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~ v THE DAILY BEE--TUE T e VG RR T Jrovanyces Ay HOSORER CRTRE TR oA AR 7 DR, WAGNER, THE LEARNED - L4 Specialist ! 343 LARIMER STREET. REASONS Why you should try the colebrated Dr. H. Wagner's methods of cure: 1. “Dr. H. Wagnor 4 a natural physician.” 0. 8. Fowrar, The Greatest Living Phrenologist. “Few can exce you as & doctor. Di. J. S, The World's Greatest Physiognomist. . **You are wonderfully proficient in your know « edge of disonse and medicines.” DR. J. MATTinws. 4. “Tho afMlicted find ready relief in your pros oo D J. Stk 5. “Dr. 1. Wagner 18 a regular gradiato tron Believuo Hospital, New York city; has had very ex tensive hoapital p 06, and Is thoroughly posted on all branches of beloved science, especially oo chronic discases.” Dis. BrowswLy & Ewio. 8. “Dr. T, Wagnor has immortalized himsolf by his wondertul discovery of spocific remedies for pi vate and poxual diseasos.”—Virginia City Chroniclo. Thousands of invalids flock to see him." Francisco Chronicle. “The Doctor's long experionco as a speclalist should render him very su ul.”—Rocky Moun tain Nows. Plain Facts Plainly Spoken. At one time a discussion of the secret vice was en. tirely avoided by the profession, and medical works but a few years ago would hardly mention it. To-day the physician is of a different opinion; he le awaro that it i¥ his duty—lisagreeablo though i may be—to handle this matter without gloves and speak plainly about it; and intelligent parents and guardians will thank hiwm for doing so. ‘The results attending this destructive vice were or. merly not understood, ov not properly estimated; and no importance being attached to subject which by its nature does not invite close investigation, it was willingly ignorod. The habit is generally contracted by the young while attending school; older companions through thoir example, may b responsible for it, or it may be acquired through aocident. The excitement once ex- 1ced, the practice will be repeated again and T“ , until at last the habit becomes firm and com plotely enslaves the victim, Mental and nervous af Hiotions re usually the primary results of self-abuse, Among the injurious effects way be mentioned lassi. tude, d on or irraacibility of temper and general debility.” The boy secks seclusion, and rarely joine in the sports of his companions. wman he will be little found In company with the other wex, aud is troubled with exceeding and annoying bashfulness in their presence. Lascivious dreams, emissions and eruptions on the face, etc., aro alsc prominent symptoms. 1f the practice ia violeatly persisted In, more serlous L HATERIGARTERL B Mos U rRt RAli Lt Y QL Etig heart, or epileptic convuisions, are experienced, and the sufferer may fall into & complete state of idiocy be- fore, finally, death relieves him. o all those engaged in this dangerous, practice, | woul sy, “hat Gl "o 1€ 81 sncs ks very possible effort to do o but f yon fail, ¥ystom is already too much shattero quently, your will-power broken tonic to aid you iu Havi from the habit, 1 would fu through a regular course mistake to supposn tha bo t every solit'e but dangerous exvitement without suffering from it evil cousequences at some futuro time. Tho numbver of young men who are incapacisted to fill the duties enjoined by wedlock is alarmingly large, and in most of such cases this unfortunate condition of thipgs can be truced to the practice of seli-sbuse, which been abandoned years agh. Indeed, & few months’ practice of this habit is sufiiciant to induce spermatorthaa. 3 Inter years,and [ have many of such cases under treat mentat the presout day. .. up to this fascinating Young Men Who may bo sufferiug from tho effects of youthtul follies or indiscretions will do well toavail themselvor of this, the greatost boon ever laid at the altar of sut- ering humanity. Dr. WaaNER will guarantos to for oit 8500 for every case of seminal weakness or private discase of any kind and character .which he under. takes toand falls to curo. —— Middle Aged Men. Thero ate many at the ago of 80 to 60 who are troubled with too frequent_evacuations of the blad. der, often sccompanied by a slight smarting or burn. ing’ sensation, and a weakening of the system in a manner the patient cannotaccount for. ~ On examin- ing the urinary deposits a ropy sediment will often be found, and sometimes small particles of albumen will appear, or the color will be of thin milkish