Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 16, 1884, Page 2

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9 —_— . ] Indulgence and Excesses, Whother overeating or drinking are Hop Bitters made harmless by using froely, giving elegant appetite and enjoy- ment by using them beforoand removing all dullness, pains and distressafterwards, loaving the head clear, nerves steady, and all the feelings, buoyant, elasticand more The pleasing effects | He Declares Hibernation of Humans happy than before, of a Christian or sumptous dinner contin- uing days afterwards. Eminent Testimony; N. Y. Witnoss, Aug, 151850, I find that in addition to the pure apirita_contained in_their composition, oy rontain the extracts of hops and other well known and highly approved medicinal roots, leaves and tinctures in quantities sufficient to render the articlo what the makers claim it to be, to wit, a medicinal preparation andnot a beverage —unfit and unsafe to be used excopt as a mediclne. *“From a careful analysia of their for. ula—which was_attested under oath find that in every wine-glassful of Hop o from thoe distilled spirits are equal full dose for an adult, which fact in pinion, subjects it to an interal rov- tax as & modicinal bitier,” EX B. Ravy, U. S, Com. In. Rev. Hardened Liver, Five years ago I broke diwn with kid- ney and Liver complaint and rheumatism. Since then I havebeen unable to be about at all. My livor became hard like wood; my limbs were puffed up and fillad with water. All the best pilyaiclnxu agreod that nothing could cure me. [ resolved to try Hop Bitters;21 have used seven bot- tles; the Hardness has all gone from m; Tiver, the awelling from my limbe, and 1o has worked a miraclo in my case; othor- wiso I would have been now in my grave, J. W. Morey, Buffalo, Oct. 1, '81. Poverty and Suffering, *1 was dragged down foring for years, caused o bills of doctoring. 1 w plotely discouragod, until one yoar ago, by the advice of my pastor, | commenoed using ‘Hop Bitters, and in one month we wero all well, and none of us have day sinco, and I'want to say to all yoor m keep your families woll a year with Hop 2 Tossthan ono doctor's visit will cost, T know it.” A, WORKINGMAX poverty and sut- family and Inrge B onfoovled 3 suffering from agon: oral want of tone, and its usual concomit- ants, dyspepsia and \ dom derivable from the use of & nour- ishing diot and stim- o tivo, Iy tho 1t ia'the po seasion of STOMACH this grand require: ITTE mant’ Wil nakes A ke . v asan i ort go real need, igorant. or sale by all Drugglits and deal- tters, the active medicinal properties | kitten, with a five © | tached;to & sirap about its nock. ASLEEP FOR SIX WEEKS. Astonnding Assertions of & Cincinnati Modical Stadent, Possible and Brings to Life a Drowned Kitten, Cincinnati 1 “I have no_sleep for thirty-six hours, That's what I came to see you about, What shall I take—opium?” “No; not at all. You don't wan't drogs of any kind, Take a bath first. Hold on. Where are you going! Don’t get mad about it. 1did not mean the remark in an individual sense at all. The bath is not meant for purposes of cleanliness but meroly to equalize thedis- tribution of blood in the various parts of the body, particularly to draw it from the vessel in the head. Give your body a brisk application of friction’ after the bath by means of a course towel or flesh brush, and continue for ten or fif- toen minutes. Then, perhaps, you had bost swallow a fow drops of spirits of camphor in a wine-glass of wacer, and my word for it youwill sleep if your room is dark and quiet. Very often the application of a damp cloth to the base of the brain is all that is required to stop a man's brain from working and to send him to sleep, By all means avold oplates until every otber means of inducing sleep has been fruitlessly tried. *‘The {dea is altogether too common that when a man wants to go to sleep all he needs todo is to swallow a dose of opium or belladona, or inject a little morphine into his veins, 1 tell you every drug thatinfluces artificial sloep is a poison which leaves behind offects from which the user sometime never recovers.” The reporter knew the orator thorough! and moek! effect. “Soo