Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 13, 1884, Page 2

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OMAHA DAILY BEE - THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13 Thigty Years Record. (14 Y¥e | ¥ By the REMEDY, PRy LN} o of this 1t in purely voge. tablo, and cares when GRAVEL inon fail. DIABETES ared oxe BRIGHT'S hoso dise DISEASE PAINS N THE BACK LOTNS PRICE 81 on Bond_for ston Pamphlot INERVOUS Ll DISEASES o RETENTION NS OR REMEDY NON-RETENTION & Co., OoF . Uy URINE. Prnvlllll;nel.: d0LD EEDAL, PARIS, 1875 BAKER'S Breakiast Cocoa Warranted absolutely pus Cocoa, 1 Ol hiaw timen the strength of Cocon with 8t \1-0wroot or Bugar and Is therefore far more cconoms cal. Tt i deliclons, nouriabing strengthening, easily digested, and admirably adapted for invalids se well as for persons in health, Ry old ny Grocers everywhers, (1, Darehestr, Mt = = = | &2 ful_1eothers, HORLICKS' FOOD FOR i starch) require calth or kickness for INFANTS. The best diet for PEPTICS and INVALTDS. Highly b o SHOP LIFTING IN NEW YORK. Professionsl Connter Thieves ud | Kleptomauiacs, QU2 [Devices for Conceatment ana the| '.\..' Methods of Deteet | (AN 5 [ New York Herald, | Fow persons realise to what a great ex- | tent shoplifting aa a trade is carried on | in this city. The wholesale storekeepers | who suffer from these petty thefts and | the police or private detectives who are employed to catch offenders of ~ this kind | aro perhaps the only one who probably estimate the large number of people that make a practice of robbing the counters. \ore is & eplendid field for the ehop lifters’ operations in the immense stores | of the metropolis, On a buey day the amount of petty larceny committed is enormous. The crowded store, the bus- tle and confusion, the shop girl with more customers than she can attend to and a score of other things, all aid in the successful pilfering of small articles, Shoplifting is a crime to which women are parlicularly addicted. Itis very sel- dom that a male shoplifter is arrested. Perhaps this is due to the fact that women are more given to shoplifting,and therefore a female thief can carry on her work with loss fear of suspicien and de- tection than a man, Quite oftea women who are relatives o out togother in their shoplifting tours. A women was not long ago arrested in this city for taking a pair of stockings from the counter and concealing them in her pocket. She had a_younger women with her who she admitted was her daughter-in-law. ~ When searched the shoplifter was found to have in her pos- session not only the stockinge, but alsoa comb, a pair of kid gloves and a pocket book containing €60, The younger woman was next searched, and two pocketbooks containing §600 were found on her. A saleswomen in a Bowery store sus- pected two young women of ehoplifting. Watching them closely, she saw one of them stuff a dress into a large pocket, carried under her dress skirt, where It was found when she was arrested. The other girl pretended to be respectable and said thet she had met the thief in the street. She had accompanied her to the store to see her buy a silk dress. They were both sent to the penitentiary. HIDING THE BOOTY . In all sorts of ways the ehoplifter tries to escape detection. Even when she is seen taking articles from the oounters the stolen things may not be found upon her unless she is thoroughly searched. Near- ly every shoplifter has a false pocket, where she secretes what is not hers by purchase or by right, Besides this, she does the trick of putting small articles in the folds of her shaw] or dress. A detec- tive suspecting & women of shoplifting in | the National pike. = A | gonds. 1"1»"'( ¢ i of price in stamps. Rucine, W RSTIACT OF MALT"6 8. $cience of Life Only $1 00 BY MAIL POSTPAID. A GREAT MEDICAL WOKK ON MANHOOD! Exhausted Vitality, Norvo Physioal Deblitty Promaturo Docline in_Man, Errors of Youth, and the untold miseries rosulting from Indiscretions or ox. ocesses. A book for every man, young, middle aged and old. It contains 125 prescriptions for all acut and chronle discases each one of which 18 invaluable. Sofound by the Author, whose experlence for 17 years Is such a8 probably never oefore fell to the lot of any physician. 800 pages, bound in besutitul French muslin ompossed covers, full, gilt guaranteed t0 be s finer work In_every se: ‘machanical, - erary and professior al,—than any othor work sold {n this country for $2.60, or the money will be retunded in every intanco. Price only §1.00 by mall, post paid. Tilustrative sample b conts. Send now. Gold ‘medal awarded the author by the National Medioal Association, to the officers of which he rofors. The Solenoe of Life should be read by the youn for instruction, and by the afllcted for rellet, 1t w benefit all.