Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 7, 1884, Page 7

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! ] THE DAILY BEE “MONDAY s JAN AY 71884, e THE e OCHEAPEST PLACE IN OMAHAI!TO BUY Furniture 8 AT DEWEY & STONES They always have the largest and best stock. NO STAIRS TO CLIMB ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR TO THE DIFFERENT FLOORS. H. B.IREY &G0, Agents, Real Estate 16th and Farnam Stveets. = - - Omaha, Neb. Below will be found a fow of the BEST and most DESIRABLE bARGAINS: OMAHA CITY PROPERTY. 3 No.'211—2 story brick residence, near St. |Mary’s avenue, ata ;‘1’“:”;!21—12 vacant lots, 1 block from street cars, same distance from Hanscom Park. We offer these l?tn, wflnchdnm vell'y desirable ilding purposes, at a low figure for a few days only. 5 fo%‘::‘.“226“—3plog: on Saunders ntregaz, near Charles.” These lota will be sold cheap and are well located for a block of stores. No. 220—Business property, rents for $2.000, pays 20 per eent. Best thing ever offered. % No. 235—Three houses and lots, rents for$1,200 per year. No. 241—3 lots in Bartlett's addition, very cheap. No. 2563—15 acres in Cunning?nm’l addition, No. 247—3 lots in Hanscom place, No. 947—4 lots on S. 10th street. Easy terms. Each, $300. No. 102—House and lot. House, b rooms and basement. Lot, 60 x140, 8. 10th street, near Charles, $500 down, balance in 2 years. 1,400. 3 No. 84—9 lots, 66x132 each, S. 10th st. Must be sold altogether. ,600. “No‘ 77—3 houses, 2 brick and 1 frame, on lot 66x132, S. 11th st. $4,900 cash, balance long time. $7,250. No. 40—One acre lot and house, 4 rooms, 4 blocks, 8. St. Mary avenue street car line. Very cheap. $3,700. Liberal terms. 7 No. 11—3 houses and lots, 50x140, S. 16th st., N of railroad. This is the best bargain for an investor ever offered in the city. $2,600. No. 90—A good house of 5 rooms, with basement and other good improvements. Lot, 50x160. Kruit and evergreen trees 6 yearsold. Nice residence property. Easy terms. $3,200. S No. 19—New house and barn. Lot, 132x148. Thisis a va_rV.de- sirable residence property, and >0i(; offered at a low price. Will Jex- for roperty. $4,500. e Tot 1n Block K, Lowe's Lst addition, $150 each. $175 each. Easy terms. 63 Boyd’s addition. No. 163—8 lots 1n Boyd's ety No. 167—2 lots in Lowe's second addition. acre, with house and barn. Bargain. il No. 169—4 acre lots in Lowe's second addition. No. 179—1 lot in Kountz' third addition. New] house of 3 barns, etc. $1,800. N0, 181-1 lot in Kount' third addition, 2 housos, ote. $1,600, No. 184—2 lots in Block 3, Kountz' third addition. Must be sold together. §2,200. ¢ ; 0. 186—3 acres in Okahoma, with good 5-room house and other il ts. $3,600, improvements. 3, FARM LANDS. No. 261—A40 acres near Fort Omaha. No. 262—2 good farms near Waterloo. 240 acre farm near Osceola, Neb., §25 per acre. for cit; ty. Easy terms. o‘;;.yl;f{%nflaa ofy improved landin Hitchcock county, Nebraska, ing i ice from $3.50 to $10 per acre. g o, § 7 B40 ncres of good farm and i Dawson county, Will ex- for city property. $3.50 per acre. 7 oh;qn⪚:%h); csg fnr{n in NebrEskB, 7 miles from Omglxn, containa 160 acres, 2 houses, wells, cisterns, barns and all other first class im- provements. Also orchard matured and bearing. Will exchange for city property. : i s 0. 107—Several valuable and lopr-priced tracks of laud in Madison m{g farms within from . o 12 wmiles of railroad, and 23 pieces of im- proved lands, near Table Rock, Nebraska, all uqnvemently near market, and in many instances offered at great bargains. ‘Among other counties in which.we have spec and unimproved lands, are Jefferson, Knox, Clay, Will exchange ains in farms Valley, Wobster Sarpy, Harlan, [Boone, Filmore, Cass, Seward, Merrick and Nuck- olls. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED, H.B. IREY & CO., Real Estate Agents, Southwest Corner 16th and Farnam St., Omaha, Neb. T. SINEIOIL.D, MANUFACTURERLOF Thirteenth Stroet],0 na Galvanized lronComices, Window CapsFinial ' H. PHILLIPS) “ | c Merchant Tailor! B I o of Moas ook ol WOOLENS. A spacas st FINE SUITS A »D OVERCOATS. * Also a full line of Busincss Suitings and Trowserin, All garment 40 be mado in the latest styles and with the best trimmings. CALL AND BEE ME. Skylights &0 Established in 1858, A. J. SIMPSON TEE LEADIN G UATTiage Fator, . 1409 and 1411 Dodge Street, OMAEA, - - - - - NEB FURNITURE! THE RED SKY. The Recent Snows s Aids in Explain- ing the Phenomenon. Cosmi Dust?