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e TR 2 OUMAHA DAILY BEE--THURSDAY. JU 12,1884, DR. THOMAS’ Eclectric 0il! WORTH ITS WEIGHT IN GOLD! A Medicine with curative pro- nerties as imoossihle to counter feit as the PYRAMIDS OF EGYPT and which is now having an en- ormous sale throughout the Uni- ted States and Canadas. BORANTON, PA. LOWELL, During the past two| 1 was b yoars I have us of Dr. Thomas' Oil for_spr: cuts, burns, and Rthen |oure mation Tt always cures M. L. Blair, Ald. Fifth) Nov, 9, 145! YVILLE, Tn eases of Croup Thom | PORT, TOWA. Asn Graysville, 11ls. GRAY'S BPECIFI TRADE MARK LI REWADY. An unfailing oure for Seminal Weak- o, and " all that follow as & soquence of Self. Abuse; a8 losa of’ -~ <ORE TARING.mLandtudo.bain AFTER AR, ] in tho Back, Dimnoss of Vision, Prema and many other diseases that load tolns sumpt BRWARR druggists from whom the medicine I hou- nd & Promature Grave. roquirements are such that they complied with. co thelewritten of one single package of Gray's Speci tho most akoptioal ot It rea merite, On acoount of Yellow Wrapper; the only genuine. & Full particulars {n out pamphlet, which siro 40 send free by mail to every ono. £#Th dom, {f_ever ntoo. A tria cifio Modi 1no 1 sold by ail drugglate at 1 per pack 107 86, of Wil bo-sent. 160 by g0, or six packagos mall 0o the recelpt of the money, by addressing THE GRAY MEDICINE C0., suftalo, N. Y. gold nOmahal ' © . dsiman Iy 10m vo Organs ILITY 1o ly METHOD. Adopted in all the HOSPITALS the Ganorat cured CIVIALE OF FRANCE ~ Prompt return of VIGOR. Simple cases, §3 0 89, Bovers ones, 88 to §12. Pamphlot Free,” Civialo Remedial Ageno , 16¢ Fulton 8t., New York, Q Chartered by theStateof 111~ nois for theexpress purpose of giving immediate relietin all chronic, urinary and pri- vate diseases. Gonorrheea, J}GleetandSyphilis in all their ¥ complicated forms, also all dincases of the Skin and Elood promptly relievedand permanentlycured by rem dies,testedin a Forty Years 8 A Special Practice, Seminal Wealness. Night Losses by Dreams, Pimples on the Face, Lost Manhood, positively cured. There {810 experimeniing. The appropriate iakt once used in each case, Consul gonal or by letter, sacredly confident icines sent by Mailand Express, No package to indicate contents or sender. Address DR.JAMES,No. 204Washington St.,Chicago, ||, I ———— e ————" <y 4, Y [EN _ONLY, XOUNG O from Nenvous Dnn ALrriNg WeAKNRsES, and RREONAL NATUR) . CADSKS, Festoration o FraLy) Vieor and MANEOOD once APPLIANCES aro pent on 80 rial Lty Losy all thoso diseases of resuliing from ABUSKS poedy rellet and v, Bend Pamphlot frée. Ad It for . Adas YOLTAIC BELT s _Marsl Diustrated 11, OURDPABY thrives on Horlick's Food" write hundreds of other's milk contalns no e %o Tnfasia. shouid k’ S LREADY Dmnl'lll:‘.nhl::lm S e glu&‘y bes 17 d cial to others And 77 centa, a for on “Kasily di i k on tho Treatment of Bigeated and auteitio », eik 10 be desired: ng 1 supertor to a0 500 oy, M. of price in stamps. Rucine, Wi the beat diet for DYSPE PTIOR audiNvALIDS, k. Prico 4 all drugists. Uhildren, free. iy ey Zu b ‘mail on reces #timo and 1 w1 uy EXT ML I\\'nm ..u I'E \EI I ,‘.s.. n ag cun @ r | rran Twa Thd P 8. s maes ol Oliver J Bello ast Morrimack St mody for Catarrh 0il nover Dr. Thomaw' Eclectric Oil 1t onred me standa st the top. It cured [0 far as ita rosults aro concerned, but it - [ who takes this method of renewing her 118 URRAT vy nm OB MARK on. of advertisomonts to_retund mmey, whon do_not vefund, but refor you to tho manufacturers, and the will convinos untezfeiters, wo have adopted the wodo. o 5 ORE) (arTan) RO-VOLTAIC BELT and other ELzoraio Days’ Trial TO LD, who are suffer- VrrauTY, 4 complete MANHOOD REST s tictim of early imprudenco, ca maturo docay, elc, A 8 ervous (e red & simplo wifoure, which i wil sead VHKE IRV R 525w 81 Now Vark Notice to Cattle Men, 900 CATTLE FOR SALE, 180 Hoad of Steors Threo Years Old, 200 & e T o o