—London Lancet. Tnero is no member of #-clety to whom The Sol. ence of Lifo will not bo usetul, whether youth, par: ent, guardian, Instructor or clergymaa.—Argonsut. Addroess the Peabody Medical ‘Tnsdtute, or Dr. W. H. Parkor, No. 4 Bulfinch Rtreet, Roston, Mass., who may bo consulted on all discases requiring skiil and experlence. Chronie sud obstinate diseases that have od 1 il of all other phys:| o Buch treated n\n‘!ou)llHE“l fully w8 o sustanco of fallre. THYSE[F NEBRASKA LAND AGENCY . F. DAVIS & GO., BUOCSSSOR TO DAVIS & SNYDER.| Genorai Dealers fr REAL "ESTATE 1606 FARNAM 5T . OMAHA. tave for salo 500,000 acres oarefully selected Innds 0 fastorn Nobrasks, at low price and on easy terms, Trproved tarins 101 salo in Douglas, Dodge, Colfax Piatte, Burt, Cuming, Sarpy, Wasningion, Meriok Baundere, and Butier Jountfes. Tazos pald 1u all parts of the State Monoy Ioanod on mproved tanne, Wotary Publioalwavs in office Correspond THEONLYTRUE | IRON Wil purify the BLOOD, regus iipeity o BHOSBL s Wnd RESTOWE TIK i wnd VIGOR of YOUTH, Dys la, Want of Al?n.-illllc. ahs o Bt /Belgian Boyal and U.8, Mall Bteamers SBAILING EVERY BATURDAY, BETWEEN NEW YORK AND ANTWERP The RA ¢, Germany, Italy, Holland and France Vg sl 4 Cutth b xoursion, §100; Balooo from #6¢ 110 4o 8100, APotor Wright Boos, Geo Agents. ¥ Brod: wey N, Caldwe'l. Hamildon & Co., Omabs. P. K. il wau & Uo., 906 N. 104b Sreeh, Ouaba) D. ¥ Kl ahy Valiand volan o ly e — y | her friends know of her arrest. a shoe store on Sixth avenue arrested her after she had left the place and took her back. The storekeeper said that he did not have any reason to suspect the priso- ner. The detective insisted upon her being searched by the storekeeper's wife. A pair of shoes were found hanging to a hook attached to the woman’s garter. With some women shoplifting is a ma- nia. Although comfortably off they will steal as often as they get an opportunity. The storekeepers do not arrest women of this class because they have ways of re- covering the value of the stolen articles. The husband is made aware of the facts in the case and he always makes good the lose, ASHAMED OF THEIR CRIME, The most pitiful cases are these in which the woman, otherwise respectable, is caught in her firat offense. She cannot tell why she was puilty of the crime; all that she can say is that she was tempted and in a woment of weakness committed the act. When these women are ar- raigned in court for trial they are over- come with shame. This feeling of dis, grace at being publicly arraigned as thieves is 80 intense that the court, ap- preciating the fact, generally lots them off with a day or two's imprisonment. Some of these women resolutely refuse to give their own names. Not long since one of them was arrested in a store in Sixth avenue, near Nineteenth street. She confessed her guilt, and a ' large crosswise pocket, concealed in the folds of her dress, was found filled with stolen goods, She said that she dared not bring disgrace upon her family by lotting She had ample means, she added, and was tempted to steal upon the spur of the moment. Another case was that of an old woman dressed in black, who was arrested in an Lichth avenue dry goods store, She was accompanied by her daughter, who was also arrested.” Two manly youog mea called at the prison and said thoy were her sons. They had been looking for her and her daughter may be the thiet, but who might turn wp in court as claiment in a suit for $50, 000 dama, e ODD ELEORION BETS Samples of the Novel Wagers aid on the Presidential Contest, Louls Globe Democrat Of novel bets there are quite a num ber recorded. William Ellis bets Chris Miller that Cleveland will be elected and agrees that if It g0 results he will count every tie on the Baltimore & Ohio road between this city and Washington If Blaine is elected Miller is to push a hand cart from Wheeling to Washington over Cleveland drum mer who was in tho city to.day made a novel bet with cne of the lady clorks in a store where he sold a bill of The lady was republican, and_of course bet on Blaine's success. Whether the drummer ia for the plumed knight 18 not known, still he takes his chances on Cleveland, The bet is this: If Blaine wins, the lady is to glve the gentleman forty-eight