—~Some of the Remarkable Blood-Red Infusorial | and Snows of History. New York Herald. | The most vivid of the recent brilliant red sunsets was that of last night. It will be remembered when this strange evening sight was first noticed that the fire angine companios of Peekskill, Poughkeepsio and Trenton, N. J., wero called out to quench it, and in truth the first appoar- ance was so remarkable—whether on account of its novelty or its brilliancy is immaterial-—as to deceive all who saw it. Bright as was the first appearance con- trasted with the ordinary glories of sun- seot, the contrast was not as remarkable as that of last night compared with provious similar manifestations. The whole west- ern sky was one glorious blush of cardinal od, . For two hours the startling sight, for which there was something grand in the vividness of the red glow, attracted the attention of the people hereabout. At six o'clock the most peculiar phase of the phenomenon was witnessed when in the starlit sky the peculiar ruddy glow came and went. At half-past six the sky in the west re- sumed its wonted evening aspect, and the - insisted that the strange redness in the sky is due sololy to cosmic dust, for this rod appearance and falls of red stow and so-called blood rains have been quite common within historic time. Many of these storms have been investigated by Ehrenberg and have been found to con- tain infusorla, whose terrestial origin he was able to locate. Some account of these may in this connection be of interest. Tho great Gorman naturalist and micros- copist mentions in his *Micro-Goeologie” 81 dust storms which took place bdfore the Christian ora, beginning with that mention by Homer in the “Iliad.” Sub. sequent to the boginning of our era ho mentions about three times that number. The peculiar rails mentioned below are some of them mentioned by Laury, othors by Von Humboldt, in “Kosmos” and others by Ehrenborg: On the Hth and Gth of November, 472 A. D., there was a fall of black dust in the neighborhood of Constantinople and the atmosphore secmed to be on fire. Marcellus ascribed it to Vesuvius, Again, in 662 A, D, red dust fell in Constantinople At Brixen, in the Austrian Tyrol, in 869 A. D., red rain fell for threo hours. A red sand fell in Bagdad in 020 A, )., and for many hours previous and subsequently the atmosphere was tinged red. In 1056 A. D., thero was a fall of red snow in Armenia, In 1110 A, D., in the province of Vas- pouragan, in Armenia, a flaming body fell into Lake Van and the water became the color of blood. In 1219 or 1222 A D., (the date is un- certain), a red rain fell in Bohemia. At cosmic dust from interstellar space, or Javanese volcanic dust, or what not else that may have caused the magnificent atmospheric effect was ineffectual to dim the lustre of the stars, which shone out in electric distinctness the evening through. PUZZLED SAVANTS, Savants in all parts ot the civilized world areendeavoring to explain the cause of these recent magnificent sunsets and sunrises. These gorgeous morning and eventig phenomena have been the sub- ject of much conjecture and discussion among scientific men for a month past, and opinion is divided as to the cause of them. On one hand it has been main- tained that to the recent volcanic activity in the earth’s crust, in the vicinity of the Island of Java, these strange sights are ascribable, and the means by which this belief is arrived at are simple and valid 80 far as they go. It is contended that during the volcanic activity vast quanti- ties of pumice dust and_incinerated rock were were carried as pollen might be, in the vast volumes of gas that escaped from the volcano's crater and borne into the upperstratum of our atmosperic envelope, into which the light gases naturally found their way. That these clouds of fine and almost impalpable dust have since re- mained in the upper air is the claim of the first set of gentlemen who seek to account for the strange appearance of the sky at night and in the morning. There is nothing insupportable or untenable in this theory, as will be shown; but there is a broader and more satisfactory expla- nation, and one which, in the face of the fact that the observation of peculiar sun- rise and sunset effects is almost universal, seems to be better founded. COSMIC DUST. It is that the earth in its travels through space has encountered a zone of meteoric dust, and that to the presence strange offects alluded to. So far as thie particular locality is