elters, 220 One " Tbe above describod cattle are wll well brod lows | beautifying the complection—the one :&k'.nnl(hl aud smooth. will prices. call on or address e M. ¥. PATION, __ Waverly, Bremor Co.. lows, None genuine with. trademark of the Bull. Al successtul Fishermen and Sports. men smoke Blackwell's Bull Durbam Buwoking Tobacco, aud they enjoy it. E T lota to sult purchasers, aud b reasonabl sult purchy o COSMETIOS OF NO USE. Pure Water the Best Known for Beau- tifying the Face— Washes Quite Useless as Romedies for Skin Troubles “There is nothing a woman willnet do, no tortures she will not endure, to en- hance thu beauty of the complexion,” said a druggist to a New York Mail and Express reporter. “The women in Brazil rub the juice of a nut on the face, the skin of which (that is to say, the epidermis or superfical skin) comes off, leaving the face in a raw state. After applying the nut juice, the patient takes to her bed, and in threo weeks a fresh skin has formed and sho has an entirely new complexion. It is rather surprising, on the whole, that some such idea has not been adopted in more civilized coun- tries, although a method somewhat near- ly approaching it has actually been adopted in Paris by a physician who claims its invention I understand, on good authority that it is very successful must bo extremely painful. A woman youth must undergo a fearful ordeal. She is placed under the influence of chloroform, and the whole superficial Iayer of the cuticle is removed with the knife; this accomplished, the face is swathed in bandages and a new skin forms in a few days, A physician of my acquaintance assurred me that he had soen a porson who had her complexion renewed in this way, and that her skin was of a delicate creamy tint, like a child’s; she always took the greatest care of it, never going out unless thickly veiled. A complexion obtained at such cost was not to be readily sacrificed. “The only good cosmetic I know of is pure water. Any first-rate physician will tell you that face-washes are quite useless an remedies for skin troubles. And yot these quack remedies always will com- mand a large rale, though many of them contain elements very injurlous both to the health and complexion, and not one of them pretends to attack the skin trou- ble through the blood, which is the only way recognized as effectual in the prac- tico of medicine. People frequently ap- ply to me for a remedy for freckles, but the philosophy of thefreckle is somethin, young, however, He is young still, but wiser and broader. He has come to that point whero ho is willing to admit that that disagreeable characterization, “Northern scum,” in the last stanza was simply put in for the sake of the rhyme, He would not write such a song now. Yethe copies the old song again and again in response to requests that foome from the four corners of the earth. I sawa true copy of it yesterday. It is rarely printed correctly. It is venerally mangled in quotation and it is always mutilated in the newspapers. I hear that Mr. IRandall contemplates gathering it and half a hundred other lyrics in a volume to be published shortly. — Wei de Meyer. Tt it now undisputed that Wie Die Mey- er's Oatarrh Cure is the only treatment that will absolutely cure Catarrh—fresh or Chronie. “Very _officacions. Saml Gould, Weeping Water, Nob.” Ono box cured me, Mrs, Mary Kenyon, Bismarck, Dakota,” It rostered me to the pulpit, Rev. George E. Rain, Cobloville, N. Y. “Ona box. radioally cured me, Rev. O, H. Tahlor, 140 Noblo stroot, Brooklyn' '*‘A perfect cure after 30 yoara suffering, J, D, McDonald, 710 Broad- way, N, Y., &c., &o. Thousands of testimo.