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2 SCROFULA Usually developes in early life, and the system, usually affectin glands, often resulting in swellings, enlarzed joints, abeesses, thickening of the lips, enlarged neck, sore eyes, A scrofulous condition is often hereditary, but bad diet, too free use of fat meats, bad air, want of sun- shine and nourishing food will if- duce it. Some people are troubled with scrofulous swelling of the glands, add with ulcers and kerne which may cause very little pain others may have inward scrofula of the lungs, scrofula of the spleen- ¢ gcrofula of the kidneys, and scrofu- la of the bomes. = BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS will drive away any case of scrofula, and not to ap pear in another place, for their ac- tion on the blood and bowels will carry the disease entirely from the body. IMPROVED HENN ) SOFT ELASTIC SECTION GORSET In warranted to wear longer, ot ho"orm neater, and §176 ko Istaction thar any cthor Cotee. iINGS cments > JOHN H. F. LRAMANN & 00, e o5 Wormy Velne oftle Serotun: st it o et Maniioon SemAsstsy UMPHREYS 0 | IOMEORAT R A B ETfE«nslPECfi"lCS FOR TIE CURE OF ALL DISEASES OF 2A | EE) 8, HO RORSES.CATTLR IR, boas.HoGS, FOR TWENTY ‘T:Amr“.(“mgh"‘v.' Tomeo. ; hic Veterinary Spes nve been used b mors, Stock 1}7.-«"-& Ligery Hinbio and Often the unwus- b f (! rHe I..I""”F 1‘llll'll(‘ lrlr:‘"r': Lo mpanies, T ray odro, nd Menngorion, and Ouiers Bandlog socs W porfoct suoceds. Huliphroys Veterinary Manaal, (9 pp. Tecelpt of price, ) cents <. ient free on application AIUMPHREY! OMEOPATHIC MED,CO 109 Fulton Street, New York. NER!UUS DEBILITY HUPH % Vital Weakness and Pros. tration from over-work or 1s radically cured by li 4ndlscrotion, @nd prompiy} Toen in uso 2 years, —la the most sucoess- ful remedy known. Price $Tper vial, ort vials darre vial Of powder for 84 sent post freo on cetpt of prics, H ! 00, Mot “likist, Catalogue troad 100 Fuiton b N: iiorioks Foua for Terenvs e v eyt e "k o 6 cents. Bent by mall for amount f stamps. 0" Dok senit free. Horliek's Food Con, Raclne,Wis, m KERvOUS Denmwrry, VimaLiTY, ASTiNo WeaKnzases, dul*:udhuu-ot = wFRE A, P 4 ud i6on d a once for Fustoration to ‘He MANHOOD Etn s VOLTAIC BELT CO., Mars| aplum ORPHINE HABIT I kAR St ean e biman e orssmante froim i Tiont o eal yan b ot R EASE LN, MD) 100 Vultan Bice Now ork Clpe H.B. HUDSO Receatly of (Boston,) has op&llltl an olegant [new Mes Fumishings ! UNDER THE MILLARD HOTEL. F*NE < In'Spring Wel IIT NDERWEA AHD HOSIE NEWESP AND LATEST DESIGNS IN NECKWEAR, JEWELRY, HANDKERCHIFS, BRAOCES, ETC, Coaching, WQIkin?, Street and Evening Gloves. FINE WHITE & COLORED SHIRTS, Eoglish, Pique,and Full Dross Shrite, SHIRTS MADE TO MEASURE. THE GREAT HEALTH TONIO! Hoff’s Malt Extract! Front ot Bottle Back ot Bottle Is the best health bev- erags kuown and con. tains but 4 per cout of aloohol. Used very large- 1y by our best phy¢lcians for Nurslog Mothers, Dys- y + Uin Merino and Cotton. ~ U. P. BAKERY, 1614 Webster St., Omaha, Neb., (Buocessors to the old U, P. Bakery,10th Bt.,) ALL KINDS OF BREAD, FANCY CAKES AND PIES o hand, Orders will be atten- WAGNER E'&n, o eprgstm Proprietors. DREXEL & MAUL, (SUCCESSONS 10 JOHN G. JACORS) S S Bt e v v very The following quaintly worded ye sraphic description of the work ¢ season's operations : ago. Then, at the door one found lines of filteen catty boxes and waiting to be sol- dered up. Now, none. and thers throngh holes tomporarily stop- ped_with bamboo leaves; the bottom of the bags mostly stained from contact with wot flights of mountain stairs upon which the exhiasted cooly had set them down on the passage. Now, one finds but empty chests, hun dreds in_number, square, deep and oblong, uscd for handling the tea in the factory. Ordinary tea chests would not stand tho rough usage. I'ather on, one comes to the dozen long double row of sifters facing each other, forty in & row, the mesh of one taking a pencil that of others refusing a pencil point— sifting tea leaf rough and bold, that aftera persuasive grasp or two in the hand broke, and consented, after a few shakes in the sieve, o bo stripped of