kisses, payable in four equal monthly installments, 1f Cleveland 18 chosen, the drummer is to present tho young lady with a sealekin sacque. This bet ia genuine, Henry Schmulbach, the leading brewer of the state, has agreed with the presi- dent of the Elm Grove Motor line as fol- Jows: If Cleveland is clected the former is to tap one thousand kegs ot beer to all comers; in case of his defeat the Motor line is to haul all persons free to Hom- brook park any day Schmulbach directs. The most curious wager is one wired the Reglater from Charleston, this state. Alf Burnott, chief of the Kureka detec- tive agency, bets D. B, Goshorn, & local democratic politician, that Blaine will be elected by a larger majority in the electoral college than Garfield had. If Burnett wins Goshorn, is to ride a blind mule through the streets of Charleston, accompanied by a drum corps, from 9. & m, to 12 m. If Burnett loses he is to swim the Kanawha river from bank to bank during the same hours, the bet to be paid as soon as theresult is known. e — Louis Napoleon's Last Ycars. Monnoirs of the Earl of Malmesburg. After a few minutes he came into the room alone, and with that remarkable smile which could light up his dark countenance, he shook me heartily by the hand. I confees that I was never mere moved. His quiet and calm dig- nity and absence of all nervousuess and irritability were the grandest examples of human moral courage that the severest stoic could havelimagined. 1 felt over- powered by the position. All the past rushed to my memory; our youth to- gether at Rome in 1820, his dreams of power at that time; his subsequent des- perate attempts to obtain it; his prisons, where 1 found him still sanguine and un- changed; his wonderful escape from Ham, and his residence in London, where, in the riots of 1848, he acted the apecial constable like any Englishman, His election as President by millions in France in 1850; his further one by mil- lions to the Imperial Crown; the part I had myself acted as an English minister in that event, which had realized all his early dreums; the glory of his reign of 22 years over France, which he had enriched beyond beliof and adorned beyond all other countries and capitals; his liberation of Italy—all these memories crowded upon me as the man stood before me whose race had been so succeseful and ro- mantic, now without a crown, without an army, without a country or an inch of ground which he could call his own, except the house he hired in an English village. I must have shown, for I could not conceal what 1 felt, as, again skaking my hand he said: “A la guerre comme a la guerre. C'est bien bon de venirme voir.” Ina qiuet natural way he then praised the kindness of the Germans of Wilhelmshohe; mnor did a single complaint escape him during our conversation. He eaid he had been misled as to the force and preparation of his army, but without mentioning names; nor did he abuse any one, until 1 men- tioned Gen. Trochu, who deserted the Empress, #hom he had sworn to defend, and gave Paris up to the mob, when the Emporer remarked, *‘Ah! veila un droie.” Daring haif an hour he conversed with me as calmly as in the best days of his life, with a dignity and resignation which migh* be that of a fatalist, but could hardly be obtained from any other creed; and when I left him that was, not for the first time, my impression. When 1 saw him again in 1871 I found him much more depressed at the destruction of Paris and at the anarcby prevailing over France than he was at his own misfor, tunes; and that the communists should have committed such horrors in the pres- ence of their enemies, the Prussian armies, appeared to him the very acme of humiliation and of national infamy. On January 9, 1873, ho died, in the presence of the empress, who never left him, released from the storms of a fitful existence, from intense physical suffer- all night. In the possession of the pris- oners wore found eight pair of gloves and three handkerchiefs, identilied by the storekecper by a private mark. The women had given and assumed name and a wrong address, Poverty sometimes makes shoplifters out of otherwise honest women, A wo- man was tried in the court of special ses- sions a short time ago for stealing a piece of cloth from & Grand street store. She was quiet and respectable in appearance, but her face was pinched asif from hunger. She cried bitterly upon her trial, She pleaded guilti, but said it was her first offenss. Her husband, a book publisher, had committed suiclde. At