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tMAHA DAILY BEE--THURSODAY, AUGUST 14, 1884, ‘LI ONIWNOJ3Y SISI99NHA ANY SNYIOISAHd quickly and _er Iy cn Dyspensin, Indigeation, We b Blood, Malarin Chillsan I unfuiling remedy for Discases of tho Tt Kidneys and Liver, Tt is invalunvie for Discases peentinr to ‘Women, and all who lead scdentary 1iv Ttdoes not injure the teetl, canse headache produce constipation—other ron medicines do. Tt enriches and purifies the blood, stimulates the appotite, aids the asdmilation of food, re- licves Hearthurn and Belching, and strengthe he muscles and nerves, Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude, Lac , it hias no equal, 2%~ The genuine has above trade mark and crossed red Jines on wrapper. Take 10 other, Wade ouly by BROWN CHENICAL 0., BALTINORE, HDy DOCTOR WHITTIER 617 St. Charles sl.,'Sl. Louis, Mo. el o ror A regulnr gradun A kot Nervous Pros! , Debhity, Mental and Physical Weaknes! Mercurial and other Affece tions of Throat, Skin or Bones, Blood Poisoning, ores and llllcrrs, nro lnnu: with u Ileled Diséases Arising from Indiscretion, Excese, Exposure or Indulgonce, which protuce mmo of thy &l SRy dimners.of e rendoring ago im Jermameaily eured. Famehs i veated exveiope, freo to a Toe ur by mail free, aad invil A Positive Wriiten auarantee tvem to all esrable Mediclner sent everywhero, ampnicts, Eog © Gorman, 04 pages, de- wcribing above dlseases, in malo or' fomale, PILEE. MARRIACE CUIDE! Hapylaces 79 proweied by i o 260 pages, One plates, 11 15 DECIDED BY Royal Havana Lottery | coritalus all the curlous, Enow, A book of great ORIG INAL V) JLE HAVA GOULD & CO'’S. regarding their indurtries. comparison comprises a review of indus- tries involving about 76 per cent of the total product of Massachusetts manufact- urers, the statistics for which were gath- ered durinj year just closed. The way in which the work has been done can highly commended; the tables in detail will repay close study. pay for the week.” In some stores the irls are allowed but half an hour for WORKING GIRLS OF BOSTON. B y tion during the year proceding this in- Hours of Labor and Their Home Sar- iy and but 40 of thom rocived pay i 9, during the vacation; many went to visit ronndings When the Day’s friends or went home where their ex- P i penses stopped. One girl worked 14 Work is Done. years without a vacation of any kind, It - is reasonable that a certain length of ser- by Them in their | Vice should be required before vacations or other privileges are granted, but there is a general hardness of regulation en- forced against these workers; ina good The 15th annual report of the bureau | MAnY cases all holidays, oven Christmas, i causo a deduction of wages, and in case of statistics of labor, just issued from the | of giokness the unfortunate worker has to stat e printing office, comprises 336 pages | provide a substitute. The report says:— of tables exhibiting comparative wages in [ In many of the larger establishments Massachusetts and Great Britain, and | time lists are kept, and if girls arc late 133 pages concerning the condition of | in the morning, “‘even a minute” it Ix de. the working girls of Boston, the last|ducted fromftheir week's wages. ZIThe mentioned being the first in order, and, | rules vary somewhat in this respect; in we venture to say, the more important [some places one minute late, actual time part of the work. The comparlson be- | deducted; in others, 16 minutes and in tween the wages and the cost of living [some cases one hour is deducted, ~ Fines in this state and Great Britain Is close | are also imposed, 10 to 25 cents if at all and doubtless accurate as regards a large | late in the morning, which is abated en nnmber of industries and justifios the | giving reasonable excuse. In other common impression derived from merely | cases, if 15 minutes late, they forfeit half superficial comparison that the laborer | day, unlcss on “‘train list” or *‘privil- here is greatly advantaged as to wages; | edged.” As an offset one girl reports as to living cxpenses the figures are loss | that she was sick six weeks during which comprehensive but show that the pur- |time she was paid the samo as if work- chasing power “of wages is greater in|ing and also allowed two weeks vacation Great Txxiuinuun here. The compari- | With pay. son covers 24 industries common to