hue, again chioging to dark sndtorpid appearance. Thero are ma , many mon who die of thiy difficulty,ignorant of the cause, which is the second stage of seminal-weak- ness. Dr. W. will guarantee a perfect cure in all casec and o healthy restoration of the genito-urinary or- 5. Gonsltation tree., Thorough examination and ad vice, 86. Al communications should ho addressed, Dr. Heary ‘Henry Wagner, P 59, Denver, Colorad, Tho Young Man's Pocket Companion, by Dr. B Wagner, is worth its welght in gold to young men Price $1,2. Seat by mail to any addreds. A FRIEND TO ALL, One Who is Needed and Nobly Fills his Place. Deuver s more fo) ate than she knows in the on of the talen’s and enorgies of & man who u his time and thought not mersly to the on of his skill ks a practitioner of his pro- fession of medicine, but to the study of those pro- found things of science snd nature which tend to the re complete understanding of the problem of life andof the Jaws of na:ure and the means of gaining reatest practical goods tomankind from the in i ation thuy scquirod in the abstract, Such & man is Dr. H. Wagner, who is located at 343 Larimer strect Dr. Wagier devoted miny years to the ac- uisition of the knowledge neocessary to his profes- sion in & number of the leading medical s:hools of the most eminent and profound teac names a3 Dr. Gross and Dr. Pancoas among his precepzors Nor di bis studies o, They continued in the fleld of the pracéicing fumily ‘phisician and i the experionces of a man of exten- Bive travel. He has visited every section of the Uni- ted Stat. wying studious attention to the cifferent characteristics of the various portions of the country, particulurls’ with regard to theic effect, climatic and otherwise upon neaith and the different forms of dis. cases. With the combined powers of close study, ex Tensive obrervation and almost unlimited practice, Dr_ Wagner came to Denver three years ago equip: ped as fow have tho Fight to claim ‘to battlo the foe of mankind, the drewded enemy, discase. In order to rendor the greatest good to society, Dr. » aguer dect dod to lay aside the general branches of practice and bring ll hss ripe knowledge and power to bear up- on the foe which swoug ‘the army of insious death agonts is the greatest. His wide experience had taught hin what weapons to use aud which to discard, and after equipping himself as his trainod Judgment was 50 well aole to advise him he cor enced boldly and confidently his attack. o esti ‘mating the results and suceess achieved, it is ouly neoessary toknow the doct s puition and_stauding to-day. While located in this city, his praotice is by 1no meany confined to it limits nor this section of country, Hiscorrespondence aud express bool s tes- tify in black and whito to his possess on of o field of baanded ouly by the ines which bound the ‘e ngth and breaath of the country, and which has laced him where & tan of his skil{ and intellectual attainmonts (o o8 to Le, and should to be ewsblo hiin 1o reach tho highest sphore of usefulness to sut fering humanity—the plane of Jfinancial lndepen nce. Dr. Wagner Las contributed of his prosperi o the stantial improvement of Denver la the ere.tion of & fine block on Larimer street, opposite his present offic:, Na. 345, 1t will bo ready for occu poncy in & ew weeks, and 1 an evidence that the doctor is o be numbered among the permanent and solld citizens of the metropolls of the plains —(Den: ver Tribuve. —_— DR. H. WAGNER & CO,, COUNCIL BLUFFS, ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEWS. * AFTER THE PROPERTY, A Woman From Missondd Claiming to be Mrs, Bankston No, 1, and Wants the Property, Last August Thomas Bankston, a man woll known in thi ¥y was taken illand died, and his property, amounting to about 81,000, was put into the hands of Thomas Officer and L, Hammer as trus- for tho benefit of his wife, Ella Now there appears enthe sceneanother woman from Lexington, Missouri, who shows up a cortiticate of marriage, and claims to have been wedded to Bankston in Lex- ington in 1870, Yesterday a petition in equity was filed by her attorney, J. J. Frainey, asking that the other Mrs. Bankston and the children be required toshow what claim they have to this property, and that the coprts may adjust matters so that she may have what her toos, Bankston, and his littlo children, wartiage rolations entitle her to, To keep abreast of the times medically and _physiologically, read ““The Science of