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s THE DAILY BEE VEMBER 22, 1883. “-OMAHA THURSDAY, NO Dyspepsia is BAD. BAD sn its effects on the disposition. The man who can’t comfortably digest his dinner is not a delightful companion. BAD inits r{frr!.c on the household. Itsets people at variancewith each other and makes them irregulac and unreasonable. BAD in its effects on the purse. A dyspeptic business man can't manage his affairs as prosperously as one with a healthy stomach, Brown's Iron Bitters is GOOD. GOOD inits effects on the dyspeplic. It gives him a sound digestion, and enables him to enjoy the food he swallows. EE GOOD in its effects on the family. It drives dyspepsia out, and with it the whole company of little de- mons that make home unhappy. GOOD inits ({i’rrls on business. With a sound digestion a man can face and overcome worries and troubles which would wreck a dys- eptic. Try BROWN'S LRON BITTERS: Health is Wealth Dr. B. O, West's Norve and ‘Braln Troatment, irnsren ood specifio for Hystoria, Dizzines,2Conval sluns, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, 'Teadnche, Norvous Prostration caused bx the uao of aleohol or tobsooo, Waketulness, Mental Depression, Boftoning of the Brain, resulting in insanity and loading to misory, decay and doath, Premature Old Ago, Barrennoss Tnvoluntary Losso *.* over exertions of -indulgence. Each month's treatment. §1.00 a box, or ‘boxea for $5.00, ont by mall propald on revelp [ . PRy GUARANTER SIX BOXES Tooure any oase. With each order rocolved by oa for a box e acoompanied with §5.00, wowillsend the B A ogusranies toretand themoasy Dhia s || T0ceinos adoct curs. - Guaramiee f.ued only oy C. F. GOODMAN mbo wle Druv ist Omaha Neb g DR, FELIX LE BRUN'S AND PREVENTIVE AND CURE. ZFOR EITHER SEX. This romedy being Infocted directly to tho scat Aho_disease, requires no chango of diet or merourial or poisenous medicines to bo tak : ally. Whon ‘16d a3 & proventivo by eithor sex, it s Ampossible to contract any private disease; but Ib the ©oase of those already unfortunately afflictod we guar. anteo threo boxos to curo, or we will retund the money, Price by mall, postago paid, 82 per box, or Shree boxes for §5. P} \WRITTEN GUARANTEES #ssued by all authorized agents, Dr.FelixLeBrun&Co SOLE PROPRIETORS, C. F. Goodman, Druggist, Sole Agent, for Omaha Kol ‘m&o wly. OHICAGO SCALE 0. £ L 3 Radueod PRICK LIT PAUER GEs, TOOLS, &o. FOUGK WADE FOR LIGHT WORK, 810 :El"h Avviland I‘Iln!.'ll‘ooll. s10 Soney ol Efomer et Vivan & Olate Attioion AT Lok Piieis! WHOLILL & RETalLe MEORAT A SMEHREYS ETEESLECIFICS FOR THE CURE OF ALL DISEASES OF HUHSBS.OAE}%‘“}’{‘&W 8, HOGS, s Nomeo- n ey lvery Stable an o onodromes Heny Bd othors BABATIG Boc Weterinary Manaat, 6 v ‘oh Teoe bhicts sent fFoe oh application ¥ v HUMPHREYS HOMEOPATHIC MED.COy 109 Fulton Street, New York, NERVOUS, DEBILITY ”‘I""J.' :::flufiwwg;fiffip 0 f-:?éa medy known. rvial, or! e vial of powdor for B sent Poot fre on 1o ome oflpLrgrics. Humpl i N My Bee Al those who xcen weak, il Arai perforu 1fu's outly cuted, v il BETTER o CHEAPERruu SO FOR ALL House-Cleaning Purpose: W WILL CLEAN PAINT, MARBLE, OIL CLOTHS, BATH TUDS, ( ROCKERY, KITCHEN UTENSILS, WINDOWS, &¢. IT WILL POLISH OCOIDENTAL JOTTINGS. Wyoming. The Legislature moots on the 8th of Jan- ary, i The district telograph has reachod Chey enne. Wyoming is full of new railrond and mining schomes. The town of Buffalo has one dozen saloons A streot railway company has been organ ized at Cheyeune,with capital of £150,000, The tony printers of Cheyenno will give a masked ball'on the evening of Thankegiving. Cheyenne expects to securs a revenue of 215,000 from its water works the present year. are deposit of ulphate of sod en up in the old Fort Coo) T region, The Laramie F tric Light, Power and Stemn Heating Co., is the latest baby cor- poration, It seems to be the determination of the Northern Pacific to build the Laramie-North Park road this winter, in order to speedily open up the large coal fiolds in the park, and head off the Burlington company, which soems to have designs on the park,—[ Laramie Sentinel. A proposition has been made o the Lara- mie county commissioners wherein the Union Pacific