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THE DAILY BEE-~FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1885, [ =3 - R “NEW DEAL” Deere & Company, Moline, lllinois TWO HORSES CAN DO 24inches TURNED WITH THE! THE “NEW DEAL" is 1 more uniform furrow THE “NEW AL " 1 lig and will do s THE “NEW DEAL cent. in Iabor more than hi DEAL’ od and rickety cxperiment, an n i tho outgrowth of careful of years, ional view o v THEY A SUPERIOR TO ANY economical plows ever placed in tho market, It ¢ THE atte CNEW HERETOFORE REQUIRED FOR ONE-THIRD THE COST OF PLOWING SAVED, THE GREATEST PLOW IMPROVEMENT OF “NEW DEAL” WHEELED WALKING PLOWS SINGLII AND DOURBLII FURROW, t in draft and more easily handled than a hand plow, and cats a , lighter in weight, and lighter in price than a sulky plow, a1 inches with tho d he work of 4 four-hors ' Plows arc ALL STEET, nd these claims are not made recklessly to attract the requirements of the ti Call and examine them, Deere, Wells & Co., Western Agent COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. \ ABLE BOMBS, Plants and Insects that Explode with Dynamite Force, Inchos under water and the firoe of the explosion weald make the water boil all abont. Experiments tried in hot wat«r showed that the latter effervesced. To the haman nostril the odor resembles t1int of murlatic acid, and is extremely irrica. ting. 1f aby one wishes to try 1t In the interests of sclence I have another beet'c all loaded’—but there wero no martyrs present. Nearly all the beetles of this family have this pecaliar method of defense, and in some looalities the odor and cffect is much worse than in others, Burchard, the wel known traveler, had a curlous experience. “With a party of natives ko started ont one evening {0 maks some astronomical observations, when hls attentlon wes stiracted by great numbers of beetles runaifg about upon tho shore, Being a naturalist he dlrected his men to eapture one, which the proseeded to do but the moment the Insects were touched they faced ghout aud tent sach an irritating Philadelphia Times “Come around tomy place to.night, said & sclentist to the writer, *‘and I'll show you the Iatest thing in dynamito The at the time ap THE WORK OF THREE. atter was on hand pointed aud found around a tabls a dozen or more faces more oriess familiar in the world of blology. In the center of the table were a number of boxes of various vizes, a dish contalning a substance Ic ing susplcionsly like water and sever other articles of an innocent plotive character, “Don’t slt in that chair,” exclaimed me one, as the writer wa »out to pull up., ‘‘Thero is a current of electricity golng into it strong and powerfal enough to kil an ox.” “Take the lounge,” sald the host, “ihat is if you don’t mind snakes.” The writer did, especislly as the one upon|discharge upon the hands of the men the loungs was a python, about ten fect| that they dropped them, howling with imlength, brought in t> b experimented | foar and paln, So painful was the dia upon.” y charge that only a fow of the insects ““He's harmless,” sald the firat sponker. | woro canght. 1t was noticed that at the I chloroformed him about hall an hour | time of the oxplosion a white, semi ago." ¥ luminous cloud appeared in the a'r, A chair was finally found and the “Here,” said ths intest man, faking moeting was ocalled together and the fup the dish of water, ‘“is another living members proceeded to busine gun,” and as ho spoke he touched a “‘Sgeaking about dycamite,” sald 8 |gmall object and & stream of water four naturalist, ‘I have brovght a fow epaci-flnches tn length sprang into tho air, meny to fllustrate that feature in low [ +Ph firt time I noticed this,” contlaued life—as there are dynsmiters in thetho epeaker, *I waslooking downinto the lower animal kivgdom as well &5 the|water and was strack by the stream higher, and curiouely enough we might fafrly in the eye, and upon Investigation, eny the same of the vegotablo kibgdom. | T found that it came from the respivatory I remember a fow yenrs ago I waa trav- | organ of the larviv of the common dragen eling on a emall vessel between somo of [ iy, This sbosting water method fs not the Weat India islands and at oue place | paculiar to {nsects. There aro a number had purchascd a number f curlous | uf fighes that have & shutlar habit. Ono sceds, placiog them under my berth forfknown as the archer fich will riee to_the safo keoplng. 