Life, or, Sclf-P'reservation,” See ad- vertisemont. Towa City is to have free water for three months, Patterson_claims the best conducted public achools in Sioux county. A brakeman named Freyer was killed by the cars at McGregor, Friday. Tho missing Atlantic boy, Harley . Hawks, has been found in Davenport. The ice harvest at Davenport hasabout closed, and 16,500 tons have been stored. The Clement_Chair company, of Clin- ton, lost about $2,000 by firo a fow days ago. Nine thousand and eighty-nine cars of grain were inspocted in the Burlington marketin 1883, Des Moines county from September12, 1888, to January 16, 1884, expended for all purposes £36,349.90. A board of trade building is talked of in Burlington, The committee estimates that the building and let would cost £36,- Tt he be a young | 000, John Hanley was arrested at Daven- port on the 19th, charged with manufac- turing and passing counterfeit money. He was taken to Keokuk. A fire in Iowa Falls on tho 19th de- stroyed about $6,000 worth of property. The 9re started in Anderson & Kratzor's blacksmith and wagon shop. On Tuesday night of last weoek the hardware store of G. B. Caldwell, of Lo- t | gan,was burglarized, and about $75 worth of revolvers, knives .and raiors were taken. Savannahian, Capt. Charles W, Austin, who is now in the government employ, and who figured in many thrilling ad: vontures in the war, but came out with- out a scar. *You had a_narrow escape, captain, but toll us something about the affair.” As 1 said, it was some time in the fall of 1865, 1 had made four or five success- ful trips from Havana, bringing arms and munitions of war, but this trip pretty nearly twound mo up. The Susanna, which the writer in The News referred to as the privateer, was a stanch, trim-built iron vessel, with a capacity for from 1,400 to 1,800 bales of cotton, and with an average speed of about fifteen knots an hour, She was built in England on the Clydo as a blockade runner, and lay low in the water with her long black hull hardly visible excopt in broad daylight. She was about two hundred and twenty: tive foet long by thirty beam, and being a new vessol, I folt hor oqual to anything in a chase. Wo left Havana with a crew of twenty-seven men, well officered by men who knew their business. We had fine weather and caloulated to make land inside the blockade under cover of night between 1 and # o'clock in the morning. However, as luck would have it, an acei- dent at sea - the giviag way of some of our machinery—detained us several hours and brought us to land in open daylight, about 6 o'clock in the morning. By this time we were in plain sight of the block- ading squadron, but as yet were unob- served. “‘The entrance to the harbor was filled with gunboats. 1t was near the closo of the war, and the blockade at other points on the coast haviug been raised, all the federaljcruisers were concentrated at Gial- veston., The situation was a perilous one, and there was but one thing left to be done. If we could evade the enemy until nightfall, and then pass the squad- ron and enter the harbor wnobserved we would be all right. Calling the men all to the bridge 1 gave them their orders, and the ship was soon heading toward land. We stood well to castward under shore with the intention of secreting our- selves until hight. We were yet some distance out, and hauling in rapidly, when about 8 o'clock I discovered a cruiser bearing down on us. All hope of making land was then abandoned, and the only chance for escaps was to put to sen. Having the confience of my men, and knowing tho speed of my ship, I did not fear tho result. “Calling to the engineer through the pipe I discovered that after making a tivejhours’ run off shore and back again, I would m 1t have coal enough to carry mo back to Havanna, as there was nonoe to bo had Galvoston. 