Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 9, 1884, Page 2

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OMAHA DAILY JULY 9, 1884, BEE---WEDNESDAY Vital Question he most eminent phymcian A:t{'uny Achool, what. 1 the bast thing in the world for quieting and _allayiog all irntation of the nerves, and curing all forms of nervous complaints, giving natural, childlike refresh- ! T they will tell yon unhesitatingly “<Some form of Hopa /11" CHAPTER 1, Ask any or all of the most eminent phys Tl CWhat is the best and only remedy that can bo relied on to cure all disenses of the kid neys and urinary organs; such as Bright's dis easo, diabetes, retention, or inubility to retain urine, and all’ the diseases and ailments pe- culfar to Women”™ “And they will tell you explicity and em phatically ' Buchu!! Ask the same physicians “What is the most reliable and surest cure for alll liver diseases or dyspapsia; constination indigestion, billionsnoss, ‘malaria, fever, ague, &c.," and they will tell 'you: Mandrake! or Dandelion /11" Hence, whea thow romedies aro combined with w e qually valuablo, R mpounde nto Top Ditters such & won crious curative powor s develope which is so varied in its operations that no disea ot §il health can possibly caist or resist its power, and yot it is ‘Harmless for the most frail woman, weakest Inva- 1id or smallest child to use. CHAPTER 11, “Patients Almost dead or nearly dyin Foryears, and given up by physicians, of Bright's and other ki liseases, liver com- plaints, eevers coughs, have been cured. Women gone nearly erazy fulnes«,and vario People drawn ont of shape trom ating pangs ¢ ehronic or suffor. Viw wd poisonin dyspepsin, indigos wost ull ot v 08 fradl’ Bitters, proof of whish horhood in the known nuine wiihout a bunch of gr In st all the vile, p stufl with “flop” or **Ho," in their nam e v havisared by DI 9 0.1 SRR CLBON 3. W. WOPPERUANY, OOLR AGENT, 51 BROADWAY. N. CELE! Hostettor's Sto- ch Bitters ispec laily adapt E"l‘ 9, Tothen ! 1 gthens the rgaus,and hy wleal calth # tho p enurgies to uohe ful il moves and p walarial feve stipation, dyspops healthfally stimo Intes th Kidoeys and Dl When ovor- »m'o by fatigue, STOMACH : ITTER iother inontal. oF physoal, tho wenry and debilitated find 1t a reliable source of renowed strength and cowfort, For salo by all druggists and dealers generally. Alike on the verandaof A e mansion of wonlth Qfand in the little cot. tage upon_the hill will therofreshing influenco ! | side, aro fastened. A SUN ENUINE, Design for Utilizing the Snn's Rays as Motive Power. w Yerk Evening Post. Fow person's know that the well-known Ericason hot-air engine, of which thous- ands have been sold for pumping pur- poses within the last fow years, grew out of Capt. Ericsson's experiments with a sun motor. The model of Ericsson's first working sun engine still stands under a glass case in the biz old-fashioned parlor at No. 36 Beach street, where Capt. Ericsson lives all the year round. The model is not more than 8 inches high, yet under a hot sun it can work ata rate which shakes the heavy table upon which it stands. It occurred to Capt. Erricason that by turning his eolar engine upside down and getting heat from a coal fire or a flame of oil or gas instead of from the sun, he could accomplish more in this climate, and the useful Ericsson pumping engine is the rosult. A practicable sun engine, to bo used where there is no coal or wood to be had-and plenty of sun, has been a problem upon which Capt. Erics- son has been at work for twenty-five years. His studies as to the amount of heat radiated by the sun have been of the most exhaustive description, and the pub- lished results have led Capt. Kricsson in- to controversies with French and Italian scientists as to the heat of the sun, the French savans contending that the sun is not 8o hot as Capt. Ericsson estimates, During the present summor, Capt. Erics- son hopes to determine by methods which can not be questioned the exact heat at the surface of the sun. Tho solar engine, as a practicablo working machine, was finished last sum- mor and worked regulerly in the back yard of No. 36 Beach street. Similar engines can now be built whenever thero is any need for them. Capt. Ericson gives the following description of his first machine. *“This mechanical devico for utilizing the sun's radient heat is the result of ex: periments