here; this is one of my experi- ments in the study of the phenomena of sleep,” continued the talker—one of the five hundred medical students in Cincin- cinnati, who is making a specialty of this subject—producing from a choset in the rear of the room an ordinary water buck- et. Pushing back his coat sleeve and cuffs, he plunged his hand into the water and brought out a dripping tortoise shell pound rod-iron at- to bo y posted on tho subjeot {n hand, y made a note of the foregoing **This kitten has been under watcr for soven hours, but L will bet you a nickle | to a copper that he is not dead.” Tho little animal was perfectly limp and motionloss. The most careful oxam- ination failed to show any action of the heart, any vital heat or other evidence of life. ' Convrary Lo what night have been expected, however, its abdomen was not distonted with the usual volume of water awallowed by drowning animals; but this fack was oxplained by the student with- drawing cotton plugs from its ears and nostrils and disengaging a linen bandage from about its head, which has beon so placed as to provent the opening of tho animal’s mouth, & e bR, o 3. . WUTZERNANY, COLE AQENT, 51 BROADWAY. N. RED STAR LINE Ecigian Boyal and U.S, Mail Stoamers SAILING EVERY SATURDAY, BETWEE! NEW YORK AND ANTWERP, The Rhine, Germany, Italy, Holland and France Stoerago Outward, $20; Propald from Antwerp, §20; Excursion, $40, incliding bedding, ote, 24 Cabin, §50; Round Trip, §90.00; kxcursio loon from $60 to 890; Exoursion #110 to $100. £a7 Potor Wright & Sous, Gon, Agonte, 65 Broad- way N. Y. Catdwell, Hamilton & Co., Omah 208 N. 16th Streot, Ou ball, OmatinAgents. CGREAT ENCLISH REMEDY. LRVOUS Cures risicass Debiliy Guairau LOSS W OF MANLY VIGOR, Spermatorr i hwa, ete., when all other remo- IEdion’ tall’ 4 oure guaranteed. Y 3160 & bottls, large Y times tho quantity, 6. n( ox. pross to any address. Sold hl - all druggists. ENGLISH MEDI CAY, INSTITUTE, Proprietors, 718 Olive Stroet, 5t ottle, four s, Ao, I Have sold 8tr Astloy Goopor's Vital Rostorative highly of it I o or years. Every customer spoaks anositatinglyendorse it as a remedy of true morit D - Goopuax, D‘l;]\ln.ll vi8.mi The best evidence in tho world of the purity and excellenco of Blackwell's Bull Durhiam Bmoking Tobacco {s found in the fact that the fame of this tobacoo increases mall on recelpt of price in stamps. hi ) R D 0 e < ““If it has been under water seven hours that kitten is certainly dead.” “Not at all. In the course of time 1 will guarantee to take you and to down ou under the same conditions, and ten ours after you have stopped breathing 1 will pump wind into you and_start your lungs again, and acat has oight more livea than you have.” Never mind. I will take your word for it.” *‘That feat would be nothing. Let me tell you what I saw in India about throe years ago—and there are a dozen boys about the college now who have seen things that will seem even more incredi- hle to you—1I saw a Hindoo buried. alive, His grave was watched day and night, port of the time by myself, and at the ond of six weeks he wasdug up and brought back to life by some of his friends Ho went into the grave voluntarily, you undorstand, having propared himself for it before hand, and slept there for six weeks, much as & bear sleeps through the winter. ~ We gave him 60 rupees— that is, $30—for his trouble, an sidered himself well paid.” As Allan Ingalls remarked to one of con- “| his interviewers, a short time after he was arrested for burking the Taylor fam- ily, *‘These medical students are a power- ful queer lot o’ men,” “From that date I have given this study particular attention; but this ex- periment with the kitten is the only pleasura I have got out of it as yot. I ' | am always on the eve of a diccovery, but I never (uite strike it.” The body of the kitten was placed on the fender, before the open fire burning in the grate, and for several minutes the student rubbed it with a soft Turkish towel. With a tablo- knife he pried open tho tightly clonched jows and poured a spoonful of brandy into its mouth, confident that some of the liquor would find its way down the feline throat. After ten minutes’ manipulation there were no