the| The health averages show a general o two countrtos=—agrioultural imnlyments, | dec b The Wages Receive Various Oc pations, 10 of condition; as for instance, 052 artisan’s tools, boots and shoes, [ Were in good health at their beginning brick, building trades, carpetings, car-|of work, and 782 are in the same classi- riages and wagons, clothing, cotton fication, showing that 170 have fallen in- goods, flax and juto goods, food propara- | to poorer health; but the average i tions, furniture, glaes, hats, hosiery, novertheless quite satisfactory. ~ The liquors, machinery, metals and metalic | table of accidents is simply ~comical, in- goods, printing and publishing, printing, [ cluding such items as ‘‘slod ran into her dyeing, bleaching and finishing cotton | and bruised her anklo,” “‘when a_littlo textiles, stone, wooden ware, woolon and | girl had her wrist broken;” and it ap- worsted goods. Only partial tables are | pears that only 32 out of the whole num- he report says with reason: “‘Soms, day law must compel men who are £, ‘negli- gent of the natural wants r their em- thing in Great Britan, where very many proprietors will give no Information atall This special A REAL ENOCH ARDEN, Years' Absence and Finds His Wife Weded to his Former Rival, New York Times, A few scattered houses, painted a 80- | belt round his waist, and determined to sands two | starve miles north of this place and constitute | heard by chance only a fow years ago of ber brown, rest npon the the village of Oceanport. The little houses are tenanted by a people whose hardy lives and simple manners contrast strongly with the luxury and gayety of Long Branch, It is only once 1n a while that fashionable visitors find their way to Oceanport and then they go for the express purpose of eating froshly caught fish and clama, A pathotic_story, closely resembling the story of Enoch Arden and Annie Lee has recently been disclosed upon a death- bed in this quiet and primitive village, The narrative, however, has agitated the simple minded folk but little, and the tongue of gossip has scarcely touched up- on it. The history had to be gathered by bits. The work was not an easy one since those who knew it best manifested a disposition to talk the least. But here is the story: A pretty girl lived near Manasquan thirty yoars ago. Her name was Matilda Duleimer Squires. Those who knew her then sy that her eyes were wonderfully soft and blue, her figure was trim and graceful, and her brown hair long and Iustrous, Besides these gifts of beauty she had the qualities requisite for a good housewife, She was the daughter of a fisherman, a thrifty, staild and practical man. Two young men paid her court— Hiram Olive, whose father had recently died and left him a farm near the quaint old village of Branchburg, and Samuel Barton, ~who, like her father, was a pretty Matilda and Barton, however,had notions of their own on that subject. Barton had already declared his love,and Matildahad told him that she was ‘‘fond"” ployes to adopt colveniences which through their own selfishnoss and foolish- ness they uow withhold,” The report contalns Interesting dotails of the per- sonal life of the woeking woman, and closes with an exenination of the com- mon rumor tha’, prostitution finds its re- cruits amonv thig class, The result of this Inqu’ "y that working women do The titlo of tho first part of the report, [ 1O 1¢°,q & double life of hard work and the last four months of the ardly be too (A GOVERNMENT INSTITUTION.) “The Working Girla of Boston,” is not | PP sical commerce, and that employers Cuba, Every 12/ chosen, there is no authority for ' or foremen do not seek to corrupt them. Drawn at Havana, to 14 Days, TICKETS, 8200, - + + Al Subfect to 10 “aanipulatlon, not controll parties in interest. 