the sappy leaf edges and to appear below, the even and uniform leaf whiv{l tea the drinker ‘insists he must have (plus the dust due to persuading.) The transformation in a rongh leaf on pas- sing the meshes of n coarse sieve, with n gentle crush from the sifter's hands, en- hances o rough bold tea much in value. In place of the rows of men then scen, tilting and jerking their solves in a mo- notony only broken by the Cantonese task- maker's roll call twice aday before the general meal of fish and rice, there is now 1o be seen only the jare floor of hardened earth, piles of empty benches stacked in a 8 of the twelve differ- nt sizes used, each in its division in the three story stands. Che dozen or score of fanning mills are still now. The trained hands aregone that turned the cranks with a uniform motion, sending the heavy tea, light tea, and flaky dust each down its respective spout sepa- rated, never again to meet, unless haph; and, mixed in & Whitochapel grocer’s wi dew. The tea leaf separated In theso fanning mills has been parted with at the smari loss of "Tis, 8,000 on 2,500 piculs to the for- cign buyer, and has heen let go by the lat- ter to the London dealer or auction room habitue. The mills now stand still. The tea growers in the hills who waited throngl June and July for their money have now been paid. The losses to the packers here, however, have been 80 smart that there is a little third crop ten now being packed in Foochow, and_the mills will rest until an- other May shall bring the physical conrage bred of hot blood back to t. pale and dis- pirited native teamen. © There are stacked up in this huge go-down a few hundred packages of a native maker's brick tea wrapped in plaited bamboo_strips, bound in half bamboo and triply rattanned. Aside here, the Chinese upper mill stone is being turned upon the nether by a Chinese who is grinding the sceds left by the fan- ning mill, In these sycce boxes sharp spades are fulling upon the tea stems, chopping them fine enough to go into the stemmy dust mixture to which the seed dust gives the strength, while the chopped stems vouch for it being tea. In the firing house, four Chinese rice kettles, two feet across the mouth, sct ob- liquely across the edge, turn the tea back in a shower over the hand of the stirrer, o wood fire being kept up in the brickwork underneath. Fire holes, scores in number, follow in rows the walls of the firing house; in cach an iron pan is placed, ready-fill and rounded with charcoal ready to be lit. Placed over each of these fires is a huge hour-glass-shaped-hasket-hood or mufiler that shuts in all heat of each firo to but one outlet-~that through the tea sieve that chokes the throat of each basket. In these baskets is dried off the tea that comes from the hills wet or flat from con- stant down pours and from the first fer- mentation of the leaf. These fires are out and all is still. Here too, on the floor above, the benches are empty where girls and women came— some t00 often—to throw out the stems from the leaf, getting half a cent for ro- moving those from two catties of tea given them in wound bamboo woven trays. The floor is now bare where we saw the Ningteh tea brought to a uniform shade, by shaking in bags with a few spoonfuls of lampblack ; then balked upon the floor, only to be strewn white as a grave in gpring with the pure munil blossoms; then blossoms in ‘turn, buried under an- other ayalanche of funeral tea, and this again with blossoms, life upon death ; then both were rudely mingled together and put away in boxes for a night till the fra- gmuco should have Leen robbed by the dead tes, and the faded flowers be thrown aside, spent and worthless. Our round finishes at theseed where Chinese lads, out of long sheets of lead, are glibly making lead cases by moulding them, hatter-like, upon a box, and then ranning the soldering iron along the edges. Here Chinamen in their natural costume, bheside this huge four-hogshead vat of hot water, are washing off’ the dust and sweat of the day, Here are piles of wood for the hot an | teo coppers, crates of up-river hardwood charcoal for' the firing pans and firing