- nials are received from all parts of the worldi- Delivered, $1.00. Dr. Wei Do Meyer's Iby Iustrated Treatics," with statements of the cured, mailed free. D, B, Dewey & Co., 112 Fulton Street, o-t.hurs & sat-m&3em — A Sacrificing Hackman. The Detroit Free Press, A hackman yesterday walked iato a hotel and up to & guest who was reading a paper, and holding out a silver dollar on his palm, he said: ““When I drove you up here this morn- ing you made a mistake and gave me half a dollar too much. Here is your dollar, I only want my regular fee.” The man took the coin and handed out a fifty-cont piece without speaking a word, His conduct nettled another guest, who followed the hackman out, and remarked: “‘My man, that was an honest action on your part,” “Well, yes, but you see the dollar he PAWNEE CUNNING. Indian Ingenuity in Hiding Stolen Properiy. “Talking about sly thieves,” remarked a passenger from the west to a Chicago Horald gossiper, *‘maybe you have 'emin Now York and Chicago; but for thorough- bred slickness I'd take a Pawnee Indian every day in the week. Them redskins "Il steal anything that can be carried off, and the worse of it is, they get away with the stuff so completely you can't find jt. Remember one time, shortly after I went out there, a surveyor lost a lot of his instruments one night. We know'd the Injuns had took 'em, because there wasn't no other thieves around, but what they wanted of them instruments was a puzzler. The In- jun agent and lots more of us made a thorough search of every tree and cabin at the agency, but notrace of the missing articles could we diskiver. When we got through an old Montana mining prospec- tor named Cowan came up an’ said he was in hard luck, an’ wanted a bit of bran- dy to taper his spree off with, and if we'd pay him for his trouble he b'leved he could find the instruments. The sur- veyor made that all right, and woléstarled out agin. 'Did ye s'arch that patch o’ underbrush there? {m inquired. ‘Every foot of it,’ replied the agent. ‘Wo poked around in there for hours; no use goin’ there agin.” ‘But yo don’t want to do no pokin’ around,’ said Cowan. *Just follow me, and do as I do.’ Then he started in. He wouldn’t look around in the bushes at all, but just skipped along, catchin’ them by their tops, one after t'other, trying to pull 'em out. Pretty soon he struck one that was loose. He gave a yelp, pulled hard- er, when out it came, and down under the roots we found the surveyor's things. ‘Can’t fool me on their d—n brush craft, if I hev been drunk for a month,’ said old Cowan, a4 the surveyor handed him gallon jug of brandy, ‘jist to taper off on you know,’ " ———— gave me was & baso counterfeit,” e — ARE YOU GOING TO EUROPE? 1n another column will be fonnd the an nouncement of Mearrs. THOS, COOK & SON ‘Yourist Agents, 261 Broadway, New York, that no fellow ever could exactly fin out. There are two or three theories in rd to freckles—ono is that thoy are small accumalations of the pigment which colors the skin, and the otfiur that they are atains produced through the oxidation by the air of the iron in the blood. The first of these is doubtless the true one. No one has ever found out how to remove freckles, Many people are annoyed b eruptions of the skin from the blood, an the only remedy is to attack tho trouble though the blood. The practiceof taking arsenic for the complexion is an exceed- ingly dangerous one Arsenic, as a remedy for skin disorders, is well known in therapoutios, but too carelessly used, it undermines the constitution. ~Reput- ablo druggists will not sell Fowler's solu- tion of arsenic, which is the form in which iv is usually taken, without a doc- tor's prescription. These so-called med- ic;'.u!rnupl for the skin have no particu- larly good effect. There is nothing bet- ter than the white castile, and the only benefit that can be derived from external washes is cleanliness. ‘A very common skin disorder is that from which young men, particularly be- tween the ages of 16 and 22 or 23, suffer. = The trouble seems to develop with the early growth of the beard, and causes an annoying pustular eruption. Sometimes this affection, which is called acne, pro- ceods #o far as to amount to a disease, but it is