18 is the falrest thing in the ature of chance in existence. For nformation and particulars aprly tof TIPSEY €0.,Gon, Agents, 1212 Broadway, N Y. ci E. KAUB & CO., 417 Walnut_strect or Frank Lohrano, L 20 W, I omd other ELxoTRIO % Days' i A ayi OR i NLY, YOUNG ORR OLD. who are poedy rel VE) M, e Sk A, iR froe. Address TAIQ BELT CO. Marshall, Mich, NEOQD BESTORED .:':%"gg"%‘fi“{"}mfi" R i = e HAMBURG-AMERICAN EFaclkzet Company. DIRHCT LINE FOR ENGLAND, FRANCE AND GERMANY. CAUERS, o010 JARANTERD. hiot of thls well-known line aro bullt of t compartments, and aro furnish- uinto to mako the pasage Loth ato and agrooabl They carry the United States ‘and European maiis, and loave New Yorks Thurs- daye and waturdaye for, Plymouth (LONDON) Ohor- bourg, (PARIS) and HAMBUM Rates; First Cabia, 805, 806 and §76. Stoorago, $20 Honry Pundt, Maek Hansen, ¥ .E. Mooros, M. Toft, The lhlmflll{‘l drou, In water- taln Omaha, Gronewieg & Schoontigon, agontain a‘n‘:mfl Bluffs, : RICHARD & CO., Gon. Pass Agts., 01 Broadway, N. ¥, Cbas. Kozmineki & Co- General Westean Agouts , 107 Washingtou St., Chica Kol Science of Life, Only $1.00 BY MAIL POSTPAID, oW THE!.F. A GREAT MEDIOAL WORA ON MANHOOD Esbaustod Vitailty, Norvous and Physioal Debllty, Prematuro Declino i1 Man, Evroraot ¥outh, an the «antold miseries esulting omgos. A book for every man, young, middl-aged, wod old, " 1¢ contains 126 prosoriptions for all aoute and chronlc disoases each oae of whioh ls Invaluable 80 found by the Author, whose experience for &3 yours fa such a8 probably never before foll 40 the lob of soy physlc an und in besutifa Feuch mualin young ollef, 4o whom The Sl wnce of Lite will not be useful, whether youth, par- dll.!lflldll-, or — ut. Address the Pes! Modioal itate, or Dr. W. M. Parker, No. 4 ch Btreot, Boston Mass., who may be consulted All diseasos’ roquiriug skil and on0e. Ohronio aud obatinate dise st s that experion: Daffied 4he akill of all other phys- & specialtys Buoh Mested sucvoss. without an tasbance fallure, Tuma STRCK PIANO HAB NO UPERIOR. The Steck is a Durable Piano. THE STECK HAS BINGING QUALITY OF TONE FOUNL NO OTHER PIANO. BOLD NLY BY WOODBRIDGE BROS,, 215 OPERA HOUSE, OMAHA XEB, giving to the word ‘‘girls” a techni, senso such as could alone justify t' 473y, Of course it is not proved that there are not much instances, but as a rule the ¢‘ghop-girl” is as virtuous, as respectable, as a woman of any other class in the community. Interviews with the polic o and with the prostitutes thomselves b 4y confirmed the conclusion. W@ The report shows that these women are hard-worked and poorly ‘paid: the average weekly earning of th.o working girls of Boston for a whofe year are $4.19, and the average Weekly ~income, including earnings, assistance and income from extra work is $5.17 for the year The average yearly income from all sources is $259.07, and the average year- ly exponses $261.30, leaving but $7.77 a8 a margin for books, amusements, etc. Those making savings are a little over 11 per cent of the whole, their average sav- ings being 872.15 per year. Less than 3 whose romults are kere presented by Mr. | per cent have run in debt, the average Wright covered the personsl history of | being 830.60, The report makes sundry 1032 individuals, 83 of ‘whom were in |suggestions: that the hours of labor “porsonal servics,” 123 in trade, 826 in [should never exceed 10; that employers manufactures, Theso were all visited at | 0ught to make endeavor to lighten their their homes, in the evening; the names burden; that there should be numerous were taken at random in all parts of the | institutions for free instructionin various city, and information may be regarded as | branches of work ; that there should be really roprosontative. ‘The women were | homes for the working girls after the full of interest in the inquiry and frank | plan of those established and in success- in their answers; they were almost inva- | ful o{)unhon in London; and that rich riably found at home, busy in some way, P"“fi o should remember the needs of and it Is noted that in these homes, even | Working women in their wills or while the poorest, thero were many evidences | they live. clusion of all human females, ‘mom 13 years up to 75, For example, 4 jy nb. surd to see numbered Pinong working “girls,” as s donoin ¢he first table, clergymen, missiona~ e, lawyers, phyis- cians, midwives, ?,athors, journalists, ar tists, engravers, professional musicians, teachers, act’yrs, architects, hatel-keepors, ete. *“Working Women” is ef course the proper torm, and weo shall useit, The census of 1880 showed that of the ¥49,- 194 pursons engaged in all occupations in Boston 110,313 were males and 38,881 feraales, and of these last 20,000 in round numbers were engaged in other than do- mestic service. Last year the bursau “‘un- dertook to ascertain the moral, sanitary, physical ard economical conditions” of these working women, The investigation of him, Her