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i 2 THE DAILY 8EE--UMAHA, MONDAY, DECEMBER — . L08R AND GAIN, crarT L. 1 was taken sick & year ago 'With bilious fever., *‘My doctor pronounced me cured, but got sick again, with terrible pains in my back and sid, nd I gotso bad 1 Could not move! 1 shrunk! From 228 Ibs. to 120! I had been doc- toring for my liver, but itdid me nogood. 1 did not expect to live more than three months, Ibegan to use Hop Bitters. Directly my appetite returned, my pains left mo, my entire systom seemed re- newed as if by magie, and after using several botties I am not only as sound as a soverergn but weight more than 1 did bofore, To Hop Bitters I owe my life.” Dublin, June 6, '81. R. FirzraTrick. ciavren 2. “Maldon, Mass,, Feb. 1. 1830, Gentlemen— 1 suffored with attacks of sick hoadache.” Neuralgia, fomale trouble, for years in the most terrible and excrutiating man- ner. No medicine or doctor could give me rolief or curo yntil I used Hop Bitters, *‘The first bottle Neatly cured me;" The second made me as welland strong as when a child, And I have been 8o to thisday.” My husband was an invalid for twenty years with a serious x Kidney, liver and urinary complaint, “Pronounced by Boston's best phys- icians— “‘Incurable!” Seven bottles of your bitters cured him and I know of the *<Liives of cight persona” In my neighborhood that have been saved by your bitters, And many more are using them with great benefit, ‘“The almost Do myracles?” —Mrs. E, D. Slack. HOW 10 Gur Sick.—Expose yourself day and night; eat too much without ex- ercise; work too hard without rest; dootor all the time; take all the vile nostrums advertised, and then you will want to know how to get well, which is answored in three words—Take Hop Bitters! —THE MILD POWER CURES.— Tn use 3) yeara.—Each number scelption of an_eminent physicin Simple, B fo and Bure Med cincs LIBT PRINCIPAL NOS. ovors, Congeation, Inflamations Vorm Fevor, Worn C iz Colic, or Teething of rhe of (hildren o Ady niaty, Gri ilions Vm| Beyaipotat; Srbeion enm, Erysipolas, Eruptions, . g ifem ieumalls Valn. . Kever and Ague, Chill, Fever, A find or Dleeding h, acute or chronie; Influen: g Congh, violent cough: 1"Bebility, Physical Wou Disense, SR ot ousehold rcmodies iadaily growingmore imparative, and of these Hostotter's Stomach Butters Is thechiel inmirit and the most popular. Irregularity of the stomach and bowels, d verted when “|outall testimony that bears adversely Lhorous # fihythzhhlmpun- o W P kfi"!‘ S FR E purestand mostoom- 7" Prenensive remedy of its class, #ale by all Druggists and Dealers geverslly. ¢ . W. WUPPERMANN, 00LB m’ 51 BROADWAY, n.“x'. OREAT:ENGLISH REMEDY. KRVO ) Cures racksicizs Deblity rmatorr. mm NSITU 18 Glive Stroet, St “1 Bave sold Sl Astley Coopor's Vital Restorutive or years. Evory customer speaks highly of it. 1 unbositatinglyendorse it asa remedy of truo merit o 40, F, Goovaw, Druggist. Omalia Feb. 1 1833 Vik Oure without med. A POSITIVE:: it tober No. 1 will enre any caso in four days or loss No, flll;\::dclhu most obstinate case no matter of how Allan’s Soluble Medicated Bougies No nauseous doses of vubobs, copabia, or oll of san- dal wood, that are & .ain to produce’ dyspepsia by S004SY ) Gragpiots or suniod on ‘st 8. srice w sond o lroulnr, " " i Sassance, CURE 617 St. Charles St., St, Louis, Mo. BEGULAR GRADUATEf two modica ollogte in the treatment of A LECTURE TO LAWYERS. How They Give Aid and Comfort to Criminals of Every Degree. The Hypocrisy and Sophistry of the “Learned Connscl of the Prisoner.” To the BAitor of Tiik Brn. The unavoidable complications of busi- ness, and the fallibility of human judg- ments, warpod as they are liable to be by self-intereat and prejudice, it becomes necessary to have a class of men who have made business rights and wrongs a pro- found study, and the laws that wero de- signed to define and settle these rights. Again, the prevalent depravity of human nature makes it cortain that there will be violations of the property rights, liberty, reputation, and even life itselt, and the resentments that the injured would naturally feel, would go very far to dis- qualify them for an impartial and reason- able judgment of the proper redress of their wrongs; so, also, a similar class of men learned in law and the doctrines ot human rights are needed as counsellors in criminal proceedings. Tawyors might be, and ought to be, benefactors of man- kind, by promoting the peaceable and equitable adjustment of the differences of men in business matters, and in pro- moting the execution of criminal justice and shielding the innocent from un- merited or ‘unreasonablo punishment. There is nothing in the nature of that profession to warrant or justify anything in tho least unfriendly to either party of the litigants, Tt is clearly the duty of both, to seek to kuow the exact truth of the case, and the honest rights of the parties, It is clearly the intention of the law, to secure the rights of the litigants. The attorney ‘s put undor oath to be true to his client, but cannot for a moment be supposed tobo by law opposed to the rights of the oppesite party. The law cannot be supposed to be capable of so i | ard lying oxplain . |tain destruction awaits such a govern- \ | ment sooner or later, 'DR. WHITTIER, self-destructive a thing as to make a law for the protection of the rights of citi- zons, and then create an influential class and swear them to do their utmost to de- feat the justice of the statute. That is no doubt a false and corrupt interpreta- tion and application of the moaning of the ‘‘oath of an attorney.” By being hired by a client to manage a case in‘law, he acquires no right toinflict a wreng upon another, and thus defeat the real end of the law. And when he is employed in a criminal trial to nd a criminal, it could not have been intendes in his attorney’s oath to bind him to do his utmost to defeat the criminal statute and turn a villain loose to prey upon so- ciety with increased boldness. Inswear- ing a man to tell ‘‘the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth,” on the witness stand, it is clearly the design of the law to get at the exact rights of the parties in the case Tho attorn s oath is abused and per- 0 does his utmost to shut gpon his client’s side, and by sophistry ay what he cannot . By the attorney’s oath it was intended to bind the attorney to sce that all honest testimony in favor of his client shall be admitted, and all false testimony excluded, the law in the case fairly stated, a fair jury secured, and kept from all undue influence, and a fair impartial charge given by the judge. Here his whole duty ends so far as tle design of the law is concerned. He has no more right in his professional character, to li deceive, prevaricate, use sophistry. irri tato, slander or abuse witnesses on the stand, than any other man. He is as much bound to be a gentleman there, as in his own, or the witness' parlor. The history of our courts presents a very dif- ferent view of the law profession of these days, and we have reason to think that its history for ages has not been very, dif- ferent. In an old book of morals wo read ‘‘judgment s turned away back- ward aud justice standeth afar off, for truth is fallen in the streets, and equity connot onter—Iea, 069:14." Woe unto you lawyers—Luke 11:46, This is the condition of a country when the courts of justice fail to protect the lives and liberties of the people. Cer- There are some fearful omens of such a doom for our country when we consider the numerous cases of violence unavenged that are re- vorted in _almost every issuo of our daily papers, The public ~ conscience is de- uched, so that the most flagrant crimes aro committed with impunity in many places. One city claims to have had sixty-eight murders, and only one capital oxecution. Murders numbering man; thousands of the late slaves in the sout are rarcly if ever avenged. General Sheridan, when in command in Louisi- ana, counted 4000in that state in four years, for which no Fu ment was in- flioted. Murderers often walk out of our courts in the north unrebuked, and sometimes petted and lionized, with their hands red with innocent blood. Frauds and peculations in _high places, aud even armed resistence of revenue and election laws, have been common of late in some portions of our country, and no adequate redress has boen realized as yet, and it is oven doubted, whether a remedy is prac- In almost all country, justice is by adestruc- tive interpretation of the rules of prac- silence, while perjured witnesses are glorified by counsel. These are no rare occurrences, they are common in criminal trials, and the result in that the worst villains sually escape, and sotiety is cursed with their exagger- ated influence; and respectable people dread the revenges to which they are liable from the liberated villains, and al- most equally the tongue of the unscrup- ulous counsel for the eriminal, by whom they must submit to be badgered by the hour without remedy, if they are com- pelled to testify in the case. Such men as are capable of such service are nothing bettor than hired conspirators against law and order, They are ‘‘accomplices after the fact,” and deserve to be treated as such. Their professional duty calls for no stich work in open violation of the manifest intent of the law., Honest men and women aro compelled by the authoritative voice of their country, to como forward to testify in court to facts in rolation to crimes in their neighbor- hood, and they must submit to any treat- ment which the counsel for the prosecu- tion may inflict, without reply, in the presence of an oxcited community atten- tive to every word. They are sworn *to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth,” and their every word that bears unfavorably upon the culprit is ruled out if possible, explained away, or ridiculed and discredited if the court admits it The attorney who would scorn to speak an impolite word in his own parlor or in