concerned, the re- snow storme are important factors in de- termining the moot as the cause of the brilliant red skies, for the snow, taken at a distance from the possible influences of city contamination, has been found to contain meteoric particles in large quan- tities. The investigations are as yet quite incomplete, but the microscope h: revealed the presence of certamn peculiar the same time there was a falling of fine sand a mass like congulated blood. On November 6, A. D., 1048, in Thuringia, a ball of fire fell’ with great noise, followed by a reddish substance like eongulated blood, which remained covering the ground for a long time. In Pomerania, in 1657, there foll large good reason why it should be arbitrarily | foreigners wero disembarked there. Thi greatest proportion of this decreaso is credited to the first aix months of the year. During the first half of the year the number of arrivals more closely ap- proximated the figures of the correspond- ing period in 1882, The number of pas- sengers landed at Castle Garden for oach month in 1883, compared with tho to tals of tho provious year, is as follows : January ruary ch July August, Soptomber October 187 November. .. 24,444 December 15,800 The total falling off this year is In January the decrease was 2,801 February 3,640, in March 11,800, April 15,817, and in May 19,201, The figures show a total docroase of 53,330 for the first five months of tho year, The number of immigrants landed this year, however, is above the average of the last ton years. The full report of Superintendent Jackson for 1883 will not be complote for a fow days, and therefore the pro- portionate decrease in the number of im- migrants from the difforent Buropean countries is not known, but the figures for the first eleven months compared with those of tho first eleven month of 1882 show that the greatest decrease is in the immigration from Sweden and Russia. The total number of immigrants from Sweden in the eleven months last yearwas 41,480, this year the number was 10,3156, From Russia the number last yoar was 16,455, this year 6,335, From other countries the returns compare as follows: flakes of a substance resembling blood. On December 24, 1660, at Lillebonne, in Lower Seine, France, meteor fell, | jio followed by a red rain. At the close of the torrible tompest, on July b, 1582, therefell in Rockhausen, | $ in Prussia, a quantity of fibrous matter resembling human hair. On December 1586, there fell at Ferden, Hanover, large quantities of matter, black and jred, accompanied by lightning and thunder. In August, 1618, a meteor fell in Styria, accompanied by a blood red rain, In 1638, at Tournay, in Belgium, a red rain fell, In January, 1643, a blood red rain fell in Voehigen and in Weinsberg, in the kingdom of Wurtemberg. On March 28, 1663, there fell near Laucha, Prussia, a shower of fibrous substance, like blue silk. WHERE DID IT COME FROM ? On January 31, 1663, there fell in Nor- way a great quantity of membranous sub- stances, friable and like half-hurnt paper. The Baron Gotthaus analyzed a portion of the substance and found in it silex, iron, lime, carbon, magnesia, a trace of chrome and of sulphur, but not a particle of mickel, which is always present in aerolites. On March 24, 1718, on the island of Lethy, in India, a ball of fire fell and af- ter it a gelatinous red substance, On October 14, 1755, a blood-red rain descended at Locarno, Switzerland. Nine inches of rain fell, and it was ascertgined that the red matter contained in this urement. The same storm reached Swabia, on the Alps, and there changed into a reddish snow, which fell to a depth of nine feet. On August 13, 1819, a mans of gelatin- ous matter fell iu Amherst, Mass. In 1841 two blood-red rains are men- tined—one in Massachusetts, the other in Tennessce, In 1842 a man named Ingelow and his two sons were picking cotton on a planta- shaped atoms known to be of cosmic ori- |tion in Laurens district, near Eurole|characters, gin At several observatories iu the United | river, South Carolina, when out of an al- Mason, for it was none other than he, Total British Isles. .... . England o Ireland. .. Hl‘lillll\lly. 14,742 10,109 10,820 12,205 1 7,048 Germany as usual leads, but this year the figures are about 19,000 less than less year. The only j countries whose num- bers this year are larger than last year are Ircland and Hungary. The class of immigrants, with the cxception of a num- ber of families of ‘‘assisted” immigrants from Ireland landed last June and July, was much botter than in former yoars. Mr, Juckson says that the number re- maining in this ity in proportion to the total number landed grows smaller each year. The number of families destined for the southwest is constantly increas- ing, and most of the immigrants have sufficient funds to enable them to begin life in this country. Only 1,700 of the immigrants landed here this year re- turned. Of this number about thirty families were Irish paupers whose passage money was paid for them, Bohemi: An Important Autograph, Berievinie, Oxr.