Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 25, 1883, Page 2

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S A ——— 2 THE DAILY BEE-~UMAHA, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 25, 18583, e — — —_—— — = = - Dyspepsia is BAD., BAD in its effects on the disposition. The man who can't comfortably digest his dinner is not a delightful companion, BAD in its r_{fn s on the household. Itsets people at variance with each other and makes them irregula «nd 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 thedyspeptic. It gives him a sound digestion, and enables him to enjoy the food he swallows. 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 in ils {/r//s on business. With a sound digestion ¢ can face and overcome worries and troubles which would wreck a dys- peptic. Try BROWN'S I‘no:\' BITTERS: CREAT.ENCLISH REMEDY. Cures prvsiea, & neh“lt! GruTAL LOSS \ OF MANLY VIGOR, Spormatorr hooa, ete., when all other reme. | A oure guaranteed. Lotie, fow Targe tity, 80, uis, Mo. pent I Bavo aold Sle Astley Coopor's Vital Reatorative or yoars, E unhesitatingly Omaha Feb. 1 1888 ==THE MILD POWER CURES == UMPHREYS’ OMEBOPATHIC—— H BSPECIFICS. In use 3 yonrs.~Each number the special pro- plion-of an ent phyaician.—The only imple, Safe and Sure Med:ciues [oF the p-ople LAYT PRINCIPAL NOB, ~ CURES, PRICE, ‘overa, Congostion, Inflamations ... . Worin Coli ¢ customer epoaks highly of it dorse it ao & romedy of true merit “0, ¥, Gooonas, Druggist. vi8-m&e-eodly 1B, is EREEEEEES RS R hothacho, Fi ok llw;:‘(nell yape: ious Htom, . ressed or Pain b Whie t:mlr:mlfum Group, Cough, it i eumn Do i el Pl . lonrt, Paipitation. 1 druy gists, or sent by (he Case, or sin- f cha on ml.r of price. d ret fcine Co.. 109 Fulton Street, RED STAR LINE SHORN LAMBS. Several Prominent Brokers and Specn- lators Who Have Lost and Won by Dealing in Villard Stocks, The Drawn Ourtain Reveals in Vil lard a Villain. New Yerk Special, NORTHERN PACIFIC AFFAIRS, A Wall street broker, who said that he spoke from personal - experience, said to-day that the following amounts had been lost in Villard stocks during the last two months D. 0. Mills, £500,000; Drexel, Morgan & 3 ,000 and £600,000. Horace Porter, £400,000; ©. . Higgin- son & Co., 8450,000; Winslow, Lanier & Co., between $300,000 and $400,000; ex President Billing 500,000; Deckler, Howell & Co., X muel Boo- cock, £300,000; Worl Strong & Co., £260,000. Against these figures are the amounts which acciue to the beara: Woerishoffer & Co., $400,000; Henry Clews & Co., 000; Hamburger & Co., $600,000; William R. Travers, $400, 000, There are other people, myself in- cluded, who took our little shares out of the Villard railroad. There are probably a hundred other people who have lost fortunes on Mr, Villard's stocks whose astories will never be heart. You can call them lambs if youlike. THE CURTAIN PULLED ASIDE, In an interview published in the N York Werld of Wednesday last, one claiming to b posted in regard to the Villard schemes is quoted as saying: It is best to be plain about this matter, Mr. Villard’s conduct has been marked all along with incapacity or treachery, ok © has allowed the prices of the s to decline indifferently and with scarcely an effort to save them. Vanderbilt comes to the rescue of his own stocks. So does Gould and every able railroad president. But with Vil- lard it is difforent. He has seen the value of the four securities he was bound to protect shrink in his hands at loast £60,000,000. Who has borne the loss? Has it been Villard? Right hereis the rub, While his friends who have supported him and trusted him have been s‘;nuldcring these immense losses, Villard has been amassing an immense fortune. He is worth $5,000,000 at least, and this hehas acquired in about five years. This new mansion he is just entering—take that for an example. The land and building is worth a million, and Villard is fitting it up inside regardless of expense. Mag- L nificent paintings and costly ornaments have been ordered. The furniture was imported from France. Does a manwho has been losing money buy chairs at$500 apiece?! I-am told that Marcott & Co.'s bill for putting in and arranging the fur- niture and effects is not less than $50,- Belgian Royal and U. S, Mail Stoamers | 000 for this work alone. Villard is SAILING EVERY SATURDAY BETWEEN . NEW YORK AND ANTWERP, Tl Rlvine, Germany, Italy, Holland and France} Steeraze Outward, 820; Prepald from Antw Kxoursion, $40, Including bedding, ctc; 24 Cabin, 866; Excursion, $100; Saloon from §80 to §00; Ex- cursion $110 to §100. 