one time he was wealthy, but at his death lefv her destitute. In & moment of despair she was driven to commit the crime. She got off with five days' im- prisonment, ARRESTING INNOCENT PARTIES, The storekeeper not only relies upon his employes to detect this kind of crime, but has also the help of professional and private detectives. These men, dressed in civilians’ clothes, mingle in the crowds, pretend to see nothing suspicious going on and suddenly pounce upon some one they have been watching for a long time. 1f the party pounced upon does not turn out to @ stolen or attempted to steal anything the detective does not feel alarmed if he can prove that the party has ever been arrested for a similar offonse, 1f the before been guilty, no matter how inno- cent she may now be, the detoctive talki sharply to her and tells her to* quick!" When an innocent purty is arrosted i is & very different matter, particularly if good caaracter or social poeition ean be proved. The storekeeper generally suf- fors in an action for false imprisonment It is this that deters them from making more arrests, They prefer to let ten sin- erson arrested has ever | M. ing, and saved from knowing the loss of his only son, whoso fate she was soon destined to deplore alone. e e— A Nibble Not New York Graphic. What's them greon-looking things?” said a rural and elderly party to an out- sido stallman at Fulton market, poluting to a bowl of scollops. Them's sacred fish from the Holy Land, Never seen 'em hefore?” *‘Never sot eyes on’em out in Color- .go, Sacred, are they? Do they grow 4 t Alway s a Rite, way? ou'bet! The Crusaders discovered ‘em in Jerusalem and used to wear the shells in their army caps and play 'em off for white chips, ‘The Hades you say!” “When they got home after the war and bragged how they'd fit, bled and died, the other fellows that staid at home used to tell 'em they were putting on scollops. See?” | savvy. How did they get over here!” *“‘Some of our fellows brought the seed over on the Mayflower, Take a quart!” “Not mow. I'm looking ’'round for Annanias, and if T don’t run agin him ‘round here 1'll come back to you, Savvy!” The Colorado man walked quietly away and tho stall wan allowed that & nibble 1s not always a bite. Durk Satap Dressing & Coun EAT SavcE for all kinds of salads, fish, vogotables and cold meats. Cheaper and better than home made. No saucoe ¢qual to it was ever offered S — Tho cat-0nine tails was lately used in Manitoba for the first time. The sub joot was Johu MoCormick, under sen- tence for larceny, who escaped and was recaptured, A ~—— “Bright's Disease” is regarded by many as incurable and it is well nigh so, except ners escape rather than arrest one ivno- cent. The private deteotive very often is compelled under these circumstances to let his suspicions lead him no further than to eye with fierce distrust the per. #on he himself is perfectly well agenred when _opposed with Hunr's [Kidney and Liver] Renepy, This old and reliable medicine has special powers in this and all other diseases of the kidneys and lx.!mm". It is purely vegetable is bighly endorsed by phy:iciane, WHITTIER'S HOME, The Poets Dwelling and Surround- ings — His versonal Ap- pearand The Criti Mr. Whittier's dwelling in Amesbury is exceedingly slmple and exquisitely neat, the exterior of a pale cream color, with many trees an shrubs about it, while within one room na into another till you reach the study that sho haunted by the echoes of all aweet soundas, for here have been written the mort of those verses tull of the fitful music Of winds that out of dreamland blew Here, In the proper eeason, the flames of a cheerful fire dances upon the brass andirons of the open hearth, In the centre of a wall lined with booke; water colors by Harry Fenn and Lucy Larcom this enticing place! (arrison and Phil- lips and_Higginson and Wasson and Emersonjand Fields and Dayard Taylor and Alice and Phabhe Cary and Gai Hamilten and Anna Dickingon are only a few of the naines that ono flrat remem- bers, to say nothing of countlees sweet souls, unknown to any other roll of fame than heaven’s, who have found the at- mosphere there kindred to their own, The people of Amesbury and of the ad- joining villages and towns feel a peculiar ownership of their poet; thero in acarcely a legend of all the region round which he has not woven into his song, and the neighborhcod feel not only as if Whittier were their poet, but in some way the guardian spirit, the genius of the place. Perhaps in bis stern and sweet