conducted during a series of twenty years; & succession of experimen- tal machines of similar general design, but varying in detail, having been built during that period. The leading foature of the sun motor is that of concentrating the radient heat by means of a rectangu- lar trough having a curved bottom lined on the inside with polished plates so ar- ranged that they reflect the sun’s rays toward a cylindrical heater placed longi- tudinally above the trough. = This heater it is scarcely necessary to state, contains the acting medium, steam or air, em- ployed to transfer the solar energy to the motor; the transfer being effected by means of cylinders provided with pistons and valves resembling those of motive engines of the ordinary type. The bot- tom of tho rectangular trough consists of straight wooden staves, supported by iron ribs of parabolic cutvature secured to the insides of the trough, On thess staven tho reflecting plates, consisting of flat window glass silverod on the under 1t will bo readily un- deratood that the method thus adopted for concentrating the radient heat does not call for a structure of great accuracy, provided the wooden staves are secured to the iron ribs in such a_position that the silvered plates attached to the same has occurred outside of these two cities. All Italion and Spanish cities aro quaran- tined against them and the general alarm will probably keep the eopidemic within narrow limits, while recent discoveries in what may be called the science of zy- motic germ diseases may be trusted to reduce its evils within the infected cities to & minimum, The remarks of a local contemporary on Sunday, and again on Monday, that we of this city have nothing to fear from the approach of cholera by way of Yoko hama, because the steamers on that route reach here by a northerly circuit, are, we think, mie-leading, The circuit ia not northerly, but southerly; and if it were northerly, that would not insure vessels from Japan against cholera all the way over the ocean if they should happen to take the germs of the discase aboard and those should develop into an epidemic on any part of the trip. Tho summer voyage from Yokohama to San Franciaco is through seas on which the temperature averages higher than be- tween New York and Havre or Liver- pool, and for a good part of the distance as high as on the Mediterranean between Fgypt and Marsoilles. The cholera has beenat loast during three seasons brought acrors the Atlantic in the months of April and March—the first time to Quebec, in April 1848, The Atlantic temperature in that month, as far north as the gulf of St. Lawrence, is lower than oven the winter temperature of the Pacific ocen between here and the Japan sea. There is no data by which we can tell how low a temperature is required to kill cholora germs, We know, however, from the history of it in 1849 that it was in St. Louis as early as February and March of that year and that by the mid- dle of April it had assumed a frightful epidemic form at St. Louis and most of of the river towns on the Missouri as far up as St. Joseph. la one day in the month of April, 1849, out of a total pop- ulation not exceeding 350, it killed over thirty people at Kansas City. We know also that in 1850 epidemic cholera fol- lowed the emigration from Missouri across the plains to this state and that in altitudes 6000 feet above sea level it raged among the trains in the Rocky mountains and down to the Humbolt desert. Krom the 20th of September till the close of November it took on a form at Sacramento as terriblo as any ever reported from the crowded cities of Asia. But curious enough, though the people of that city fled in every direct- ion—to the plains, to the mountains andl to SanK'rancisco-the epidemic did not any where but at Sacramentc become serious and there were no signs of cholera as an evidemic in any part of tho stato 100 feet above tho sea And yot © tho _ Rocky mountains, from Scott’s Bluffs to the Humbolt, are strewn with the graves of those who died of cholera in the spring snd summer of 1850. San Francisco was then a place of about 14,000 inkabitants, all comprersed within thearea now bounded by Stockton, Pacific, Bush and Montgomery streets. Cholera was Lere, but only as amild epidemic, at the same time that, out of a population not exceeding 4500, it was sending from thirty to fifty victims to the ard daily at Sacramento, Both cities were very filthy, and in Sacramento the water and air were exceedingly bad. A dry, frosty December putan end to it. But on the plains it appeared again in reflect the solar rays toward the heater. The trough, 11 feot long and 16 feot brond, including parallel opening in the bottom 12 inches wide, is sustained by o light truss attached to ench end, tha beater being supported by vertical plates secured to the truss. The Ridge's Food Blano Manago apparent, 1t is nourlshiog, satisfy- ing, and Is prepared In & fow minutes. Full 6GC., ¥~ 20 wna 1. 