bas- kets, ‘We must leave without the sight wo {hen had of the mad dervish dance of two Chinese, who given a dozen pounds of tea stems under their sandles in a tray, perform- ed about the interior periphery a double shuffle, twist and grind of the enemy under the heel, that is cooler for the spectator, the thermometer in the ninetics, than for the performers, from whose bodies the per- spiration rolls into the stems below. The box factory is elsewhere, We enter on our homew: way. It is another old isused tea hong ocenpied by foreigners in the days when money was made, tumble- down now and abandoned to Chinese. In- side, o few Chinese youths entln( o dollar’s worth of rice per month, are rapidly gluing and dove-tailing together, by rough whole- some strokes, hoxes by the score. nails are used, for these sre handmade and canpot he afforded. What & bungling mend- the merchant will pa‘{ for when these cases reach the land of rough usage und coarse nails! Here you sce a bit of thin tea-wood, there a bit of paper gaudily daubed with cardinal colors, . stroke or two, side mar ries end, the gaudy r:)per cover hides all oints, and the catty boxes, gay with bird, tterfly, dragon and phenix, are en route to be stared at in a retail grocer's window, Oancer for Twent; Years. M, W. R. Robison, Davisboro, Ga., writes, am nder dlfil“::lllllll’vt 1884: “I finel; uleer 1that Switt's Spociic will ous noer which has e Barron, of Banning, Ga,, wril 54:" Ul barwnsas s sl e 0 G, ated March 8, 1884 #oue out of the’ Canser," and tly improved. T have uk:’-lx bottles of m Bkin Cancer, which I Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseasos mailed | the first place, you make me say: ‘Satan Now I know nothing about Tue Swirr Sezcivic Co., Drawer 8, At-| the internal anatowmy of the father of lies. #1's Seecirio, for a have had for years " free. lauts, Ga. e —— To distinguish wrought and cast iron | els of com from steel, uce & polishi nitric , which should /nain for one or two minutes. Then wash t will look waish black }islatu on cast iron. Tt is}laws, carbon present in various proportions that | has m: off with water, and Q'ijl:ll on wro m!fl?:vud p produces the different appesrance. I'ea Curing and Packing in Foochow. ne in a is a paealinr morbid condition of |large Chiness tea packing house is given the | by the Foochow Herald, at the close of a large packing house presents a vory different scene from that of two months Next, one found fat bags stacked up eight or ten' feet, burst- ing with Pehling tea that had escaped here OMAHA DAILY BEE-TUESDAY, MAY 6, 1684, S ———————————————————————————— e — S —————————————— ———— — B e———— e A Ship-load of Monkeys, An American consular officer relates a very fuuny occurrence, which came under his observation during his official residence in Liverpool. A wealthy ship-owner, who was better at maki money than at spell- ing, senv an order to Bombay, and among other things wrote for two monkeys, which he wanted to present to friends ; but de- parting from the usual mode of spelling the word two, he putit foo. Perhaps the hand- writing was not very legible, as is often the case with other than illiterate ship-owners, At any rate, tho master of the ship read it 100 instead of too, and 5o did the agents at Bombay. There was much_astonishment at 50 strange an order, but the master was hound to obey instructions. Accordingly the service of a number of natives were secured, the country round about was scoured, and in a few days a hundred monkeys, of all colors and previous conditions, were secur- ed. There were little black monkeys, with eyes like beads, bigger monkeys with whise kers, and baboons wlose grave expression of countenance presented a ridiculous con- trast to their undignified antics. The whole crowd chattered, screamed, and fought in the cago which had been provid- ed for them in the ship, in spite of all ef- forts to keep them quiet. In a few days the homeward yoyage was hegun, and with it the troubles of the crew, As 0o a8 the motion of the ship was felt, the monkeys redoubled their noise, making a regular pandemonium of the ship. Relays of them shook the bars