Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 10, 1884, Page 2

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{SDAY. JUNE 10. 1884, OMAHA DAILY BEE DR. THOMAS’ Eclectric 0il! WORTH ITS WEIGHT IN GOLD! A Medicine with curative pro- nerties as imnossible to counter feitas the PYRAMIDS OF EGYPT and which is now having an en- ormous sale throughout the Uni- ted States and Canadas. SCRANTON, PA. LOWELL, 'MASS, During the past two| T was badlv afficted with Bronchitis and an tion of the throat, ) 2 ol years I-have used bottles| of Dr. Thomas' Eclectric| Oil for sprains, bru oute, and Rheu [oured mo—Oliver J. Bolle mation ways cures |[slo, 28 East Morrimack St. M. L. B Ald. Fifth —M. L. Bl Ward, Nov. 9, 1833, GRAYVILRES, TLLS, Tn cases of Croup Thom « Rclectric Ol nover alla to cure, Tt oured e of & vory bad Uloeated DAVENPORT, TOWA. As & romedy for Catarrh Dr. Thomas' Ecloctrio Ol tands at the top. It cured G BT & Pipe amokin: 14 the real test of atobacco. 1t ia tho regal way of smoking. You get more directly at the flavo You take the mnoke coole; cleanlier and mafer. P amoking reduced o a fine art. The more the question of adulterated tobacoo forces itself on the attention of smokers, the moro dosirable it becomes 0 know precisely what you are smoking. In Blackwell's Bull Durham Smoking To. baoco you have aguarantes, always, that it is Nature's own unadulterated product. 1ta fragrance, flavor, and unsurpassed quality, aps do. rived from the soll and air. Try it, and you will be sat. {fed. None genuine with. out trade-mark of the Bull. All succesaful Fishermen and Bports. men moke Blackwell's Bull Durham Bmoking Tobacco, and they eajoy it DEBILITY o\ the Geuerstivo Orgaon quickly oured by “the OIVIALE Adopted in all the HOSPITALS OF FRANCE. Prompt return of VIGOR. Simple casos, §3 to §0. Sovoro onow, §3 to §12. Pamphlet Free.” Civialo Remedial Ageno., 166 Fulton st., New ork. LOUNG OR OLD, who_are suffer- { LECTRO- T and other Erecrnio J APPLIANCKS nro sent on 5 Days' Trial TO EN ONLY, g from' Nenvous Demriry. ASTING WEAKNRSSES, and Al PERSONAL NATURE, resulting from ABUSEs an OmnEn Cavsrs. Bpeedy rellef and completo toration to FrALtH, ViGoR a MANROOD JUARANTEED. Send at once for Illustrated Pamphlet free. Adaress YOLTAI( BELT (0., Murshall, Mich, O TQ SELE. 00, Marshall, Mick, ons, cay, ot mlm .mn sond you particulars of & gt - oortai ! sel re, free of charge, ous eddres to 1 0. FOWLIER, Moodus, Cona: D e i ] Wanu00n RESTORED. To those muffering fronstoe hial errors, Iy do- matars dotty, elc " Navine. tried {n 0 overy known romody bnummlvam‘%flfip o iospnof self-oure, whi -zlfi o will send ) RTS8 Now vork Jamos Modial Insibuto R Chartered by theStateof 111~ noia for theexpress purpose lof giving immediate relietin all chronic, urinary and pri= Gonorrheea, GieetandSyphilisin all their complicated forms, also all discases of the Skin and Blood promptly relievedand permanentlycured by reme- dies,testedin a Forty Fear: ( [P bpecial Practice, Seminal Wealiiess, Night Losses by Dreams, Pimples on the Face,Lost Manhood, posifively cured, There €8 no experimeniing. The appropriate rv.nedy once used In each case, Consulta nal or by letter, sacredly confidenti toines sent by Mall and Express, No marki package to indicate contents or sender. A [ o slant by the patien $1.000 v It. Da. Horvs—I was affiloted with rheumatism and ocured by using s belt. To an: aflioted with that discase, I would say, buy Hor ootrlo Bolt, ono oan_confer with mo by writing calling % my storo, 1420 Douglas streot, Omaha, Neb. WILLIAM LYONS, -AIP:'OH‘ICI—OW‘-I“ postoftice, room 4 Fren. ot ) & Forsale st 0. F. Goodman's Btore' Drug 1110 Orders filled C. 0" D, URBABY [y thrives on Horlick's Food,” write hundreds of wrateful Ik contalns no staroh. an, thing extan 'Will be sent by mail on rece| ORLICK’S FOOD of price LI e Rucine, Wis. A&7 Usz Houricx's Dy EXTRACT oF MALT™GS Ret BT AL o R me ool 1 cavilaL MY ouni 1785 rmanw INGS {MPROVED SOFT ELASTIC SECTION GORS tlon U it ko i the ‘markst, o BHico Dald v Fefunded e (401 seihcns (oago's best physicl o, Beat ir ant for the' OSER & O S Kk T H. ¥. LEEHMANN & 00, SUNDAY LAWS. English and American Statates for the Regulation of the Lord's Day. Works of Travel on Oompulsory Church Golng Necessity and Charity the First Day of the Week, From The Advance, Wo are apt to associate Sunday laws with the spirit of Puritanism Doubtless the more than Judaic strictness of the early colonial laws of New England in referenco to