father's opposition but creased th% intenu{tg of }:ier(ltth They met by stealth, and in worZ marrled in secret. The the oud not be hidden always, and course of time old Sqr’ he was furious, He to forgive and ble o "y }ie child had i i :gz:e';;ere :_nd 4 %0 beiit unto her. He 5 from his house, and de- clared the’ 60 0% disobeyed him,ske had de* ojpeq him, and must think of h",“ a0 more as father. , Lk ill-luck tkat attended Samuel Bar- on as a lover followed him as a husband. Nothing seemed to prosper with him. Threo children came. They, like their mother, were bright and pretty. But they were not gold or silver. It was nat- ural that ¥Tatilda’s thoughts, under these ciroumstances, should sometimes revert to the old days with something of regret for what mig{t have been. Hiram Olive was still in fortune’s favor. But he never thought of marriage any more, and there was no girl in Manasquan who could truthfully say that his_attentions to her meant more than polite form., After Matilda Squires’ marriage he lost much of the buoyancy that had characterized him before. His relations with Matilda and Samuel Barton, however, still re- mained kingly. It is related of him on one occasio ament. truth could aees discovered it when Matilda’s eldest child was suddenly taken violently ill, he rode six miles through a snow-storm to bring a physician, Matilda was discontented, and she vented her feelings upon her husband,re- proaching him for having, as she put it, seduced her into espousing his fortunes, and chided him with his poverty. Her husband one day informed her that he had received an offer through a friend to go a8 mate on a vessel bound from New York to China and would take about a year. He received half his pay in ad- | yeport of the postraaster-general of the when in the|gnug in the past year is not nearly a0 times believed he was accursed. Re- membering how his poverty had goaded unhappy, he resolved not to write to her, but let her think him dead. In the intervening years he had traveled round and round the world and gathered noth- but enough to buy hima coffin and grave, and this money he bound in a rather than to touch it. He Lonisiana State e:lery ¢mpany, y . . 1 " We de heveby eertify nat we i Matilda's second marriage. Discase angements m'au:Ae’"ymm'x:,'.'-'f,{'{?f,.’..?vfm:; seized him, and when the shaddow of | Drawwngs of the Lowisiana State Lottery Company death enveloped him ho felt an irresti- | inperson manage and concrol the Drawing: ble impulse to see his wife once more, to | konesty, fairness. and mfiy’w::'fd;;:fln[?r::::r’i':fl m‘: declare his identitv and assert his right | !5 and we authorize the company to use this cer for one fleeting moment, {anoate, iehJac-rimilea of our wignatures attacked He asked that when he was dead his i children might bo brought to look upon his face, and said that if they had for- gotten him no one should tell them who ho was, but if they should recall his face no one should deny the truth, He died. He was burled on Thuraday of last week., His children were brought to look upon his lifeless face, as he had asked. They were grown up, and the :Idu}u‘t, also named Samuel, divined the ruth in an inatant. . perfect a reproduction of what his father é‘;fi,fi&‘&?fifi?@%fi"fl%’h&:."""” ® was in youtk that oven a stranger could | By auovervhalming popular vote see that closo relationship must have ex- | fdopted Decsmber 2d, 4. D 1679, " isted betwesn them. Little by little the history has come out, and when the | The only Lottery ever vot Widow Jusephson, who had been con- dorsed by the people jolned to conditional secrecy by Matilda, 1t never acales or saw that the story would soon become CoMMmsIon gy Incorporated in 1868 for 95 years by tho | Indeed he was so | 107 educational and oharitable purposes— #1th 6 cap. ad of ove of any State. . postpones, CAPITAL PRIZE $75,000 But 233 of the 1032 had a vaca- | He Comes Home to Die After Ten |Matilda before and made her cruel and | e Tickets only 85 Shares in Proportionss rhatndarc ts franchise 4o conptitution od on and en- known she began to tell it round in whis- [ Its grand singlev i 0r qrawings take pers to startled neighbors. plx:: mmdy. Matilda told Hiram Olive all the truth, [ A splontid l!', .tunity to wina Fortuno and it is said that to satisfy their con- cawing Class I, in the;Acad sciences they intend to be remarried. |oth, 