1 was sitting at the small | snrface and eject & stream of water four table, hanging on with both hauds, in [or five inches above the surface, and 8o company with a negro passenger, when [ qecurate in their aim that they can hit an and unex THE TIMES, of a 16 inch Liand plow — a gaving of 50 per ;2 ang with one less horse and little insuring greatest strength with lightest weight. becrvation and experiment reaching over & period PLOW R OFFERED, and tho most Loss and Gain, CHAPTER I T waa takon #ick a year ago ‘With bilious fever.” My doctor pronounced ms cured, but 1 got sick sga n, wlth terrible pains in my back and sid-s, and got so bad I Could not move! 1 ehrunk! From 228 1bs. to 120! T had beendoc- toring for my liver, but it did me no good. 1 did not expect to live mere than three months, I began to uss Hop Bitters. Directly appetise returned, my pains left me, my entire system scemed renewed a3 il my magic, and after using several bot- tles, I am not only as gound as & sovereiga but welght more than I did before. To Hop Bitters I owe my life.” R. Fr 3 ATRICK. Dublin, June 6, '81. CHAPTER II. “‘Malden, Mass,, Feb, 1, 1830, Gentlemen— I suffered with attacks of sick beadache,” Neuralgia, feamale trouble, for yearsin themost terrible and excruciating manner. No medicine or doctor could give me rellef or oure, until [ used Hop Bitters. “The firat bottle Nearly cured me;"” The second made me as well and strong as when a child, ““And I have been so to this day.” My husband was sn invalld for twenty years with a serious *‘Kidney, liver and urinary complaiat, “pronounced by Boston’s best physi- clans— *‘Incurable!” Seven bottles of your Bitters cured him and I know of the “‘Lives of elght persons” In my neighborhood that have saved by your bitters, And many more are usi great benefit. “They almost Do miraclea?’ —Mra. E. D, Slack. How 10 GET S10K.—Expose_yonrself day and night; eat too much without exercise; work too hara without rest; doctor all the time; take all thevile nostrums advertised,and then you will want to know how to get well, which is answered in these words - Take Hop Bitters! None genulne without a bunch of green Hops on the white label. Shun all the vile, poisonous stuff with “Hop" or **Hops"” in their name. ng them with . n ai, Theo fittestsubjocts 44"" Ba b g;v ™ for fever aud m{ulu, iz NI T T and remittests; arc tated, bil- stich persons, Hostot- ter's Stomach Bit- torsaffords adoquate protecticn by creailng stam- inaand cslstaut power of the const tution,and by che 10k Irregulariti the liver, stomach and bowelr. More- over, it eradicates malarial complaints of an obstinate type i and stands slore un- e fif"ca | “if Uk equalled among our national remedics Dealors generally. l_,.‘ a O 4N thers came an explosion that sounded as | ghiect as 1 3 8 | object as emall as a fly with the groatost it a barrel of powder had gono off [oase. The long nosod chaltodon 1s equally Somsthing whizzed past my facoroclcsaly | remarkable in this respect, Their biil that I felt the wind, and ancther projectite [ scoms arranged to form u parfeot air-gun, Ottumwa's B coien struck me full in the breast. The negro | theough which a drop of water is forced 50 fo . He uttere AR t ATt g was not so fortunate. He nttered a lond | at an ineect with unctring alm. Marshalllown gave a majority of 310 |yell as the sound came, threw up his| The squids have a similar faculty of for a mayor why will inaugurate s ““pop” [ hands snd with the blood spurting from | jecting & stream of paro black jak, and law. his face, he went over backward with a | tho writer has seen the face of a person John Nolan, a Crenton echool boy was | crash that brought the skipper and crew | drenched in fhis way, the ioky stroams fatally injured by being etrusk in the [down the yatch in a hurry. We pleked | ising four or five inches from the water. stomsch with & hard rubber ball. him up and first hn awora that I bad shot “There! dy There's one animsl dynamiter you The lanatics in tho Mt. Ploacant asyi- [ him and then that Ibad hit him with a|haven't got here,” eaid a tall, thin ssien- um indalged in & masquerade ball recent- | 1ub, but in a moment he recovered from | tist, as tne ecssion broko up later. ly. Ressineblo people Induige in like h”_“,;;fnh'm:f‘db:; gzg:“ :;’“‘x"i"'f‘:fi\l‘;‘-m ““What's that 7" asked the host, AT ha o 3 “Eggs,” was t} ly, “‘and that's . Dl of Mantoo ottty |20 B8 —a-bIOW 80 PoeEil e e sk | i e e e T iy s Loy SR o o 2! [ several hours before ~the hemorrhage | human dynawmits howlere.” oaned two nico young men $45to D8y | could be stopped. When [ rose from e the S\o old froight bill. What's ina| o geat something dropped upon the | STONEWALL JACKSON'S HORSE, AT cabln floor and I afterwards plcked it up The McGregor News charges that the —and what do you suppcss it wasl| Ridaen Through Thirteen Battles and church un-mhars_ and moralists of that | Nothing but a section of one of the seeds Now on Exhibition at New ;.