of the cage without a moment's cessation for twenty-three hours out of each twenty- four, until the cage was literally shaken to picces, and the astonished sailors beheld a cloud of monkeys issuing from_the hold, scrambling, fighting, and tumbling over each other as if theirlives depended upon getting into the rigging in the shortest pos- gible time. The monkeys, with mischiey- ousness unparalleled, would steal every thing they could lay their hands on, If clothes were hung up to dry they would carry them up to the highest point attain- ableand pick them to pieces. It was nec- essary to set a guard over every thing that a8 washed or dried. ‘When the cabin boy awept the deck he had to lock up the broom, for if he hid it ever 8o securely, his back would scarcely be turned before an old ape, half as big as a man, would have it, going through the motion of sweeping the deck with an air of indescribable gray- ity. So great was the annoyance that Was with great difficulty that the officers could keep the men from shooting their tormentors, and when the ship touched at Aden half of the crew deserted, prefering to take their chances at this inhospitable ¢lace than to endure further persecution. Tinaily the shipreached home. Shehad heen signaled at Land’s End, and the own- er wasat the dock when she crrived, Ship- owners generally pria s themsolves on the trim appearance of their ships, and our Iriend was weak in this respect, i in no other. ‘What then was his astonishment to sce the ship's rigging crowded with knots or bunches, with here and there a festoon whereseveral monkeys had suspend- ed themselves from a spar in astring, hold- ing each other by the taill Everybody about the docks viewed with wonder the approaching spectacle. The ship moved slowly to her berth, and presently her yard arms neared those of several other vessels lying at dock. I an instant the monkeys leaped from one to the other, and began a tour among the forests of masts that fringed the harbor of Liverpool. All the boys and idlers around the dock were ongaged, and a grand hunt ensued, up and down the rigging from ship to ship, until all were captured. The owner was furious, but was, after a i | that Fuacl Here and There. PROPOSALS FOR INDIAN SUP. PLIES AND TRANSPORTATION. " OF THE INTERIOR, Office of # Washington, April 7, 1884 osals, indorsed “Proposals for Beef” (.ids a8t bo sunmitted in separats envelopos,) ar, Clothing, or Transportat the oase may'be,)and directed to the Commissiner of Indian Affairs Nos. 05 and 67 Wooster atreot, New York, will be recoived until 1 v, M. of Tuesd for furnishin 20,000 porinds Bac £00,000 potun 80,000 pounds Corn, 00,000 pounda Flour, 70,000 pounds Feed pouncs Hard Bread One of the discomforts of a winter in Con tinental Europe is the lack of such fires for heating as we think essential in American hiouses. If one has a long purse, and does not mind the expense, thoy can_he had there as here, but were onc in Paris or Rome to indulge in mich roaring fires as wo keep constantly going in furnaces and grates, it would be regarded even by the wealthy as an extravagmnce surpassing that of the Roman Emperows. To be sure, the houses are 8o built as not to be as suscep- tible of changes of temperature as those in which the majority of our people live, % ity walls and partitions are thicker, the win- | 220,000 poundsatt, 150,000 pourd dows and doors closer fitted, and they re- | 00, 860,000 pounds' Sugar, and tain the heat longer. Then the stoves in use there for heating are constructed so a comparatively small part of the ieat is wasted. But e with all these precautions an American, accustomed o generous and blazing conl and wood fires, finds the apartments warmed sufficient for the comfort of the ive cold, and shivers 08 he recalls the fires blazing on his native hearth. p He learns with surprise in Paris that the wood with which his dinner is cooked or his shins warmed is gold by the pound, and is weighed out to the purchaser as care- fully as butter, sugar, or coffee. A hand- ful of twigs, such as in America would be allowed to rot, costs five cents, and better 000 pounds ,000 potiads