thatof the witness, now in this public place, where every word is mot only heard, but sure to be echoed by an in- quisitive press throughout the country, the vilest epithets, charges of base per- jury, are thrown out witha sang froid worthy of a billingsgate fish woman, All for what! To defeat public justice and procure freedom for a villain, These men are leagued with criminals against the peaco and safety of society. They are doubly criminal, because they not only cheat the law in this particular case, but they multiply criminals and crimes indefinitely, by the impunity and safoty they procure for criminals, A more dan- gerous set of men would be hard to find in thoe civilized world, Take them away, and rogues would tremble for their safety. Crimes would be scarce if all Iawyors would utterly refuse to help rogues to escape deserved punishment and only de- fond them againatinjustice, and that they are bound to do virtually by their attor- ney's oath, and clearly by their duty to their country as citizens, Their false practice is the fruitful cause of a large share of the crimes that affflet civilized countries. Every villain now knows that money, a percentage of his ill-gotten gains, will procure able, influential, elequent men, in credit with the court and the com- munity, to become his confidential allies, and by their unscrupulous trickeries, hy- pocricies and lies he can slip through the fingers of justice, and go out to renew his depredations upon society with increased assurance and boldness, with a tried “friend at court” ready to lend a helping hand at any time, This attorney wil chuckle over his successful tricks in cheating the law of a deserving victim, and his fellow conspirators will con- gratulate him on his shrewdnessin carry- ing the case against both law and evi- dence, They praise the ingenuity and skill with which he beguiled the jury by his sophistries, and sent back to an outraged community a man that had for- foited his right to citizenship, if not to life, Plenty of unprincipled viliains can be hired at a cheap rate to prove an alibi or anything else to save a confederate in knowledge that can assist in setting just judgments against violators of the rules of society. No man can enter into any compact, association or professional obli- gation that gan exonerate him from these fundamental duties to civil soclety. These civil obligationy have a priority over all other human obligations. They antedate all other, and are of higher sig- nificance than any other can possibly be. o — Horsford's Actd Phosphate. Unanimous Approval of Medical Staff, Dr. T. G, Cowmstock, Physician at Good Samaritan Hospital,St. Louis, Mo., says: ‘‘For yoars we have used it in thi hospital, in dyspepsia_and nervous casen, and as a drink during the decline and in the convalescence of lingering fevers. It has the unanimous approval of our medical staff.” CHRISTMAS PRE ENTS, What to Givens Presents and How to Give Them, One of the annoyances peculiar to this time of the year is the difficulty every- body finds in selecting appropriate Christ- mas gifts for his relatives and friends. One may have unlimited means at his disposal and be utterly at a loss to know what to buy; while another may have a very large knowledge of what selection he would like to make, but have no means at his disposal. So far as our own individual case is concerned, the chosen few whom we number as our friends and relatives belong strictly to the latter class, The following suggestions will be found of value: A husband in selecting a present for his wife is confined to narrow limits. It must be either a sealskin sacque or diamond earrings, ‘“But,” some of eur readers say, “she may have both.” To which wo answer: It makes no difference; no true wife will sniff’ at a sealskin sacque or a pair of diamond earrings, provided they vlzl:u( a little more than the ones shealready a8, A woman in selecting a present for her husband should first consider his comfort. Consequently a pair of slippers is the proper caper. If ho has crodit at a shos store, the loving wite will yet the very best. In former days wives used to make the slippers themselves, entertain. ing the absurb notion that their husbands might prize them more highly on that account. But those were the days when pumpkin pie was madeout of such common truck as pumpkins, and didn't have any nico nutmeg or cinnamon or cornstarch or extract of vanilla or ylang or hair oil, or any of those delicious in- gredients which go to makeup the modern scientific pumpkin pie. A sister should invariably present a rown brother with six hemstitched linen ankerchiefs and a pair of bright-colored, 2b-cent cotton suspenders. To make the presentation as effective as ‘possible she should shed tears—happy, joyous tears, we mean, not those of a scalding, grief- laden character, for at the glorious Yule- tide time the hoart should be filled with ii | gladness, not sorrow. A brothershould give his sister a pound of French candy, a $1.50 Jersey