‘?v;u have practically abanduned prohi- | and they wero tho explosives, The heat Oticans bitlon, of the cablng had some way affected them S Rosd agents are too common for com- [so that they went off like cartiidges and| The war-horce of Stonewall Jackson, fort or safety around Dubuque. They [as each was made up cf several pieces it yhich has just reached the New Orleans Ly for farmers who display any money | had somewhat tho effect of grape ehot. | exposition and ls attracting so much at- in town One strack the negro as related, another | tention, has had an eventful history. IOWA ITEMS, reglstration shows 3,000 as a force, I have pliced a beetle three Charles Beard, a switclupan in the |miised my kead and shattercd a looking | § yard at Pacific Junction, had his foct caught In a frog guard and was crushed todeath by the cars, He was only twentg-five years of 2ga and leaves a wife. S, E. Germarnd, a commercial drum- mer, is nursing a lame shoulder, the re— sult of a bullet wound received at Ma- quoketa, where Mr G. made himself too promiscuous with the wife of a Mr, Wil- Hams. The latter’s bad alone pre- vented the coroner getting a job. mile; in this case the frost was the cause. Joseph Woods, of Oskaloosa, devoted | There certain insects bore great holes | too much of his spare time to the wife of |in the bark of traes, rain finds its way in James madison, who protes!ed; theroup- |and froezos, and away goes the tree as if on Wood took ollel\‘ne, and went gunoing|you had placed a torpedo in it, showing for the too particu’ar husband, who, it|what the expansive power of water will appears, a forewarning had forearmed, | go,” for he filledWood too full of lead forany | ‘‘Speaking of Ineects,” sald the host, useful purpose. The verdict of the com- | ¢«reminds me that 1 have a dynamltu; munity is: served him right. here for exhibition whenever you gentle- A man named Erlckson complsined to|men are ready.” All were ready, and the Davenport police of having been|the table was cleared of the robbed of 65 by a woman of the town,|boxes except one, which was placed whereupon the police promptly arrested |in the center. ‘‘I propose, gentle- Mr, Eiickson and the judgeas promptly | men,” sald the dyramite fiand, *‘to show fined him $10 for frequenting a house of | not only an explosive insect, but the ef- ill fama. Unabe to pay his fine he was | fect of the explosion upon others who egent to jall. The woman wes afterward |might poseibly be enemies.” Upon this arrested and fined $30, which the paid | ke lifted a ellde that was attached to the out of the money stolen from Erickson. |box, and immediately there appesr:d ——— several medlum-s'zzd, eprightly beetles The Magnetic Power, that started off around the table In an ac- tive go-aa-you-please race. An enclosure was soon formed of books, and all the bee'les removed but one, and then a bestlo of a different specles was Intro- or monkey cocler that stood on the table. | Ty A number of seeds,” continued connected with the dispersal of secds. Boston Journal, Anold lady in G siys Lulu Hurst recalls to ker mind a_girl whom tho knew whon young and whose powers | 3y 05 4'wild, fiory, untamed fellow, that were scmswhat like Lulu’e, but stropgar. % Tho strange po#er came to this ancient [Z20 OVer the other at headlong specd. Lula in fite, and whon they camo on - she | The smallér boetlo at first did ot cem MANHO0D! fing powers, ew moth ERIE MEDICAL CO., BUFFALO. N. Y- TIMKEN SPRING VEHICLES! with . fi; '“ry"'mh:u' e Sidby ail e g:‘ < Carriss are"” Mew U Rty AY ol Teap. 5o high s o myalke hov. head |t0 Botics thls treatment, but fnally,when Tonths (e solling of an ordinaty ocm. | it was falrly knocked over, it seeniod t> When she became quiet and scated the | PFOPate itself to rosent further attacks. chaira, tables and such things in the room | Lt Taised tsclf high upon its legs, ehook would begin to dance around until {hey |18 Wing covers nervously, end, as the would get up against the chalr in which larger Ingect came around the ring on a {he gicl was sented, She had fio control |93 run, it tarned suddenly, unlimber- over the power snd It only exerted itself |3 tteclf, 0 to epeak, and, a3 the caemy ot timos, " Hor frionds thoughe hee. e | epprosohed, an sudibto report was hoard, glass behind me, another struck me in|cently, been in the cars of Mrs, the chest, while still another, curiouslv [ gon's’brother in North Caroli enough, took off the handle of a pitcher | save the animal to the Virginia Military Four of the seeds didn’t go off, and you | allowed to wander over the grounds, the may be sure I put thom in a stzong box. | pet of every one. He has not worn a e a the | eaddle since the war. speaker, “have a eimllar babit of ex-|known as L'ttle Sorrel, and his history ploding, and it is generally a provision [ novel and iateresting. In | yackson's staff now in the city remarked the west I have seen trees explode with |{o_day that Little Sorrel was madea Con- a report that could be heard nearly a|fedorate against hiswill. - ince the war the animal hae, until re- Jack- She ustitute, where b was cared for and The horse was A member of In the spring of 1861, when Major ackson had taken command at Harper’s Ferry, a numbexof horses were captured on a train from the nozth on the Balti more & Ohio Rallroad, Jackson request- cd his quartermaster to select a horse for him from the lot, and Little Sorrel was picked out. Jackson ordered that the trader who had the horees should be pald for the horsein United States money. The horse was of medium size, easily kept, and bad a long, lubbery pace. He soon evinced great power of endurance, and was used by Jackson in all his active service, He rode Littie Sorrel at the battles of Manassar, Kernstown, Me- Dowell, Wincheeter, Port Republle, Cross Keys, Chickahominy, Cedar Moun- tain, Second Mansesie, Sharpsburg, Har- pers Nerry, Fredericksburg, and at Chan- celloraville,where Jackeon fell mortally wounded from his back. The old steed is now thirty years of age, When Jackson was wounded he escaped into the Federal lines, and In a subsequent charge was captured by General J. E. B. Stuart. When Little Sorrel passed through I{noxville the other day, old men, who had seen the anlmal in battle, foll upon its neck and wep —r—— Betore And Behind The New London Telegram, To show more clearly the comicalitles snd absardities of atago Jife, we ‘ite o few Instances which are the result of eonal observatlon, and which, to the thivking, show the vaet difference be- Scenes, N ohad and wore afeutd ot et 1% 4w cloud for & moment hung in the air, and Wor ths agoey may have hoon the sirl|the lsrgo beetle foll spraling in its dwindled froma robust, healthy person, | tracke, and with spasmodlo strugglos en- to a wreck, when she died, eavored to back away from the living P cannon, Croquet, The latter sfill retained its offsnsive Thia is the old Frinch word for a ban: | Poslticn, and upon b.iag touched with a dy or hockeystick. The circumflex over | PeRcll agatn ejected, twico In quick suc- the e in the final syl'able s improper, ceeslon, a volatile fluld that gave outa and s not usad fn the original French | decided pupg:nt odor that was evidently word, The origin of the game of croquet suffucating to the larger beetle. A moute is not, a8 many suppose, of modern bieth, | ¥38 BOW iotroduced, and a3 it ran by the but may be fraced through fts various|dynsmite insect it geceived a discharge stages 10 Porsia as far back as the eighth | that caused it to squeal with patn, and contury. Its origin was polo, which the | #ith & convulslve action it reared itself Pere played with a long-bandled mal- | 2POB its hind legs and for a fow seconds let called chugan. In the ninth contury [3roggled as if In a fit. A kitten sub- the game made i's way into the Eastern |jécted toa like diechargo spit and rubbed Emplre, the orlginal mallet changing its | Bér noe in rage and fear; and finally, form with & network of gut strings, The |3ter several discharyes, the supply of original ball games in which sticks were ‘m,m"““",’“ seemed to give out. used were played on horseback, and