Sunday was the fruit of puritanism, But Puritanism will not ac- count for the fact that in every state of this Union there are to-day laws more or losa restrictive in reference to labor and amusement on Sunday: nor for the fact that the Sunday laws of England are to.day substantially what they have been for the past two hundred years, This age is certainly far enough remoyed from Puritanism; yet to-day wherever English-speaking people are found there you will find a recognition of Sunday as day of rest and worship, and laws of some sort to protect that rest and wor- ship from needless disturbance. The fact is, this sentiment, out of which Sunday laws have grown, antedates Puritanissm, and has outlived Purita- nism, There has, however, been a fundamen- tal change in public sentiment in refer- ence to Sunday legislation. In earlier times the atate undertook to regulate pri- vate conduct, to prescribe what acts should and what acts should not be per- formed on Bunday. At the present time it is folt that legislation should aim not so much to regulate private conduct as to presorve public order; that it should be based on the fact that the great body of the people desire to observe Sunday as a day of rest and worship should be pro- tected from needless disturbance. But it is also folt that the private conduct of individuals should be left to the regula- tion of the individual conscience. This change is certainly not one to be depre- cated, and it is not one which is likely to go backward. The Sunday laws of this country were derived in large part from the common law and the statute laws of England. At the common law only judicial acts were forbidden on Sunday. = There was no re- striction on labor or amusement. Among the earliest statute laws where thoso of Elizabeth and James I., by which attendance on church was made compulsory. Similar laws were in force in some of the Eastern States as late as the latter part of vhe last century. Such laws would not be tolerated anywhere in this country, at the present time. We look upon them as among the harshest and most crabbed features of Puritan- ism. And yet these laws in England were not an outgrowth of Puritanism at all. At the time of their passage, labor and amusement on Sunday were not only not forbidden, but encouraged. Queen Elizaboth was entirely opposed to the idea of labor on Bunday being prohibited or discoursged; and King James wrote a book toshow what sports were proper on Sunday. It was not until the 29 of Charles II. that CERTAIN KINDS OF LABOR wero forbidden on Sunday, and from this law the The Sunday laws of this country, with reference to labor, have been generally derived. It seems singu- lar that this law should have been passed in the reign of the most dissolute of En- glish monarchs, and when Puritanism was under an especial ban, These English and American laws in reference to labor on Sunday are all alike in one mgect—worh of necessity and charity and mercy, were excluded from their cperation, “They are unlike in the extent to which labor, other than that of necessity or charity, is prohibited. In some of the states all other labor is pro- hibited; in others, the prohibition ex- tends only to common labor, or labor of & man's ordinary calling. Under these statutes, two classes of questions have arisen, those relating to validity of contracts made on Sunday, aad those relating to works of necessity and charit; Where labor generally is prohibited, all contracts made on Sunday not growing out of works of necessity and charity are void, Where only cer- tain classes of labor are prohibited only contracts relating to these classes are void. Whether contracts made ille- gal by the Sunday laws can be ratitied on another day of the woek, has been dif- ferently decided in different states. Is those states in which all labor on Sunday is prohibited, except works of nccesisty and charity, the question has arisen whether a MARRIAGE PERFORMED ON SUNDAY was valid, marriage in that country being merely a civil contract. In Pennsyl: vanin it has been decided that it is valid, and its validity is assumed in Massachu- sotts and New Hampshire, Ina few years the question arose in Massachusetts whether a will exe- cuted on Sunday bya personin good health was valid. This led to anelaborate review of the Sunday laws of the State, and the validity ot the will was/sustained on the ground that, although in terms all labor on Sunday, except works of ity and charity, was prohibited, fact of the