pledges itself to erect a depot at Chey enne that will cost 230,000 and to build one bundred miles of road during the ensuing year, The pledges are made and the building will be (. in consideration of the issusnce to the road of the bonds of £300,000 that the road forfeited by reason of the non-building of the Northern road before the first of No- vember, A well has boen sunk at the Warren ranche, five miles southeast of Otto, and’ about four: miles from Cheyenne. Ata depth of 157 thirty-two feet of water was obtained. diameter of the well is four inc) and a wind mill will be used t) hoist the wate In sinking the well the drill strock a ‘‘vein” of charcoal that was two feet thick. The char- conl was capped by a cement rock and is of & good qual te foot, T Dakota, Yankton has 1,114 school children. The Masonic temple at,Sioux Falls is noar- ing complotion. Black leg is carrying off cattle in the vicini- ty of Altamont, Wheat solls for conts at Jamestown, The electric light machinery reached Deadwood. The building season at Bismarck continues righs along despite the cold weather. Dakota farmers get eight dollars per ton for buffalo bones and are gathering large amounts of them, The military telegraph lines botween Tort Sully aud Deadwood will be reopened at an early day. Four townships have been purchased near Carrington for & colony to be located there next spring. Mitchell gives a block of lots and a bonus for the erection of a 100.barr Houring mill, Codington county farmers have enjoyed bountiful harvest, the yield from a quarter section averaging 4,000 bushels, 1t is estimated that thore are botween , 700,- 000 and 800,000 cattlo on the Black Hills ranges and not less than 25,000 horsos, The Fargo Southern has just recoived its first engino.” While good weathor lasts the company expect to lay two miles of track ench day, Crow Dog who escaped from the Deadwood jail and who is under sentence of death, is said to bo out on o hunt with a bund of his own people. Potor Dickson, a prosporous farmer of Barnes county, has fallen heir to about §20,000 by the death of an uncle 1n Scotland. and has gone across the ocean to claim it. The Lisbon gold excitement has subsided somewhat, but the gold placers are there un- quostionably. llioro in stll o _question us to the richness of the gold bearing eurth and this is to be tested aud settled this winter. conts at Fargo and 76 has also of his farewell letter: ** This is m A BUui Tu TIN, BRASS, COPPER AND STEEL WARES ©OF ALL KINDS. and no churches The Wyoming Meat Co's. packing houses are ready for business, The new ( agational church at Chey enne will cost £16,000 without mings. r" hour. The best day's run was 3,200 hushels, 1t is said the pay roll of the Northern Pa- cific from its western terminus to Helena amounts to over £400,000 par month. Two thousand Chinamen are said to bo at work between Holena and Missonla improv- ing the road bed of the Northern Pac The emigration travel to Montana and the west has become so popular that the Northern Pacific has been compelled to enlarge its equipment for that class of travel, Track laying on the Helena and Jefforson ity railrond is progressing favorably. Rails are down as far south as Clancy, and the work is advancing at the rate of one mile per day. Miles City, the model town of Montana, now that shohas had a_dozen of her saloons licked np by the firey flames, wants a Young Men's Christian association organized to com- pensata for their loss, The erection of the passenger depot at (iar- rison has commenced and work is being pushed wlong quantities of material T aro being forwarded over the U, & N. daily. The main bulding of the Anaconda com- pany at the smelter xito is 308 feet in length, and has three large stacks. Compared to 1t {mmense proportions, the largest structures in Montana sink into insignificance, ‘The shipment of beof from the “Yellowstone valley has averaged 75 car-londs per day for the past six weeks, and the railroad company are taxed to their utmost to_furnish cars to supply the increasing demand, Mr. Oakos, vico-president of the Northern T ailroad, thinks there would be no dif- ficulty in raising a quarter of a million dollars in Now York for the purpose