37 Petar Wright & Bons, Gon. Agta. 65 Brosdway Caldwell, Hamilton & Co., Omah: & Co., 208 N, 16th Strect, 'Omahy; Omahs, Agents. P, E. Flodman 147" D. E Kimball, | upon him as um&eeod-1y | the blind pool. His followers unhesi rivalling Vanderbilt in splendor. Now, naturally, those who have lost money in the Villard stocks do not understand this, They say they have been deceived, betrayed; they once thought him a flnan- cial l‘{upuleun‘ ‘When he came from Ger- many as the representative of the foreign stockholders of the Kansas & Pacitic and succeeded in rescuing that road and sell- ing to Jay Gould with a profit to himself of $300,000; when he entered the Oregon Navigation and built up that enterprise, and watered his stock from &6,000.&)0 to $24,000,000, his friends began to look genius, Then he invento:l A money in buying of himself at 150 his o e holdings in the Oregon Navigation i since been down fi‘o‘ be- Then he has used the Oregon Transcontinental as & tender to his spec- 1 should not wonder if some one brings an action to . compel an ac- stock, which low par. ulations, Di K. C. Wesr's Neuve axp Brary @ivar. | counting for the blind pool operations. ific for Hysteria, Di Noural, of aloohol or tobaoeo, Wikeful progsion, Boftening of the Br sunity and leading to misory in eithe Tavotantary 1 ane! n vither sex, Inyoluntary Lowses ‘orrhoen caused by oyer-exortion of the brain, abuso or over-ndulgonce, ¥ach hox cor gnomonth's treatmonty 81004 box, or six bo o $5.00, sent by mail prepuidon receipt of prico. WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To. cvin any caso, ‘With n-m-h order received b) for six bo: ACCOmpus with send the purchaser onr written guarantes to re fund the money if the trentment doos not effoc! wsoure, Guarantoees iss G Gnly by 65 C. F. GOODMAN, Sole A ent for Omaha [Neb, " DR, FELIX LE BRUN'S , £5.00, wo Wi e —— The Giunt andthe Dwarf.” & Lincoln Democrat The fight of The Omaha Republican against Tur Omana Begk, reminds the haitalo people of a puny little dwarf tackling a iant, pittiful to contemplate. Practical Charity of the G, A, Xt. Odell Optic. solely to the people of the state of New York, but all tho rest of the commercial world has shared in them, The entire success of the free canal and the good it has wrought aro a signal vindication of the brond and sagacious statesmanship of the men who, in the face of considerable prejudice, brought the reform about. Serorura the germs of — A medicine that destroys Serofula and has the power to root it out is appreciated by the af- flicted. The remarkable cures of men, women and children as described by tes- timonials, prove Hood’s Sarsaparilla & re- liable medicine containing remedial agents which eradicate Scrofula from the blood 100 doses £1.00. Sold by all denlers. 1. Hood & Co., 1 1, Mass, General Win, ¥, S8herman Promoted From the Ranks to the Posi- and Army Post Commander. St Louls Republican, Dee. 2, Last night a new pest of the Grand Army of the Republic was established at the corner of Eastern and Garrison ave- nues, known as Ransom post, No, 131, with Gen. Sherman as post commander. A Republican reporter met Col. David Murphy, asked him why the post was so named. He said he was told by Gen, Sherman that it was named in honor of Gen. Ransom In October, 1864, the Seventeenth army corps was commanded by Brigadier Gien. . E. Ransom, the senior officer present, in the absence of Gen, Frank P. Blair, who, with Gen. John A. Logan of the Fifteenth army corps, had left the army and ‘‘gone home to look after politics,” which fact is stated in “Gien, Sherman’s Memoirs,” the most interesting that will be left for future genérations, In these most graphic memoirs Gen., Sherman relates the fol- lowing in regard to Ransom, after whom the new post inaugurated last night, is named: Gen. Ransom was a young, most gallant, and promissing ofticer. son of the Col. Ransom who was killed