—The Hon. Billa Flint, Life Senator of the Dominion Par- liament, has written an autograph letter, heartily praising St. Jacobs Oil, the great pain cure. SERGEANT MASON. of this dust in our envelope are due the [shower was an inch deep by actual meas- | He Tells an Interesting Story of His Return to *'Betty and the Baby. Philadolphia Press, January 2d. A slender, sinewy man, dressed in plain citizens’ clothes, a slouch hat and square-toed, old-fashioned boots, with long, dark hair and keen blue eyes, walked, unnoticed, up to the desk at the Continental hotel last evening, and wrote his name on the register, in large, bold “John A Mason.” Sergeant States, since the the strange effects were [ most cloudless sky great particles of red | then leisurly proceeded to the elevator noticed, efforts have been made to catch whatever substance might be in the air by means of gelatine-coated plates adjus- ted in an apparatus invented by Dr. Mi- quel and known as the wroscope. These plates are adjusted at the small end of a | germs of marine growth, likely facus|weeks, funneil-shaped contrivance which, by means of a weather vane, always presents its mouth, so to speak, to the wind. The plate being very sensitive,overything of a foreign nature in the atmosphere is caught on the adhesive surface and thero |the same authority, a fall of orango|of rotained. Attached to the machine is an anemometer by which the amount of air passing through the funnel isascertained. [ many, there was a fall of five feet of red | iy forehead. Already some remarkable finds of inor- ganic matter have been made by means of this contrivance at great elevations;but as most of the high stations are now cut off from eommunication, it will not be possible, until next summer, to ascertain and collate the data gathered, and hence the recent snow storm, which carried down with it all the foreign substances intervening between the elevation of its conversion, into snow and the earth, is of great scientific value, since thg snow, when submitted on prepared pans to high temperature, is converted into water, to the bottom of which all the contained dust precipitates itself. DUST IN THE ARCTIC, The writer has seen in the extreme north, under the eightieth parallel, on Spitzbergen, where no dust conld pre- vail, since there, for geologic ages, the surface of the earth has been covered with snow and ice, great patches of yel- low and black dust, presumably of mete- oric origin. Investigation of the sub- stance, however, failed to illuminate the conjecture, The yellow dust which was at first supposed to be diatomaceous ooze, was found to be formed of cartonate of lime. The black dust, how- ever, contained metallic iron and was un- doubtedly of meteoric origin, On the face of a grand glacier in Green Bay, Spitzbergen, from which had. recently broken away a huge iceberg, could be seen plainly defined the snows and accu- mulations of hundreds of years, and here and there in well-deflned “streaks, depos- its of black dust, presumably of meteoric origin, One streak of black was more of the others, but it was supposed that this was the dust which descended on Spitzbergen, Norway, the Faroe islands and some parts of the north of Scotland when Hecla,the great volcano of Iceland, was last in active eruption. The face of the glacier being sheer and precipitons it was impossible to ascertain whether or not this speculation was well founded, That at the time of the eruption is ques- tion great showers of black dust descend- ed on the islands to the north of Scot- laod is attested by British meteorological records. As this eruption was quite as violent as that in Java last summer, and since the limits of its effects are compara- tively so confined, reaching only to Nor- { way, it does seem quite improbable that | the Java eruption could exercise so ex- | tremely western an influence s to be ob- | servable here. [PHENOMENAL