0 wizo_espoclally to tamilen. Sold by all Drugyists and alao by many Grocers, Ridge's Food does not tax the digestive or. gans, WOOLRICH & Co., on Iabel, RED STAR LINE Bolgian Boyal and U.S, Mail Steamers SAILING EVERY SATURDAY, BETWEEN NEW YORK AND ANTWERP The Rhine, Germany, Italy, Holland and France Btéerage Outw, Propald from Antwerp, §1; Fxoursion, $49, inluding bedaing, eto, 24 Cabin, $60; Round Trip, §90.00; Excursion, $100; Saloou from 860 %0, §00; Excursion’ 110 to 8160, £ Potor Wright & Sons, Gon, Agents, b6 Broad. way N, Y. P, ia; D). m&n Olod Kim 1y Caldwell. Hamilton & Co., Omaha, man & Co., 204 N. 16th 8t 1 all, OmahaAgents. VICOR & LGURE Quick. mure, aafe. Tiook_frea, xency, 160 Fulion 51., New Yoris o of Ofca. 1t vora T K007 1ol Foart Se., Maw wata SOFT ELASTIC SECTION GOR 0 wear longer, forn neater, A afaclon tiat tny 4. H. F. LEH)MANN, JAMES Y. CRAIG, Lmumwlmmwm AND FLORIST, Plans, aod estimatos of cost of laving out new or g old lawns, rnd\n , sodding, Sl "wil be far on appioation. Giower ool dealor 10 all kinds ’ Flowexs, Bhrubs, Ornsmental o i o Junt the thing {or Cauilery or Tawn Decorstion, ouse Aud_ Nurser Blrost, _'floflx Out Flowers and Flower- ot all somsont, a0d any [ Deaigua or Bouquets made up on the ehor Orders by pall mm"nn sttended to. i 1 i £ LB B heater is 6} inches in diameter, 11 feot long, exposing 130x9.8- 1,274 superficial inches to the action of the reflected solar rays. The reflecting plates, each 3inches wide and 20 inches long, intercopt & sun- beam of 130x180 23,400 square inch soction. The trough is supported by central pivot round which it revolves, The change of inclination is affocted by moans of Lorizontal axlo—concenled by the trough—the entire mass being 8o ac- curately balanced that a pull of five pounds applied at the extremity enables aporson to change the inclination or causo the whole to revolve. A singlo revoqution of the motive engine develops more power than needed to turn the trough and regulate its inclination so as to face the sun during a day’s operation, The motor is a steam engine, the work- ing cyliuder being 6 inches in diamoter with'an 8-inch stroke, The piston rod, passing through the bottom of the cyl- inder, operates a force-pump of b inches in diameter. By means of an ordinary crosshead secured tq the piston-rod be- low tho steam oylinder, and by ordinary connecting rods, motion is imparted to n crank shaft and fly wheel applied at the top of the engino frame; the object of tlus arrangement being that of showing the capabilicy of the engine to work either pumps or mills, The average speed of the engines during the trials last summer was 120 turns per minute, the absolute prossure of the working piston being thirty five pounds per square inch Oapt. Kriccson concludes from the work of his engine last summer in pump- ing water, that the sun motor of tho type doscribed will be a valuable machine for tropical countrios where coal and wood are scarce, From the hest obtained from solar rays for working his engine, he bases the calculations which led him to fix the degree of heat at the surface of thesun at 1,302,640 © Fahrenheit. This yoar's experiments will, he hopes, dis- pose of some doubts as to the exastitude of _these calculations, and also enable him to take into account certain factors which have not been considered, The famous builder of the monitors is now in his 82 year, but is as active in mind and body as a man of 60, He has lived for the last quarter of a century in the big house in Beach street—a faghion- ablo noighborhood when he moved there ~—devoting his whole day to scientific re- search and experiment, assisted by his secretary and some draughtsmen and machinists, He never goes out during the day, but takes a stroll every evening, His health is excellent, and his interest in