at, Chapultepec in the Mexican war. He had served with the army ef the Tennes- see, 1862 and 1863, at Vicksburg, where was severely wounded, He was not well at the time we started from At- lanta, but he insisted on going along with his command., His symptoms be- came more aggravated on the march to to Rome, and we were encamped near Gaylesville, I passed him in company with Surgeon John Moore, United States army, who said the case was one of ty- phoid fever, which would likely prove fatal. A few days after, viz., the 28th, he was carried on a_litter toward Rome, and as I rode from Gaylesville to Rome I possed him by the way, stopped and talk- ed with him, but did not then suppose he was 80 near his end, The next (Fay,huw- over, his escort reached Rome, bearing his body. The officer in charge reported that shortly after I had passed his symp- toms became so much worse that the; stopped at a farm house by the roadside, whero he died that evening. His body was at once sent to Chicago for burial and & monument has been ordered by the society of the army of tho Tennessee to be erected to his mamory. +At 6 o'clock yesterday morning the following reception committee, composed of Messrs. Murphy, Becker, Seaman, Drake and Erdman, met the department officers at the Union depot, comprising the following gentlemen: Gen. William Warner, Kansas City, senior vice-com- mander-in-chief aud = department com- mander of Miasouri; Col. J, 8. Sterrett, St. Soseph, senior vice department com- chief mustering officer; Col G.‘W. Fi patrick, M. D., Kansas City, medical di- rector department of Missouri;Charles W. Soott, Kansas City, assistant inspector; Col. C. W. Whitehead, Kansas City, commander post No. 8, At 6 o'clock last evening the commit- teo of reception escorted the above named department commanders to the residence of Gen, Sherman on Garrison avenue, where thoy were most elegantly enter- tained. The party then repaires ed, with Gen. Sherman as commander. vice commander, W. S. g\nrwrmum:’. B, Seaman; adjutant, D, chaplain, A. J. Child; surgeon, Dr. T. 8. The grand army post at Lincoln is not Hawley. of that ilk which goes in for political sop nly. The members seem to have a de- that the organization shall be of ractical benefit to its members. We Knve noticed several accounts in the o sire AN PRAVENTIVE AND CURE, Z0R EITHER SEX. Th romsdy belng Injectod t0 the seat Ahe feaso, @ercunal of porsonous meds v hen e & proveative inpossiole to con! Any privi liwonso; case of those unfortunately aiic Wnteo throo boxos to oure, of wo will foner, Prico by mall, pastage pad, €2 per Lo Ahree boxes tor §5. WRITTEN GUARANTERS taaed by all authorized agonts. juires 1o change of dlet or nauseous. olnes o be taken intorn Lincoln p and is an honor te the old soldiers. man who tries to foster and promote the t spirit will not find him self sprawling in the mire of contempt ‘oither oax, it 1+ | 88 & prominent member of the grand | " ut in the | army did not long ago, who attempted to f D, McDonald, 710 Broadway, N, Y., &c. wo 3 press g 'th, |stand on the back of that organization " growth of while he reached for persimmons. e —— Skedaddled Like a Thief. Dr.relix Lenmn &co during a rain storm, he contracted a se SOLE PROPRIETORS . 3 | t, for Omahs | ¢ .&1 Goodman, Druggist, lnll‘t‘lh-h'" tiol vere attack of rheumatism, which ‘‘ske daddled like a thief” after two applica- ns of St. Jacobs Oil, the great pain |carry out the mad 1t seems to | militia company. cure and household friend. be well understood that the Great 266T“ Em“uu’ Pmci s‘_un' man Remedy and Pain cannot agree, BY MAIL POSTPAID, KNOW_THYSELF, A GREAT MEDICAL WORK iy ON MANHOOD! it mm and :l.{“wth.n:&lmt.% e — The Free Erie Canal. Davenport (lowa) Gazet The first yoar's whi Vork During the season just immense amount by rail in competition with | res .rz not only lalir):dnd by the | Will make eves the canal itself, wi has commented upon in these col- | Ul further by the abolition | Fiver. In oth-{h:ord:,dfla&‘ result been to cheapen cosl com- L railroaas to weut over the A ad ""“L'.'."m fi have uot apers of that post going out in a body to l‘lmck corn or do other work for sick comrades. That sort of charity will cover an excursion train load of sins The | w PrrrspurG, PA.