statute was to prohibit abor relating to the pursuits of only gain, The greatest number of legal decisions have grown out of constructions of the words ‘‘necessity”” aad ‘‘charity,” In England the House of Lords has decided that shaving on Sunday is not a work of necessity, charity or mercy, and conse- quou:lx that a barber's apprentice is not obliged to attend his master's shop on Sunday. e — From Oleveland, Ohio. Comes a lotter signed T. Walker, saying: *'About six months ago I commenced takin, Burdock Blood Bitters for protracted case u‘; lumbago and general debility, and am now pl to statebave recovered my appetite aud wonted strength. Feel better altogether T — OLIVER GOLDSMITH'S TOMB, B Thousands of Busy Feet Trampling Over His Boues in the Heart of London, London Cor, New York Sun, It was on an inclement spring noon, 1 had been at BmilK , the emi- nent maker of law-ventilating wigs, who dwells in the middle of the ‘‘Temple,” and was hurrying toward Fleet street through the public way that lies between the Temple church and Goldsmith build- inge. his is & somewhat curious alley. Gn one side is the old sanctusry, built by the Knights Templars in 1185 in com- memoration of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, and dedicated to the Blessed Vi'i‘m On the other side is an_irregu- lar line of houses, mostly occupied by the chambers of members of the legal profes- sion. In one of these lives the authorof the *‘Vicar of Wakofield,"justabovethespart- after- ment ocoupied by the learned Blackstone whom he sorely disturbed by his loud lays, his games of blind-man's buff, and his dancing parties. It is there also that he died on the 4th of April, 1774 from to many James' powders. i The pavement of this thoroughfare is peculiar. It consists of tombs. The path has been traced through the old church. yard, and the ancesters graves have been turned to profitable account by the inge- nuity of the decendants. Worn by the trampling of the passers-by, the epitaphs are nearly effaced, and soon no sign will remain of the desecration. Other sights, however, will probably subsist and pre serve for this singular spot its grim char acter. Inlaid in the external wall of one of the houses facing the church are two funeral monuments, also rapidly decaying in their wretched forlornness, Asl was passing beautiful but most mournful chants suddenly fillea the air, and as sud- denly stopped, to rise again more lamen- table and despairing. I stopped by the railings which inclosed the old round nanctuary, There was a minute of silence, and then the Invisable volces resumed their plaintive strains, At my feet in the declevity of the ground, between the railings and the shrine, was something indescribably dismal—a yauning tomb. It had been disposessed of its lid, a pair of dilapidated boards had been carclessly thrown across it, but the eye could pene- trate through the gaps they left. Some hideous figures were carousing in the va- cant place. I lookedaway. The descon- nolate song still rent the air like a hymn of despair. No doubt it was some mourn- ful hymn, sung with impressive earnest- ness by a forvent choir, yet it sounded to my ears as a supreme cry for help of the poor departed ones disturbed in their grave. A little outside the public way formed by the lurge slabs of the tombs the ground slightly rises. A very unpre- tending monument lies there, No rails protect it. People pass by and don't look at it, it is so plain and “unasuming. It rises only just above the ground. It wears signs of approaching decay. The stone is much chipped; yet it is not very old—only a few years more than the cen- tury—but no one evidently looks after it. Nothing is more sad than this hum- ble sepulcher, ejected, as it were, from the churchyard, and thrown on the public road. No doubt the poor forgot- ten citizen pays the penalty of his obscu- rity. Unknown in life, he is friendless in death, and no one cares to protest against the profanation of his grave. This assumption is wrong. The ashes cast their under the curbstone are not those of an obscure citizen. Read the fast-fading inscription placed on the stone HERE LIES OLIVER dngl 8 agreat and grate- ful pation. How is such a thing possible? Note that this is to be seen, notina lonely, ignorant, destitute village. but in the heart of the populous metropolis, in the middle of the wealthy and enlighten ed inns of court which Ben Johnson de- scribes as “‘the noblest nurseries of hu- wanity and liberty in the