scientific matters of all kinds uu- abated, e — Horsford's Acid Phosphate Advantageous in Dyspepsia. Dr, G, V. Doxsey, Piqua, Ohio, say ““I have used it in dyspepsia with very marked benef If there is deficiency of acid in the stomach, nothing affords more reltef, while the action on the nervous system is decidedly beneficial, o —— Cholera Phenomena. San Francisco Chronicl 8o far there is nothing in the cholera in the south of France to alarm any one at this distance. It1s confined to the two cities of Toulon and Marseilles, the latter having a population of 320,000, the former 62,000, lon for & fortnight and the deaths for the twenty-four hours ending at 6 p. m. June 24th were but four, while at Marseilles only two deaths had occurred. Both places are closely quarantined by land and sea, aud, though it may spread from any one of ten thousaud who got out and away before the quarantane, there is yot 1o authen'y Dor saying that a singly case 1t has been in Tou- | J 1851-52-63. Doubtless a hot, humid at- mosphera is best adapted to cholera, but for all that it has assailed the driest and coldest climates, and coldest winters have failed to destroy the germs left from the preceding summer. From all of which 1t would seem that we are not secure against its approaoh from Japan, should it de- velop into an epidemic there, and that prudence requires a close watch on the vessels entering this port during the sum- mer and fall months from Asiatic ports thatare infected with this plague, o —— To make a salad that is certain to please all tastes you need only use Durkee's Salad Drossing. Nothing equal to it was ever offered, and none so popular. 1t is a superb tablo sauce. An Army Poker Game, From the Buffalo Expross “DIid I ever tell you about my army poker experience?” asked a small-sized City Ha!l official with a very prominent forehead, of a reporter of the Kxpress Saturday, No? 1 thouzht I'd told overybody. It was in’G8 when I was first lieutenant of a_company of cavalry, then stationed at Fort Lyon, Colorado. We had been lying idle for weoks, and were tired out of doing nothing, when Ben Smith, our paymaster, came around with six months’ pay. “Did he ever play poker? Waell, I guess not. 1t would have been all his commission was worth, on account of his vespousible position, “The evening we were paid off some of the oflicers got up a game and inyited mojto como and join them. 1'd never play for money, and I know that most of them were old hands at the game, but I was just fool enough to go in with them and 1 lost every cent I had. **When 1 got up next morning 1 felt ‘blue,’ 1 can toll you. 1 hadu't paid my mess bill or settled my post-trader’s ac- count. Ihadn't even squared up with my striker. *You blamed fool, it serves you rigbt,’ 1 was saying, when T met one of my companions of the night before, the regemental quartermaster. ‘Woll, John,' says ho, in a confidential sort of way and in a low voice, ‘we'ro going to have another gamo tonfght. You must come down.” 1 told him 1'd donated all the money I saved for the presont and did not wish any more experience, 1 fi- nally agreed, however, to try once more on condition I should never be asked again I borrowed 800 of the. quarter- master and went down to the rendez- vous a little after sundown, I pitched into the game rocklessly, as I was in a hurry to lose my money and have it over with, but the more recklessly 1 played the better I came out. ‘Bluf’ was no name for my game. We were playing for $2.60 blind, 85 to come i One hand, I remember, I scared 'em all out but the quartermaster in the start by not drawing acard, He thought I was ‘bluf- fing’ and he raised me $10, 1 ‘saw’ him and raised him §560, He studied over his cards o moment and threw up his hand, He had a queen full 1 laid down two duces and raked in the pot. “‘When the bugle blowed for reveille next morning we were still atit, I was way ahead. 