1884— Olive was found last night at his home. OAP" He was disinclined to talk, but by de- grees ho consented to lop off' exaggera- {100,000 ™ tions that had become engrafted on the story, and he confirmed the story here emy of Musi .24 Monthly drawing, LTAL PRIZE, 75,000. ickets at Five Dollars Each, tious, in Fifths in proportion, 2 H «*ost. Office De- partment, APPROTINATION PRLZRS, 9 Approximation prizos of €760 9 do do B L] do do 8 In the orurse of a revi ow of the annual | 1967 Prize amounting to...... A) United Fiingdom, the London Times of | to the July 28, says: For turther Information write clearly giving fall The increasa in the gross telegraph rev- o offioe of the Company in New Orloans. tored Lettors to EW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANE New Orloans, La. grert as that of the preceding twelve tho state of trade than the increase or [ °xpense) to M, A. DAUPHIN, decrease of correspondence. The mini- | oru. A. DAUPHIN, ' Now Orleans La, mum price of a telegram at present is 607 Soventh 8t., Wash ngton, D. C. ; Postal Notes and ordlnary lotters by Mal or Ex. was hardly the man v c itk “hrobably & much surer index of | pross (Ml sums of 8 and upwards by Expross ot our New Orleans, Tuosday, Sept. BEDFORD & SOUER Owing tothe increase given for arms and ammunition, clocks | ber have had any accident whatpver in | toiler of the sea. Hard luck had come | given, y HPHA’.P’!‘:IS;r OF PRIZES. & and watches, leather, musical Instru- [the cuutr}:o of their hv{os, #o that the bear- :Adenrlton m{,d he lmdhlit;‘Ie tta \:iflbl: h(iu ks e 4 SAET IZE. T b ments and materials, paper, rubber and [ing on the question of woman's work is|lady love beyond his heart an and. o o “ieen 1 do 000 elastis goods, ,mpAl,jufi’i,.é' sl and | not apparent. The testimony as to the | Old man Squfi’u, with his eye always to Sl ARSI 1 § TRIKESIOF 00000 %0 silk goods, straw goods. It isstated Indurancoe of the various occupations on | the main chance, was an advocate of the| " Pihe W s A 10 do 1000, 1000 that while it is perfoctly easy to colleot | health is generally favorable, but the|suit of Olive, and curtly hinted to Barton | WOrkings of the 7 gegraph and " go. B do 00 000 sbmtiatios from the factories of Massachu- | common evil in the lack of sutiablo water | that ho neod not hops to become the| —ephone and gyingyBank 2 o | 3% & 2 000 settos, it is very difficult to do the same |®loset accomodations, in regard to which | husband of the protty Matilda. The lflflv""em to the British o0 do 5. 5 '000 lication for rates to cluba should be made ouly ) 0. Money Ordors payablo ani in our business we've. such as to preclude its use for private purposes by any but the well-to-do classes and even in business the telegraph is probably placed out of the habitual use of retail tradesmen. The promised re- duction of the tariff will be a change of a far-reaching character, and it will be interesting to note its effocts. In the meantime, communication by means of the telephone is incroasing in large towns and business circles, al- though here again, as the instrument is at present worked only the upper midd'e clasg can particlpatein the advaniages of the invention. The postmaster general calls the attention to the fact that by far the larger part of the telephonic com-| Erlanger,.seeiesevacs (Faculty Prize, Medical College of Ohio, SPECIALTY And other Discases of the Anus and Rectum, Boyd's Opera House, *“uRiii® eve od and wtf IN BOTTLIES. supplied by private companies holding | Pilsner... his lisence. Considerable discussion has | Raiger. . recently taken place upon the question whether the position of the postoffice to- DOMESTIC. ‘ward the telephone is such as to allow of s tho freo and extonded nso of that in-| DuAWeIser. ... uuivee. strument, and the public will learn with | Anhauser. s Bohemian, $t, Louis. .St. Louis. The savings bank continues to give the same remarkable proof of its adaptation to the wants of the population. Nearly a quarter of a milllon of additional depos- itors had recourse to the bank during 1883, one in every nine persons in En- gland and Wales being now a customer. Wine. ED. MAURER, C. A.WILSON,M.D. PILES, FISTULA, Imported Beer «« Bavaria, munication of the country is at present | Culmbacher, «s-+vsvs +v...Bavana o<.Bremen. 