kingdom.” (ioldsmith, I know, has a monument in Woestminster. But what of that, since his remains lie on the publie thoroughfare banished from the sacred ground of the churchyard, unprotected alike against in- jury and oblivion? Lo e L A Newspaper Editor, 0. M. Holcomb, of Bloomville, Ohio, rises to explain: ‘‘Had that terrible disease catarrh for twenty yoars; couldn’t taste or smell, and hearing was_failing. Thomas' Eclectric Oil oured me. These axe facts voluntarily given nilw!a(emmr prejudice of patent medi- cine, e ——— Ambidextrous Garfield. A gentleman who knew Gen. Garfield tells this story: ‘‘We were sitting in the office of the secretary of the navy, wait- ing to be heard on some matter of routine business, when Garfleld took his seat at a vacant desk near by and com- menced writing with both hands upon scratch-pads upon either side of him. He seemed to write with one hand as freely as with the other. The only dif- ference was that the lines on the tablet written with the left hand were reversed from the usual order. The conszquence was that the writting on the left hand tablet could not be read except by an expert, or by holding it up to a light or before a mirror. 1 looked at the one written with the left hand on its upper side, and while the lines seemed remark- ably uniform, they conveyed no meaning; but, holding the thin paper up to the light, 1 saw not only that the words written were the same as those on the tablet written with the right hand, but that every peculiarity in the formation of alotter which was found on the right hand tablet was exactly reproduced on the left hand, The achievement was a marvel to me, as I had never heard of it before, although I have since heard that many people do it Gaitield said that he often wrote that way whenever he wished to have an exact copy of what he was writing without having & copy mado by letter- press, B e Wel de Meyer. It it now undisputed that Wie Die Mey- er's Catarrh Cure is the only treatment that will absolutely cure Catarrh—fresh or Chronic, *Very officacions. Saml Gould, Weoping Water, Neb.” Ono box cured me, Mrs, Mary Kenyon, Dismarck, Dakota,” “It rostered me to the pulpit, Rev. George E. Rels, Cetleville, N. “One box radically cured me, Re , H. Tahlor, 140 Noble stroet, Brooklyn 'A'porfoct cure after 30 years suffering, | . McDonald, 710 Broad way, N. Y., &c., &¢. Thousands of testimo, nld- are received from all varts of the worldl- Delivered, $1.00. Dr. Wei De Meyer's Iby lustrated Treaties,” with statements of the cured, mailed free. D, B, Dewey & Co., 112 Fulton Street, N. Y tue-t.hurs & sat-m&3em e — Ruskin's k ccentricities, Mr. Ruskin is & curiosity, He is sel- dom to be seen anywhere, Even in his own beloved lake district he takes his walks in the gray of the morning or the dusk of the evening. He seldom goes into society. He loves the theatre and Roes when he feels he can indulge himself with such recreation. Perhaps not fifty of those well known people have ever seen Mr. Ruskin before. He comes into the room in the midst of & half dozen entlemen not in the usual seemly fash- 1on of the English procession on such oc- casions. I saw him when he entered the room, but who was before him, beside him or behind him I could not now say, for they all came together and the dis- tinguished scholar and critic was like the Master in the great picture of Veronese *‘The Marriage of Cana.” He was “‘in the midst thereof.” Ruskin is just 65 years old and he looks and acts like a man of 65, He is not more than b feet G inches in height. Indeed he is petite. His complexion originally I should judge of what remains of a complexion, was fair, though now his face pretty nearly up to his eyes is covered with an iron gray beard; the abundant hair is uncon- veniently long, and though he was per- sonally neat and *‘trim” his hair seemed to have no recent speaking acquaintance with a brush. The forehead is low and retreating; the eyes gray and sparkling Quizzing and wischievous, OSCAR WILDE (QUIETED. Married Btcenflv fo 4 Sweet Sister Spirit, I'he Trinmphal Ride to the Church— A Disappointing Clergy man - Os- car's Marriage Hymn Slighted, By Special Sunflower Stalk to the N. Y. i Journal, LoynoN, June 3.