Blankets, Woolen and_Cotton Goods, i vart of Ticking, 20000 yard ndard Oalico, 185,000 yards; Drilling, 9,000 vards; Uuck,0 tree from sl sizing, '#0,000 yar Calico Shirting, ). Clothing, Gro Books, &¢. a.d a Jong list of miscellanious articles, il Plows, Rakes. Forks, 8 roquired for the Brakes, delivered at 8¢ Also, transportation for such «{ the artioles, goods, and plies that may not be contracted for to be HIDS MUST IR MADK OUT ON GOVERNMENT BLANKS, 03 showing the Kkinds and stock tea with Ground Ol Cako 1 the delivered at the Agencice. its merits. Try 1b and Juder ARCHITECTURAL IRON WORK. Oolumns, Pilasters, Lintels, Fencing, Oresting, Railing, BEtc.. Oast, and Wrought Iron Beams. Agents for THE HVATT PRISMATIC LIGHTS, THE MURRAY IRON WORKS €0., Burlington, lowa. THE LARGEST IRON WORKING ESTABLISHMENT IN THE STATE. “SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Cround Oil Cake. athe best and oheapest food 1or Wtock of any hind, One pound is equal o three pounds of corn ik 1 & i Winter, inscead of rinning down, will incrowe in weight w.tion In the spring. Dairymen, &% woll an others, Who use it can tertity to yourselvoe. - Prico §26.00 por #-a: no charge for acks, Addross WOOTAES 'y TANSRRD Frr mAMn AN Nob. d be in good marketal Jrood at proportionato pri 8o fires on ] the continent are a luxury, and in many v i goods houses are, except for cooking, not seen the | 3o e Gierved vy B l’f,’:,‘",",,‘,‘,:;”,’,fifl,’,‘;,‘;':,""‘“'"" year round, torme of contrac rhent, transportation routes, But if fires are expensive and fuel searco ’7”{‘"‘ "’".:'“"':‘,‘;; Wil be furnished and high in Continental Europe, what 67 Woostar Streot, shall we say of Japan, where charcoal, split wood, brush and dried grass are used for cooking and heating booths and is hardly ever used outside the cities for purely heat~ ng purposes, The charcoal is mad ¢in wooded regions, and carried to the settlements in straw sacks on the backs of men and horses. A good comfortable fire, such as our people mnust have to keep them warm, would cost several dollars a day. But our extravagance in fuel diminishes ew ork; the Commis A, at Crogonne Chi- Leavenworth, Omaha, £aiut Lovis, Saint Paul, o, and’ Yaukton; the Postmaster (& stnastors at tho following named placesin Kaneas: Arkansas City, Rurlington, Caldwell, Dodge City, Emporia, Kurekn, reat Bend, Howard, Hutohinson, Larned, Mo Pherson, Marion, Medicine Lodge, Newton, Osage City, Sedan, Sterling Topeka, Welllniton, Wichita and Winfield: Bids wilte openca at the hour and day above stated, and bidders are invited to be present ¢ the openin/, CERTIFIED CIECKS, All bids must bo accompanied by certified checks GARRABRANT:COLE .- Trial Orders Solicited, Satisfaction Guaraniped, { ssor rarmam». W EHOLESALHE CIGARS & TOBAGGO, TEE NEW HOUSE OF Fine Havana, Key West and Domestic Cigars. All Standard Brands Tobaccos, with the years and the increasing cost of fuel. Weo will travel a good ways, and have then to seek communities remote from railroads, to find such wood fires as kept the log cabins and thin frame houses of the pioneers warm. The great fire plac- es, with their wide fronts and immenso chimneys, their great andirons, back-logs, fore-logs, and sections of seasoned split wood four or five feet long, piled high, are hardly known save in remote settlements, But we make ava of coal s our fathers did of wood, and will probably coutinue to do 8o till the cost of it compels a study of economy in the methods of heating houses, and_ servants are instructed how to manage fires so as to upen rome United States Depasitory or the First National Bank af Los Angel or at leass five per cent of the amount of tne proposal. H. PRICE, Cowmissioner, Northeast Nehraska ALONG THE LINE OF THE Chicago, St Paul, Minneapolls and OMAHA RAILWAY. The new extension of this line from Wakefleld up 0 BEAUTIFUL VALLEY of the GAN Lamber, L, Shingles | Piokets, § Near Union Pacific Depot, - - e dJ. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LINE, CEMENT, PLASTER, 0. STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Omaha, Neb, secure the most heat with the least amonnt through Concord and Coleridge of fuel. einnati Commercial. TO EARTINGTON, e ——ee. Re: he best portion of the State, Special ex. HumAN BLoon.