1213 Farnam St. of orderly and artistic arrangement of the household, and one could not help being struck with the refinement of feel- ing that existed among them.” The whole showing is very favorable to the character and industry of the working women, but it is not so pleasing as re- gards thelr employers The classification table shows that none of the higher and rarer occupations are included in the plan of inquiry; these workers are at work as copyists, restau- rant girls, telegraph operators, nurses, book-keepers, clerks, errand girls, sales- women, bookbinders, watchmakers, tail- ors, dressmakers, seamstresses, uphol- sterers, leathex-workers, not-makers, ci- gar-makers, photograph finishers, print- ors, paper-box wmakers, confectionery makers, knitters, weavers, button, brush and blanket makers, ete, Of the 1,032 it is found that 594 live at home with their parents; 150 in lodging houses, eat- ing at restaurants; 116 in boarding houses; 18 with their husbands; 97 at their own homes or with relatives, and b2 boarding in private familios—a great preponderance of home life, and this in- deed makes it possible for so many of them to live well on very small wages. As a genoral thing their surroundings are good; only 129 are reported as living In unpleasant and poor circumstances, The tables of nativity indicate that there are very few women of purely American blood in all these; the great majority are either of foreign birth or parentage, and there is a field of interesting study in these series of tables. For example, of the 1032 there were 603 born In Massachusetts,but of these only 102 had fathers born in this country, and only 118 mothers so born, ‘|80 that it is certain that the children of foreign born citizens principally furnish the female labor of Boston, Of the whole number 917 are single. The average age at which these women began work 16.81, but the present ages range from 13 te 76, and the oldest have been at work from 40 to 60 years in round num- bers. There is a fair degree of perma- n-m\{nln occupations shown, and a steadi- ness In residence; for example, over 84 per cent of the time during which the 1052 girls have been at work has been passed in Boston. It 1s interesting to note that 880 of them do their own house- work and sewing in whole or in part. The working hours of these women are commonly from 7 to 8 in the morning to G at night; but 92 work over 10 hours a day, and 300 have a shorter day on Sat- nrg In the matter of vacations, short Saturdays and absences more or less brief from illness, it is noted that there is as a general thing little or no consideration shown to the working woman, but it is true that in this respest there is probably no unfair discrimination against woman, for it is the case with all ‘the working class, There are not very many employ- ers who have any high seuse of their duties and respousibilities toward those they hire, Bome deduct a money equiv- alent for weekly half holidays iu the hot months; *‘in some cases where the hour for closing is b each day aud 2 on Satur- +daye, gitls are only allowed_five days' pay CONVINOIN Tho proof >f the pudding is notin chewing tho string, but in having an_opportunity to tost the asticlo direct, Schroter & Beoht the Druvgists, have a free trial bottle of Dr,’ Bo- sanko's Cough and Lung Syrup for each and every ono who is afllictod with Coughs, Colds, Asthma Consumption or any Lung Affection. et A Right Smart Western Town, From the New York Sun, “‘Yes, sir,” said an enthusiastic citizen of a new western town; ‘‘we've got a right smart town, stranger, Why,” he continued, Impressively, ““it's only six months old, yet it's got two hotels, forty- eight beer saloons, twenty-seven gam- gling places, four drug stores, to say nuthin’ of grocery and clothin’ stores and the best half-mile track west of the Mis- souri.” *‘Any churches?” asked the stranger. “Any what!” *‘Churches.” “You meaun them buildin's with a long pint sticking up in the air.” “Yes,” “No, wo hatn’t got any of them. Thar was some talk about buildin’ one, but we tinally allowed it would look too dudish.” — —— ORIGIN OF AMMONIA. Ammonia is obtained in large quantities by the putrefaction of the urine of animals,—En- cyclopedia Britannica, J‘J\'nr{ housckeeper can test baking powders containing this disgusting drug by acing & can of the *‘Royal” or ‘*Andrews’ Pearl” top down on a hot stove until heated, then remove the cover and