in- +There's protection for you,” eald the stead of polo belng an outgrowth of the delighted owner, taklng up the dyna- sports played on foot, the latter are the | Rite bug, which was rather long and nar. changes made in the Persian game of chu- | ¥0» baviog a carlous generel appearance gon, which, 8s has been said, wes the from the fact that the head and thorax parent of all our games In which artifislal | ere narrower than the abdomen. “I means are used t) propel the ball, The call it Rossa because It makes a distur- translation from the chugan of Persia to|bance and everything boll and ferment, the short-handled mallet used on foot | Put i reslity doei no harm. The beetle,” was eavy and natoral, and the substitu- | be continued, ‘‘was brovght from China tion of & olub came by natural changes, | Py ® friend of mine, or, I'should say, he CERTIFICATE OF PUBLICATION, OFFICE, AUDITOR OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS, SraTR OF NERRASKA, Lincoln, February 1st, 1885 } It Is hereby certified that the State Insurance of Insurance by Company of Des Molnca Tows, bas complied laws of this State, and is authorized to tre in the Sta i buslness of Fire lusurance in this state for the cur. ent year. Witness my hand and the seal of the Auditor of Publio Accounts the day and year above written. s o~ Bigned: I A BABLOCK, Ls } Auditor P. A, [ el — Wamer's Vigor::: i wl v mail, J, H.Warner,: 07 Stato St..Cl 159 s 51 . Address W D A e P WARD £ “o.. B9 ANA. w0 18 aphrodisiac, arons- s nctivity, positively losy uvrvous debil. wenkness ofg enerutive systoin ; either sox. the hand bel bab ipi sent me & dczan or so of the brave lt:um::n. olg probaly the original and I hatched them outin my insect case. It ‘i’- very numm'nn :n Chioa and Japan and various parts of the east, and so Prompt, safe snd sure; pleasant to|gpecios in § dath Amerlca, The selentiie take; Ited Star Cough Cure, a cure will§name is Brachinidm —that 1s, that's the make, {;mily num;—;bult; they generally go by o —— e nams of the Bombardier Bestle, from - ‘1“";:" that Difference, their hablt of bombarding all {ntraders remont Tribune at shortnotioe, The explosive In this case Had the gang of robbers who raided |{s a volatile flald secreted in the posterior the etate trersury Saturday succeeded In | portion of the body, which the insect bas their designs they would have obtained |the power (f ejecting with such force §300. 1If the senate amendment to the | that it is falt several inches awsy, and appropriation bill ls carrled, rewarding | forming, fcr 8 momert, a cloud as It were the detcctlves, the tremury will belof smoke, To very small an tns robbed of §1,600, There is just thatfmay bo fatal, and 10 larger forms it is ¢literenco between polite robbery and {quite sufficient to stop their progress in a bold thievery—between legal plandere rs fyiven direction, It stings snd burna the and bandi human flesh for teveral moments snd stain It so that the marks are vieible for Smoke Seal of North Carolina Tobac- | several days. €0, “‘To show the power of the explosive L ——— tween tho relation of professional people before aud behind the ecene Before tho scenes: Hero—For y have followed you as the relentless tiger follows his prey, and now you must ‘pre- pare for your punishment which your crimes deserve. Thus do I bury my kuife agaln and again In your craven heart— thus do I saliate my direst venegence., Villlan—With mv dying brath I curse you. (Dles). Behind the scenes: Hero—Say, Curly lend me a collar button; some fakir has collared mine. Villlan—That's an old duy. But here you are, Don’t be ashame to return it, Before the scenes: King—Down, slave and beg my royal pardon, Slave—Yos, sire; most humbly do I crave thy clemency. Behind the scenes: Slave—Here you royal dummy with the tin fake on, pull off my boots, will you? I can’tat.opover for this pad. Kiog—Why, cert, Jimmy, Before the scenes; Hero—Thus I do endow thee with a royal ransom. Take this package; within it you will find $40,- 000, and if you need more you have but to send to my lawyer. Behind the scines: Hero (who s also the manager)—I am very eorry, Lillie, but I can't pay your salary this week, Here is §1; make that go till we strike better buciness That's a good girl. ————— A Poisoner Hung. OuicAGo, March 5,—Dr, Albert G, ¥, Gur- son was hanged in the county prison at 10:30 this moraing