—All nature wasin harmony with the marriage to day of Os. car Wilde and Miss Lloyd. Even the police smiled with content, but it wae the tollowing notice that made them smile Orders are hereby given to all members of the Dynamiters’ Benevolent Union that on no account must an_explosion occur on Tuexday, June 3. the wedding day of Ireland’s wonder, Oscar Wilde, (Signed) Parnick HOOLAHAN, No. 72 Bilk street, The Empire put on its holiday dress, Tolegrams from everywhere poured into Mr. Wilde's headquarters during the day, each message causing the fair recipient to gasp with pleasure, But one cruel drop was there in the bucket of well-wishes, That was a callegram from Tody Hamil. ton, New York, informing Mr. Wilde that his poem on the white elephant had been declined with thanks, and would be returned by the next steamer. The wedding precession was a wonder- fol affair. A band of harpists led tho way to the church, gently trumming on their harps. The bridal coach, painted a ghastly green, was rolled along by two horses painted to match. The coach was thrown open, showing its precious bur- den. Oscar’s hair has grown forth agein and he looked very much as he did when he first departed for America. His briae is a aweet young thing and made a pleasant contrast with the bridegroom opposite.§ Behind the bridal coach were strung out the carriages of the relatives. These vehicles were partly yellow and partly black. On the panals were the Prince of Wale 8 coat-of-arms, surrounded by the legend **New, York Cab Company.” It is believed that the cabs were imported for the occasion. Therelatives were dressed in subduded colors, {+Only one unplenasant incident hap- pened to mar the passage from the bride’s residence to the church. A party of bag-pipers playing a most dis- tressful Scotch air headed off the wed- ding chariot, At first Oscar seemed dazed, then the full force of the shock struck him in both ears. His agony was something terrible as he stuffed his hair into those organs to deaden the sound. At the church the music was of Mr. Wilde's own composition, the funeral march being sung as the procession wound on its way up the aisle to the al- tar. The groomsmen wore knee breech- es and long hair, but they could not com- pare with the chiet object of the occas- ion. The minister had been importuned to use a maraiage service in verse, also composed by Mr. Wilde, but he not only refused to do so, but he also declined to don a fantistic attire made on purpose for him. Oscar felt inclined to postpone the service on account of the contrairi- ness of the minister, but the pressure of public opinion present was too strong for Your correspondent secured a copy of the marriage lines composed by the long- haired poet. Here it is: ‘When soul meets #oul, Red as a rose is she; Each finds & goal, & air as a lily is he, * Oscar, take now your bride, Happy, oh, happy is she Two flowers blooming side by side Under the church roof-tree, It is impossible to find out what part of this service made the minister sour. It could not be its length. Whatever it was the minister was the loser by his unkindness, as Mr. Wildo refused to pay him a penny for the use of his Episcopa- lian service, After the ceremony the party rode to the residence of Oscar's brand-new par- ents-in-law, where a little spread was laid. 1If there is one feature in which the bridegroom is not msthetic it is in the line of gastronomy. Ham and cheese, hard-boiled eggs, beef and beans and other delicacies of the season disap- peared from the table, washed ou% of sight by tobies of ale. It looked as if Oscar was attempting suicide, but the folks were too modest to say anything until his eyes wero out of plumb and then they informed him that the bridal train would depart in ten minutes. He was carried to the coach and whirled off to the station with his vonny bride. ‘There is no truth in the assertion made two weoks ago thav Mr, and Mrs. Wilde intended to make their wedding tour to || and through America. It is well known that Mr. Wilde's latest edition of poems was not a success, and that the greater part of the consignment found its way to Aun street. Hence Mr. Wilde is not so much in love with the United States as hoonce was. The new couple will con- fine their honeymoon as much as possible to the British Isies, although they con- template a short Continental tour, e Skin Cancer, Mr. W, H. Gilbert, of Albany, Ga., under date of May 8, 1884, says: Mr. Brooks near here has an eating cancer on his face which had nearly killed him--every one thought hy would b dead in a short time as nothing seemed tostop the ravages of the cancer. He commenced taking Swilt's Specific two months g0, sud it has had & wendertul effect on him, o' was yesterisy so far recovered as to be out at