signa of life, beyond an in- creasing degreo of heat, which was, of course, due to the fire, The rubbings were continued, and the throat was carefully stroked for the pur- ose of assisting the brandy in finding its level. Presently the muscles of the lower jaw began to twitch, and the stu- dent left his work long enough to cuta pigeon-wing. “‘What did I tell you?" said he. ‘‘This cat was not drowned; life was only suspended for seven hours, and in thirty minutes more it will be crying fora saucer of milk."” Even while he was speaking, one of the rigid limbs began to curl up ina natural manner, and the pupils in both wide-open eyes gradually contracted, In thirty minutes, as had been promised, the drowned kitten was seated composed- ly before the fire, making its toilet. ““There will be some astonishing dis coveries made in the subject of suspend- ed animation before many years, and [ wonder that the] whole medical fraterni- ty are not working on it. Every boy knows that flies which have been floating in & basin of water apparently dead for hours will come to liFu when placed in the sun, and their resuscitation is just as wonderful as would be the bringing back to life of a human beiv ish ed to extreme cold will grow stiff and brittle as dry clay. They may be kept out of their native eloment in this condi- tion for a woek, and when replaced in the wator their faculties will return to them, **Bears curl up in their dens at the be- gioning of winter, and remain, to all in- tents and purposes, dead until the fol- lowing spring opens. In the course of ttme man will be able to do this,"” “‘Fut what will be the advantages! Who wants to sleep half his life away (" ““The thing will Klva & great many ad vantages. Suppose you have an income of $100 & quarter “That is about the size of it, sure enough,” “‘I say, suppose you have an income of $100 & quarter; you draw it and before P i the first month is in your money Is gone, and no more will come for two months, In the moantime you must live, but if you are able to sleep any desired length of time your living need cost you nothing. You curl yourself up in an attic,and there you are until the next day of payment draws near,” The student gracefully parted his ccat tails and took his place on the hearth- rug beside the cat. “That is all gammon. How am I, for instance, to go to sleep for two months at a stretoh when I can’t by any possibili- ty manage to keep my eyes closed for two houra!” “Do as I told you at the beginning of our talk and you will sleep. But I don’t want you to take my word for the fact that men have been in hibernation for as much as six weeks at a time. Sir Claude Wade, an attache of the British govern- ment in India, witnessed the burial alive of & man who was taken out of his grave after forty days and restored to consci- ousness, I can show you his own tosti- mony.” He produced from the same cupboard that had sheltered the bucket in which was the drowned kitten, a copy of Serib- ner's Monthly for December, 1880, and pointed to a paragraph in page 250, It read: I was prosent at the court of Runjit Singh, at Lahore, when a fakir was bur. iod alive for six weeks, and, though I arrived a few hours after he was interred, I had the testimony of Runjit Singh ana others, the most credible witnesses at his court, to the truth of the fakir having been buried before thern; and for having been present myself when he was disin- terred and restored to a state of perfect vitality, in a position 8o close to a8 to render deception impossible, it is my firm belief that there was no collusion in producing the extraordinary fact that I have related.” “There, you see, the voluntary hiber- nation of human beings is already an ac- complished fact, and when the civilized world becomes as higly educated in_the mysteries as these heathen Hindoos have been for fifty years, perhaps you will be- lieve it."” ——— Very Well Put, Why do wo dofer till to-morrow what wo should do to-day? Why do we neglect congh till it throws us into consumption, and c sumption brings us to the grave? DR. HALL'S BA M is sure to cure if taken in season. It has never boen known to fail, U it thoroughly according to direction vero till the