1 wasin a quandry; but no time was to bo lost. ‘Give her full head,’ I shouted to theengineer, and casting my glass across the harbor I saw SDAY, INUARY 29, 1884, | IMPORTANT INVENTION, An Appliance to Convert a Locomo- tive into a Steam Fire Engine. Mr. W. Havens, of this city, sags the Patterson (N. J.) Guardian, has a curi. ous invention which is described as the Van Duzen patent steam jet pump, with Haven's patent application of the same to locomotives for fire purposes, convert- ing any locomotive suppliod with it into a steam fire engine, for the extinguish- ment of firo on trains, bridges, or in any building within reasonable reach of the hoso on the line of the railroad track, such as lumber piles, snow or other sheds. This cheap and simple appli- ance, patented in March last by W. H. Havens, of this city, after having been satisfactorily tested for some months past on the Erie and Lehigh Valley railroads, has just now been placed on a switching engine of the New York, Susquehanna & Western railroad in this city. 1t may,in case of neod, in one minute bring to bear o powerful stream of water on the passen- ger, freight, or engine house, or on any of tho wooden buildings, fonces, ote., that closely line the cut, or on the cotlec: tion of cars standing on the track. The appliance consi-ts of a small brass cham. ber placed within tho tank, so connectod that all parts and pipes are froo from any liability to froeze. It has no valves of looso parts, it needs no cars, gives no trouble, and it is claimed cannot get out of order, how- ever long unused, The onlyrequirement in working the appliance is to run out the hose (ready connected) and turn on the steam from the valve at the engin- eer’s hand, when the action isinstant and positive, throwing the water from the tender-tank, filling a two-inch hose,send- ing the waterin a steady, solid steam rapidly through a five-eighthsnozzlo sixty to soventy feet horizontally and thirty to forty feet high, From its cheapness and simplicity, (DR, EENDERSON, | bicitesspfmste e 00841608 W yandotee Sb. yoary' practioe—twelve I KANSAS CITY, MO. | Chioago. a Authorised by the wtate 40 bees Chrono, Nervous and Private diseasos § Asthma, Epllopey, Rbeamatism, Pilss % Tape Wori, Urinary and kin Di ‘oagon, Sominal Weak noss(night losses) y Soxual Debility (loss nt sextial powor) 1 Cures guaranteod o money rotended. Charge L Mhousands of onsos cured. . No Injurlous modi funigrniahed oven to patients st & distance, Con Troo and confidential —call or write: age and fiortrico aro fmportant. A BOOK for both sexes with L-and oirculars of other things sont seale: © oent siamps. FREEMUBEUM od odw WRVONR FCTRO VOLA, 0 TELT, and othol o will hond on MEOLD. Trinl PRI T i ndlok i Vaurae Brue Cotunsans, M - " N The ui 5 10 Wot tho torin * Shoy Line™ 10 gnnection with the corporate’yg of n great rosd conveys antig 0% R Kreat rou o foautred bylo traveling pub and the bost'$' Julck (e W tiona—ll of Wi “ae farn Ished by the greatest railway in Amerl (Orrcace, MmwAkEs And St. Paul. Ttowns and operates over 4,600 milea of:)y Northern Illinos, Wisconsin, Minnosota, lows ind aa ta main linos, branches and oo: tionn roach all tho groat business centron of the Northwest and_Far West, 1t naturally answers the description of Short ine, and Best Route botween Chicago, Milwaukee, 8t. Paul and Minneapolis. treedom from care and trouble, and the frequent chances occurring when it might render valuablo sorvice, it is judged that the device will become popular and free- ly adopted by the railronds when its mer- its aro understood. It has the cordial in- dorsement of H. G. Brooks, president of the Brooks Locomotive works and form- erly superintendent of motive power on the Erio, whose experience and knowl- edgo of the requirements for railroad equipments are not surpassed. The rail- roads will probably consider it quite to their interest to supply this device to the locomotives, To do so would probably prove far more oconomical than to take the chances of doing without it and pay- ing damages assessed thetic courts for the lack of it. The patenteo would agres to fur- nish the entire appliance complete the federal cruiser preparing for action. There was only one alternative, and in forlorn hope I took the desperate chance of running the squadron and breaking the blockade. It was then about noon. I headed the ship for Galveaton, and passed over the outer bar into the swash or beach channel, hauling in south by west, in the very teeth of the guns on the gunboat Seminole, which had already opened fire. At this point the chase began, and for an hour we ran under a Lieavy fire from the guns of three of the squadron, which were bearing The present term of the district court for Marion county has a dosket of 38 criminal cases and 110 law and chancery cases. There are 38 lawyers docketed— one for each criminal case, A tall family in this state consists of a father and three sons, whose measures are: Mather, 6 feet 6 inches; oldest son, 6 feet 8 inches; second, 6 feet 8} inches; and youngest, 6 feet 9 inches. The state