—A correspondent of the Post states that while out at night experience under the law which made the Erie Canal free of tolls has been so thoroughly satisfactory respect that it has completely | tongue, the wisdom of that measure, and [ smount to. An is not useful of the aluoof tha baca deal of being ornamental, The time he pent in Btill, if Bloomington a military attachment, the | she should have a chance to work it up Then if Omaha ots into another snap and is captured by ump hands as she m n“yur or hmb oya can gral doh:m blunderbusses and vor- as the wild-e solv diers did then—and what would be the result! Why, the result of their efforts man in the state wish ke were eighteen feet high so he could go up and kick them clear into the Missouri | g ture therein devotes to it conferred upon the people of tl::.S::i b ;u]:‘ el B S knowledging the lonor conforred on him, responses befitting the occasion. ——— ‘Wel De Moyer. Itis now undisputed that Wel De Meyor's Oatarrh Cure is the only treatment that ill absolutely curo Catarrh-—fresh or chronic. “Vary eflicacious, Ono box cured me, Mrs, Mar Dakota.” *'It restorec Teis, Coble- Vater, Nob,” Keuyon, Bismarck, pulpit, Rev. Geo, " “0no box_radically curod me, 140 Nobla street, Brook- perfoct oure afser 80 yea. s suffering, ., Tayl ‘A from all parts of the world Dr. Wel_ Do Meyer's Miustrated " with statements by th . B. Dewey & Co., 182 F V. hur&sat-m&e-3m e ‘What The Milita iy Good For, Cdell Optic. militia company has done an any time since the battle of and that amateur and lacks ight us well be s she n till she gets a headache, , the Bloom ir desth mul!u into the seethi tox of destru ) o — Flist kate Bvidence, ; THE FLATBUSH KISSERS, Conclusion of the Testimony in the Mock 3 nrriage Oase, The Higbie house is one of the first houses in Flatbush, L. 1., says the New York Sun. It is a protty, white dwell- ing in a quarter of an acre of ground, laid out ina lawn, The hammock, which isa distinctive feature of the case, 18 broken down, and dangles in the wind by one rope from a_truit tree ten feet from the house, to which the other rope was attached at the time Miss Highio's donce was undergoing formation. Tt is an obj f curiosity in the town, and even the cenductors on the passenger horse-cars point it out to their passen- gers. Every other hammock in the tov —seveoral of which are mentioned in the testimony—has been taken down. Some of the elderly towns-people say they will never be swuny again, The town is a pretty village full of old homesteads, ancient and gigantic trees, and families of ante-revolutionary origin, 1t is paved and lighted, has water works, a newspaper and four churches, besides the Methodist society. The town is in a state bordering on distraction, It had slumbered nearly 200 years before it was awakened with a shock by the revelations of pretty Miss Higbie's determined prose- cution of her case. The parties to the suit are nearly all well known there. Mr. Munday is in business in the city, Mr. Bennett is connected with a great New York Ico company, Mr. Higbie is a car- pentor, Mr. Mowlen is a real estate agent, Mr. Vaughanis a wealthy resi- dent and an_iron manufacturer in New York, and Mr. Snyder, Sr.,is in the hardware business there, On Saturday the testimony in the Higbie-\ aughan case was completed. For the defense ‘‘Frank Neefus” was first called, and a beardless youth, with blonde hair and bashful behavior, dropped timor- ously into the witness-chair. He testi- fied, with hesitation, that he had heen married to Belle Houtman, Did he take evi- her on the wedding tour up and down the road in a wagon with the other brides! Not;not he. Was there a squabble among the brides to decide which husband be- longed to which wife? Yes, there was; and hesaw Annie Higbie and Gertie Ben- nei fighting for the charming Walter Vaughan, Had Mr. Neefus ever kissed Annie Higbie? He thought that he had several times. Since the social and her marriage with Vaughan! Oh, yes. The next witness was Thomas J. Sel- over, of Flatbush. His side whiskers were meagre, and his complexion was ox- tremely sallow. He said that he was a book-keeper in Brooklyn. He acrimoni- ously contradicted some of the testimony of Miss Munday, a sister of