of erecting smelter in St. Paul to reduce Montana ores, The Granite Mountain mine, near the oldest ynartz camp in Montana, Philipsburg, is all the rage just now, having made the finest run in bullion ever shown up’ in the territory. A tons of ore has produced bullion to e of 8125,000, and since the 1st of 300,000 worth has been extracted from 1,610 tons of ore, or nearly £200 to the ton. The artesian well fever seems to be all the rage on the Canadian Pacific as well ason the Northern Pacific rond, An 800 feet well and a 600 feet one have been bored near Medicine Hat, but without meeting the aqueous fluid inany quantity. A four-foot vein of coal was struck in ono wellat a depth of 262 feet. It 18 said to be the finest coal yet found in the Northwest, California, The Los Angeles cotton mill is to try crude petroleum ol for fuel, The Central Pacific has sattlod its taxes in Shasta county for $19,044.94 and elovates county warrants amazingly, Work on the proposed cotton mills in East Onkland will not begin until spring. The machinery has been ordered, The number of through passengers over the Central Pacific railroad for the month of Octo- bor last was 10,597, of whom 3,653 went enst and 6,044 wost. The Central [Pacific railrond company has paid the $300,000 compromise taxes over to 0 foaquin county, and that amount less 75,000 puid to the lawyers, is now in the nty treasury. The rival Chineso societies of Sacramento had a bloody fight the other day, resulting in killing two and wounding several, Both fac- tions were fully armed and wore papler mache helmets and lung protectors, National City is the most southwesterly town in the United States, It is situated on San Diego bay, and has one of the most re- markable climates in the world, offering every inducement to invalids withits equability and dryness, The Bonanza King mine, in San Bernardino nty, has turned out_ this year up to date 512,000 in bullion, and it is expected that the output for this yoar will reach §700,000. This is a wonderful product with a ten-stamp dry- crushing mill. Thore is a marked falling'off in both the pro- duction of and demand for quicksilver_on the couet. A fow yoars ago, when the gold and silver mines wero producing extensively, thero was & hoavy demand_for the article, but the fulling off in the mining business has naturally lossened the call for quicksilver. It is said that there is fully $30.000,000 capital repre- sented in the quicksilver mines in this State, o Utah.) Jorastock miners are seeking employntent Frelghting between Piorre and tho Black Hills {s more active during tho present month than at any time before this senson, the wagon trains forming o procession which extendjfrom the Missouri rjver to the foot hills, The Cincinnati exposition awarded to south- ern Dakota the eold medal for the fineat dis- play of agricultural products, Yankton coun- ty'a chief contribution to the display were 0 loaves of tobacco which are said to have ! excellod in sizo and quality everything ever bobald in the tobacco Cincinnati, line by ,everybody in J. H, Graham, editor of the Dakota City Argus, committed suicide recently. ox- plained tho cause in the following paragraph last day upon earth, for T have made up my mind that L'will bp far moro useful to mothor oarth by occunying six by two feet undernoath her surfaco than if I remain o parambulating drunkard on top,” Colorado, Thero i not a vacant residence in either Du- rango or Animws City, The assessed valuation of Colorado for the your 1888 s 110,000,000, ““Doc” Baggs has opened a fly bunko dive near the Union depot, Denver, The oil craze hus seized Donver, Constant excitements aro necessary to keop the props under the town, The total shipments of charcoal, lumber and timber from Teunessoo pass are estimated at 410 curs per month. Pitkin was vever in a more healthful condi- tion than at present. Business of all kinds is good. while the output of the wines was never 50 ¢ reat, The Standley artesian well near Golden is down 800 feet. The drill is passing through an fmmenso denosit of fire clay, W uter cones to within 100 feet of the surfucs, Aun anthracito conl vein, eighteen inches thick, has boen struck within ten miles of Bueua