smell, Dr, Price’s Cream Baking Powder does not contain Ammonia, Alum, Lime, Potash, Bone Phosphates, (prove it by the above test), It is brepared by a Physician and Chemist with special regard to cloanliness and healthful- ness, m-e-w-2m e —— Asking too Much of Him, New York Sun, My dear,” sald a wite to her hus. band, ‘‘suppose a party of men should break Into the house some night when ou are away, and abduct me, what would you dof” ““That ls not a supposable case,” he re- “I know it is not likely to occur, but imaglne it.” *Impossible,” “Well, you certainly can imagine it.” “No, I can’t my dear.” ju EXOCITEMENT. “What causos tho great rush at Schroter & Bocht's Drug Store?’ The free distribution of sample bottlos of Dr, Bosanko's Cough and Lung Syrup, the most popular remedy for Coughs, Colds, Consumption and Bronchitis now on the market. Regular size 50 cents and e The Broken Bank, New Youk, August 13,—President Evans the Wall Street bank said this orning, the state examiners were still endeavor- ing to sum up the loss the bank sustained. Some statements and published in regard to the amount lost by Dickinson, and the man- ner in which he lost it, Kvans said, were true and others not. There was no doubt that Dickinson was in Canada. All excitement in A regard to the suspendied bank has now died *out, In the last ten years both tha aggregate amount deposited and the number of de- positors have nearly doubled, the amount now in the custody of the bank baing nearly £12,000,000 and the number of |} depositors over 3,100,000. Nor does this represent a mere withdrawal from other banks, for the business of the trus- vanoe, and gave it to her for the support of herself and the little ones. He sold his fishing-boat and gave her that money, too. When they parted, he to go on his long journey, she to patiently wait his return in the little fisher's cottage, she fell into his arms weeping as if she never would soo him again. S oy ) . Hh gs bank shows no falling off. Matildy. Tva brought S ns-gond offices sometimes oxhibited by _private Sl i willb B bankers, Mr, Fawcett yery appositively ) remarks that they do not at present give change in my fortune.” . dor "on month after that Matilda receivod | e "ovemeery fcifiten to| porsons of orn seas. The months and years went 9f 100,000, there are only ten places re- by and sho heard nota word " from the |J/0ing in the privilege of a bank, whore- ocean. Just ten years after her husband as there are forty-seven towns and villa- had salled away sho marricd again. Tho | 507 Posseesiog @ postolico transicting groom was Hiram Olive, Hor father |jovi353 bank businoss, - On tho othor lived long enough to witness the coro. | LM it may bo anticipated that tho lived long onough to witness tho co%o- | yaying habits induced in _childhood HICTARnG S0 ke fL8 CATE 1S e farss | through the poscssion of an account in and bought ona near Ocenuport, and took |22 Fi#teicq will in after lifo tend to th his bride and tho children of his old rival | Jhold (horofere 1 e Hoker’ rato with him and lived there. . hroo wecks ago weather-beaten old | oty tho foo of so admirable a nuasery of i, Prolapens Ul 104 that 00 Would Not Buv It. cured by using s belt. To an that disease, T would eay, buy Horne's Electrio Belt, A |my store, 1420 Douglas streot, Omaha, Neb. WILLIAM LYONS, MAIN OFFICE—1422 Douglas Street, arnam 5t , Omaha, EROrders filled C. 0 D Journal of the Wost. 20 Pages { puere 4 I. 8. SMITH & CO., EDITORS AND PUBL HON ROBT. W. FURNAS, Se of Agriculture, Associate SUBSCRIPTION 47 A in advance, S WANTEDZY + OMAHA, NEB harged in an in- Dn. Horxx—I wag affiloted with rhoumatism and ono affiicted with Any ono can_confer with mo by writing calling €@ Forsale at O. F. Goodman's Drug Store* 1110 RURAL NEBRASKA ! The Leading Agricultural and Live Stock wyean 8 Colnmns v State Board r. admitted to the firm Mr Edwin Davig,who is well and favorably known in Omaha. This will enable us to han- .