—un the purity and vi- on rates for land tockera over this line to ini?yhoi th}(: blood depend the I;igur ;uu} M) LR LR s ERC BUOVIA TR O/l health o the whole system. Discase of 3 various kinds is often only the sign that | SIOUX CITY & PACIFIC RAILROAD nature is trying to remove the dmturbmfi ik bors Bioas s b o HA g o e o cause. A remedy that gives lifo an Narfolk, vigor to the blood, eradicates scrofula CTonncct at Blaix and other impurities from it, as Hood’s or Fremont, Oakda e, Noligh, and through to Val- Sarsaparilla undoubtedly does, must be G the means of proventing many disenses #£ar For rates end all information call on i r > F. P. WHITNEY, General Apent, that would occur without its use. bnld] bv dealers GLISH INFANTRY.—The standard of ‘BRUNSWIGK & co. Hall's Safe and Lock Compy | SAFE, VAULTY, LOCKS, & P. BOYER & CO.. , DEALERS IN FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF 1020 Farxy .mm Streeot. Omah height for the Infantry of the line is now fivo feet six inches, and for chest measure- BlLLIARDS. raont it isthirty-four inches; no vecruit is accopted who does not fulfill'these require- while, mollified by an explanation, and the difficulty satisfactorally adjusted. The monkeys wero gradually sold off, realizing mn of whout fifty dollars above what had oost. —————— The Testimony of a Physiclan. saya for_soveral yeara I have been using a Cough Balsam, called DR_WM, HALL'S BALSAM FOR THE LUNGS, and in al- most overy case throughout my practice, I have had entire success. I have used and pre- scribed hundreds of hottles ever since th days of my army practice (1863), when I was sur- goun of Hospital No, 7, Louisville, Kontucky, .. Henry's Oarbolic Salve. Tt is the Best Salve for Cuts, Bruises, Sores Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Tetter, Chapped Hands Chilblains, Corns and all kinds of Skin Erup James Beacher, M, D., of Sigourney,flowa, e ments, which are in excess of those in all, and considerably higher than those in most Continental armies. Some, indeed, are in favor of lowering these standards, because in consequence of them we are forced to reject 5o many recruits whose chest meas. urement i3 ouly thirty-three inches, but whom, in every, other respect, it would be rable to enlist. Without'in any way going back to the very low standards to which we have often liad to resort in the duyc of long service, we would at any nmcnent increase the number of our ro- cruits very considerably by reducing our standard fo that of Germany or of France. In 1873 there was in every 1,000 men in the Fifteenn Ball Pool, Carom, AND ALL OTHER GAMING TABLES. TEN PIN BALLS, CHECKS, ETC, 18 South 3d Street,£8t. Louis, 1411 Delawsre Street, Kausas City, Mo., 1821 bougias St.. Cmahs, Neb, HENRY HORNBERGER, Agent. or Catalogues and Prico Lists. Wholesale H. B. LOCKWOOD (formerly of Lockwood & Draper) Chicago, ian- AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & "RAND POWDER Ct / STEELE, JOHNSON& CO., I'GCers { 0 ager of the Tea, Cigar and Tobacco Departments. A full line of I\ all grades of above; also pipes and smokers’ articles carried in stock. Prices and samples furnished on application. Open orders intrusted to us shall receive our careful attention Satisfaction Guaranteed. army 412 under five feet seven inches, and 588 ovor that same height; in 1850 the numbers were 398 and 602 respectively. Surely these facts show a decided improve- ment in the physical strength of our sol- DUFRENE & MENDELSOHN., ARCHITECTS tions, Freckles and Pimples. DURNO'S CATARRH SNUFF cures all affections of the mucous membrans, of the bead and throat, Red Horse Powders curs diseases in animals, bl Novel Use of Canceled Greenbacks. * “What becomes of all the greenbacksand bank-notes after they have served their few years of usefulness ?” is a frequent query. A bank-note has its life just the same as all other things useful. What an_interesting story the travels of a greenback, from the moment it leaves the press until it returns to the macerating machine, wonld make! The