Vista. The coalis equal, apparently, in quality to tho best Crested Butte coal, Fifty-five private residences, many of them very fine oncs, have been erected in' Durango duriug the past season, and soveral others tie going on as rapidly as the work can bo done, Delta county has already three sorghum mills, and the cultivation of the cane and it conversion into syrup promises to become a leading and profitable industry in that part of the state, Several prominent maturing & scheme to in the Animus valley, indications are said at Canan City, A new syndioate of mine operators is being formed in Breckenridgo with a Alow to leasing and working properties which are known o by valuable, but from some cauge are not being worked. 'They are nuw negotiating for & prom. ising property which two years ago was & val. uablo shipper but naw idle, reaidents of Durango are prospect for petroleum near Dorango. The oil 0 be quite us promising s IMontana mgmw county's ussessment foots up $4,317, There are seventy patients in the territorial Iusane asylum, Twonty thousand American citizens fn Mon. tann pay property taxes, Miss Kitty Coreon. the Mengher shepherdess, T called the Rheep Gueencw The Flathead Indians are opposed to their removal to the Tabaceo Pluink constre. 8on River valley clalms an average yild of four hundred buahels of potatoon et ope - * White Sulphur Springs {s fat hecoming the headquarters of tho woul industry of the e Hitory, Thero aro in Helena forty which nay county licenses aggre terly 82,040, The Piegan Indians in Montana bave e - pletely failed as (armers, and aro i o wretel . €d condition Ruperintendent Simmons, of the Congre gationa) church in Dakota snd Montans s Grganlsivg a church in Glendive, A Beaverhead county grain crop of 10,60 buishels Was threshiod ab the rate of 400 bukhel or - saloons ting quar. in the mines of Utah, ‘Wheat in some of the southern counties of the territory is selling at 50 conts a bushel, One of the small mines or Tintic has taken out £100,000 worth of high grade ore this sea- son. The interest in the flowing wells still con- tinues and a largs number will be sunk this winter in Salt Lake Valley, Cordelia Stoker celebrated her 100th birth- day in Southern Utah, a few (lurn since, She was surrounded by 50 nieces and nephews and numbered her descendants at 212, The output of bullion in Utah this year will ba about $1,000,000 more than for 1882, larger number of mines have been working and the outlook for the coming year is more encouraging than ever before. The charter granting to Major Exrb and his associates the right to construct and operate a cable tramway on Tribune avenue passed the clty councl last night without a dissenting yoico. The cable rond ought to be a great convenience and a_great success, and ity in- troduction will be one more advance made by Salt Lake City. New Mexico. The foundation of the public hall at White Oaks is comploted, According to old Moxlcan proguosticators, the coming winter will be a severe one, The profits of the Indian_sole tradership at San Carlos are said to be 850,000 8 year, All the Indian scouts in the territory have been discharged, and no more will bo onlisted, Ranchnien on the Gila are digging wells on their ranges, aud are procuring an abundance of water, Another rich pocket has been struck in the Old Man mine, Grant county. The other strike yielded $10,000, Some very fine kpecimens of native copper have lately beon “.-ku.l up near the mouth of Tortolita canon, Nogal mountain. Joo Fowler, the well-known ranchman of Sacorro county, sold his cattle and ranch prop- erty the other day for about $30,000, vich strike of galena ore has been made by Albuquerque partios at Cerrillos, The ore is rich in wilver and tho partners huve a real bonanza, Alhuquenxua capital is doing a great deal toward developing the Golden mines, Hor placer diggings aro among the most valnable in the territory, The United Miners of New Mexico, an asso- clation organized in Santa Fe in J uly last, has agents at work pushing its subordinate clubs in overy county in the territory, There were 17,569 tons of Seattle, W, T\, during Octol Four hundred and sixty-one pupils attend the publicschools at Walla Walla, W, T