usually trifling, and it is per- fectly suscoptible of treatment. The remedies ordinarily applied are, however, inoperative, and the true nature of the disorder is but little known. The follicle, or sac, from which the hair grows, is from an eighth to a quarter of an inch in depth, and is supplied with moisture by a littlo gland at the side of the follicle, which contains a secretion called sebum. If through any cause the secretion of sebum becomes too plentiful, the follicle is likely to become clotted up, and nature's way of removing it is by inflam- mation, which forms a pustule, When the growth of the beard begins to develop the secretion of the sabaceous matter is stimulated, and t'e pustules frequently appear in great numbers. The only effective treatment known for this simple variety of acne is to thrust a needle ito the follicle as far as possible and remove the obstruction. This is a painless operation, for the needle does not pierce the skin. The clothing of the sebum in the follicle can usually be seen before any inflamation has taken place, so that the latter may be avoided. With careful treatment of this sort, and frequent washing with water, there should be no difticulty in curing any case where the difficulty is not constitutional. The uce of grease or oil of any kind is bad for the skin under such conditions. Com- plixicns differs very much with the climate. Tho English have, beyond a doubt, the most beautiful complexions in the world. Awerican girla possess moro beauty of feature, perhaps, but their compiexion are not nearly so fine, As one goos farther south toward the equa- tor, one sees darker skins and darker hair and eyes, for all these physical char- acteristics have reference to climate influ- ences, Upon two things the condition of the skin lL\ pends—oil and coloring mat- ter, The skin of a very old man or wo- man, for want of oil, becomes like wrinkled dried-up parchment; an Albino has scarcely any coloring matter in his hair, eyes, or complexion. To finish 1 will give you a receipt for used by the dames of ancient Rom Probably it is familiar to many, but ther may bo others who have never read of it. " | These ladies made a stiff paste of rye flour, and covered their faces with it on retiring. In the morning they washed it off vith milk (they never used water) und applied a little powder, if it was doemed necessary. This, we are told, on good authority, to be the best method of improving the complection that has over been used, eitherin ancient or mod- orn times. The rye flour is said to posi- tively draw from “the skin any marks that may have lingered on it, ureover, it makes the complection charmingl, soft, an effect which the milk helps produce. Several Parisian belles adopt- Empress Eugenie tried it. their lovely skins, In fon of the clever druggist it3is doubtioss very efficacious in softening and bleach- ing the skin. e The Author of “My Maryland." ‘Washington Letter in Phila. Kecord. lightful men in Washington, rolative to the very complete arrangements they have made for tours In. Bureos the coming Spring and Summer. **Cook’s Excur- slonist,” containing maps and full particulars, will be mailod to any addross on receipt-of 10 centa A Suggestion, Wall Street News. “It’s no use, Mary,"” he said, as he got off the train at station in New Jersey, and found his wife waiting to drive him home to the farm. “What's happened?” *“Why, down in York the bulls are pre- dicting a big wheat crop.” “‘Well, isn’t that what we hope for!” “Yes, but the bears say that England won't buy a bushel of us this fall.” *‘Oh, well, Samuel, I shouldn’t worry over it,” she said, as she surrendered the lines, 'if wheat Is big and prices low, we | can make up forit in the cider. You know we can water that almost half, and sell all that we can make.” — NoExperiment, With a majority of people it is no_experl- ment that Dr. Bosanko's Cough and Lung Syrup s a cure for Coughs, Colds, Paius