his work, and seems in a fair way to get entirely well, Troatise on blood and skin diseases mailed ree. Tz Swirr Sercivi) Co,, Drawer 3, Atlan. ta, Ga, 169 W. 23d St, N. Y, and 1205 Chestout St., Phil e —— A Case of Tight Corsets, Pittsburg Dispateh. A case of much interest both socially and physiologically, is reported to have ocourred in this city yesterday. A lady is reported to have been reduced to a condition of suspended animation by tight-lacing in a street car, in such a wa) a8 to create the belief that she wai stricken by heart disease. What extra- ordinary amount of horse-power she was able to apply to the lacing of her stays is not related; but it is evident that it must have been something phenomenal from the number of women that parade our streets with abnormal waists and are as lively as crickets over it. The event should be a warniog to the female sex, but it will not bs, The majority of the ladies are thoroughly convinced that they can squeeze themselves into the shape of wasps without suspending their animation in the slightest degree. They have demonstrated by long experience that they can heroicdlly endure any amount of pressue around their waist and they rather like it. Of course they will not give it up because a silly thing faints in the street cars. can ever convince the dear creatures will be when small waists go out of fashion. I that happy day tight corsets will be harder to find” than four-leaved ‘clover. STARTLING! ro the changes that, ina few years, liave taken place in the manufacture of Clothing Improvement after improvement has been made, until to-day the clothing offered by Schlank & Prince, 1210 Farnam street, is equal in every respect to the best Custom Work! While at the same time the lowness of price of the fine grade of clothing they handleis no less astonish- ing than the Perfection of Fit! AND THE QUALITY OF MATERIAL AND MAKE Boston GlothingHouse 10 1210 VARICOCELE or Wormy Veins of the Scrotum. Often (he unrus- Farnam Street, BURLINGION, Towa. WONKS The Murray Iron WoRks. ENGINES. e BOILERS w1 ECTyp MILL AND-MININ 2 N WORK. MACHINERY;: . 8 : AL1G LIGHTS, 1IMATES ". RIDGE VQRK’ PATENT 06 AND, SAW, MILE, EC AL he Ters SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growerg of Live Stock and Others, WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Cround Qil Cake. It isthe best and cheapest food ror &tock of any kind, Gne pound i equal 8o three pounds of corn stock fed with Ground Ofl Cake Ju the Fall tnd Winter, nstead of runuing down, will Increase in weight and be in good marketable cordition in the spring. ¥ Dalrymen, as woll Ao others, who use it can testity ¢ Its merits. Try 1§ and fudg for yoursalvee. » Price #96.00 per ton® no oharge for sacke. Address WooD! N L ED OIL COMPANY, Omaha WEOLRSALE GIGARS & TOBACGO. TEE NEW HOUSE OF GCARRABRANT:COLE U & de not mean "5 warra o i i ity il once for a troatise and a Freo Bottle of my i xpress and Post Ofice. It costa Jea and 1'will cirs yoa. . Q. ROOT. 143 Pair] 8t Mew e DUFRENE & MENDELSOHN. ARCHITECTS A&REMOVED TO OMAHA NATIONAL BANK BUILDING. Science ot Life, Only $1.00. BY MAIL POSTPAID. Fekiociit ¥ ont Manhood, Bebilty's%, | Fine Havana, Key West and Domentic Cigars. Al Standard Brands Tobnccos. I SR ER A o, iR a esor | T11AE Orders Solicited. Satisfaction Guaranteed, { 2507 earNams. DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFES, VAULTS, LOCKS, &, 1020 Fary .m J. A. WAKEFIELD, treot. Omal ~S— KEOW THYSELF, 6 A GREAT MEDICAL WORK ON MANHOOCD Exhausted Vitality, Nervous and Physieal Debility, Promature Decline in Man, Evrorsof Youth, an the antold miserles esulting from Indiscretions or ex- coasor. A book for every man, young, middle-aged, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN (e Lumoer, Lath, Shingles, Piokers SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C. STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY, Near Union Pacific Depot, - - - Omaha, Neb, and old. Tt contalns 125 presoriptiona’ for all acute and chronlc diseases eachone of which s invaluable 8o found by the Author, whoso exporience for 23 years s such asprobably never befors foll to tho It of Aoy physican 800 pages, bound In beautlin French musiln m aossedcovers, full gilt, guarantecd ¥0 bo a finer wors n every senso,—mechanical, 1t erary and professlonal,—than any other work sold in Shis country for §2.60, or the money will bo refunded In every Inatance. Price only $1.00 by mall, post- pald. Tlustrative samplo 6 cents. *Sand naw. Go d modal awarded the author by the National Medic-1 tlon, to the officors of which he refers. ‘Tho Sclenso of Liteshould be read by the youn Instraction, and by tho afflated for roliaf, T wili benefit all.