|of property. We ask u?flafflction that Mr. Fawcott has in- gefi(l:st fii{waull:efl. vited suggestions from the companies, | Schlitz-Pilsne: Milwaukee. (] . and that the subject fs now under his Krug's voose ..Omaha, those Who ha.VB deSl- consideration. Ale, Porter, Domestic and Rhine rable property for 4 sale,foplacethe same ‘| with us. The new firm will be & [Avls REAL ESTATE BROKERS. man in shabby clothes appeared in Ocean- | "ot s chanes i | el 15 O gos in the postal order ar- §:i'z§'1 od osls chocks bove his 6T, | rangoments make an alteration of tho do- i that ho lisd oome down from Noy | Lomisations of ordors, and allow stampe, R ST O to the number of five, to be aflixed to the A Jflu‘ephmnfi nhkindlyuolg ‘.0:’“ back of an order, and any broken amount somotlmes called **Grandmother Joe,” u? ::0' p?lu;ld::‘g] m:w lof;em‘ ‘:{ oais The second morning after his arrival he | & 1Y2 070 B8 WO WAL at tho samo VT Py e R 5 time the poundage has been reduced,'lo shall never get up again,” he said foan il that in no case will the cost of sending lous Grandmother ‘.lsoo.' “‘I've got con- gish aB amoust exsood. iWormonse o two-pence halfpenny. ‘I'he postmaster- | sbuse or over indulgence. Each box, cont sumption bad. I have dragged myself B e it Bl round iy whia to pay. ou.fot l | 13,00 Ber cent tho aumber now {4836d | 1,y s s s s sed your trouble, I hung on “’,’ that, though ::l.l:.z at the rate of 818,500,000 iu the | or six bothles, accomplished with £ 00, wo wil send It i | the pureh: d thy everything else left me. As I came down ter mmm‘:fi;fit}” tg‘e ::l; ‘fl; &:’ic}:%ty n;:u‘u‘;-’fl {.TS","JILE.'.‘&‘;!‘J‘.'&'L‘I‘E" Ay ..'fl““h..'.: Health is Wealth | Di. E, 0. Wast's NERYE AND BRAIN TREASMENT, 0 guarantoed specifio for Hysteria, Dizziness, Convul- slons, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Teadache, Nervous ration caused by the use of alcohol or tobbacco, cfulness, Montal depression, Softening of the brain, resulting in insanity and feaping to misery, dooay and death, Premature Old age, Baroness, los) ofpowerin elther sex, Tavoluntary Lossos and Sper- matorbora caused by over exertlontof the brain, self- W horo I hoard the name of a cortain | gyreful attention to minute dotails, th | 'y Smbsry " " sae Medison St Coteuso, il H public convenience, and to make Tved on the coust near horo, namod Sam | the machinery of civilived life work| M| R. RISDON man Squires, Do you know her?” smoothly. 5 Yo ———— “Well, go tell her to come here to see| _The GreatShaft Didn't Shake, = GHH,] I]lsnralmfl Agflm me, Tell her she must come; only| WasuiNaron, [Special. ]—Fears wer: once—that will be all. Go right|expressed to-day that yesterday's earth- BEPREAESTS now.” quake had damaged the Washington | Phaalx Assurance Co., of wondon, Cash “Who are you!” monument, which is now five hundrod | wassicr i, ., **She will know,"” foet high, Capt. Davis, assistant engi- | 100 Merchaste, of Newsrk. The widow, full of surpriseand curi- | neer in charge of construcclon, said when | Girard Fire, Phlacelilia aul osity, hurried away, leaving the sick | questioned: *'The plummets hangingfrom man in charge of her red-haired maid-of- [ near the top of the monument to the all-work, Susie. When she returned |bottom did not measure the slightest de- H Matilda was with her, The two women | viation. The most minute examination r me Ia I"Tnu h \ entered the sick-room together. The |failed to show any change in the position 1 )I OFFICE AND RESIDENCE' 1617 Dodge 8t., - Omaha, TELEPHONE No 14 CENTRALHOSPITAL fixed upon the door-way. Matilda's eyes | sixty-fourth part of an inch, about the picked up by a vessel that carried him to | do that, The cld time light-house used to Cor, 14th & Jones, Omaha, met his, For an instant she stood star- | size of & common horse hair, but there ing hard ai him, asif half indoubt, | was not even that much movement."” then she started back and cried aloud. *“Wouldn't such a shock have any ing."” sway, but it would come back to its origi- Then he explained how he had been | nal upright position, All high structures Australia, how he toiled and suffered to | vibrate in storms to such an extent that{ persous efilicted with vy disease, not contagle make a fortune there, and how, after he!oil would be spilled out of the lamps, but | can '\.ngl ulhy Bl ”Mx 1“ scoupylay & 1!:!\-}\! Josw lln\d put & littlo together, ill-luck always i they would come back to their origiu‘l] Y bAEe Lo Atiancad By 84y BRYSICWE 10 KDSdHAL: “‘Yes,” said the stranger, ‘‘yes, yes'|effectat all on the monument?” it's Sam Barton—not dead, but dy-| *Certainly. The whole structure could _ ¥, ¥l The Lying in D oupeeial teature, came and swept it away until he some- ' position just as a menument will, el b 3 | dle an increased list 213 South 14th St. . )