in tho Lunges, Soroness in the Chost, ofe., but for thoue® who doubt, aske your neighbors who have used It orgota freo mample bottle of Schroter & Becht, the druggista. Rogular sizo 50 conts and $1.00, Sold to'the trado by C. ¥, Goodman. ——— The Working Day in Austria, Vienna dispatch to the London Standard. To-day the lower house passed almost unanimously the most important section of the government factors bill, whose provisions will revolutionize Austrian in- dustry. It provides that workmen in factories shall not be occupied tor more than eleven hours out of the twenty-four, and should have at least one hour's in- terval for meals. The ministers of com- merce, on the advice of the chamber of commerce, may permit in certain cases one additional working hour daily; the sohedule of these exceptions to be revised triennially. The *‘normal workday,” as it is technically called, has hitherto ex- isted only in Switzerland, and its intro- duction into Austria must seriously dim- inish her power of competition with other countries, and particularfy with Hungary, whore no such restriction of labor exists, and whose manufactures, as is guaranteed by the commercial treaty, may freely enter Austria. | — A Newspaper Editor, 0. M. Holcomb, of Bloomville, Ohio, rises to explain: *'Had that terrible disease catarrh for twenty years; couldn’t taste or smell, and hearing was_failing. Zhomas' Felectric Oil cured me. These me facts voluntarily gi against o former prejudico of patent medi- cine.” e Grape Growing, J. B, Armstrong, in Rural New Yorker, In California we practice sulphuring the vines to prevent mildew, grape-rot and blight, known under the various scientific names proper to these diseases. When the newly grown canes are from ten to fifteen incheslong, putting forth blossoms men go into the vineyards with dredg made of tin cans, like an overgrown pep- per box, with or without hundlesattached, and rapidly sprinkle the leaves and ten- drils with flowers of sulphur, This is usually done in the morning when the leaves are wet with dew, so that the sul- phur will stick for severaldays. Another application is often made three or four weeks later. There are no after effects imparting the taste or smell of brimstone to the berries; for, long before they ripen, the substance is blown away by the wind or worn off by the rusting leaves. It is the only effectual remedy in use here. Though we grow more varieties of eventa the ladies who are kown to have [ess of rooting the cuttings. followed the resipe of the Tomans re ko grafting, o ) 6 SALLIe season. B8 ena i aave baen celarual Tt suocess with the Delaware grafted on the fia ot b bpin. n t ¢ {isis doubtlons” | the Clinton, which was used beoause it ian James R. Randall, the gentle author of the flery war song, *‘My Maryland, My Maryland,” is one of the most de- You find grapes, and many of tenderer kinds, such as are only raised under glass in the At- lantio states, the ture are not so different, but that many valuable hints might be of service to the industry there. For instance, it is well- known to viticulturists that some kinds of hard to rooc, and of slow growth rts vines are when started, Here all colder climates considerable care. strong grower,and for the further reason, of interest to us in California, it is phyll- However, grafts do very oxeraproof. well on any other stock. Oalled to Preach We feel called upon to preach s few gospel that are worth kuowing, Wawant facts —facts everybody to enjoy all that is possible the conditions of grape cul- @ root 0 | readily from the alip, they roquir; in v is ed this plan, and it is rumored that the |often desirable to fruit new sorts as soon At all | 88 possible, without waiting the slow pro- il ‘We resort and sometimes get a bunch or I have had good . . ? , id. W t all those who are sufferin it difficult to beliove that this quiet, lib- | from: sheumatism. neuralgie, and sl aches eral, broad-minded man wrote that nar- |svrains and pains to know that Thomas' Edec- row, passionste appeal. He was very ' fric Ol is an unfailing and splendid cure. ‘Want of Faith. 