life he has been 80, even as much as in his song. “There is no charge to Mr. Whittier,” once said a shopman of whom he had made a_small purchase, and there is no doubt that the example would have been contagious if the independent spirit of tho poet would ever have allowed it. These Indian summer days cf the poet’s life are spent not all in- the places of the winter is passed in Boston; a share of the summer always goes to the White hills, of which he is passionately fond, and the remainder of the time finds him in the house of his cousins at Oak Knoll, in Danvers, still in his native county of Kssex. This is a mansion with its porches #nd porticoes and surrounding lawns and groves, which seems meet for a poet’s home. It stands in spacious and secluded grounds, shadowed by mighty oaks, and with that woodland character which birds and equirrels and rabbits darting in the chequered sunshine must always give. Itisthe home of culture and refinement, too, and as full of beauty within as without. Here many of the latter poems have been sent forth, and impertinence to intrude with their callow manuscripts, and here those pests o their requests by the thousands. to Amesbury and there awaits election day, a period in which he religionsly believes that no man has a right to avoid his duty and of which he still thinks, as when he saw — **Along the street The shadows meet OF destiny, whose hands conceal The moylds of fate That ehave the state And make or mar the common weal,” and what victory? With all the deep and he could find one day in it that he would change, 50 far as his own acts are con- cerned. It is certain that no one else could find It. In appearance Mr. Whitney is an up- right in bearings as ever. His eyo is as black and burns with as keen a fire as when it flashed over the Concord mob, and sees beauty everywhere as freshly as when he cried with the “Voices of ¥reedom” and sang the ‘“'Songs of Labor:” as his_smile is the same emile that has won the worships of men, and of women too, for sixty years and over. Now, it is with a sort of tenderness that people speak and think of him whose walk will perhaps go a little farther with their own; not that they deem such vital- ity and power and spirit can ever ceaso, but that they are warned of its apothe- osis, as it were, into loftier regions, where his earthly songs shall be turned to the music of the morning stare as they sing together, Wives For In some parts f England men who got tired of their wives sell them as low as sixpenco apleco. Sometlmes a wifo is traded off tor a quart of beer. Both hus- bands and wives in such cases aro very disagreeable porsons. Possible they are the victims of dyspepsia and liver com- plaint, and their health is badly run down. Such people may not be worth doctorlng, but nice people Who are run down by theso silments, should try Brown's Iron Bitters, which will bring them right up, ¢ Cheap, — Jumping from the Train, Chucago Herald, “Talking about prisoners jumping through car windows to get away from their keepers,” remarked an old sheriff, as he kept his eye on two mea who were handcuffed together and occupied the seat in front of him, *‘let me tell you a little story. About fifteen years ago 1 was taking a chap up to Joliet one night, and as I alwa s thought myself good enough for any one man, and, as he was s quiet one, anyhow, 1 took the clamps oft him., 1 had had him in charge several months, and 1 thought him a big coward; so when he asked permission to go into the closet I let him go, feeling confident he would never jump with the train going forty miles an hour. back directly, and then I got scared and looked for him. i he bad made the jump. and looked for him. 1 expected to find him dead by the side of the track, but not a sign of him did we discover, except that I found his hat where he had jumped. The train went on and I stayed there, swore in & posee from among a lot of section hands, and oftered a reward, but I never found him—not even a track nor a sign, save that hat, It was always of the greatest mysteries to me how he got away. The fall must have hurt him, as there was a high bauk there, and how a man could get away 80 quick after such a terrible jump was moro than | could understand, Ten years afterward I came across that man in the pen at Joliet, where he was a ten- lyear burglar, He told me how he had 330t away, and laughed g0 over it that 1’} d be | and Celia Thaxter, together with inter- | Ple case in his hand, trying to sell some eating. prints, hang on the other walls, |cigars. 