Yovery child born at Caldwell, LT, be- tween May 15th and June 16, 1884, will be given a town lot, The Woman suffrage bill has passed both houses of the Legislature of Washington Ter- ritory and awaits the approval of the (Gover. nor. Siorra Nevada is well heeled financially, having & cash balance of $50,910.15 in the troasury, November 1st. The monthly ex. penses average about §21,000 The Sierra Buttes mine has paid $11.000 in lividends the precent year, and the Plumas. Fureka £40,6: Both ‘nm;mrtlu are in Ne- vada, and belong to English companies, he six months ended November 1st ounds of bullion have bean shipped rom the Wood River mines, Idaho, During the same period $4,680 000 worth of ore hus seen shipped from the same region. On the Island of Santa Catalina there are npposed o be about 17,000 sheep, besides ut 4,000 wild goats. On the Island « f San lemente, closo by, are abont 4,000 sheap coal shipped from ber, I there than existed in all northern Mexico be- fore, Tt now appears that former estimates of the wurplus of Oregon wheat for export for the prosent season have been considerably exag- gerated. Fatimates wero made early in the season that the total surplus of eastern Ore. gon and Washington Territory would be 225, 000 tons, The ostimate will probably fall 100,000 tons short, ixcellent Report, 3. Goodridge, of Breoklyn, N. } " Cannot express myself pralseworthy terms, uredo Tlood Hitters e wsed for the past two § keep my stomach in splendid trim." e as The Washington Monument up High as the Spire of Saint Pete Washington le‘ter Cloveland 1. The Washington monument is to-day four hundred feet high, and it will reach the height of St. Peter's at Rome befere the work stops this year. Colonel Casey, the chief engineer, tells me it will be fin- ished by this time next year, and that the work is being done as rapidly as possible. One cannot appreciate the size of the monument at a distance, although it can already be seen miles away in all of the country surrounding Washington. It is, however, only when you get close to it that you appreciate its grandeur. At five hundred yards it is a great tall white shaft, which rises in one solid column from the ground and seems to rest against the blue sky at its back. The Potomac below it almost washes its feot, and it stands guard over the White House, the Capitol, and the national city. As you take a step nearer you see a great net stretched around the tup, and creatures walking on its edge no larger than the little midgets who tied Gulliver to the earth with strings, These Lilliputians are, however, full grown men, and that net is there to catch them if they lose their balance and fall over. Tt has al- ready saved many a life, and very often the men working on the monument fall into it. The stones of the outside are mensured with the eyo to seo whether they bo even with those below, and in stooping over to do this one is very apt to become dizzy. One day a cat was taken to the top of the monument. She ran all around, and finally jumped off. She lighted, and for a moment was stunned. Then reviving, she ran away and has not been seen since. No other animal could have survived such a fall. Go another hundred feet closer to the monument now, and you notice that it is not all of onefblock, but that it is made of hundreds of squares laid as evenly asa Mosaio floor, and_you can readily see by the difference of "coler where the old work ends and the new work begins; that near the bottom for one hundred and fifty six feet is of a dingy, dreary gray, while joined to this above the rest rises of an almost dazzling whiteness. The lower third of the monumentjseemsto havebeen made of stone of many veins, and these have come out with age so that this part seems as mottled and streaked as thongh some second-class painter had tried his graining brushes upon it. Go still closer and you see this much more plainly, and you also seo that the whole of this part of the monument is BREAKING AT THE ED where the slones join, and that little pieces of stone are broken off as though they had been cut with a chisel. The trouble is that the edges of the stones were not chamferred when the monu- was built and the weight is so heavy on the