auditor’s report shows that there are 556 insane patiente in the In- dependence hospital, and 79 who have no fixed home, the cost to the several coun- ties and the state for the 635 being $25,- 369.60., ‘Willie Martin, a student of telegraphy at Dallas Center, attempted to jump on Conductor Weston’s train last Tuesday morning. He fell under the wheels, and one of his legs was crushed. He diedthe following morning, A movement is on foot for a district fair at Dubuque, te include the counties of Dubuque, Delaware, Clayton, Buchan- an, Jones and Jackson, in lowa, Jo Da- viess county, in Illinois, and Grant coun- ty, in Wisconsin, Thero is a mystery as to tho death of a child at Essex. The coroner held an inquest, and the jury decided that it came to its death by suffocation. It is now reported that the body will be taken up and a post mortem examination held. The southeast corner of tho public wquare of Washington, was burned Friday morning, The part burned com- prised six business buildings, all of which, with most of their contents were destroyed. The total loss will reach from $12,000 to $15,000. Tharsday last a man giving his name a3 Wm., Wall was arrested at LoeMars, Ia., charged with counterfeiting. Satur- day his trunk was found, It contained dies for manufacturing counterfeit silver coin, (uarters, halves and dollars, Also an amount of spurious coin and metal, A De Witt firm sent a cypher message to a Chicago commission house. The word ‘‘brakes” was delivered ‘‘brokes,” whereby Hart & McQuinn lost $131.256 on 5,000 bushels of oats. Therefore they brought suit for that amount, with inter- est at 6 per cont from July 15 last,against the Western Union company. A juryat Clinton on the 24th returned a verdict for plaintiffs for the full amount claimed. | Clarence Scott, formerly one of the promising young men of Lyons, has been arrested for petty thieving, and the charge fastened upon him in finding the missing articles in his possession, rs, Scott, wifo of the prisoner, made personal appeals to Mayor Roov and Poormaster Hudson for aid, representing herself and children as on the verge of starvation and scantily clothed, and in need of help, Worked Wonders, “ My daugliter was very bad off on acconnt of a cold and pain in ber lungs, Dr. Thomas' kelectric Gil cuved her in twenty four hours, One of the boys was cured of sore throat, T'his medicine has “‘worked wonders in our family,” Alvah Piuckney, Lake Mahopac, N, Y, o —— The Blockader's Last Run, *‘It was about 11 o'clock in_the fore- noon some time along in the fall of 1865 —in the mouth of October, I think it was | ¢f —that I ran the federal blockade in the Galveston harbor, in command of the 343 Larimer St. Address Box 2389, | steamer Susanna, with a cargo of arms DENVER, COLJ and ammunition for the confederate gov- ernment,” The speaker was a medium-sized, square-built man, with deep set eyes and determined foatures, “I have read the account in The Sa- vannah News,” he continued, *‘of the striking chase at sea, and the story of the ¢ markable escape of a confederate steam- er at Galveston. 1 was in command of that ship at the time.” * The reporter recognized at once an old down on us all the time. ¢ ‘Push her hard!" I shouted again to the engineer. ‘All right, sir,’ came the roply, and tho huge black volumes of smoko that poured out of her funnels and lay in clouds on the water, the throbbing of the engine in the hold, the strainingof the wheols as they flow around plowing the water and leaving & track of boiling, foaming sea far sstern, told that he was doing his duty.” It was an exciting time, but every man was at his post, and not a word was spoken.« The shell whized over us and splashed and_drenched our decks as they fell close under our funnels as I stood on the bridge, and the fragment of a shell shattered our bow above water, but otherwise we were unhurt. I could watch the movements of the men on the cruisers through my glass, as I stood on the bridge between theflashes of the guns and the clearing away of the smoke. ““‘We wore even now about half a mile distant from each other and about a mile from the shore. ‘All right below? I in- quired again through the pipe. ‘All right, sir,” was the answer, and the shi rushed through the water as the shot fell thick and fast, but the chase was about up. The bar was between usand the gunboats, and che distance grew greater as the channel widened. In ten minutes more we were out of their