1 had my six months' pay back and several hundred dollars bulitr:l. But I had had enough of poker playing, taking the two games together, and have never tried it since,” ———— Angostura Bitters were prepared by G, B, Siegert for his private use. tion i such to day that tney have onerally kuown as the best appetiz ing tonic. Beware of counterfeits, Ask your grocer or drugglst for the genuino artizle manufuctured by D J, G, B. Siegert & Sona. S — (It is said the Sioux City saloons will et around the law by moving to the Nebraks side and hiring o steamship to wfer the thirsy free of o' GIFT-GIVERS IN OHIO, A Long Roll of Men Who Have Con- tributed to Enrich Olncinnati Bat Few Who Are lous Bome Peculiar Oases of Mu- nificenc Cincinnati special to the Chicago Daily News, Cincinnati calls a long roll of men who have contributed from their wealth to enrich the city, but among the names on- ly one is illustrious, only ons man is en- titled to the honor of being called a bene- factor; that man is Reuben R. Springer. He has enjoyed his wealth by giving It away. While in full possession of his faculties he has soen the mo numents of his munifiicence rise about him. He has given in secret and without stint, finding it,n8 thegentlemen of thecloth would say, “More blessed to give,” etc, He has al- 80 given publicly, but without ostenta- tion. No man was ever turned from his door hungry, and no worthy charitable organization ever wanted assistance and applied to Mr. Springer in_vain, As much as it is possible for Cincinnati peo- ple to revere anything, they revere this, their benefactor, But of Cincinnati’'s so called benefac- tors. One of the high schools of this eity is named from a childish man, who gave about $50,000 to endow it. His name was Thomas Hughes. He was a shoo- maker 8o much given to_his cups that it became impossiblo for his wife to live with him, They therefore lived apart, and soveral years before his death she obtained a divorce. Tommy's love turn- ed to fkate when the the decree was granted, and during the rest of his lite he was haunted with a fear that Mrs. Hughes would some day inherit his wealth. He cared no more for educa- tion than does & jackdaw, but the en- dowment of a school he believed would afford him the best possible way of de- priving his wife of even a chance to get a fraction of his fortune. 'The divorced wife died in_penury, and the Hughes High school still grindsout an annual grist of boy and girl graduates. Four or five years ago an_obscuro man boarded at one of the principal hotels of this city, His landlord knew that he was wealthy and that was an assurance always when the time came for making out the monthly bills, The boarder was a bachelor and save to the small coterie that nightly played poker in his room he was a comparative stranger to everybody in the city. Even the bell boys of the hotel did not know his name, and one of the waiters in the dining room spoke of him as *‘the man who once gave me a foe.” It ocourred to this obscure gentle- man ono day that unless he did some- thing to rescue his name from oblivion his remains, from sheer lack of identi- fication, might find their way to the dis- secting table. A few hours later the Cincinnatti papers announced that C. W, Wost had givon a contingent of $125,000 to build an art museunr. There was a specification in the gitt that the city raise $125,000 more and build the museum. The city ‘‘hustled,” the money was raised, the museum is now in process of construction and C, W. West is heralded as a benefactor. About fifteen years ago a man named Tyler Davidson lay dying in this city. As his brother-in law, a millionaire, Mr, Henry Probasco,leancd over the bedside, Davidson whispered, *“When I am gone use a couple hundred thousand dollars of my fortune in having constructed a bronze fountain, to be located in, Fifth Street Market space.” This Davidson whispered and goon after died. His in- structions were oral, ahd the millionaire brother-in-law, who was his sole heir, though undeno legal obligations to do 80, carried out the wlshes of the dying man, To-day 1o one ever speaks of ~tho Tyler Davidson fountain, though the name is cast in relief on the ornament, 1t is known as the Probasco fountain,and the words ““Tyler Davidson” are looked upon by the present generation as the name of the designer or maker. The millionaire Probasco never gave a dollar of his own wealth. As Mayor of a com- munity of sybarites in Cincinnati's wealthiest suburb, however, he threw a little boy conductor of a street car into jail a fow nights ago because the boy had insisted upon the millionaire paying his fare. Probasco had lost his ticket, and after paying the boy b cents had found tho lost property. He then demanded a roturn of the five cents, at the samo time proflering the ticket. The boy insisted that ho had punched his trip-slip, which called for b