1t made me sorry that 1 was not rivalled it may be, by tho window that|in the cigar trade, for if I was, and his looks down & sunny little orchard, and goods came anywhere near suiting my by the glass-topped door through which | customers, 1 should buy from him in you see the green dome of Powow Hill, proference to any one else, The sight What worthies have been entertained in | Was prove © of sadness in me, aud | that knew him of old. The greater part here fledglings have the unwarrantable prominence, the autograph seekers, send Bat in the early fall the poct steals quietly back What a life he has to look back upon as he sits with his fame about him—what storms and what delights, what struggle wonderful humility of spirit that he bears before God and man, yet it is doubtful if He didn't come The window of the closet was wide open, and it was too plain I stopped the train and we run back, got out lanterus bet the day he got a chance to tell me of his cleverness was the brightest one he had passed in many a year. He had simply climbed ont the window, reached up to the ventilators with his hauds, and pulled himself up to the top of the coach I'here he lay and heard us talk about catching him. When the train went on with him and without me he was very happy. As soon as he got s chance at one of the stations ho jumped upon a freight train, and from that out was |nothing but a common tramp. Pretty sleek, wasn't it e RUINED BY POLITICS, A Millionaire Who Losta Fortuuc in the Political Arena, A Lexington (Ky.) letter says: I saw ex-Governor Bishop, of Ohio, on thoe stroots hero a few days since with a sam- hurried by without stopping to speak to the old gentloman, for I could not change his condition, and did not wish my mine todwell on it. 1 eay the sight provoked sadness in me, and 8o it did. Not because 1 think tho occupation of a traveling salesman or drummer is in any way degrading, for 1t is an honest and legitimate calling, in which no one need beashamed to engage. Nor was it because I thought thero was any oacrifice of dignity on the part of Governor Bishop in engaging In it. 1t was creditable to him that he should have gone to work for himself rather than fold his hands and become a charge upon others, and I honored him for it. But still 1 was sorry that he had to do it. 1 know what poverty ls; 1 know what the constant strain of having to seok one's daily bread by his daily labor ie, and I know how hard it is to feed the little mouths and clothe little forms that are dependent on the father for every morsel and every shred. 1 have fought with these wild beasts at Ephesus, and still do battle with them daily, after the manner of men, though mayhap it profit- eth me nothing. But I look forward more or less hopefully to the time when in old age I can rest and let my days go out in peace, undisturbed by carking cares about next week's market money. The time may never come, but I wish it would come to every man whose thrae- score years have passed. R. M. Bishop has been a prominent man here as well as in home at Cincin- nati. As one of the leading men in his church, he becama president of the board of curators of Kentucky university, 1 be- lievefrom its organization.At all times he took a very lively interest in its welfare, and spared no pains or trouble to advance its interests. His has been a familiar figure here for many years, and he has had warm friends and ardent well wish- ers on all sides among tho peoplo. His great wealth did not make him purse proud, nor his cilieial position tempt him to be haughty. While governor of Ohio and president of our university he was still the same simple, unaffected christian gentleman, he would have been had his station been humble and his means limited. Miefortune came and he fatled in business. 1 suppose he must have made an honest failure else he would not to-day be traveling selling cigars by sample, 1tis honuvrable and commend- ablein the old gentleman to knuckle down to work, but I wish he had his fortune back, and if the prayers of one poor sinner for his succets would avail,he would not have long to wait until he did have it back. e ——— 1 have been afllicted with an Affection of the Throat from childhood, caused by diph- theria, and have used various remedies, but hav r found anything equal to BROWN'S BroxciiaL Trocues,—Rev. ¢, M, F. Hamp- ton, Piketon, Ky. Suld only in boxes. e — The Fatal Tou Philadelphta Ledger, Nov. 8. Mr, Jay Gould is getting some inkling at this time of the place he holde in the genoral estimation, Whatever he is sup- posed to have anything to do with is im- mediately tainted with suspicion. - ———— SKIN DISEASES CURED, By Dr, Fraziers Magic Ointment, Cures a if by magic: Pimples, Black Heads or Grubs, Blotches and Eruptions on the face, leaving the skin clear and beautiful, ~ Also cures Itch, Salt Rheum, ipples, Sore Lips and old, Obstinate Ulcers, ,Sold by druggists, or d on receipt of Price. 