RAINS, | There is, b extensive and of greater depth than any |} gelatinous matter fell in a shower. In 1867 a similar rain fell in Albany, and the late lamented Dr. Jacob T, Mosher, of happy memory, made an analysis of it. He found it contained piatycarpus, In 1813, according to Von Humboldt, there was a fall of red-colored hail in Palermo. The same year there was, according to tinted hail in Tuscany. In March, 1803, at Corniolo, Ger- BDOW. A brick colored snow fell in Italy in 1816, THE CRIMSON CLIFFS OF BEVERLEY, In the first volume of Kane's ‘‘Arctic Explorations,” page 44, the following, which proves the universal character of these phenomenal rains, will be found : My diary continucs: We passed the Crimeon cliffs of Sir John Ross in the forenoon of August 5, Tho patches and | trembling hands, eagor with the hope of | 1ot be useful, wheth red snow from which they derive their name could be seen clearly at a distance | the depot and boarded a fast train for | L. Parker, No. 4 Bulfinch Streot, Boston Mass., who of ten miles from the coast, It had a fine deep rose hue, not at all like the brown satin which I noticed when I was here before, All the gorges and ravinesin which the snow had lodged were deeply tinted with it. 1 had now no difficulty in justifying the somewhat pueticnl nomenclature which 8ir John Franklin applied to this locality, for if the snowy |said: *‘I want a horse right away. My | long sta surface were more diflused, as it is no doubt earlier in the season, crimson would be the prevailing color. The yp y red snow was diversified with large|in amazement, as a horse was saddled for dutlylnfithum ipof tho stomach. ~Price $1.60 surfaces of beautiful green and alope- ol ‘I'here have been with us for the past ten years rains of flies and reptiles, if cer- tain news papers are to be credieed, but the books are silent concerning many of these phenominal rains, Dr. Lorne of Laval university, however, vouches for the Canadian rain of flies reported in 1876. In ““Ausight der Natur” Hum- boldt discusses the origin of these strange rains,and he is in agreement with Ehren berg that mmf’ of them are due to the presence of infusoria in the air, These, it is suggested, were carried into the air by storms and then precipitated in dis- tant places. Darwin mentions many dust storms en- countered by sailing vessels as far as 800 miles off the coast of Africa, in mid-At- lantic, and proved on investigating the deck sweepings that they were of Central African origin, The dust from the hot interior plains, it seems, had been whirled into the upper air by wind storms and borne out to eea to the dis- tance mentioned, - ——— IMMIGRATION, Statistics for the Year from Castle Garden. o — The number of immigrants landed Tat Castle Garden in 1883 shows a very large falling off from the figures reuun{ od the er, on this account no' previous year, when nearly half @ willion ' Loston, and wasconveyed to his room,01 the third floor, where they were waiting to receive him, Mr, Perley and Mr. Hagar, of the dime museum, where the sergeant will ve on exhibition during the coming two The news of his arrival spread quickly through the hotel, and in ten minutes a crowd had collocted about the rogister anxious to catch a glimpee of his name. The sergeant looks well, and all traces his confinement have disappeared. His hair, as black as the raven’s wing, has grown long and hangs in locks around His manner is confident, though modest, and he is overy whit the self-same bold, dashing soldier, who, animated by what he believed to be an inspiration, sped the swift bullet on its way; 80 near the heart of the assassin, Guiteau, He tells a thrilling story of his meeting with ‘‘Betty and the Buby,” after he was pardoned, The moment the document of executive clemency was put in his joining his wife and child, he rushed to home. Fate was with him, for he made evarydpolaiblo connection in New York, Philadelphia and Washington, and the evening of that same day he jumped from the cars at the little town of Fred- ericksburg, Va., only twenty-four miles from his home, He ran, so great was his haste, to the nearest livery stable, and name is Sergeant Mason; I'm on my way to ‘Betty and the Baby.'” *‘What, are you Sergeant Mason?" cried all around his use, Not stopping to talk to his delighted friends the Sergeant mounted the horse and dashed away across the hills and through the woods towards the village of Locust Grove, where Betty, with the baby, was