disoase is conquerad, as it iy cer- tain to be, even if it should require a dozen hottles. There is no better medicine for pul- monary disorders, Sold everywhero. — ——— A Turkish Horse-seller, Boston Commercial Bulletin, The owner was called for, and a strap- ping fellow about 30 years of age ap- proached. He was attired in the Turk- ish costume, consisting of a short] jacket, blue ves: embroidered and covered with bell-buttons, and red fez; his hair was WILD ENGLISH GAMBLERS. Ruiged Britisk “Bloods” Who Coolly Blow their Braios Ont, The Days of Walpole ‘and the Noted Cocon Tree Club—Men Could Coolly Liose $100,000 ata Sitting. who Although America, and more_ partic- ularly the cities of New York and Wash- ington, have furnished many noted gam- blers, the amounts that have been staked and lost or won at play on this side of the Atlantic may be said to be small in com- parison with the tremendous ventures made abroad. Now that gambling has fallen into disrepute in England and in some parts of the Continent, the wealth- ier classes and sporting men of title fight rather shy of the green cloth, But the private clubs of London and the tables of Tonaco and Baden-Baden still furnish theit quota of patrons who frequently make ventures and take risks that are astonishing, and upon which the success or complete ruin of the player depednds, The famous old London gambling Kent Cocoa Tree Club, in St. James' street, had its origin in a Tory chocolate house in Queen Anne’s days, and assumed the higher form of a club in 1746, Members of parliament and persons high in life belonged to this club, which, it used to be said, exercised a very impartant in- fluence on the course of politics. In those days members of parliament were not always above taking a bribe, and many of the Cocoa Tree gentlemen were only too easilyinduced to accept bank notes for £200 or £300 each when the miniatry hard pushed, were obliged to resort to such a device to obtain support; and the peace of Fontainebleau is allegel to have cost the government in this way £25,- 000. Gambling also went on to a fearful extent at the Cocoa Tree. Horace Wal- pole relates, in;1770, that a Mr. O Birne, an Irishman, won £100,C00 from a young Mr. Harvey. “You can never pay me,” said O’ Jirne. “ can,” replied the young fellow; “‘my estate will sell for the amount.” ‘‘No,” said the Irishman, *‘I will take £10,000, and we will throw for the old " | ninety. They did, and{Harvey won. In most of the fashionable clubs of the last contu ry goming was carried on in the most rockless manner, In the club book of Almack's there is this note: “Mr. Flynne, havingjwon only 12,000 guineas during the lust two months, retired in disgust March 21, 1772.” To lose £20,000 in_ono evening was not unusual, Generally £10,000 in_ spe- cio lay on tho table. A curious account is given of the way theso desporate gam- short, face dark, with bright, gleaming oyes, and a fierce mustache. He was nfiuvu the medium size, and withal a pleasant-looking fellow. “Now, my son,” said the Captain, “how much do you ask for the horse?” Making a salaam the Kurd answered. ““Master, if thy servant hath found fa- vor in thino oyes, thou shalt have the horse for 200 sequins.” ©0, Falher of the Faithful, herr the thief !” shouted the old fellow with the swivel neck. “Iwo hundred sequins for the brute, when Iwillsell mybeautiful bestfor 100.” “‘You ask too much, my son,” said the Captain. ““Thou seest, O Frangistani, that my horse is swift as an arrow from the bow, and that he springeth like a jackal. See his loins ; they are in strength as the lion.” I gee all these things, O child of the Faithful, but yet thou asketh too much.” “Well, please God, thou wilt buy him for 1560 sequins.” ~<Now, may dogs defile thy grave, thou robber!” shouted the fellow who sported the bluo gabardine and yellow slippers “Wouldat thou cheat the stranger within our gates, whon for eighty sequins he can buy my beast, the pride of Bassora, instead of mounting the old camel, which is it for nothitg but lepers to ride?” “T will count down in thy hand twenty sequins with the Sultana of Frangistan thereon for thy horse,” said the Captain. “What hath thy servant done to thee, O