1f Schroder & Becht,the druggists,donot suc coed 1t in not for the want of faith. They have such faith in Dr. Bosanko's Cough and” Lung syrup as a remedy for Colds, Consumption, and Lung affectons, that they will give a bottle free to each and every one who is in need of a medicine of this kind e Facts About the Flyers, Fallen Leaf, who made such a record in the Hindoo Stakes, is a daughter of Mollie McCarthy, by her first husband. She had only been a week from Califor- nia when she ran in the Hindoo at Cov- ington, Ky. The great racer Force is dying of lung fever. The Narragansett Park spring_meeting ing at Providence will be held June 17, 18, 19 and 20. Young Smuggler, who has a_record of 2:29}, will take a rest until the circuit meeting in Hartford. The Dwyer brothers intend to weed out their stables and let Trainer Roe de- vote his energies to the promising two- year-olds. Maud S. recently showed a mile and repeat at Chester Park. Billy Barr drove her, and as he nodded at _the turn a hun- dred watches were flashed out. The beau- tiful mare came down the track with that same old, easy, swinging gait, flnishing the mile in 2:27. In hersecond attempt she completed the mile in 2:24., i ——— From Cleveland, Ohio. Comes a letter signed T. Walker, saying: ““About six months ago I commenced taking Burdock Blood Bitlers for protracted case of lumbago and general debility, and am now pleased to statebave recovered my appetite and wonted strength. Feel better altogether” —— He Wanted To Arkansaw Traveler, Immigrants after _coming to Arkansaw are soon naturallized. The other day on a railway train an Irishman stopped the conductor and asked: “What toim do yez git inter Little Rock?” “Six-thirty."” “Can’t yez pull out an’ git in a half hour sooner?” *‘No; is your business very urgenti” Yis, av yez plaze.’ “Do you live there?” “No, never was there. Me brother does. I'm just from Ireland.” ““Then why are you so desirous of ar- riving there by 6 o'clock!” ““Wall, yez see, sor, there is illection thero to-day, an’ T want to git there in toim to vote before the polls close,” Vote. —— With the condiments generally attain- able it is not possible to produce a mayo- naise dressing for salada that will com- pared with Durkee's dalad Dressing. Buy a bottle and be convinced. — A POISONOUS PRO DUCE. The Employment of Mischievous Sleep Producers. Lancet. The death of a medical man—Dr. John Middleton, late surgeon major in the second life guards, but at the timo of his decease a practitioner at Stockton— will again draw attention to the mis- chieyous, and, we believe, wholly inde- such depressing narcotics as chloral and fensible practice of giving and taking | bromide of pottasium as a remedy for sleeplessness. Sloeplessness is always wakefulness in one or more of its multi- tudinous forms, and the recourse to nar- cotic poisone for its relief is utterly un- scientific and deplorable from a thera- peutical point of view. 1t is as clumsy in theory -in so far as it can be said to have a theory—as knock- ing & man down because he needs rest. Wi.t is it that prevents the natural and physiological rest of the body at ryth- mical periods, The brain is as truly a rut of the body as the stomach, and it s as much the {.ulc of the organs of the mind to prevent sleep by mental worry or v-kal{’nlneu asit is » fault of the stomach to render sleep impossible by bad digestion. No intelligent practition- er ever thinks of narcotizing the nerves of the gastric organ to promote tleep. ‘Why, in the name of common sense, should any medical man for an instant think it legitimate to narcotize the brain because it exhibits some disturbing irreg- ularity in its functions? THE AGGREGATE OF MANY ALEWIS, Sleep is not & speclal prerogative of the brain, Every organ sleeps, and gen- eral sleep is aggregate of many eleeps. It is time to protest against this clumsy rocedure. If we do so warmly, it is ocause we feel that the mistake is of common making. It is so much easier to write & prescription or make up a bottle of medicine or a box of pills with one of the rank poisons that mimic sleep, and as they do 8o deprave cerebral and nerve tissue, than it would be to search out the real and acuive cause of wakefulness. When will the progress of professional enlightenment reach that point at which all those clonks for ignorance that depend for their significance on the negative in are ostracized from our nomenclatum? Dr. Clifford Allbut has just pleaded forei- bly and eloquently for the discarding of that wondrously silly word *‘indigestion.” Will no spirited scientist help to exorcise the haunting folly that clings to tho term “‘insomnia.” All terms with in, negative, imply ig- norance on the part of those who frame and use them, and, which is worse, are content with the state of knowledge ar- rived at, or are too indolent to extend and improveit. Who shall sound the depths or measure the range of the stu- pondous unknown over which the auda- city of a specialty and the apathy of a profession conspire to cast the veil of “‘in- sanity!” There aro more than a score and a half of known causes or forms of sleoplessness, each onme requiring direct and /specific treatment, and yet, as by common consent, the profession sanctions the abuse of such drugs as chloral and bromide as ‘‘poisoned sleep” producers. No medical man is justified‘in undertaking the treatment of his own maladies. It is impossible that he should so far atep out of himself as to be able to form a reasonable judgment of his case objectively; and no “practitioner has the justification of science for the recourse to narcoticsa as remedies for sleoplossness except when an exceptional pain is the accidental disturber of a sleep function, or a habit of wakefulness may be broken by an occasional dose of the stupefier. — Not A Case, Not a case of thenmatism, not a case of neuralgia, not a case of lameness, not a case of pain or eprain—not one—has failed to go when attacked by Thomas' Eelectric Oil. Sl Bigamy Highly Colored. Special to the Journal, Newark, N. J. June 4.—Miss Fannio McDonough, one of the prettiest and most accomplished colored girls in this city, was marriod on Wednesday ovening to George Harrison Brown, & young and fine-looking colored man who is always dressed in tho latest fashion. There was a select wedding reception at the cottage homo of the bride's parents, No. 230 South Orange avenue. Late last evening Brown was arrested in Jersey City and locked up at police headquarters in this city on a charge of bigamy. The complaint was made by William Johnstone, Johnstone, of Long Branch, and that he deserted her. the Johnstone woman but he applied for a divorce on good grounds, and his law- yer gave him to understand that the ap- plication was granted. Then he made Miss McDonough, his school love, his wife. Miss McDonogh, or Mrs. BrownNo. 2. was seated at the piano playing and sing- ing “‘I'm Lonely Without My Own True Love” when the reporter was ushered in- to her neatly furnished parior this after- noon. She has a fine soprano voice, was graduated from the high school, has a suppleand slender fizure, an olive tint on her cheeks, large black eyes and pout- ing lips. She blushed, smiled, and bowed heartily when the reporter asked if she was married to George Harrison Brown, ‘Yes, I was married by a clergyman a week ago,” she sald, “‘and George, foolish dear fellow, was as bashful as a girl.” “‘Did you know then that he had an- other wifel” the reporter asked. “‘George another wife!” exclaimed the young lady, laughing heartily. *No, he has no wife but me, and I never heard he waa married to anybody else.” “But he has been arrested for bigamy,” the reporter said, ‘‘and is now in