Annie Hig- bie's brother-in-law, in régard to Walter introducing Annie as his wife at the social at Mr. Berry's. The prosecution called Annie, the com- Y | neatly in blue velvet with lace trim- to the hall corner of Easton and Garrison ave- nues, where Ranson post was. inaugurat- g officers were elected and installed: Post commander, W. T. Sher- dor, H. M. Pol- What s loft of tho Ropublican is | Jard: *junior vice comman, ol Pope; officer of tke day, E. A. Becker; urphy, ol of tho guard, A Erdian; (Gen. Sherman made a nice speech, ac- and Col. David Murphy and others made Saml. Gould, Weeping 3o, Thonannia of teatlmaoninis. are. rosaived | oriiaeh! Delivered, §1.00. Trea- cured, mailed Fulton strost, Bloomington, this state, is about to ject of organizing a 'he milita company is an institution which has existed cver since wo were on earth before, and we have never struck but one thing equally usels nd that wes a sheep's tail. If a good at Lexington the only man who knew of it kept the in- formation mighty quiet. A man may go out and drill until he is as stiff as a wagon is all it will soldier s good b- | nette, plainant, to the stand, She was dressed mings. After she had given a little un- important testimony contradicting Mrs. Kate Bennett and Mrs. Hamblin, and after the lawyers had a long wrangle over it, she gave place to_her younger sister, Fannie. Fannie said, with many blushes and embarassed smiles, that Walter had stayed i their house an hour on the day before he went away on his vacation; that he had asked her to mind his -horse, which she did; thatshe went into the house soon and found Walter amusing himself in many ways, and thav when Walter dropped some cigar ashes on his hand aud she brushed them off he sai w right, Fannie; make yourself Valter had sworn that he did . Gertie_Bonnett was next called. J. Walter Vaughan had sworn that Gertie had sat in hammocks with him and that he had often hugged and kissed her. Mr. Leggott had received a letter trom E. Mowlem saying that Gertie was willing to go upon the witness stand and swear that this was false; that apart from games at parties which involved kissing she nover kissed J. Walter Vaughan or any other boy, and that ‘‘any evidence con- necting her with hammocks” was *‘utter- ly groundless, and her family would like o vindication publicly.” The opposing counsel had a lively sparring match over the question whether J. Walter had spoken of lying orsitting in the ham mocks, Finally Miss Gertie was allowed to falter out that Walter had kissed her, but he never sat in any hammock with her. .Miss Munday gave a little inaudi- ble testimony, and the whole case was closed with a private examination of Mrs, Higbie, Annie’s mother, in which she tes- tified that on herreturn from the country on the day following the scene between Walter and Annie in the hammock at the Munday’s she had found unmistakable proof to her mind that Annia’s account of what occurred was true. Counsel for the defense declined to make argument. Mr. Leggett, for the prosecution, was very severe. ‘‘Where did all this hugging and ng go on?"” he said. *“Was it in The Allen’s notori- ous resort! Was it in the vicious resorts on the Bowery or Hester street! No. Where was it, then? Ata church soci- able; a sociable of the Flatbush Methodist It is time a blow was struck at mock martiages. These sociables ara damnable hotbeds of vice, where young girls’ lips are hed with the kisses of young libertines and lepers like that thing there. Even the child, Fannie, could not escape his impulses. He testi- fied he tried to kiss her, but she wouldn't let him, Finally Mr. Leggett, in words chosen hotel. The clerks read it and showed it to Curbs, ““When aoes the first train leave for the south?” he asked. He was told that he could be oft in an hour, and, paying his bill, he hastily de- parted for Florida. He brought up at Griffin, and registered as Clarence Oleary and wife, of Rochester, N. Y. This morning the pair passed through Atlanta on their way back home. The young man said to your reporter : My name is Harry Fdwards and my wife's name was Alico Randall. We are from Greensburg, Ind. Alice’s father is in the dry goods business. My father is a harness maker. The Randalls thought