master, that thou should thus revile him} Say eighty, and we shail rejoico.” “No: 1 will give the twenty.” “Fifty sequins, and ho is thine.” “No.h “‘Ho is of the'children of Araby; but still thou mayest have him for forty.” “Twenty, or we shall depart in poace.” ““In Allaha’s name, say thirty.” “No.” ““Well, thou shalt have him for twen- ty; but be kind to Selim, for he is a good horse, and loves not beating.” e A Bottle 248 Ye: From the Washington Mo., Observer, Mr. L. Green, of Newport, called at this oftice last Saturday morning and ex- hibitea to us a four ounce bottle, the existence of which is clearly traced back 248 yoars, It can not properly be called a square or round bottle, as the corners and edges hardly approach either. Evidently the process of blowing glass at the time it was made was in its incipien- oy. The bottom was doubtless intended to be flat, but the corners and edges are not equarely and smoothly turned, and in the centre of the bottle a daub of mol- ton glass seems to have ,been cut on to stop up the hole that was left by reason of the edges failing to come together and close in the bottom, The shoulders at the top of the bottle, 00, look as if they were intended to be blown square, but instead of this they awkwardly doubled in toward the center, The neck of the bottle is short and straight, without the usual rim atthe top, and at the bottom of the neck it spreads out and is apparently molded into the hole left at the top of the bottle where the glass laps over from the shoulders. Up and down the body of the bottle in a sort of twisting shape are large but pretty uniform ridges which appear to be on the outside, but upon feeling the bottle they are discovered t» be but slightly indented on the outside and must be either inside or running through the interior of the .| body of the glass. This bottle was brought from Germany in 1616 by Jobn Baker (the German name would probably be spelled Becker), who sottled in Philadelphia. When he died the bottle fell into the hands of his son, Fred Baker, then into the hands of Frod’s son, Karl, and then into the hands of Karl's daughter, Rachel, who married Wm, Ramey and settled in St, Leuis county in 1880, Wm. Ramey was an un- ole of Mr. L. Green who secured the bottle from his uncle’s wife. Mr. Green has lived in this county for twenty-five years, and slill holds out to certify to what we have here written and show us the “‘documents.” — Although Pozsoni’s medicated complexion powder is perfoctly harmless and non-explo- ive, still it goos off aud makes & good report. Hold by all druggists. blors used to equip themselves for the sport. They took off their embroidered coats, put on frieze garments, protected their lace ruflles with picces of leather, shaded their eyes with broad-brimmed straw hats adorned with flowers and rib- bons, and wore masks to “‘conceal their omotions!” 'That suicide was not an un- frequent rosult of such high play can hardly be wondored at. Lord Mountford, a momber of Whito's, whero tho gamb. ling was fearful, got so terribly involved that ho determined to ask fora govern- ment appointment, and_feiling that, to take his own life. = Ho did fal, and after asking several porsons what was the easi- est mode of dyiyg, invited some frionds | ) to dinner New (ear's day, having supped the evening before at White's, where he played at whist until 1 o'clock in the morning. A fellow-member drinking to him a happy New Year, **ho clapped his hands strangely to his eyes.” In the morning he sent for a lawyer and three witnesses, made his will with great delib- eration, and then asked the lawyer if it would stand good though he were to shoot himself. The answer being yes, he said: ““Pray stay while I step into the next room,” and then, retiring, shot himself dead. According to Walpole, three brothers, members of White's, coutracted a gam: bling debt of 870,000, while Lord Foley's two sons had to borrow money to such an extent that the interest almost amounted to £18,000,000 a year. The same viva- cious chronicler of the manner of his times gives an almost incredible account of Fox's love of play and dissipation. In the debate on the thirty-ninth article, on on February 6, 1773, he