cents, and that if he returned the nickle he himself would lose it. A £5,000 damage sutt for false imprison- ment is now pending against the choleric Probasco, David Sinton, the wealthiest man in the Ohio valley and a resident of this city, hitched a string to £50,000 about six years ago, and offered it to the city in tho shape of a bronze forum, to be ated on what is called Fifth Street Square. Tho gift was nccompaniod with a volumno of provisos which no body of men with any dignity could accept, and the common council rejected it; but David Sinton was at once enrolled among the *‘Cinsinnati benefactors,” Josoph Longworth, who owned acres of houses in this city, gave a fow lots to the school of design, and just before his death, a few months ago, asked the trustees of the school to give them beok to him, stating as a reason that he con- templated doing something better for that wsthetio institution. Longworth’s nawe is handed down as blest. He is a Cincinnati benefactor. mies Pilos are frequently preceded by a sense of welght in the bucmum- and lower part of the abdomen, causin ationt to suppose he has some affection of the kidnoys or neighboring organs, At times, sym toms of indigestion are prosent, as flatuency, uneasiness of the stomach, ete. A molstere like perspiration, rflnlunln & Aery disagresable itching particu. larly at night after getting warm In d, its 107 common attendant. Internal, External and Ttching Piles yield at once to the applica- tion of Dr, Bosanko's Pile Remady, which acts diroctly upn tho parts aflocted, sheorbing the tumors, allaying the intense lching, wud of- fecting & pormanent cure Where other reme- dies have failed. Do not delay until the drajn on the systom produces permanent _disability, but trv It and be cured. - Schroter & Becht. *“Trade supplied by (. ¥ Goodwan,” em— Old Andy's Trouble, Arkansaw Traveler. *‘Wush somebody woul' kick me all over dis town, " said old Andy. ‘‘® hat's the matter?” “Matter nuff ter dribe or po' man crasy, I had er ten dollar bill whuy 1'd wucked er month fur, an'er feller gin' mo one o' dese advertisement counterfeit hills, Wall, I went out ter de picnic ter 'joy myse'f an’ cut er splurge ‘mong de wimmen, Thought I'd make er mighty' pression for er widder ‘oman whut 1'se been fur cr long time wantin’ ter marry. Her littlo boy come er prancin’ 'roun’ an haulin’ out de counterfeit ten dollars 1 gib it ter him, ‘Thavk de gennerman for such er heap er money,’ said de lady. **Neber mind, s'l, case 1'se got plenty o shit, Les’ all go down heah an' git some fowcronm uod fooda water’ Wall, or, | flock o' wimmen folks went down wid me au' dy st down an’ ed dase 'fs ‘what your bill, sah? When dey got, up 1 said ter do m...,l hree dollars,’ says he.” ** ‘Gimme de change,’ 'I, an’ T flung down er ten dollar bill. He tuck it up, turned hit over an’ said “ ‘Whut yer tryin’ to heah is rank counterfeit. ““Good Lawd! I ‘gunter git sick at de stomach, I had gin that triflin’ chile de good money. *Mis Washin'ton, &', ‘Whar's dat sweet boy o’ yourn gone ‘‘ ‘“Neber mine de aweet boy,’” said de ce-cream man, ‘I want pay fur dat aweot stuff whut yer's all been puttin erway “““Keep on yer shirt, s'T; ‘yer'll got yer money.’ “CIf I doan git hit mighty quick,’ say he, ‘yer'd better take off yer shirt an’ par yesse'f.’ He commenced ter take off his apron, an’, cuttin' roun’ de corner, I flew. De win' whistled in my years { went so fast.’ Airter erwhile I sneaked back an’ hung gin me? Dis er roun’ de suburbs, Seed de ’'oman's boy, an’ 1 went up ter him an' naid ‘* My dear little chile, lemmo see dat mnneidwlmt 1gin yer terday.’ * ‘Mudder tuk it erway from me,’ sez he. ‘Said she would keep er part o hit fur me, but yonder she is spendin’ it wid dat preacher.’ ‘‘ *Thinkin’ dat she had vaid my bill, 1 walked up ter de stan.’ “Madam, 81, ‘did you pay my bill? ‘' ‘Huh, yer needin’ think dat I'se made outin money,’ says she. “‘Jes den de ice-cream man cama outen his tent an’ kicked me roun’ scan’lus. Now, 1 wants some stout, active young feller to finish de job. Er fool nigger is de bigges' fool 1 eber sced.” e Of the many remedics betore t ervous Debility ne len’s nently ry $1 pkg., 6 for § wvists. — Fruit Near the Ground, Some persons strive to have fruit pro- duced as far from the ground as possible, They seem to think that there isan advantage in having it near the sun. They delight in trees with tall trunks and branches that extend upward. They are constantly cutting off the lower limbs, 8048 to secure very tall trees. They trim pear stalks so that they look like Lombardy poplars, In buyin? trees of a nursery or from traveling dealers thoy select the tallest. 