I wasn't good enough for Alice. They belong to the shoddy aristocracy, so they forbade me to go with her, 1 was cler ing in & shoe store at 88 per week. Good wagee for a boy, although not enough to suppoit a wife, Alice has big brothers and younger sistors bosides her parents, while I have a father and several sisters, but no mother or hrothers, They abused Alice every timo she saw me, although we would meet frequently. She said they beat her. Finally they wanted Alice to go with another fellow. We had to either marry o r part forever. She said if I was a man I would run away with her. [ knew it was serious, but 1 had somo money saved and bor- rowed 8125 more of my uncle. Satur- day we started for Cincinnati. We went through to Lexington, Ky., where we spent Sunday and Sunday night, oc- cupying separate apartments, of course. 1did not know whether I could geta license on Sunday, 8o we did not try to marry. Thegirl’s father and b :other.and the city marshal came to Ciniinuati that day, while we were in Lexington, but lost track of us. Monday morning we proceeded to Chattanooga and were mar- ried there by Rev. G. C. Rankin. The paper stated that Alice had paid for the marriage license and all the money. Tho way of it was, 1 got tired of carry- ing soch a large roll of bills and put it in her satchel. Not having the right change in my pocket I reached in my satchel for the monoy, which was mine. From Chattanooga we proceeded to Rome, Ga., which we loft Tuesday, and apent one day in Atlanta. 1 know how folks look at, eloping couples, They think we ure young and green, and they laugh at us and snicker and think it is a school boy and school girl affair. A Boa- ton drummer, Frank R. Reed, took me to be greemer than I am, He told me there was a reward offered for our arrest, and it was known where we were. He offered to helpus, and as I was uncertain and alarmed, I took him up to our room to talk the matter over. He eaid it would never do for us to stay in Griflin, that we should go to Barnesville and hunt a pri- vate house, in order to throw detectives off the track. He and my wife would get off at Barnesville and search for a place to stay, representing themselves as man and wife, while I should go on to Macon and find work. Well, I saw through that scheme, though Alice thought he was kind. 1 didn’t propose to get out of the way in order that Mr. Reed might run around with my_wife. 1 suppose I ought to have kicked the scoundrel down stairs, but was too much amused at the transparency of hisrascality. I don't see what they can do to me, as we are mar- ried, and I am going back to find work either in Greemsburg, or Cincinnati. Alice says she is afraid her father will shoot me, but I am not afraid of it.” s Young Men, Middle Aged Men and All Men who suffer from_early indiscretiona will find Allen’s Brain Food, themost powerful invig- orant_ever introduced; once restored by 1t there Is no relapse. Try it; it never fails. $1; 6 for 85,—At drugginée. The Union Stock Yards, Beatrice Express. With a cool million ready to invest in stock yards at Omaha, and an incorpora- tion (the Union Stock Yards Co.) ready to commence operations, our Nebraska metropolis has taken another stride in her march of prosperity. These stock- yards, which will be built on a gigantic scale. will not only benefit Omaha in- measurably, but the enttre state as well, by building up a home market for stock that will be as good as Chicago or Kansas City. — _“Don't Hurry, Gentlemen,” Said a man on his way to be hanged, “there’ll be no fun till T get: there.” e say to the dyspeptic, nervous, and debilitated, don’t hur- vy thoughtlessly for. some romsdy of doubttul merit, uncertain of relief, when you can get a the druggists for one doliar Burdoek: Blood Bit- tera almost sure to cure and certain to benefit, o — The porium ot the West. Chicago Journal: Chicago cover anarea of nearly thirty-six square miles, or 32,- 000 acres. There are 780 acres in public parks, 575 acres on the river (with branches) and the slips and the Illinois and Michigan canal. The streets of the city measure (51 miles, are known by 607 names, and cover 5,200 acres. About 153 miles of streets are paved. There are 766 miles of sidewalks, 337 miles of public