spoke very in- differently, which, Walpole says, was not surprising under the circumstances. ““Ho had sat up playing hazard at Almack’s from Tuesday ¢vening, the 4th, till 5 in the afternoon of the following day. An hour before he had won back £12,000 that he had lost, but by dinner- timo, which was at 5 o'clock, when play ended, he had lost £12,000. On the Thureday he spoke in the above debate; went to dinner after 11 at night; from thence to /lng sk's, where he won £6,- 000, and, between 3 and 4 in the after- noon, he set out for Newmarket. His brother Stephen lost £11,000 two nights after, and Charles £10,000 more on the 11th; o that, in three nights, the three brothers, the eldest not 20 lost £32,000. Captain Gronow relates that, about this time, Lord Robert Spencer and General Fitzpatrick were allowed to keep a faro bank at Brookes', and that the former bagged, as his share of the proceeds, £100,000; after which he never again gambled. George Harley Drummond, the banker, only played once in his life, when he lost £20,000 to Brummel, and was obliged to ietire from the firm, In the first hal' of the Eighteenth century, ladies of title kept gambling houses. An entry ie the Journals of the House of Lords, dated April 20, 1745, shows that Ladies Mornington and Cassius claimed privilage of peerage in resisting certain peace officers in doing their duty in “‘suppressing certain gaming houses kept by the said ladies;” but the claim was not allowed, Betting was also in- dulged in at the clubs with'as much fran- tic zest as play. Anything served as an excuse, aud sometimes the occasions of the bhets were so shocking that the men of the least eoency would hwe shrunk from associating them with any form of amusement, A man dropped down at the door of White's and was carried into the house; immeditely the betting har- p'es were staking large sume on the ques- tion whether he was dead or not: and when it was proposed tc bleed him, those who had taken odds that hfe was extinct protested againat such a coarse, on the ground that it would affect the fairness of the bet. Bad as this was, there was a worse case still, for which Walpole is again the authority. If true—though one would believe it an nvention—it is suflicient to leave & stain of murder on the very name of White's. A youth bet £1,600" that & man could live twelve hours under water. He accordingly hired ome poor wreteh,probably in & most des- perate plight and sank him in a ship Both ship and man disappeared, and were never heard of mora. ‘alpole adds that OMAHA DAILY BEE--FRIDAY, MAY 16, 18t4, the miscreants actually proposed to make the experiment a second time. Itis a singular fact that Lord Mountford, whose suicide we have just related, bet Sir John Bland that Beau Nash would outlive Col- ley Cibber, and that both the persons,the subjects of the bet, survived the bettors, and that Bland, as well as Mountford died by his own act. e ] you are bothered nearly to THATd.-Mh with rheumatic twinges orthe pangs of neuralgiais no reason why you should continue to suffer, Ex- periment with a good medicine, Try Recollect it is tED by every druggist. Thomas’ Fclectric Qil. GUARAN Neural- gin and Rheumatism never stood before t, us & man or woman, if you SHOW..., earache, headache, backache, any ache, afllicted with toothache, that has sought relief in Dr. Thomas’ Eclectric Ol to no advantage), and in re- turn we will refer you to thousands similiarly affected whom this medicine has restored and cured completery. FOSTER, MILBURN & CO., Props., Buffalo, N, Y Western Cornice-Works, IRON AND SLATE ROOFING, C. SPECHT, PROP. 1111 Douglas St Omaha, Neb. MANUFACTURER OF 6alvanizea Iron Cornices 47 Dorn Kooling, Spe adjusted Rat 1 am the general Iron Feneing, Crestings. Bal Railings, agent for Peerson & Hill's atent Inside Bli Northeast Nebraska ALONG THE LINE OF THE] Chicago, St Paul, Minneapolis and OMAHA RAILWAY. The new extension of this line from Wakefleld up the BEAUTIFUL VALLEY of the GAN through Concord and Coleridge TO EXARTINGTON, Reaches tho best portion of the State, Special ex- cursion rates for land teckers over this line to Wayne, Norfolk and Hartington, and via Blair to all principal poluts on the SIOUX CITY & PACIFIC RAILROAD Trains over tht C., St. 0. Railway to Cov nicton, Sloux City, Ponca, Hartington, Wayne and Nortolk, Connccot at Blaix For Fremont, Oakda e, Neligh, and through to Val- entine. #4rFor rates and all information call on F, P, WHITNEY, General Agent, w-American H (London) aturday steam: Avril 15: BOHE W uri, (Parls) and HAM ers to Hamburg dit IA, April 1 Ratos: Prepatd st ly reduced. Moores, M. Toft, agents owig & Schoentgen, agents in Coun- RICHARD & CO., Gen. Pass. Agts., Y. in Omaha, cil Bluffs. 