and all of l;ia old neckties and scarfs for a crazy quilt, For the younger members of the fam- ily, the little boys should have drums and horns, and the little girls boxes of paint. ‘We arp a little bit timid in offering advice to lovers. Our scheme was a $75 Christmas card, and a volume of Mrs. Hemans’ poems bound in blue and gold. That ther scheme was successful can crime, and counsel is ready to use them with extravagant eulogy, to secure the liberty of one whom he knows to be guilty, and deserving of condign punish- ment. His desire fora tee and the glory of victory swallows up allhis love of country, {'ultice and order in society. If such iberated villains would turn and prey upon their deliverers, and give them a taste of the cup they have mercilessly mingled for their fellow citizens, they might possibly learn wisdom, but no they must be Igned, for they may be wanted again, and so the bitter cup to its dregs is presscd to other lips. Thus all the valuable purposes of government are utterly defeated, and by men who would be shocked to be told that they are des- stituto of patriotic virtue, and are using all their legal learning and acumen for a feo to thwart public justice, and utterly destroy all thatis valuable in govern- ment, and impose heavy burdens of taxes upon the community for capturing, hold- ing and trying criminals to increase their security and impudence, and give fat fees to their respectable confederates. Gov- ernment ceases to be of any value where it fails to execute wholesome laws, and he is the worst enemy of his country who is intentionally the cause of such failure, His position as counsel for a criminal furnishes no justification for any such thing as is claimed for it, by the apolo- gists for theso irregularities of the legal profession He has the same int:rest in the peace aud order of society as other men can not throw off these obligations. His at- torney's oath never could have been in- tended to give him the right to forget or tico in the ldgal profession. No matter how vile a crime s man may commit, when he is arraigned and presented for trial, plenty of lawyers for a foe, are ready to move heaven and earth to de- purposes of criminal law, and [ | turn those dangerous men back upon the bosom of society to practice their infernal arts, with in boldness and suc- coss, because of the immunity they have secured, The methods these criminal lawyers resort to, ought to make a highway man blush for shame. They will assume lu- 20 | nacy, self-defence, or any other lie as the theory of the defence, when they know it is a lie, and then scrape all the witnesses that the criminal can gather am his confederates in crime, to swWear clear, and the witnesses on the lay anide his common interest in the wel- fare of society, or that he may cease to be honest, truthful, ingenuous, polite and gentlemanly even in cross-examining wit- nesses, Every attribute of a gentleman is often loat in the defender of a crim- inal, and sometimes in civil suits, It is most likely to be the case when the evi- dence of the prisoner's guilt is painfully clear, and the defence difficult; then des- perate measures are resorted to without scruple. How a citizen can so far set aside his oblig:tiun to his country as to go to work deliberately to defeat the statutes of his country, and help villains to evade the penalties of just laws by subornation or !ury-pwklng. or corrupting a jury, spir- ting away witnesses, perverting vali testimony by wlt:hht.ry. mi-inur{;nung law, wearing out the patient public by new trials at groat expense, and making criminal justice so uncertain that lynch- law is fast taking the place of regular ad- ministration of justice, is more than can be accounted for on rational principles. The man is to bo pitied as well as blamed who can rise no highor in patriotio vir- tue. He forfeits all reasonable confi- dence of his fellow citizens. The only oftice of government is to secure to all the inhabitants ‘‘life, liberty and the rur-uu of happiness.” It accomplishes his end by a system of means that point out to all the citizens certain duties, and forbida the doing of certain other things, to the harm and in violation of the rights of others and by prescribing penalties to wrong doers. 1t appoints persons who are sworn to arrest, hold and lawfully try and punish ovil doers, Every citizen is solemnly bound to render his earv.est aid in carry- ing out these ends of government, Itis manifestly his duty to dotect crime if possible, and expose it and assist in impartially giving testimon proper tribunal, of all facts '{daln his id | of men are shocked when they hear of \be infersed from the fact that we now spend $10 a month for shoes, and bought the second baby carriage only last ‘week, The eldest son should receive from his parents jointly a prayer-book with a ten-dollar bill “inclosed between the fly-leaf and the cover. He will take good care of the prayer-book and the prayer- hgltl)k will take good care of the ten-dollar bill, Grandpa and grandma should be re- membered in the shape of easy-chairs, Anybody can sit in an easy-chair without danger, and, besides, it helps to furnish the house. Outside of the family and among friends one should spend as much money as pos- sible, or he will be looked upon as mean. Your washerwoman should receive a Christmas card. They can be purchased this year for one cent, which price brings them within tho reach of the poor and lowly as well as the high and mighty. Another very nice present for your wash- erwoman, and one that she will appre- ciate, is to pay her what you owe her. If the above suggestions araacted upon yule tide over the holidays in good shape, — e —m— Angostura Bitters are the best remedy for romoving indigestion and all diseases orig- nating from the digestive orgaus, Beware of counterfuits ~ Ask your grocer or druggist for the genuine article, manufactured by Dr. G. B, Slegert & Sons, e —— BEECHER ON CARBONIO GAS, HeRecommends Fellow-Minlsters_to be a Little Witty, New York Journal Dec. 17. Mr, Beecher threw hie sealskin over- cont across the back of a chair at Plymouth church last night, and blowing the cold off the end of his fingers began to preach on self-government and control, He said that every man is the result of forces that have been acting down towards him for centuries, but that every man has a problem to work out in life. Some men, said the preacher, who are of wonderful intellectual ideas would starve to death if they had to work for a living, Men of practical notions say what's the use.of theso intellectual *‘highfalu things? ‘They never reach for them but to pull them down and milk them, Multitudes any wit associated with & man™ while in prayer, 'Why shouldn't I flash wit before God” said Mg Beecher. ‘Didn’t he make it? There is not one single part of @ man's soul that is not necessary to sal- vation. Suppose a literary man should decide to leave out the letter Z from his writings! Suppose a musical composer should decide to leave out a certain note from his anthems because he thought it was secular! X “‘Mirth,” continued Mr. Beecher, ‘‘is like carbonic acid in—1 was going to say pagne, but I'll say soda-water. [Laughter.] Many of your ideal preach are 50 afraid of z.ing thought too pr rossive that they blow out all the lights rom their sermons, and their sermons consequently are very solid—aud very stupid, Its wnudumg snore in church by some men, but oh, my, how sinful is laughs out loud. i R Young Men,Middle Aged Men and All Men who suffer from early indiscretions will find Allen's Brain Food, themost powerful invig: g T R A 0o relapse, ; it never Glor 8. AL droggia. J. | church was built in’ 1766, Broadway at THE SPIRES OF NEW YORK Grace Church Steeple and Others— The Ghostand the Bolls, Now Yo k Herald, When the erection of Grace church was commenced in 1830 the intention of the building committee was to erect astone spire, in kesping with the rest of the building. With this understanding the walls were made sufficiently strong to support it. As the tower grow in height, however, the funds grew surprisingly less, and by the time the lower sills of the long Gothic windows near the top of the tower wero reached it was found nec- essary to run light walls from there up and surmount them with & wooden spire. 1t is for the purpose of strengthining this pert of the tower that pulleys have been auling materials into the bell loft for the last three months. The bells, eleven in number have been’ boxed up and sent down, and will not be re placed until the spire is completed, some time next sum- mer. The spire itself is to be built of what is called Itarian marble, from the quarries of West Rutland, Vt., and will cost when completed about £50,000. The style of architecture will be in keeping with the rest of the building, what is technically known as decorated English gothic of the second period (from 1307 to 1377). Commencing at the top of the tower, eighty-five feet from the ground, the spire will be of an octagonal form the cornices edged with beads for a_distance of fifty-three feet. At that point it will terminato in acap center foliage on which the gables above will rest. = At the samo point the octagonal - form will take an eight turn and run 4 simple shaft to the apex, a distance os sixty-four feet. On the upper shaft the corners will be or- namented with crockets, terminating ina very elaborate final,from which a twelve- foot cross will rise. The intention is to light the cross by slectricity, but serious doubts are entertained us to its practica- bility. The pannels in the lower spire will bo filled with tessellated work, and this, together with eight flying buttresses and’ four tracery windows, profusely or- eamented with gothic foliage, will give the spirea very much carved appear- ance. The old spire had its ghost story, which, among the superstitious, was tho true reason forits demolition. It is posi- tively asserted by the aforesaid class of people that at 3:15 in the morning