corners of these stones that it causes them to break off. This will not, it is thought,impair the strength of the monu- ment, but it gives its lower part an un- sightly look. Several of these blocks are cracked through, but the most of them merely at the edges, and this cracking will be avorded in the new part by cut- der, A | them as to whether they will stand the ting off the edges into a groove where the stones join. Of course THE FUTURE OF THE MONUMENT is a question that only time can tell. I had a talk with Louis Smithmyer, the man who is to build the new national library, if Congress ever passes the bill for its appropriation. He says you can toll nothing about it. The experiment has never been tried before, and the stones cannot be tested. You may test weight now to be put upon them, but how can you tell what will be their ability to stand the samo weight when they have been exposed to the severities of the weather for fifty years? In that time their very constitution may be changed, and they will not be able to bear what they will now with ease, ~ Nothing but time can tell and time alone will tell whether the Washington monument is to outlast the pyramids, The monument now weighs nearly one hundred thousand tons, It is so massive that it can hardly be described. These Flocks 1 have been speaking of are nearly as large as an ordinary library table and its walls are as thick as a good sized par- lor is wide, ~ Tach side is at the base fifty-fivo feot long, having a froniage quite as big as two large houses, and at the top they will be thirty-five feot wide or fifteen feet wider than’ the houses in the average dwelling house block. Think of a stone double house big enough to have a flat of four rooms, each fifteen feet, and a five foot hall running through the center, and you can imagine the attic of the Washington monument five hundred feet above the ground. e HumaN Broon,—On the purity and vi- tality of the blood depend the vigor and iealth of the whole system. Discase of various kinds is often only the sign that nature is trying to remove the disturbing cause, A remedy that gives life and vigor to the blood, eradicates scrof: and other impurities from it, as Hood's Swsaparilla undoubtedly does, must be the means of proventing many diseases that would occur without its use. Sold by dealers, e e— The True American, Boston Transcript, Why does that gentleman rise from his seat! _Because he gets out at the next sta- tion. But wo have not got near the next sta- tion yet. 1 beg your pardon. From an Americhn point of view we are very near it. 1t is less than a mile away. ‘'See, he rushes wildly toward the door; and now he is on the platform. 1s he not in danger! Tho only danger he dreads is the danger of losing one-quarter of a second. Ab, we are almost at the station now, Will he not wait until the cars stop! N , indeed; that would b a waste of bus time, Thero ho goes. Good heavens! ho has fallen! The cars have run over him, Yes, such thiugs frequently happen in Am but, you know, where one man pr hat have been born and sed ou the island vithout having tasted water. Yankee ente; takes credit for this ‘hihuabua has been connected with the Unit f Btates ahout a year, and during that time nore machinery for mining, for agriculture sad for wanufacturng has boen ' veceived s killed, half a dozen Junp offsuccossful- 1y, Tho chances of death are only one in six or thereabouts, His lips HIS OWN EXECUTOR. A Well Known Gentleman's Philan. thropy, and the Commation Caused by One of His Letters. Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, We published in our local columns yestor. day morning a significant Jetter from a gontle- man known personally or by reputation to nearly every perfon in the land. We have received a number of letters protesting against “palpable frands and misrepresentations;” therefore, to nd & doubt the authenticity of d the genuineness of its senti T of this pape commis in all the possible facts in the Accordingly he visited Olifton w the author of the letter, and with the following result Dr. Henry Foster, the gentleman in quos- tion, is 63 or 64 years of age and has sn ex- tremely cordial manner, He prosides as super- intendent over