61 Broads THE OLD RELIABLE THE BRUNSWICK, BALKE, COL- LENDER COMPANY' [SUCCESSORS TO THE J. M. B, & B. C0.] THE MONARCH Ibe most extensive mauufacturers of Billiard & Pool Tables IN THE WORLD. 500 8. Tenth Stroct, - OMAHA, NEB Prices of 13 llird and Pocl Tables and materials, furnished on ap, diation, BRUNSWICK & CO. BIDLIARDS Fifteen Ball Pool, Carom, AND ALL OTHER GAMING TABLES, TEN PIN BALLS, CHECKS, ETC, 18 South 8d Streot, St. Louis, 411 Delawaro Street, Kausas City, Mo., 1521 Dougias St.. Omahs, Neb, HENRY HORNBERGER, Agent, Write for Catalogues and Price Lists. Neb;aslgg D_éor;lge Ornamental Works MANUFACTURERS OF GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES Dormer Windovwms, FINIALS, WINDOW CAPS, TIN, IRON AND SLATE ROOFING, PATENT METALIO SKYLIGHT, lron Fencing! Orestings, Balustrados, Verandas, Office and Bavd Raillags, Window and Cellar Guans, Ete. 00R. 0. ANDé STREE, LINCOLN NEB, GAISER, M« DUFRENE & MENDELSOHN. ARCHITECTS OMAHA NATIONAL BA BUILDING. SREMOVED T THIS BELTor Regenrae tor is made expressly for the cure of derangements of the generative organs, There fs no mistake b hi TR through the parts i tore them to hnalthy action Do uot eonfound tis with It i for the ¢ circulars giving full it 8., Chicago L1 - Amassssnan ARCHITECTURAL IRON WORK. Oolumns, Pilasters, Lintels, Fencing, Cresting, Railing, Etc. Cast, and Wrought Iron Beams. Agents for THE HYATT PRISMATIC LIGHTS, THE MURRAY IRON WORKS C0., Burlington, lowa. THE LARGEST IRON WORKING ESTABLISHMENT IN THE STATE. SPEélA‘L NBTIOE 'i‘() Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE OALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Ground Oil Cake. Tt fathe best and cheapest food tor #tock of any kind. Gne pound I equal to three pounds of corn stock ted with Ground Ofl Cake In the Fall sua Winter, instead of running down, will incroaso in weight and b in gogd marketable cope.tion In the sprng. e, &% woll a8 others, who use it can tectity to ita merits. Try it and judes for yourselves. Price $25.00 per fca: no charge for sacks. Address WOOTWAL, LINGEED 517 AAUDANY Omaba Neb WHOLESALE CIGARS & TOBACGO., TEE NEW HOUSE OF GCARRABRANT:COLE Fine Havans, Key West and Domestic Cigars. All Standard Brands Tobaccos. Trial Orders Soiicited, Satisfaction Guaranted, { xsor — P. BOYER & CO.. DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFE, VAULTS, LOCKS, &. LONO Fary J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lamber, L1, Shingles , Pl SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, Omaha, Neb, m Streot. Omalh } 'Wholesale STEELE, JOHNSON& CO., Grocers ! H. B. LOCKWOOD (formerly of Lockwouod & Draper) Chicago, xan- ager of the Tea, Cigar and Tobacco Departments. A full line of 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. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & ‘RAND POWDER £ PERFECTION Heating and Baking T« only attained by using /CHARTER OAEK Stoves and Ranges, WHIT WIRE GAUIE OVER DOOR Fer sale by MILTON ROGERS & SONS -~ OMAHA (SUCCESSOR TO FOSTER & GRAY.) L.UNBEIR, LIME AND CEMENT. Office and Yard, 6thand Douglas St~ (Jmaha Neb. John L. Willsie. PROPRIETOR OMAHA PAPER BOX FACTORY, 218 South 1ith Street, Omaha, Nebraska. “Correspondence Solicited.” 0. M. LEIGHTON. H. T, COLARKE, LEIGHTON & CLARKE, BUCCESS0RS TO KENNARD BROS, & €0.) Wholesale Drugpists ! —DEALERS IN— Paints. Oils. Brushes. OMAKS Cias 4@ ARG L. AGIER FRANZ FALK BREWING GO. Milwaukee, Wisconsin, vor. Flockrio Bath €0, 105 Washuigtos | nAf1a, GUNTHER & €0, Sole Bottlers, M. HELLMAN & CO, Wholesale Clothiers: 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREE1 COR 13Th

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