reach, and, running the ship under Pelican point, wo were under cover of our own guns, shel- tered from the enemy's, ““We wero now safe. The open bay was before us, with the white sand-hills beyond. The fleet was lying below about two miles, and the fort and wharves along the city were lined with thousands of spectators who had witnessed the chase, and who received us with open arms,” “It was a nip-and-tuck race, captain,” remarked the reporter, ‘‘How did you fosl with the shells burating about you?” “Well, about as Ido now,” was the reply, as the complacent captain stood with his hands in his pockets, quiotly smoking his cigar. *‘True, there were about two hundred pounds of powder under the bridge, where I stood, but it's all in a lifetime, There's no use get‘ing excited,” “We lay in a port about eighteen days,” he resumed, ‘‘discharged our cargo and reloaded with cotton, when we E for 800 locomotives for what is reported through the papers to have been paid to one person for injuries roceived ina noted railroad disaster, and this sum is buv a small fraction of the entire loss at the time from the destruction of the trains and damages paid to persons. By order of the postmaster gencral the ap- pliance has been officially inspeoted, with a view to greater safety for mail trains, by tho superintendont of railway mail service, and favorably reported on to the department. St. Vitus Dance is a distressing mala- dy. There is but one cure for it Sa- maritan Nervine. “Samaritan Nervine cured my wife's fits,” says Henry Clark, of Fairfiold, Mich., ““She had them 30 vears.” At by unsympa- |® B)Chicagy, Milwaukeo, La Crosso and Wi ‘Chicago, Milwaukeo, Abordocn and Ell Chicago, Milwaukee, Eau Claire and Stillwater Chicago, Milwaukeo, Wausau and Merrill, cayo, Milwaukee, Beaver Dam and Oshkosh, Chicago, Milwaukoee, Waukesha and Oconomowos Chicago, Milwaukee, Madison and Prairiedu Ohlex Chicago, Milwaukee, Owatonna and Fairibault, Chicago, Boloit Janesville and Mineral Polnt. Chicago, Elgin, Kford and Dubuque. Chicago, Clinton, Rock Island and Cedar Rapids. Chicago, Council Blufty and Omaha. Chicago, Sion Pullman Sloepers and tho Finest Dinlng Oara b world are run on the mainlines of tho “‘qu MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL fl and every attontion 18 paid £ passeugors by courbe ous employes of the company. . 8, ILL, A. V. H. CARPENTER, 1 Maunger. Gen'l Pasa. Agon), ARK, GEO H. HEAFFORD, ARCHITECTS LREMOVED TO OMATA NATIONAL BANK BUILDING g Nebraska Cornice —AND— Ornamental Works MANUFACTURERS OF GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES Dormer Windows, FINIALS, WINDOW CAPS, Druggist. $1.50. Y The district court at Indianola in the case of Pigatt vs. Jamen, which was action of mandamus to compel the presi dent of a school board to sign a contract made between a teacher and a school director, granted the writ, e b “Brown's Bronchial Troches” are widely known as an admirable remedy for Bronchitds, Hoarsensss, Coughs, and Throat troubles. Sold only in boxes. POTASH. Todide of Potassium is one of the strorgest of the rals uxed in medicino, and bas produced much sufforing in the world, Takea for & long time and in large doses, 1t dries up the gastrio jui s, irs digestion, the stomach reutse ent d clines in health and welght Blood or Skin Diseases should be careful how they take theso mineral poisons, a9 in most instances the effect of thew ix to almost premancntly impair the conti- tution. o take the place of theso poisons we offer you a kafe, sure, prowpt and_permanent reliet from our troublee, Switt's Speciio is entirely o vegeta- tlo preparation, and It is asy to conyinoe you of its merit, 1 havs cured permanently Blcod Teint in the third weneration by the use of Swift's Speciflo after I had ot sigually failed with Mercury and Potash. F. A, Toousn, M, D, Perry, Ga. A young man requuste me tothauk you for hisc of Blood Foison by the use of your Specific after al other treatment had failed. Jou Jacons, Druggiety Athens, Ga. Our treatise on Blood wud Skin Diseases mailed freo to applicants, THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Draver 8, Atlanta, Gn. Imported Beer "IN BOTTLES. « .+ Bavaria Bavaria .