50 cents, Sold by Kuhn & Co. and C. Jodman, C— Tam O'Shanter caps f girls and “jockey” for small boys’ wear are’ worn a great deal in England, made of velvet, plush and serge, or can be made in any material chosen for the jacket, costume or great-coat. | e “Work, Work, Work!" How many women there are working 7 = BES pombin T TD‘NI 1w L Kidneys and Liv IV omon, i 1 " . Take no othe 1y by HIOWS CHENICAL €0, BALTINOKE, ¥ TR GRN And Undisputed in the BROAD CLAIN ‘eingthe VERY BEST OPERATING, QUICKEST SELLING AND 05T PERRECT COORANG ST0VE Ever offered to the public. HAMBURG-AMERICAN Faclkoet Compainy. DIRECT LINE FOR ENGLAND, FRANCE AKND GERMANY.{ Tho ateamships of this well-known line are built of water-tight compartments, and sre furnish- every requisite to make the passage both afe and agreeable. They carry the United Statos ropean mails, and leave New York Thurs- urdsys for Plymouth (LONDON) Chor- 18) and HAMBURG. ersgo from Europe only #18. lays and Sat; First 820, y Pundt, Mark Hansen, ¥ E. Moores, M. Tofh, sgentaln Omaha, Groneweg & Schoentgen, agents in Counoll Plaffs, RICHARD & CO., Gen. Pass Agts., 01 Broadway, N. Y. Cbus. Kozminski & Co- Wosteru Agants, 170 Washlugton St., Chlca omptly relievedand ntlycured by reme- rdina Forty Years Practice. Seminal .- by Dreams, Pimplcs on food, g ositively cured, There appropriate re onsultations, credly confidential. nd Express, No marks on o indicate contents or sender. Address MES,No. 204Wa; shington Si.,Chicago, Il ww.——---—w-d Nervous Debility NS 0¥ uitou Sty N Xe Manhood Resiored, Victims of youthfulimprudence,causing Ne bility, Prema y. and all disord e by by indircretios Tl $ree.by addressini. X parmanent core. ro Do DR. KO e x L ) - Do rochiarod nti iy 18 coming, the ecason o the yos In view of this fact we say buy one of 3 ‘s Electric Belts. By o dolng you will avotd Rheumatism, Kidney Troubles and other ills that flesh is heirto. Do not delay, but call st our oflice and examiue belts, No. 142¢ Douglas street, ¢ t’J. Goodman's, 1110 Farnam 8t., Omahas, N O ors Allod 0 0 D r- to-day in various Lranches of industry to say nothing of the thousands of patient housewives whose lives are an unceasing round of toil—who are martyrs to those complaints to which the weaker sex ie liable. Their tasks are rendered doubly hard and irksome and their lives are shortened, yet hard necessity compels them to keep on. To such Dr. Pierce's vorite Prescription” offers a sure ns of relief. For all female weakness it is a certain cure. All druggists, | —— The best coral grounds yielding the most and best coral are still those on the Algerian coast, fished for that purpose from the middle os the sixteenth century, the others being the coasts of Sicily, Corsica, Sardinia, Spain and Balearic Isles, and Provence. —— STOP THAT COUGH By using Dr, Frazer's Throat and Lung Bal- sam—the only sure cure for Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness and Sore Throat, and all diseases of the throat and lungs, Do not neglect a cough. It may prove fatal, Scores and nundreds of grateful people owe their lives to Dr, Frazier't Throat and Lung Balsam, and no family will ever be without it after once using it, and discovering its marvelous power, Itis put up in large family bottles and sold for the small price of Kubr & Co, and Pittsbure Chre cents per bottle, Sold . Goodman, A new clock has been invented, and is coming into use in KEurope, which is warranted by its mannfacturers to run for five years without either winding or regulating. The Belgin government placed one in a railway station in 1881, sealed with the government seal, and it has kept perfect time ever since, and has never been touched in that time, —— Catarrh Is o very prevalent aud exceedingly dis agreeable disease, liable, if neglected, to develop into serious consumption, Bulng a constitutiona! disease, it requires a constitutional remedy like Hood's Sarea- parilla, which, acting through the blaod, reaches every part of the system, efiact- ing » radical and perma'ent cure of catarch in even its most severe fc Made only by C. 1. Hood & Co., Lovell, Magzs, . M R. RISOON OMAH A A GROWING CITY The remarkable growth of Omahs during the last fow years {s & matter of great astonishment to those who pay an occasional visit to this growing city. The development of the Stock Yards—the necessity of the Belt Line Road—the finely paved streets—the hundreds of new residences and costly business blocks, with the population of our city more than doubled in the lost five years. All thie isa great surprise to visitors aud Is the admiration of our citizens, This rapid growth, tho businees activity, and the many substantial improvements made a lively demand for Omaha real estate, and every investor has made a handsome profit. Since the Wall Street panlc last May, with the subsequent cry of hard times, there has beeu[‘suu demaud from specula- tors, but a falr demand from investors seeking homes, This latter class are taking advantage of low prices In build- ing material and are securing their homes at much less cost than will be poesible ® year hence. Speculators, too can buy real esta’ 2 cheaper now and ought to take advant . present prices for futur profi s Th few years promises greate avelopments in Omaha than the par i+ years, which have been as good st wo could reasonably desire. Now m as ufacturing establishments and large sn- bing houses ara added almost weekly, job al 1add to the prosperity of Omaha.*ind There are many in Omaha and through- out the State, who have their money in the banks drawing a nominal rate of n- torest, which, if judiciously Invested in Omaha real estate, would bring them much greater returns. We have many bargalns which we are confident will bring the purchaser large profits in the neer future. ‘We have for sale the finest resi- the north and in dence property western parts of ‘the city. North we have fi e lots at reason- able prices on Sherman :;/u;\;u;l 7th, 18th, 19th and 20th streets. West on Farnam. Davenport, U\lnaiug, fln}l_nll tl; ]euiiing streets in that direction. The grading of Farnam, Califor— nia and Davenport streets has made accessible some of the finest and cheapest residence property in the city, and with the buiiding of the street car line out Faruum, the pro- perty in the western part of the will increase in value. We also have the agency for the Syndicat- and Stoek Yards proper- ty in the south part of the city. The ion developments made in ths | by the Stock Yards Company and the railroads will certainly double the price in ashort tinie. We also have some fine business lots and some elegant inside resi- dences for sale, Parties wishing toinvest will find some good hargaius by calling on u Gt Ingurance A R EPRESENTS #Phanix Asouranse C Asoots. ORIGINAL GouLD &¢O'S: 18 DECID BY Royal Havana Lottery ! (A GOVERNMENT INSTITUTION.) Drawn at Havana, Cuba, Kvery 12 to 14 Days. TICKETS, $2.00, - + - HALVES, #1.00 Bubject t0 no manipulation, not controlled hy th partics In interest, It ls tho fairest thing in th nature of chance In existence. ¥orlntormation and particulars spply $oSIISEY, Gen. Agonts, 1912 Broadway, N Y. clty, E KAUB & CO., 417 Waluus_street, 8, Louls’, Mo o1 Frank Lobrato, L. D., 20 Wyandott, Kan, Iy 21'mée & w 1y Health is Wealth ! ' Da. E. C. Wxat's NKkyN AND BRAIN TREASMENT, 8 quarsatecd specifio for, Ty, D zzinose, Convul: stons, Fits, Nervous Neuralgls, Headacho, Nerve P!\u!tll\nu caused by the use of alcohol or tobbacco, Wakefuluess, Moutal depreseion, Softening of the brain, resulting in_insanity anc feaping to misery, decay and death, Prematuire OId sge, Baroness, loss ofpower In elther aex, Lovoluntary Losses and Sper. matorhora caused by over exertiontof the brain, self. sbuse or over indulgence, Each box, contains one month's tr. ent. §1.00 & box,or six bottles for $6.00, sent by wall prepaid on receipt of price. WE GUARANTER 81X BOXE3 To cure auy case, h order recelved by ns for six bottle d with 86.00, we will'send Ahe purchaser our written guaranteo to refund the meuey If the treatment does not effect & cure. Guar: Autecs {ssned only by JOHN C: &00., 1y 25-mde-ry £62 Madison teago, 111, "JAS. H PEABODY, M. D, Physician & Surgecn| Ras iidence No. 1407 J A street. Office hours 1 wip o Telgbon: tor Bt Office, No. 1600 Far i Oftce, Yo 100 Ty e RASKA REAL ESTA'qB BROKERS. 213 South 14th o Bet veen Farnham and Douglas. P.S.—We ask those who have property for sale at a bargain to give us a call- We want only bargains, We will positive'y not handle prop- erty at morethan its real value. e { | |

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