sowers and 4504 of water-pipes, There are twenty-nine miles of river frontage, twelvo miles of slips and basins, making forty-one miles of water fron: tage. ~There aro thirty-two bridges in the city, that cost an average of $25 000 each, and eightoen viaducts, ranging in cost. from §6,000 to $230,000 each. I How Much will Do It? viuimd to cure! Only a very little. A fow drops will cure any kind of an ache; and but & trifle more is noeded for sprains and lamenosses, Rheumatism is not so roadily affectod; an ounce and Somoetimes two ounces are requitad. No medicine, however, {3 8o sure to eure with for their force, pictured the wretched fu- ture of the girl, “never to be called by the honored name of wife or mother,” 1f the decision should be adverse to her. Mrs. Higbie was unable to suppress her tears, and burst into a paroxysm of cry- ing. - Miss Annie succumbed also an wept in her handkerchief. The. elder Mr. Vaughan was standing up, facing tho the samo nuiabor of spviications, ” " " DR. WHITTIER, 617 St. Charles St., St, Louis, Mo. REGULAR GRADUATE of two maod! has been_eny loger in tho tre CHRONIC, NERVOUS, SKIN AND BLOO colleges tment of Discasee sudionco and behind tho Judge. When |t SiFeiieet o, Conmuion s the lawyer so moved the people that the | invited. When it is inconyenient to visit the sty men applauded and the women wept Mr. Vaughan found it impossible to conceal his amusement. St The judge will aunounce his decision in three weeks. —— L, BUT NOT GREEN, YOUTH! Married a 15-Year-Old Girl on Eight Dollars a Week, Courler-Journal. A7rraNTA, Ga., December 17'—A week ago a smooth-faced little fellow, wunrms a skull cap, turned up at ‘Markham an ‘wrote on the register, ‘‘Samuel B. Cur- and wify, Utica, N. Y." 3 assigned to a room, The young fellow was a blonde, while the wife was & bru- She was 10 and the young hus- Thve band not more than 17. The next morn- vantages which ing western papers, oon an ac- count of the runaway marriage of Harry C, Edwards, wlndunl’ Loy, reached the treatment, medicines can be sent by mail or oxpros everywhere. Curable cases guarautoed; where dou exisis it is trankly stated. Call or write, Nervous Prostration, Debility, Mental and Physies noss, Morcurial and other affections of Throst’ A 17-Year-Old Boy Who Stole and |~ ‘08, consoquences and cure, orstamps. . BENDERSON, | e st eto, Cures V. Thousacds cincs furaished evca to sultation tree anc {hperiencu are ustrated—and with two § oend slarspe. FREE How much of Zhomas' Eclectric Ol is re- | CHARLES SHIVERICK, BETC., Have just received a large quantity of new CH.ANMIBEER SUITS, AND AM OFFERING THEM AT VERY LOW PRICES rassexazr zLavaros |[HAS, SHIVERICK, 206, 1208 nd 1210 FarnamSt To Al Flooxs. 1R L MATA, N WM. SNYDER, 1810 and 1820 Hamoy Stroot and 403 8. 15th Stroet, —~ONMAH A, NEB t8d Oatalogie tarnished fras nnon applicatin. M. HELLMAN & CO, Wholesale Clothiers! 7301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREE1 COR. 13Th, OMAHA, . H . 5 NEBRASE Anheuser-Busch v, BREWING ASSOCIATION i Keg and Bottled Beer ORDERS FROM ANY PAKRT OF THE STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, Promptly Shipped. ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE T0 THESTANDARD OfoOourG-uaranted F. SCHLIEF, Sole Agent for Omaha and the West, Cor, 9th Street and Capitol Avenne” I—Iousekeeper_é s % #ASK YOUR GROCERS FOR THE : '“OMAHA DRY HOP YEAST =2 = WARRANTED NEVER TO FAIL. E‘ 2= Manufactured by the Omaha Dry Hop Yeast Ce 2 & 2718 BURT STREET, OMAHA, NEB A J. SIMPSON TWELE ILEAD IN G ; NE A. . DAILEY, Buggies Carriaces and Suring Wagons My Repoitory o constautly llled with sZseloct§stook.], Best Workmsnzbip guarenteed, Office and Foctory S. W. Corner 16th ard Coprto! Avenve, Gmah “BURLINGTON HOUTE" (Chicago, Burlington & Quinecy Rallroad.) rt Léa to 8t polis; Parlor Cars with Reclinie- rom St Louis and Peoria aad . 3 Louis and Ottumwa. Oul cars | change Of cars botween Bt Louis and Moines, lowa, Lincoln, Nebrasks, and Deny . * o, 1t 15 universally adzmit d to be the World for all CIns: of Travel. PERCEVAL LOWRLL (on. Pass. 42'6. Chicaga., — —— ——— ot ) CELEBRATED 3 This Excellent Beer speaks fcr itaelf. - 1 Furniture!j | { [ | H {

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