+ Bohemian +eeee.Bremen, Erlanger,... Culmbacher, Pilsner. Kaiser. . again put to sea and passed the squadron without being molested or interfered with, Everything went smooth until about sixty miles off Cuba, when we broke our crank-pin, and so disabled were picked up by the federal cruiser Metacomet, commanded by Capt. Jew- ott, and taken to Philadelphia, 1 was tried there in the federal courts, and the Susanna was condemned as & government prize.” The Seminole, which figured in the above affair, was employed by the United States government during the war in cruising along the South Atlantic and gulf coasts in search of the many enter- prising blockaders with which the coast and West India waters were infested. She captured and assisted in the capture of a number of vessels, in which sev- oral of our citizens were intorested at that time, After the war she was sold to the Nickerson line and ran as a merchant steamer between Boston and Savannah for & number of years. She was taken off a little over a year 0 to give place to the new steamships lity of Columbus and Gate City. Her engines were taken out and she has since been used as a e, The following mph of marine intelligence records or run: Barge Seminole, from Hoboken for Boston, coal laden, while iu tow of the steamer Pof, Morse, sunk on the morn- ing of November 13, four miles from Handkerchief lightship, Crew saved. Be Careful of the Babies, If your children are threatened with croup or any throat ditficulty, apply a few drops of Thomas' Felectric Oil” 1t s the nicest wodi- cine for the litte anes we know of, DOMESTIC. Budweiser...............8t Louis Anhauser .......0 3t. Louis Best's. ... . Milwaunkee, Schlitz-Pilsner .. ++ Milwaukee, Krug’s... weisrees .Omaha Ale, Porter, Do nestic and Rhine Wine, ED. MAURER, 1214 Yaruam, dames Mdica! nstituto Chartered by theStateof I11i- nois for theexpress pury of giving immediate rellefin all chronic, urinary and pri- nhood, Fositivel 18 no experimenting. The . remedy appopriste 18 at once d i h case, Itatios sofaler n%"sm.-"?.:’m‘ dy ‘condential, | ines sent by Mall and Express, No marks package to Indicate CORtents or sénder. Addres DR.JAMES,No. 204Washington lL,cihuo,Ilb " ! ! ERVINE L TR PRI bl TIN, IRON AND SLATE ROOFING, PATENT METALIC SKYLIGHT, lron Fencing Crestings, Balustrades, Vorandas, Officeand Bavk Railings, Window and Collar Guards, Eto. COR, 0. AND#tn STREE™, LINCOLN NEB, M GAISER, Managor. i &b REAL ESTATE AGENTS OFFER THE FOLLOWING BARGAINS IN [mproved Property! 2000, houses on north 10th St. §4.000 onts, — ‘eary pay No. 8.—One story house,seven rooms only 7 blocks from U, P, Depot. Good value for 82100, 1, “yery nicely located. Good view, Elegant hore, §2.400. No. 10,—Hotse and full 1:t en th and pancrolt, Neat cottage, #hado trees vines &c. G propert:, 81,600, No, 20.—House'of foven rooms. Gothie. In Red flelcw Sub-division A very honie like place. Cheay , 2,000 No. 21.—Houso of 8 rooms corner of Plerce and P cifie. Good p acs nyvenlens to depot very desirable re 00 Property, {8,000, No. 22.—An ciegant littlo home In Tak: Srret cur, school, church, highly respect: ablo iocality, A ondbu‘fnln #2600, tora bulld nigsouth of depot No, 24.-A tull Jot and o ‘A wood place for business and choap at §1, " dopot, A good investment at 46,000, House of six rooms in Parkers addition, Baen, woll and cstarn & 00sts only 11,69) Can be paid for in moathly peymenis.” 29, Houso four rooms on . 15th k. .07 tade it. 50,- 18 such & good barga'n we dare not acver. t 1t would go to quick! No. 81— Bose place on Green car line, 92,600, No. 82.—A corver with cottage in Parker's addition only 81,676, No. 62.~Iow' in good part ofthe city, 8t. cars ‘will pass the doors In » short time, All modern Illng‘rmmnh including mortgage! ut! No, 04.—House of & rooms on full lot neatSt. car louse turn-table o Sl 000, No, 100, ,, Bold In monthly paymeuts of §13 in, No. 105, fifiwm... house near business on Capitol rat class bargain, 43.1 No. 84.—The best in of 'l unparalled for lo- cation aud prie. ~ A manslon for only #15000. ‘a4 Propirty 1s constantly increasing i value. Persons wiehing to buy, should buy now. “Fortun favors the brave.” Calland seo complte complete lst of unlmproved a9 well s lmprov, Money to Loan, Houses to Rent, Notary Pablie, propertyd Corner of 16th and Dodge Btreets, (WILLIAMS' BLOCK, fouso on Popiloton wvenus south front, ‘o addition, 1Lt with six goud tenement houses near itlen. This is A No ouse of four rooms and corner lot for 6.0, Convéyaneing. SEARS & BOSARD, BARKER & MAYNE, THE CHEAPEST PLACE IN OMAHA TO BUYj Folle Roel=To||=f= XSS AT DEWEY & STONE'S, One of the Best and largest Stocks in the United States to select from. NO STAIRS TO GLIMR. ! ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR. 9 Dr. CONNAUGHTON, 403 BRADY ST., DAVENPORT, TOWA, U. 8. A, Hstablished 1878—Catarrh, Deafness, Lung and Nervous Discases Speedily and Permanently Cured. Pationts Cured at Home. Writo for “Tie Menrear-Mistonany,” for the Poople, ¥ee. Consultation and Correspondence Gratia P, O. Box 202, Tolephone No. 226, HON. EDWARD RUSSELL, Postmnstor, Davenport, says: *‘Physician of Real Ability and Marked Suocess.” CONGRESSMAN MURBHY, Davenport, writes: “An Honorable Man, Fino Success, Wonderful Cures.”—Hours. 8 ta &, “BURLINGTON HOUTE" | 1 (Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad.) fMawzoxine CGUING NORTH AND SOUTH. ‘onches, Parlor Cars, with Rovlin | 8olid Traing of Elegant Dar Coaches and Pali inirs (Seats free), Smoking Cars, with Ro. | man Palace Sleeping Cars are run daily to andy & Chairs, Pullman Palace Slewpingg Cars and [from 8t Louls, via Hannibal, Quineys Keokuk, [the famous C. B. & Q. Dining Cars rim daily to and,| Burlington, Cedar Rapids and rt Lea to 8t (rom Chicago & Kansas City, Chicags & Council| Paul and Minneapolis; Parlor Cars with Reclinie* |Blufts, Chicago & Des Moines, Chicago, St. Jo-|Chairs to and from 8t Louis and Pean-md;v" seph, "Atehison & Topeka, Only through line be- [and from St Louls and Ottumwa, o tween Chicago, Lincoln & Denver. Through cars |chango of cars between St. Louis and DI} L between Indianapolis & Council Bluffa via Moines, lowa, Lincotn, Nevrasks, and DenvCX, o [All connoctions mude in Union epota. 13 1| Celorado, 1 & known asthe great THROUGH CAR LINE. It 18 univergaliv admit ed to be the | Finest Equipped Rallroad in tho World for sil Clnsses of Travel. 4 3 ‘T, J. POTTER, 3d Vice-Pres't and Gon" Managor. PRECEVAL ROWILT, 13un. 1mos. Ag's, Chicass 3 M. HELLMAN & CO, : Wholesale Clothiers! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREE1 COR. 13Th OMAHA, v ; 2 NEBRASK THORNBURG PLAGE! Situated in West Omaha only two blocks from the proposed line of the Cable Cars, with the Belt Railway Crossing one corner, aud only three quarters of a mile from the present Street-car Line, at the prices we are asking for lots. No other Addition OFFERS SUCH INDUCEMENTS TO BUYERS EITHER FOR RESIDENCES OR SPECULATION, Lots in Thornburg Place are bound to double in vaiue duaring the coming summer. Now is the time to get the nicest lots ever placed ou the Omaha market. Prices $1560. to $260. on monthly payments, We have a few nice lots lett in Parmenter Place, $325. to $400. each—Easy terms 5 0 elegant, lots in GRANDVIEW, just south of the U. P. Depot, $176. to $300. monthly installments. BHEHILI.ATR. * Beautifnl 24 acre lots at $250. each. 26 beautiful lots in Prospect Place 8200 to 8500, each, $15. down and 5 per cent a month. 15 lots in Lowes addition $176. to $300. long time. 8 lots in Boyd's addition, $175. each. 12 lots in Patrick’s addition, $360, to $500. 6 lots in Plainview, the finest ones in this addition, 8475, to $500. Lots in Barlers SuY-division and the following additions: Isanci & Selden's, Redick’s, Mullard and Caldwell’s, West Omuha, Kirkwood, Oma-~ ha View, HMawthorne, Pike pluce, Credit, Froncier, College place, Done k- ens, Park place, Parkérs, Capitol Hill, Hartman's. Plainview, & &ec. Several choice acre tracts in Gises addition, Hawes addition, South- Omahaana West Omaha.y{A choice & acre piece in Tuttles Sub division 3 acres in Okabama. & acres on Cuming street. 3 one acre pieces on Sherman Avenue, near the fair grounds, alsosoma verp choice business lots on Dodge, Farnam, Harney, Jackson and other streets, _ We have the finest market garden pieces to be had around Omaha. Four, five and ten acre tracts on 16th street, north of the fair grounds, $400. to 81000 each on monthly payments. A few nice acre corners in west Omaha, at less thau half the price asked for adjourning land. 4 Two lots, cunmini{l'lg 14 acres each, in Barker's a'lotment, south 10th street $800 and $1,000. Euasy terms, fi 8 acres, south 13th strect, $3,000, Will divide. FOR BALE—Leading hotel in lively Nebraska town, also general store in good town, will take some land or Omaha property in part pay— ™ HOUSES AND LOTS In all parts of the city, We have some great bll“linl‘il nudnu 4 property. FARMS AND LANDS In all parts of the State. Farms in Nebraska, Iowe and Kansas If you want anything in the Real Estate line call and see us, We will show you around, and try to suit you. Houses, Stores, Rooms for rent, iy By ¥