the celebrated sanitarium which accommodates over 500 guests and is unquestionably the leading health resort of the country, Several years ago this benevo- lent man wisely determined to be his own exe- cutor; and, therefore turned over this mag- nificent property worth $300,000, as a free gift to a board of trustees, representing the principal evangelical denominations, Among the trustees are Bishop A. C. Coxe, Protestant Episcopal, Buffalo; Bishop Mathew Simpson, Philadelphia, Methodist Episcopal; President B. Anderson, of the University of Roches- 3 Rev. Dr. Clark, Secretary of the A, B, M., Boston. The benevolent purpose ustitution is the care: Ist 1 missionaries and their families whose health has been broken in their work, 2nd.—of ministers, of any denomina- tion, in good standing, 8rd,—of members of any church, who otherwise would be unable to secure such care and treatment. The current xpenses of the institution are met by the re- ceipt fromn the hundreds of distinguished and wealthy people who every year crowd its ut. most capacity, Here como men and women © once in perfect healtl, but neglect. 1 the first symptons of disease, The uncer- ain pains they felt at first were overlooked until their health became impaired. They little realized the danger before them, nor how alarming even urifling ailments might prov They constitute all classes, including m ters and bishops, lawyers, judges, statesmen, millionaires, journalists, college professers and officials from all parts of the land. Drawing the morning Democrat and Chron- iclo from his pocket, the reporter remarked: “Doctor, that letter of yours has created a good deal of talk, and many of our readers have questioned its authenticity.” *“T'o what do you refer,” remarked the doc- the use of our columns for such *‘Have you not seen the paper?” “Yes, but have not had time to read it yet.” “The reporter theroupon showed him the let- ter, which was as follows: FTON SPRINGS, SANITARIUN Co., ) uixes, N, Y., Oct, 11,83, Drar Sik:—1 am using Warner's Safe Cure, and I rogard it as the best remedy for some forms of kidney disense that we have. T am watching with great care some cases I am now trenting with it, and I hope for favorable re- sults, 1 wish you might como down yourself; as T would like very much to talk with you about g remedy and show you over our . Yours truly, igned] HENRY FOSTER, M. D. T'do not seo why anybody should be skep- | concerning that letter,” remarked the Lsn't it unusual for a physician of your standing and influence to commend a proprie- tary preparation?”’ “Idon’t know how it may be with others, but in this institution we allow no person to dictate to us what we shall use. Our purpose is to cure the sick, and for that work we use anythisg we know to be valuable. Because I know Warner’s Safe Cure is a very valuable preparation I commend it. As its power is mauifested under my use, «o shall T add to the comploteness of my commendation.” ‘‘Have you ever analyzed it, dector?” “We always analyze before we try any preparation of which we do not know the con- stituents. But analysis, you know, only gives the elements; it does not give the all import- ant proportions. The remarkable power of Warner's Safe Cure undoubtedly consists in the proportions according to which its ele- ments are mixed. While there ma; thousand remedies made of the same elements, unless thoy aro put together in proper propor- tions they are worthless as kiljney and liver propara ions, **L nope some day to meet Mr. Warner per- sonally, and extend fuller congratulations to him on the excellence of his preparations. I have heard much of him as the founder of Warner obseryatory, and as a man of large benevolence. The reputed high character of the man himself gave assurance to me in the first place that he would not put a remedy upon the market that was not trustworthy, and it was a source of a good deal of gratifica- tion to me to find out by actual experiment that the remedy itself sustained my impros- sions,” The conclusion reached by Dr, Foster is Ymcixely the same found by Dr. Dio Lewis, Or. Robert A. Gunn, ex-Surgeon General Gallagher and others, and proves beyond a doubt the great efficacy of the remedy which has