1f they have grape vinesthey take pains to train them very high from the ground, In some cases they allow laterals to run into the branches of trees, They con- struct trellisses six or more feet inheight They endeavor to fix the largest vines on the highest wire or piece of wood used as a support. They train currant and goos- berry bushes in tree form. They en- courage blackberry and raspberry cones to attain a great length. and are at the trouble and expense of training them with stakes and twine. They have frames for supporting tomato vines, so as to nave them grow like trees. There is one advantage in having fruit at some distance from the surface of the gronnd. 1t renders it less liable to be gathered by boys or picked by fowls. very other consideration is against the practice. Large fruit, as apples, peats, and peaches are diflicult to gather when they are on tall trees. They are liable to injury in falling after they become ripe. No kind of fruit ripens as well at a long distance from tho ground as it does quite near it. The temperature of the air is higher near the surface than several feet above it. With grapes and tomatoes, raised in this latitude, it is important to make all we can out of ths short season. The soil stores up heat during the day and gives it out during the night. The nearer the fruit is to the ground the more benefit it derives from 1t. Fruit within a foot of the ground has the benefit of more heat than that which is several feet removed the Face, Lost Manhood, pusitively. 8 no cxperimeniing, 1 @ at once used in each case, IT CURES WIHEN ALL OTHER MEDI- CINES FAIL, s it scts DIRECTLY and AT ONCE on the KIDNEYS, LIVER and BOW- EL8, restoring them to & healthy nction. It is a safe, mure and spoedy eure phy frienda given them up ito dle. IT IS BOTH A ''SAFE CURE" and a " SPECIFIC.” Xt CURES N Liver, Bl Dronay, Dis had all Dis of the Kidneys, dder and Urinary Orgnns; ravel, Diabetes, Bright's ‘ains in the Ba Itetention or of Urine, N male Weaknesses, Taundice, Bil ey, Sour Stomach, Dyspeps sin, Constipntion and Pilen. #1.25 AT DRUGAISTS, #3-TAKE NO OTHER. 63 for I 1 Pamphlot of Sold Tes. HUNT'S RE. ';l\' €O, Providence, . 1. 311,350 IN CASH GIVEN AWAY To SMOKERS of Blackwell's Genuine Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco. This Special Deposit is to guarantee the payment of the 25 premiums fully described 'n_our former announcements. The premiums will be puid, no matter how small the number of bags returned may be. Ofice Blackell's Durham Tobaceo Co.) Durham, N. C., May 10, 1884 § P.A. WILE K of Durham, Durham, . C. you $11.950.00, which lease place on Special Deposit to pay preminms for our empty tobacco bags to be returned Dec, Bth. Yourstruly, J.S. CARR, President. Ofice of the Bank of Durkam,) Durham, N. C, Hay 10, 1551 S. CARR, Fsq. 3.8 CARR B koIl Durham Todaceo Co. receipt of ccd upon 5 . Cashier, ture of BULL on tho senta. AR James Medival Ingtituta Z ') Chartered by theStateof 1. nois for theexpress purp of givingimmediate relietin all chronic, urinary and pri- vate disecses. Gonorrheea, ClectandSyphilisin all theif complicated forms, also all discases of the Skin and Blood promptly relieved and permanentlycured by reme- dies testedina Forty Years Special Practic i ss. Night Losses by Dream: 2 appropriate re.z.edy ‘onsultations, per- er, sacredly confidential, Med- seat by Mailand Express, No marks on ckage to indicate contents or sender. Address BEDFORD & SOUER Owing tothe increase in our business we've admitted fo the firm Mr Edwin Davis,who is well and favorably knownin Omaha.Thig will enable us to han- dle an increased list of property. We ask those who have desi- rable property for from it. e — A CARD.