for poisoning his wife nearly five years ago. e Sons ot Rich Men, The sons of some of the very rich men of New York are said to be liviog at & tremendously extravagant rate, and are likely to see the bottom of the fortunes acqnired by economy and thrift. Ouve glided youth recently chertered a palace: car at $100 per day amd took a party of friends to New Orleaps, this being but one ftem In the expenditure. Another isjtouring 1t around the world in a yatch, A’third, who is “‘no ends cf a swell,” cuts his fa'her dead when they meet in Fifth avenue, MARY ANDERSON'S LOVE, A Fashionable Young Sculptor Wooes tho Actress While Carving Her Bewhehing Featares New York J Miss Marg Anderson, the celchiated Amerlcan ac:ress, afier being cogaged (n paper) to the Dake of Pocdaud, Cancn Faresr, James Gordon Beanett, Lord Garmoyle, tho A1chbishop ot Canterbury and Me., tienry K. Abbay, 18 now sid to have actually centred her atfcction upon a young scalptor of London named Rene. He, 1t seems, was eomo tme ago com mlseioned by Mr., Abbey to make a life size, full-length etatue of the charming tross, to be placed in the Royal Acad- nal. e ] | CHAS, SHIVERICK, FURNITURE UPHOLSTERY AND DRAVPERIKS, Passenger Elevator to all floors, 1206, 1203 and 1210 Farnam Str OMAHA, NEBRASKA ot, | emy and subzequently in the lobhy of the Lyceum t Mr., Abbey was led to chooee bim from an ideal baat which he made of Misy Ellen Teriy, and which gave such a suave and beautiful contour to the head of that lady that Mr. Abbey dubbed him tho woman's sculptor par excallence, Miss Anderson th.n made inquirics and much admired gome of the works of his which she was shown. Then Mr. Abbey determined to make the actress a presont of the statue of hee self on the sole condition that sheshould coneent to stt for i, The position chosen was to represont Miss Anderson in the costume of Galaten as ehe first awakes to lifo. This was chosen as the most sppro- priate and striking of all her impersona- tions and the most likely to ba made an effoctive atatue. The work was begun about six months ago, and Miss Anderson took a great in terest In it from the very start, On sev- eral occasions shy dismisged rehearsals to attord her ssance as & model, and_very scon the work seemed to absorh her whole attention. She grew enthusiastic over it and gradually came to prolong the sitiings from cne Loar to two, threo and our. The statue was the corstant subjoct of her convertation, and from that it very often pasted to the young scalptor, or whom ehs spoke with great fervency and admiration, This was remarked by the watchful eyo of Dr. Hamil- ton Griflin, the step-father of the actress, who immediately requested to accompany Miss Anderren on hec aily excurzions to the studlo of Mr. tene. Bat this apparent survelllance soon worried Mies Anderson, who no fied the doctor that his eeplonage was ax noying and requestad him to remain away and attend to nis bueiness affairs, Then Mrs. Griflin, the mother of Miss Anderson, took 8 hand in and appeated suddenly to take the niost lively intercst in the matter of the swatue. DButy the old lady’s criticism and remarks about the work were naturally rather ludicrous and brought some ccnfagion t) Miss An- derson’s family pride. At apy 1aie she made this the ground of requesting her mother to abaent hersslf more iraquently from the sittings, Though the work dragged on In dura- tion Miss Anderson did mnot appear to weary of. She took the most lively in- tereat In the smallest details, and even spent some of her time in taking lessons in modeling from the handsome Mr. Rene. He issaid o bea very Adonis, with lopg, flowing blond locks ~ that fall over his shoulders, a slight fcrm,delicate, intellectual features, small hand and a large, liquid blue eyc. He is not mora than twenty-tix years of oo, and a_slight mustache completes the picture of a young fellow who, half from bis talents aod half from his1.oks, has suddenly grown fashionable. That is the portrait, at any rate, that is made of him by a lady wh) has accompanied Miss Anderson on s:veral of her excur- rionsto his stadlo. He, too, has shown an excessive interest In the work he fs performing for Miss Andersen. Urgent work, which ehould long ago have been finlshed, has been pushed aside, while he labored assiduously and long over the statue of the beautiful American actrees Thus rumor has grown to