—London Lanoet. There I8 no member of aoclety to whom The Sci- ence of Lifo will not be usetul, whether youth, par- ent, guardian, instructor or clorgyman.—Argonaut. Address tho Peabody Medical Institute, or Dr. W. H. Parker, No. 4 Bulfinch Stroet, Boston Mass., who may be consulted on all diseases’ requiring skill and gxpertonce, Chronlo and obstinatediseasesthat have baffled tho skill of all other phym"E I. clans A epoolalfy: Such treated sucuess- “ tully without an inetanc allu e, THYSEI-F POISON b 0 the ood Isapt to show itselt in the spring, and nature should by all means be assisted in throwing it off. Swilt's Speclfic does this cffectively. It isa pnrely vegetable, non-polsonous remedy,which helps ature to foroe all the polson or taint out througn he pores of the skin, Mr. Robert A, Easley under date March 10 followed by rhematisy f Dickson, Tenn., writes, : “Ihad ¢ and fever for three years, so that I was not abie to attend to my business: had tried al- most ary kind of medi: nd found no relict. ecommended Specific. I tried ong And my health b yprove. 1 continued until I bad taken six bottles, and it has set me on my feot, as sound and well as ever. 1 recommend it to all similarly afflictcd.” three (28) of the leading retail Atlanta, say, under dato of March 24th, 1 more of' Swift's Specific than any one remedy, and three to ten times as much as any ofher blood medicine. We sell it to all classes, and many of the best families use it as o gencral health tonic, Our Treatise on Blood and 81 i1 Diseases mailed free. THE SWIFT FIC €O, Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga, N Y. Offoe, 150W.25 St, bet 6ih ard 7th ys Health is Wealth’ MENT, o guaranteed spe i i 1 neas,” Convalsions, ' Fita, Norvous Neuralginy Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use of aloohol or tobacco, Wakefulnoss, Mental Do- nression, Boftening of the Brain resulting in in. e3nity and leading to misery, decay and death, Premature Old Ago, Barrenness, of powst in either sex, Involuntary Losses and Bpermat- orrhcea caused by over-exertion of the brain, self. use or over-indalgence, box containe one month's treatment. $1,00 & box, or six boxee for $5.00, sent by mail propaid on receipt of price WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES Fo cure any case. With each order recstvea oy us for £ix boxes, accompanied with $a(6, we sond the purchaser our written guarant re- fand the ‘money if the treatmett doos DOt elecs soure. Guarantees issuea obiy oy C. F, GOCDMANN, Droggish Agen 19 Owmabs DR. FELIX LE BRUN'S G~ G PREVENTIVE AND CURE, FOR EITHER SEX. The romody belng injectad directly) 40 119 wosh © the discase, roquires no changy of dlol 1 oausoous, merourial or poisonous medicluee to be taken lnter: ually. When used us a preventive by either sox, 1t ls wpoasible to contruat any private dlsease; bub i the oase of those already unfortunately aflicted we guar sntee three boxes to cure, or we will refund the mon oy. Price by mall, postage paid, #8 per box or thros boxes for #6. WRITTEN GUARANTEES The only thing that I Lesued by all authorized sgents Dr FelixLe Brun&Co. BOLE PROPRIETORS Fani wan, Duggist Bole Ageat, for Oma &oly m STEELE, JOENSON& CO,, Wholesale Grocers H. B. LOCKWOOD (formerly of Lockwood & Draper) Chicago, ¥an- ager of the Tea, Cigar and Tobacco Departments. “A full line of all grades of above; also Yipes 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 CD —_— . « EFS! (i PERFECTION 8| Heating and Baking Ts only attained by using ‘'CHARTER ©QAY Stoves and Ranges, WHIT WIRE RAVIE OVER D0OR For sle by MILTON ROGERS & 30N8 e OMAHA (SUCCESSOR TO FOSTER & GRAY.) LUNMIBIER, LIME AND CEMENT, Office ard Yere, 6therd Dovgles s, (Jmaha Neb., John L. Willsie, PROPRIETOR OMARA PAPER BOX FACTORY, 106 aud 108780uth 14th Street, Omaha, Nebraska, ““Correspondence Solicited.” 0. M, LEIGHTON, H, T, CLARKE, LEIGHTON & CLARKE, SUCUKSSORS TO KENNARD BROS, & C0.) Wholesale Druggists! ~DEALERS IN— Paints- Oils. Brushes. OMvVHA, - - - - - Ciass. NEBRASKA L AGEMFHANZ FALK BREWING CO. [ Milwaukee, Wis. BEER. ’ | GUNTHER & CO., Sole Bottlers. M. HELLMAN & CO, Wholesale Tlothiers! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREE1 CQR. 13Th MAHA, » — — E o

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