custo- dy." My husband_arrested, and for biga- my,” exclaimed the startled lady as she sprang to her feet, her hands trembling and a frightened look springing into her eyes. ‘No, no; I will not believe it, for T have known him ever since we played at school together. He has kept company with me for years,” The reporter tried to quiet the lady, but she insisted on knowing all the facts, She then flung herself .n her knees and buried her face in her mother’s lap. She fainted just as the reporter withdrew, but towards evening she and the Rev. Mr. Davenport, a colored minister, called at Police headquarters. Brown smiled fainly when she appeared at his cell door and then he hung his head. ‘‘(ieorge, is this truci” she asked in a faint voice, ‘*Were you so cruel to me as they say? Did you mary this woman they tell me about?” Brown was silent. He dared not look in the eyes of the gitl he had wronged. She fainted, and was carried away from the cell. — Horsford's Acid Phosphate, As an Appetizer, Howard City, Mich., ith it a8 n touic, apetizer.” Dr. Morris Gibbs, ssys: T am greatly ploas it is an agreeable and a goo THIS DELTor Regenra-e tor is made expressly for the cure of derangements of the generative organs, / s atre P TRICITY permeating t B throughthe parts must ros : {ore them tohealthy action B Bo not confound this with Electrlo Belts aivertived t0 ro AL wils trom Lead ke, 1t 18 or the ONE spec- ific urpose. For circulars giving full information, address Cheeve tric Belt Co., 163 Washington 8t., Chicago, 111, Science of Life, Only $1.00. BY MAIL POSTPAID, A GREAT MEDICAL WOR! ON MANHOOD Exhausted Vitality, Norvous aad Physioal Debiliy, Promature Declino {n Man, Exrcrs of Youh, an uatold miseries esulting from Indiscretions o A book for every man, young, middle aged ) oy snd old. "It contains 196 prescriptions’ for all acute And chronlo diseases’ ¢ach o of which is juvalusble 80 found by the Author, whose i o1 yoars ls such asprobably never b-ll:r‘rlu;lntn;l{: lfi of N:o‘ physic an 800 pages, bound n besuifu French muslin m sossed covers, full gily, guarauieed 40 be & finer wors b overy sense,—mechi orary and professlon: any other work sold in his country for §2.60, or the money will be refunded In every instance. Price only §1.00 by mall, post- pald, ~lustrative sample 6 cents, Send now. Qo d medal awarded the aut the N Medic- | ‘The Scienso of Lifeshould be read by the tnstruction, and by the afficted for reliet, 1h will beuedt all. —London Lancet. ‘Thore {a 0o member of soclety $o whom The Sol- ence of Life will not be useful, whether youth, par- wnt, guardian, lnstruotor oF clergyman. —Argoaut. Address tho Peabody Medical Institute, or Dr. W. H. Parker, No. 4 Bulfinch Sireet, Boston Mass., who may be consulted on all discases requiring skill sud experionce. Chronlo and obstinate disoasosthat have led the eklll of all other phys- clane trosted suco ailu o THISELF ut This Qu & & # GOLDEN BOX OF 000DS TR T T o, A whokw- i oot ARt SOREL 10 tad AL ¥oung,I73 Groenwiel chan ax Need 4 who avers that Brown ia the husband of Margaret Ann Brown admitted to the Journal reporter to-day that he married URLINGTON. IOWA., THE LARG RON WORKS N ATE Tne Murray lron Works,” ENGINES, ‘PECALTIES: |BRIDGE. WORK, BOILERS, | \RONTECT,, t L‘mru,fl‘n‘” ne. 1\ MILL AND’ MINING i, /RON ‘WORK. 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ILUNMIEEIR, | i LIME AND CEMENT. ‘ Office and Yerd, €th exd Lovgls ts., flmaha Neh, r John L. Willsie. PROPRIETOR OMARA PAPER BOX FACTORY, 100 and 10838outh 14th Street, Omahs, Nebraska, */Correspondence Solicited.” 0. M. LEIGHTON, H, T, CLARKE. LEIGHTON & CLARKE, BUCCESSORS TO KENNAKD BROS, & 00.) Wholesale Drugists!" —DEALERS IN— i Oils. Paints- OMyYHA, Class, NEBRASKA A FRANZ FALK BREWING C0. | LAGE Milwaukee, Wis. BEER’ GUNTHER & CO., ’Sole Boftlgi M. HELLMAN & CO, Wholesale lothiers!! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREE1 €OR. 13Th Brushes. MAHA, -~