the peint of asserting poeltively that Miss Anderson has at length allowed her heart to be taken captlye, and that the offer of the young sculptor's hand has been ac- cepted. Dr. Grifin and Mrs. Gnffin have, at any rate, demanded explana- tlons on the subject, and Miss Anderson bas refused to give them, remarking that her heart and her hand are her own to bestow whenever and wherever she sees fit, Tho gossips in {he London clubs pro- dict that at any moment tho formal an- nouncement of the engagement of Miss Anderson to the young sculptor Rene is likely to ba made. He himself, pre- serves a discreet stlence, which not cven his most intimats friends have been able to pierce through, But one thing is conceded, thet a handsomer, more charm- ing couple could not be found the world over. e — Sick Heapacne,—Thousands who bave suffered intensely with sick headache say that Hood's Sarsaparilla has completely cured them, One gentleman thus re- lieved, writes: “‘Hood’s Sarsaparilla is worth its weight in gold.” Reader, if yon are a sufterer with sick headache, glve Heod's Sersaparilla a trial, 1t will do you positive good, Made by C. 1 Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass Sold by all druggists, 100 Doees One Dollar, e Supposing a prayer on a formal occa- gion 18 read from a printed slip and a typographical error completely ruios the proper sense, Will Providence racelve the petition as read or a3 orlginally written? The students In a western theological i gued for hours about this, ————— Duecling in Germany, N, Y, Evening Post, For an officerin & regiment to put on by mistake the cap of another officer does not at first sight seem to be one of those offenses for which blood alone can atone. That, however, was the vlew taken of such an incident by the seconds of two Prusslan officers at Oologne, who were lcoked upon a8 bound by the laws of honor to meet in mortal combat—In a duel, that is to say—which was to be con tinued until at leist one of the two partles engsged received & merious wound, Revolvers were the weapons selectad, and after no fewer than seven- teen shots were fired one of the combat- ants was found to have received so serious & wound that soon afterward he died, C — A Pair of Sad Deacons, Exchange. ““This is & sad, sad world,” murmursd Deacon Goodman, 88 he mechanically un- locked the door of a corner cibinet, “Indeed it 1s, indeed 1t is," aesented Deacon Betterman, sympathotically, “No joy is unalloyed.’ ““True, very true,” answered Descon Goodman, as he put soms suger into two glasses and addad some l'quid from & black bottla, “‘You like yours this way, I suppose, bro her” “Yes, yos,” was the sad roply. #We all have to take the bitters with the sweet,” G Ul plgeisy { Catalongos 1 on apy o, SOOI atet ettt ettt ettt ettt DUFFY’S s > T T 6N Y omason Absolutely Puro and Unadultorated. Entirely Free from FUSIL OIL, Ask your Physician E ) USIL OIL i Z ve Sure Cure fo tell yo an that i choards of ‘the best famili nsing room. L and_ that is not only. fou ty, but also in_ the pl DR. ARENDT, the gre of ot BEEN DT s Aalt Whisk Prof. VON VO NDER, writes :—Puri uify’s Malt Whiskey, is' ¢ 10 prest g 0 u tho £1S, ML D, KAWE i il ' vEs and_those afl WE W the United States plain case (thi all_opportunity f nt), PUR o WELISKRY and with it i VE CURE for 4 This ight_expense (Raw Beefsteak and our TSELE being of the ingredients, a5 been taken for & fow weks, the iifering from Consumption and J he sunken and blood] hile all the muscles of > to perform their had been before. In other words, the sy supplied an exhiaust, thereby giving nature the upper hand. in the confi womenS0LD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS AND FINE GROCERY HOUSES e s Sample uart Bottles sent 1o any address in the United States (East of the Rocky Moun. ins), securely packed in plain cas Lxpress charges prepaid on receipt of &8 GERMAN D. WYATT. LumberMerchant - Cumings and 20th Sts.,. Omaha, Neb. L,AG*ER]E&Q_HZ.FWWM 60, BEE R K Milwaukec. Wis. GUNTHER & CO,, Sole Bottlers, (SUCCESSUR _TO FOSTER & GRAY). LUONMIBER, LIMF AND CEBENT. RUZMPING & DOLTE, —MANUFAOTURERS OF— ORNAMENTAL GALVANIZED [ROK CORNICES Finiels, Window Osps, Iron Cresil ar/ »10 BouAb 134h B Orange Blossom Flour WHOLESALY BY L. A STEWART & CO, 1013 Jones Btreet } { OMAHA NEB Tin, Iron'and Sl ' Neb. 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