average lifo of & bank-note is about three years, perhaps a littlo longer. Aftar serving its purpose as currency it is meta- morphosed into rabbits, birds and other figures. The process of the destruction of tho notesisan iteresting one. The réader will often seo in the daily papers a para- graph something like this: “National bank- notes received for redemption to-day, $500,- 000" 'The next day these notes are carried to the Bureau of Engraviug and Printing and placed in a machine containing im- mense knives, which chop the notes into small fragments. This operation is con- tucted under the supervision of three offi- cers of the Treasury Department, especially detailed for this purpose. No oneis allow= ed to be present at this daily maceration of the notes except the uilicers and the men who run themachine. They arscompelled to remain in the room until each separate note is destroyed, They must account in ad 3 mflfl will oure the horrible | * The Stark County (Wis.) News thoughy oeding on me for over | that sermons were pretty good reading b surfiuce by | els, he eactalaly s Rare o ues or filing, and a drop of 3 Satan has & ng, {:gl’:fio' rop of | liver. detail afterwards to the Redemption Bureau for each noto ; and should one become lost Few | OF mislaid, and afterwards find its way into | auyestow it upon them. circulation, the result would be the im- mediate dlmhnqiu of the three gentlemen who daily have in their custody from half & million to two or three millions of notes and bonds, Theshreds arereduced to pulp, sod then by a patented process this masa is molded into figures of birds and animals and sold as mementoes to visitors, Often- times it will happen that one little object will be com] of what once was $100, 000 worth of money. Durkee's Salad Dressing is composed of the freshest, purest, and choicest condi. ments money will buy, It surpasses any that can be made ot home, is cheaper, saves labor * nd all anxiety, for that publishing them, ion, and made @ practice of One of them appeared with several mistakes, and the reverend- gertleman wrote as follows to the editor: “ Dear Bir—1I wish to correct some mis- takes made in publishing my remarks. In hgs a liver. He is ularly uuplnnod to have horns, nwmflsnwil but he is also sup) be destitute of bowels ; at least, jou; and if he has no bo ‘What lever, WIOLe Wi —— pensation to e bow- 4= the slightest henefit.” a During forty years the Rhode Island leg- ?:’runn{i thirty-eight different dog .y bk, Fee Here is one body of legislators that flife.” Otto J. Doeshur, ade an effort to earn its allotted com- diers, and affords a positive denial toall the wild statements which are so commonly bandied about as to the inferiority of the recruits who now enlist under the short service system, compared with those wo used to obtain formerly.— English Paper. e— A Sensible Man would Use, Kemp's Balsam for the Throat and Lungs. It is curing more cases of Coughs, Colds, Ast. hma, Broncbitis, Croup, and il 'Throst and Lung troubles, than any other medicige. The proprietor has authorlzed Schroedor & Becht, to refund your mones 1 r taking throe-fourths of a bottle, relief is not obtained. Price ;ili‘) conts and $1, For sale by Schosder ocht, —— £FREMOVED TO OMAHA NATIONAL {BA BUILDING. Western Comice-Warks, IRON AND SLATE ROOFING, C. SPECHT, PROP. Omaha, Neb. 1111 Dou Ias S8, — |} — funerals nee. MANUFACTURER OF There is one French custom we should like to see introduced into the United States, and become universal, In France, when a funeral passes, ¢ man raises his hat to saluts The de- ceased person may have been o child, ¢ pauper, or a beggar; it is no matter; the eortege is saluted by every man, whether h¢ be prince, millionaire, or mendicant, It is a good and lovely custom. w things are more humiliating than to see a funeral trotting down Broadway, in New York, winding in_and out among the vehicles and other obstructions, exciting nc more remark or attention than if' it were ¢ procession of old hacks going to the repai shops. In New York, the rapid pace seems unavoidable, owing to the great distance tc the cemeteries, Elsewhere, funeralsat least move with & decent slowness, and the evi- dent sorrow of the followers seems to plead to the passer-by for sympathetic recogni- tion. It were a mark of civilization in us 6alvanizea Iron Cornices 4% Dormor Windows, Fintals, T Slato ooling, Specht’s Patent M light, ) atent djusted Ratchet Bar agd Bracket Shelving. ho everal agent for the above line of goods. ‘“randas, Iron Bank agent for Peerson & Hill’s Patent Inside Blind. 