of a 24, 1883. CHARLES SHIVERICK, Furniture! BT, Have just received a large quantity of new CELANMIBEIIR SUTUITS, AND AM OFFERING ; THEM AT VERY LOW PRICES PASSENGER ELEVATOR ‘[:HAS, SHIVERICK, To All Floors. (100, AT A, MBS . F MANUFACTURER OF OF STRICTLY FIRST-CLASSE Carnages, Buoates, Roat Wanong certain day in the year not mentioned, the chimes would ring a most weird har- mony; a phantom form would appear in the tower, which upon pursuit would re- cede like a will-o'-the-wisp and vanish in- to the upper recesses of the spire. When the new spire is completed it will be 214 feet high, making the thir- teenth spire n New York over 200 feet | £ in height. highest, not only in New York but in the line to the top of the cross. It was the first stone spire commenced in the coun- try, though the spire on the Presbyterian church at Tenth street and University Old_ Trinity spire, of course, is the |f country, being 208 feet from the ground | S§8 AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. 1810 and 1820 Hamey Street and 408 8. 18th Stroet, —~0MAHA. NEB u_trated Catalozue furnishod free unon apnlicatin. Established in 1858 TEE LEADING place—a much smaller one—was finished tirst. Both spires are of Little Falls, N, J.,stone. In Trinity o staircase leads to within 50 feet of the top, the first 70 feet being of solid stone. The Trinity steeplo isin the perpendicular style in- troduced when gothic architecture in England. has assumed its last and third eriod, between 1399 and 1646. It com- ines the stiff stateliness and sharp angles of the first or early English with the pro- fuse decoration and curved lines of the second. The four niches in the tower of Trinity, below the clock, were built to'recieve the sfatutes of the four evangelists, but for somereason these have never been placed there, and their original use now seems to have been forgotten. The most striking landmarks in New York, whethercoming up the bay or down the river or overlooking the city from the heights of some steeples, are the bridge towers. Devoid of allarchitectural beauty, these piles of stone attract the eye by their simple massiveness. Perhapy the best place from which to see the city, cer- tainly the place from which most people do g0, is the bridge itself. From this point not only are four hundred church spires are visible, but at least halfasmany more domes and towers of public and pri- vate buildings. When this century was young but three would have been notice- able, of which only one is now standing —8t. Paul's, opposite The Herald office. Its spire; which was ot that time & marvel, is even now among the highest in the city. The other two — the old Brick Meeting, which stood where The Times building is now and St. George’s chapel, at the corner of Beekman and Cliff streets—have long since been de- molished. Those who have ever taken the trouble to notice have doubtless won- dered why the spire on St. Paul's was placed at the back of the church instead of on the Broadway end. When the that point was but an insignificant lane and (ghuroh street quite an important thorough! But when in later years Broadway * was opened and Church street sank into insignifi entrance was stopped up, the Broadwa; portico built and the facing of the churel reversed. An intereating story of neglected genius is connected with the same church, It wus modeled after St. Martin’s-in-the- Fields in London; and though much superior to the original, and oue of the finest specimonsa of Renaissance architec- ture in the city, the name of the architect uite decorous to st congregation that has been lost,and the man whosememory: would to-day be honored as a master in his profession is unknown. A great monotony in lueElo-building is noticeable in New York, the orthodox form being a single front spire of gothic design. In England a double front of three towers is the favorite, while on the continent a double front of two towers and the center tower are most frequent), seen. As an old architect remarked. ** center tower, with its necessary columns in the church, wouldn't do for our Amer- ican ministers; they want an open space like & theater,” A SPECIFIC FOB Epilepsy, Spasms, Convul- slons, Falling Sickness, 8t, Vitus Dance, Aleohol- ism, Opium Eat- ing, Syphillis, Scrofula, Ki . Fuil, Ugly Blood Nervous Weakness, Bi Biliousness, O Kidney Troubles aritics, §1. “Samaritan \rr&ru.’.mng'.!:.‘aw 0. McLeomoin, Alexander City, Ala. duty lo recommend it." r. The v SoA. Richmond Mod. Gos, 1. " Sold by all Drugeists. Cariage Factory, 1409 and 1411 Dodge Street, OMAHA, - - - - - NEB I—IO'use.Kee'pers sl {ASK YOUR GROCERS FOR THE o 'sOMAHA DRY HOP YEAST 2 o WARRANTED NEVER TO FAIL. = Manufactured by the Omahs Dry Hop Yeast Co X 2118 BURT STREET, OMAHA, NEB s, I} = - = = es A. K. DAIT. Y, MANUFACTURER OF FINE Buogies Carriaces ad Sering Wagons My Repository is constantly fillod with aZseleotPstook. i Best Workmanship guaranteed, Office and Foctory S. 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