—To all who are suffering from exrors 1 ludiscrétions of youth, nor 1088 of manh te, 1 ire you, FREE ARG! ody was discovered by a mirsione ca. Send selt addressod onve INMAY, Station D. New York T — rls and Tight Lacing, Clara Belle, in Cincinnati Enquirer, A girl who has just returned from London tells me that, in the health ex- hibition there, one of the exhibits was meant to depict the horrors of tight- lacing. A waxen figure was subjected, for the purpose of divulging the secrets of the ladies’ torture chamber, to a com- pression to the girth which a woman may, with proper self-respect, measure around the waist. The sufferings of the dummy, inaudible, save for the creaking of the machinery, which, in the forcible - pression of the waist, might well be mis- taken for groans, were quite terrible in their realism, but the female spectators instead of being instructed. is that the old curmudgeons who take corsets &s a text for serméns against us are left very far behind. In- juriously tight squeczing of the waist i rare, indeed, nowadays. ‘*The coming man and woman,” says Dio Lewis, “*will be just as large at the waist as at any other part of the body.” What an old fool | Did he ever see a Fiji Island wo- man? I have. She had never been compressed by s0 much as & calico wrap- per, and yet her waist had a goodly taper to it. Pretty soon Lewis will be de- manding legs as big at the ankles as at the calves. And when that sameness of outline fis produced by bigness of ankle rather than smallness of calf, I hope he will be satisfied, for surely the owner won't, e —— Letter from Senator H, O, Nelson, find In DR, H. £ > | DR.HORRE'S Dumb Ageiict Prolapsus Ut oured by uslug & belt. To an that disoase, I would say, buy Horne's Floctrio Belt, 1y storo, 1420 Douglas strect, Omaha, Neb. srnam St , Omah; EONLY TRUE < AR! ELECTI 1l Liver thina, Hient $1.000 Would Wot Buv It. Di. Horxs—I was affilotod with rheumatism and ono afBlicted with Any one oan confer with me by writlng calling WILLIAM LYONS, MAIN OFFICE—Opposite postoffice, room 4 Fron: £ ¥or salo at 0. ¥. Goodman's Drug Store’ 1110 Ordors fllled C. 0° D SENATE CHAMBER, Aupany, N. Y., April 4, 1883, On the 27th of February, 1883, I was taken with a violent pain in the region of the kidneys. I suffered such agony that I could hardly stand up. As soon as possible I applied two ALLcock’s Po- rous Plasters, one over each kidney and laid down, In an hour, to my surprise and delight, the pain had vanished and I was well. I wore the plasters for a day or two as a precaution, and then removed them. I have been using AvLcoc Porous Plasters in my family for the last ten rs, and have slways found ence I believe they aro the best plaster tn the world, Hexky 0, Neusox, ——— Didw't Want to Stop. “‘What are you slowing up for?' yelled a treight conductor to an engineer on of our Vermont roads. ‘‘Why, we've run over a book agent.” *Drac it all, then, why don’t you keep on! We can’t kill | him unless the whole train runs him," —— Ladies, attention! In ha Diamond Dyes more coloring is given than in any known dyes, and _they give faster and more brilliunt colore, 10c, at all druggists. Every- { o body praires them, Wells, Richardson & Co., Buliogy ONMAZEIA, = Dess or Private which he undertakes: ages of 50 ana 60, are tro desire to evacuato the bladder, oiten accompanied by aslight smaiting and burning sensation, and & Butlington [Vt.] Free Press. [y o oposits & ropy sediment will often bo found, and sometimes s all particles of albumen will app I over | Ongans. DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP, beretatore existing botwe gorman s hereby alssolye busiucss will be carried on by § Vi Cumana, Dr.Tanner CROUNSE'S BLOCK, Corner 16th and Capitol Avenue, - INEBEXR. TREATS CHRONICDISEASES in all their forms. Y0 MEN, who are suffering from the effects Youthful Indiser , of would do well to avail them the quickest and best external [ of Southiul indicr SR romody for colds, strains, kinks and | tiose: s e, Tamner il puar i i ¥ i~ | antee to torfoit ¥ ase of Seminal Weak- rheumatic affections. From my experi- | su Discase, of any kind or character tails 2o cure, y meu between the MIDDLE AGED MEN with & t0o frequent ening of the systew in & manner that'the pa cannotscoount fon On_examining the urinary or the color will be of & thi b to a darkand torpid appearauce. Thre sro a 1 who die of this difticuly, jznorant of the cause. 1t is the second stago | weakness, Dr, Tanner will guarauteo a periect cure iu a'l such saud a healthy rostoration of4he Genito-urinary Call or address as above, Dr, Tanner sale,toplacethe same with us. The new firm will be l y | s, REAL ESTATE BROKERS. 213 South 14th St. Notice is hereby i sutme all the firu's labilitics e U

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