awakened so much attention in the land, and rescued so many men, women and chil- dren from disease and deat} ——— v machine for separating gold from hout the aid of water is reported to have been discovered, A wheel five feet in diamoter throws sand by centrifugal force against a moving surface of mercury, which amalgamates the gold, while an air blast blows away the sand, o —— AllowjUs To Say That a good deal of tho suffering in this world bo avoided by purchasing Dr. Thomas' Oil, and using it as per directions. Tt infallible cure for all aches, sprains, and is an 5, There is further talk of buildine a road from Dillon, M. ., to Helena and Benton, Tk idea is'said 0 bo an ultimato conr y the Canadian Pacific. The Northern Pacific, rumor says, will ¢ the movement, —— For Throat Diseases, Brows BroNcHIAL d their efficacy by a test Prico 25 cts, Tested by Colds, and ~ Coughs, TroCHES have pro of many years, ——— The town lot business in the Railroad ad- ition to Helena is flowrishing. Last month about $10,000 worth of lots were sold by the Northern Pag Helena land office, and al- ready this month about half that amount has been disposed of, You can be weak, tated, and despondent. disqual Work of head or hand, or you can enjoy a fair share of health ana peace of mind. “Burdock Blood Bitters will alleviate your misery and do you a world of good if you will but have faith to try, C— ' A shert time ago the Northern_Pacific sta- tioned eight carloads of wood at Bonita to Le haudy for loading engines camps of Chinamen there, and they wanted wood, They just quietly took hold and walk with those eight oarl Ry NERVINE Spasms, Convul- slons, Falling Sickness, St. Vitus Dance, dlcohol- ism, Oplum Eat- ing, Syphillis, Bcrofula, Kings Eil, Ugly Blood Diseases, Dyspep- N Nervous Weakness, Brain Worry, Jlood Si7es, Billousness, Costiveness, Nervous Prostration, Kidney Troub 5 o “Samaritan Nery Dr. ¥ 1 feel it iy duty : Dr. B, Clyde, Kansas. It cured where ph! 08 R Rev. . A. Edie, Beaver, Pa. & Correspoudence freely uuswerod. ~68 They have picked him up. . Ho is speaking, Yes, ho says: I die a true American.” ¥ 3¢ testimoniala avd circulars send stamp. The . $.A. Richmond Med. Co., St. Joseph, Mo, CELAMEBER of the | CHARLES SHIVERICK, Furniture! BT, Have just received a large quantity of new STUITS, AND AM OFFERING THEM AT VERY LOW PRICES rassenazr srzvaror |[HAS, SHIVERICK, 1206, 1208 nd 1210 Farnam St — OMAHA, NEB. To All Floors. * MANUFACTURER OF OF STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS 1 s, ug A Wagm 1819 and 1320 Harmey Street and"408 8.718th Street, wre, astrated Catalogua hurnished frod ubon applcAGan, * —OMAHA, NEB s K=l = & = =y = Fouselzseepers ASK YOUR GROCERS FOR THE OMAHA DRY HOP YEAST WARRANTED NEVER TO FAIL. Menufactured by the Omaha Dry Hop Yeast Ce | 2718 BURT STREET, OMAHA, NEB J.=H. CIBSON, CARRIAGE AND WAGON WANUEACTORY CORNER TWELFTH AND HOWARD ["1REKTS, OMAZEIA, - - Particular attention iven to re alrin - - - [0 Satla.act’cn ouarantoed? [bugeol = 3 BROILING, BAKING, Granite Ironware. BOILING, PRESERVING, FO IS WSS S i nrn. ] 5 » The Best Ware Made for the Kitchen. ”l'mo“"\ MANUFACTURED ONLY BY THE ST. LOUIS STAMPING COMPANY, ST. LOUIS. Stove, Havdware. and Housefurnishing Dealers. T Salye hv all Near Union Pacific Depot, J. A, WAKEFIELD, AWHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lamber, Lth, Shingles, Pi SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C. STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY, OMAHA, NEB EFRESE @ OY¥YSTEELS. 1 Oval’ Brand AND Booth’s FRESH FISH AT WHOLESALE. D. B. BEEMER, Agent,Omaha. P. BOYER « CO.. DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y! FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFES, VAULTS, LOCKS, &, 1020iFarnam Stroot. Omakh. There were two |- Sold by all Brugwists, 7 Anheuser-Busch . BREWING ASSOCIATION CELEBRATED Keg and Bottled Beer This Excellent Beer speaks fcr itselt, )()I(I)ER%‘ FROM ANY PART OF THE STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, Promptly Shipped. FALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE TO THE STANDARD OfOurG uarantee. 'F. SCHLIEF, Sole Agent for Omaha and the West, Cor, 9th Street and Capitol Avenue!