'THIS BELTor Regenra-o tor is made expressly for the cure of derangements of the generative orgens, Thero is no mistake about this instrument, the con- tinuous stream of ELEC. TRICITY pormeating through the parts must res tore them to hralthy action Do not confound this with Electric Belts advertised to cure all flls from headjto toe. 1t is for the ONE speo- ific purpose. For circulars giving full information, address Cheever Elootrio Belt Co., 103§ Washington 8t., Chicago 11l SPRING Ts the season in which bad or poisoned blood is most apt to dhow itselt, Nature at this juncture, peeds something to assiet it in throwing off the kopunities which have collected by the stuggish circulation of blood duriug the cold winter wonths, Switt's Speci- — Horstords's Acid Phosphate, IN NIGHT SWEATS AND PROSTRATION, Dr. P, Srupnavres, St, Louis, Mo,, says: “‘I have used it in dyspepsia ner- vuous prostration and in' night sweats, with very good results. i Wholesale Druggists ! 317 8. 13th 8t., - 0. M., LEIGHTON. H. T, CLARKF, LEIGHTON & CLARKE, BUCCESSORS TO KENNARD BROS, & C0.) —DEALERS IN— Oile. Brushes. Ciasg. ‘AAT AR Paints- OMAH~ T This cut shows a sectionat view of our New:Polar Air Dry Refrigerator, manufac- tured in the most perfect wanner of Kiln-Dry lumber Charcoal Killed, Zine Lined Galvanized lron Shelyes Black Enameled Trim mings Handsomely paneled, and desigoed for the wants of a class of trade that re- quires the he?t clx(lias of oods that can be made. 3 We shall sell these Re-fl-—r- 4 frigerators at manufactur- er's prices, with freight ad del. Yon are respectfully mvited to examine them. Compare prices befora buy- Respectfnlly, W L. WRIGHT, Manufacturer's Agent. “OMAHA, NEBRASKA. d flo isnature's great helper, a4 it Is & purely vezomble alterative and tonlo. Rev. L. B. Pain L writos: “Wo have been using 8 pecs o orphans’ home sy a remedy for blood complaints, and as & general 4MOPAGATING FUCHSIAS.—The following method of raising your plants of fuchsias is said to be practised by the cottagers in t‘i‘xe ;‘v‘:t of l‘angland;d :hn the untrhm,nit:‘i 0 it has destroyi e folinge, the w & Rable’ resl of the present season is cut off close to the | hlth tonics ang bave bafremprianle, rovulis rem ground, and laid like sheaf of corn in a mu:d It is unh' m '-;:;c:y:?mm;lfl“ "f?b‘f?{f ‘m- o pure, 0 mains antil spring, when & multitude of | W. IL Gilbert, druggist, Albauy shoots may be scen pushing their way | aresellive se i iapt Bty Byoct through. The soil is then carefully moved, | b b!.m.uu'.. o ey uaed 8 reton: ith & shar v 0 a. T o) k. :flld“ :fl:}j;:nt m’;fl':’:fi'::.‘m:a’pfi: e e o 1 T i enough for the parish, The old stool | Ovrtreatise on Blood aud Skin Discases mailed throws up more vigorously than before, to A A 0 by mp g SWIFT SPECIFIC GO, be served in the same way the following Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga. sutumn,” Macon, G N Y. Offloe, 160W.23d t., SEGER & TONER MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN HARNER, SADDLES WuIPS, ETO, ke nvory fine licht haroens, and have al: % hand & orss. Clothing, Ourey LR 0 S e L Threw Away $3,50, “Troubled with astma for eight years. Not quite twn battlos of Fhomas’ Feleciric Ol cured me completely after spending over $350 without This is what August Trubuer, of Tyrone, Pa., says. Proved a Big Benefic, *‘Hag magieal pain killing aud healing pro- Hulf of a fifty-cont bettle cured we utism and a cold that had seitled in as woll as I ever did in my rop'e Holland Caty News. Hollsnd, Mich., speaking for ?homas’ Eclectric Qily 6. A. Lindquest & Go,, FINE TAILORING AT MODERATE PRICES. Without exception we have this spring one of the finest IMPORTIN TAILORS, 1206 Farnam Street. lines of Spring Woolens