awaiting his coming with an anxious heart. It was nearly nightfall when he reached the home of his chil hood, He had expected to return to his loved ones in the same log cabin in which he had left them, and great was his sur- prise to find standing in its place & sub stantial framehouse. Dismounting, he advanced to the gate, where he stopped, and cried out, *“Does Sergeant Mason live here?” There was a cry of joy in response, and in an instant he was clasped in his wife's arms. That night the country folks gathered at the house from milesaround and tend- ered him a rousing welcome. He says he is not going to exhibit himself any longer than is necessary to enable him to save enough money with which to start a stock farm, Itis expected that *‘Betty and the Baby” will reach the city in a few days, when they will also be on ex- hibition at the museum. The sergeant will wear the soldiers’ suit in which he shot at Guiteau, ——— “I have ea and every donca of Lifoi or, | . 4arbormer Windows, Fioals, M, 1ion aud Sat Self-Preserv neider it u work of | Bucling, Spechit's otallio Bkylight, Paten W v g e ot adjusted Ratchet B 0 Bracket sm»hfi:s. 1an great merit. Tho prescriptious alone aro | MISstec Hatchet Bir aud Brasket Shewinge 1 of the book™ G, worth ten tiwes the Temple Btreot, Howanb Joses, M. D, PO 3[cago and ‘this city. 5 | says: >= [ and makes AN e | 904 10F Pocrsons HUI ' atous (naide Bllud, How Children Had “Fan,’ On & summer day, they went o piay, Down the road to Deacon Jones’ pastura; Dick elimbed the tree, Vie looked #o gay; Tho hoties soro spent in fun and Inughter. That night thwe young or es yelled with pain, Yes, the funny Dick and Vi : The'gripos were of the green ap Bat quickly eured by CA — Puitangne January b.—Another Pullman car conductor, name not yet known, was arrested this morning, charged with embezzling tickets belong- ing to the Pennsylvania company. He was employed on the route between Chi- He confessed that he failed to cancel certain tickets, and was held in $1,000 for trial. Other ar- rests are expected to-day. p e - Mischievous Malaria, To say that malaria is mischievous is to put it very mildly, It is all that and more. 4 It is cunning, deceitful, treacherous, sly, and underhanded. It does its work in the dark, and in such a sly way that much of the mis- chief is zfi,mc before it is discovered. It saps the foundations of a health system. It robs the blood of its vital- ity, demoralizes the liver, confounds the stomach, and makes the victim wish he were in his grave, Itissad tosece peoplesit down in their misery, content to begthe victims of mischiey- ous malaria, and thinking that noth- ing can be done for them. The power of BROWN’s IRON BITTERS over the wmischiefs of malaria has been so am- ply proved that there is no reason why anybody who can procure a bottle of this Prince of Tonics shall suffer. Great is the power of malaria, and great are its disastrous effects. But greater far is the beneficent in- fluence of BROWN's IroM BITTERS, The preparation of iron in thisfavor- ite f:uni&y remedy ‘can be taken without ruining the teeth or produc. ing constipation and headache. 1 iiu fand, RESCUED FROM DEATH. William J, Coughlin, In the fall of 1 d flosh. and was con I was admitted to the e said T had o hole 1n my lung as big as & half dollar, At one time areport wont around that 1 was dend, 1 goye Ui hope but s friondtold e of DT WILLIAM HALL'S BALSAM FOR THE LUNGS. I got a bottle, when to my sur- prise, T commonced to foel botter, and to-day I fool bottor than for threo years past. Another Physician's Testimony. Bostox, M fay 9, 1881, T know parties who have triod all kinds of modicinos for Lung Disoasos, who say that D Wi, HALL'S BALSAM FORTIE LUNGS, i8 CONPLETE SUCCESS, Dr. CHAS, 1, WOOD, The tse of the term ** Shox Line” in connection with the ! = = required by the traveling &-b- lic—a Short Line, Quick Time and tho bost of accomm E tione—all of which are furne B@Waré (Orrcaco, [MjmwAUREE of the continued use of mereury and potasn for the And St. Paul. troatment of Bloodand Skin diseases—they nover cure, and nearly always injure or totally ruin the genoral health, A WELL-KNOWN DRUGGIST. Tt owna and operates over 4,500 miles of:)y ) i\ Northorn Tllinols, Wisconsin, Minnosota, Towasn My drug storo was tho first to sell Swift's Spocific. | Dakota; and aats main lines, branches and connecs It was then put up in quart bottles which sold for | tions reach all the great business centres of the .00 each. 