- [ {1 ) it 08 OWLL | tana and twenty-two weeklies, Nervous Weakness, Brain, Worry, Blood Sors, eoting reading aa you will find. _This being a | \pements, and these thoroughly clean. | ~pa Masons of Helena have decided toerect | fitroves Hecsnesn Bratn Worry, ool S5 K tandard modicing is ol everywhre by drig: | When it has begun, the Tollowing mods | » (s wpiok Wil vont So0.000, Blouanss, Costivenet, Nerr: o eg and Bottled Bee ' Rists, g of treatment is suggested: 'The scalp is to | The fortheomimg history of Montans will “SamariteyNnie, Testimm e b s (43 ‘l'hcold-l—-l ry YRR be daily well soaped with tar or fluid |consist of two volumes of about 1,000 pages r. 30, 'fl:mffln. s\ B e ity, Als, This Excellent Beer speaks { ¢ itselt, 4. . “ tlziu:nne potash soap, which is to be rub- | each. I feel it my duty to recommend if They my fit the modern railway car in for fifteen minutes firmly, The | 1t isstated that the Colusa copper property | = Dr. D. ¥. Laughlin, Clyde, Kaneas. TE——— % with theappointments aud trappings of | head is then to bo drenched with, first, | at Butte has been sold in Eugland for 81,500, | “Itcured where phyiicians fatled." © " luxury and splendor; they may garb the | warm water aud then gradually colder | 900: Correspondence freely muswered. “68 V' ORDERS FROM ANY PART OF THE g officers of the train in showy ~ uniforms, | water. A two per cent corrosive sublim- | The output of the Montana €opper company tumummuuamuc-: u.-‘:lat'l.lhnwu STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, : ith gold-lace trimnings “and silver | ate lotion is next to be pretty freely | ¥hose works are at Butte, was worth $180,000 | The h-l.t.:ll:hun‘"‘mm;“‘ M'(m badges, but they cannot restore the con- The head is then to be dried, | 1 Past year. . spall y A DROR T RECR Promptly Shipped House-Cleaning Purposes. |ductorof the older day. He s of the|aud the rooty of the bt o0 dried, | A movement is an foot awong the Shonkin t“ : i AT WILL CLEAN slorionat the pat. Wo shal Lok half par e .filuuo‘:’. of Napthol 1 syt | catilemn to comlllate el sock fuorests M Q ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE T0 THESTANDARD i . upon his like again. He was of the time | rul into them, Finally, ad P on for X hone who fiom (ubiscreti i pabes, Mamnum, o cromue, aom | when 'rulreud had Faguin . o |0 o k& haf G v pr o, s 10 R S B L | BPm i mamemn OFf OUIY Gruarantee. ‘W’l KITCUEN UTEXSILS, | onding, aud represonted commaunities, | or salioylic oil is to be used to the head. | distance of only forty wiles. 1§ Sidaniad taedletnes: Kl wed by o 4o and he disappeared when cormorant cor- | This treatment has now in many cases | It is rumored that & tract of placer ground S0 Vjs benia. TR Hsdicet Hoakly o 'F. SCHLIEF, Sole Agent for Omahaand the West. AT WILL POLISH porations swallowed our pet euterprises A TIN, BRASS, COPPEK AND STEEL WARES | 48 mere worms to spin *‘through lines" ALL KINDS. and “systems,” established aweeping Mattuoth hot springs has beon sold to Hottimors hartios for 5100000, Of twelve buildings recently burned in 0T I .. brou'iht the disease not only to a stand, o ‘.""‘E L] but the hair has been to a considerable . extent restored, TON RENERY 30 46 e, sew v | Cor, Oth Street and Capitol Avenue?