1 have n great many cases cured | Northwest and_Far Wost, It naturally answers the Its use, and some who had tried all ‘sorts of treat- | description of Short Line, and Best Route betwoen In fact, Thave nover known it to fail when | " Chicago, Milwaukeo, St. Paul and Minneapolis. roperly’ 1 sell a large quantity of it, and for | Ghicagw, Milwaukee, Ta Crosse and Winona. o8 that are dopendent on blood joison or | Chicago, Milwaukeo, Aberdeen and Ellendale Chicago, Milwaukee, Eau Clairo and Still water Chicago, Milwaukeo, Wausau and Morrill. Chicago, Milwaukoo, B skin humor, Chicago, Milwaukee, 1t cures 5 AND BLOTCILRS OX TIIE SKIN, lexion fair and rosy. blood taint, there s nosuch word as fail. 1t cures casos that have long withstood other sorts of treat- mel without any of those recurring troubleg that generally follow mercurial and other so-called curos. L NBURG, Macon, Ga. Our troatiso on blood and Skin Diseasos mailed froo to applicanta. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO,, Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga. N As for , Rockford and Dubuque. o, Clinton, Rock Island and Cedae Chicago, Council Bl Chicago, Sioux City, 8 Chicago, Milwaukee, Mitchell and Chambelain. Rock Island, Dubuque, 8¢ Paul and Minneapolie, Davenport, Calmar, S¢. Paul and Minnapolls and the Finest Dining Cars In Pullman Sleepers Fard are cun ce Sueailaline Gt b QNG MILVIAUK*E P. SI- PAUL \ and every attention is paid to passengers by ous employes of the company. ux Fal Nel;rask_t_: Cornice Omamentdl Wk MANUFACTURERS OF GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES Dormer Windovws, FINIALS, WINDOW CAPS, TIN, IRON AND SLATE ROOFING, PATENT METALIC SKYLIGHT, —WITH— Iron Fencing! Crestings, Balustrades, Verandas, Officoand Bank Railings, Window and Cellar Guards, Ete. - N. W, COR, NINTH AND JONES STS, U WM. GAISER, Manager. 8. 8, MERRILL, Gen'l Manager. J. T. CLARK, Gen'l Sup't. A. V. H. CARPI Gen Fass: Aont, GEO H. HEAFFORD, J. L. MARBLE, Employment Agent. Al kinds of help supplied promptly. Railroad? Sower and Grading help SUPPLIED FREE OF CHARGE. 217 N, 10th Street, - OMAHA, NEB FALLS RANITE. And your work is done for all time to time to come. WE CHALLENGE The World to produce a more durable material for street pavement than the Sioux Falls Granite. ORDERS FOR ANY AMOUNT OF parg Bl 266TH EDITION, PRICE $1.00, BY MAIL POSTPAID. KNOW_THYSELF, A GREAT MEDICAL WORK ON MANHOOD! Exhausted Vitality, Norvous and P! Premature Docline {n Man, & rorsof untold miserion resulting from ind cossies. A hook for every men, It contains 126 presori] sical Dobility and the and for all and chr s invaluablo 8o found by the Author, whoso experience for 2 19 b such as probably' never before fell to the 1o hysician. 300 pages, bound n boautitu ualin, embossed covers, full gilt, guaraiteod t0 bo & finor work, in every sonse,~mechanical, lit: erary and professional,—than any other work sold in this country for 2.60, or the money will bo refunded in every instance, Prico only paid. lustrative sample b medal a Assool h he refers, This boo ‘young for instruo tion, and by the aflicted for relief, 1t will benefit London Lancet. oro I8 no member of socloty to whom this book youth, parent, guardian, ror clergyman, —Argonatt, Address tho Peabody Modical Institute, or Dr. W. may be consulted on all dise Joquiringatill and experience, Chronio and obstinatodiseasosthat have baifled the ekill of all ather phys: clans a"wpectaity. “Buch " trontad sutcc HEAL Sty without an 1nstance of failure, 'I'H mibekw-ly ro without med. A POSITIVE: it tober 10, 76, One box No. 1 will enre any case ln four day or less No. 2 will o MACADAM! filled promptly. Semples sent and estimates given upon application, WM. McBAIN & CO., Sioux Falls, Dakota. he most o! ing. Allan’s Soluble Medicated Bougies No nauseous doses of wubebs, copabla, or oll of san- dal wood, that are e*..ali to produce o tinate case no matter of how Hold by all druggists, or mailed on recelpt of fehor pariioulass sand for GLPouUIRT. B {.M& “gartanco, CURE, DECCORMICE'S Patent Dried Fruit Lifter. AS USEFUL NO DEALER IN A ’ ™ GROCERY Groceries STORE 48 A PAIR OF Western Comice-Works, IRON AND SLATE ROOFING, C. SPECHT, PROP. 1111 Douglas 8. . CAN AFFORD o u8 counrenscazs.’ [l Without lv. Owmaha, Nob. MANUFACTURER OF Galvanizea Iron Cornices enciug, Ureatings, Balustrados, Verandas, Iron Ban) slungs, Window Bunds, Oollar Guards: also geners.

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