Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 13, 1885, Page 7

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3 Woman's Suffering and Relicf. Those languid. tiresome sansations, eausing you to feel searcely able to be ~n your feet; that constant drain that Is taking from your 3sbem all ts formeeelasticty; diiving the bloom feom your cheeks; that continual strain upon your vital forces, rendering you irritable and fretful, can ensily be removed by the use of that marvelons remedy, Hop Bitters, Ir- regularitios and obstructions of your syetem, are relioved at once while the special cause of periodical pain are permamently removed. Vone recetve #0 much bensfit, and nono are s0 profoundly grateful, and show such an inter- est in recommending Hop Bitters as women. A Postal Card Story. I was affected with kidney and urinary Trouble— “For tweive years!” After trying all the doctors and patent medicines I could hear of, I used two bot, tles of Hop “‘Bitters; And I am perfectly cured. 1 keep it All the tlme!” respactfully, B.F. Boothe, Saulsbary, Tenn,—May 4, 188 . Braprorn, Pa., May 8, 1875, It has cured me of several diseases, such as nervousness, sickness at the stomach, monthly troubles, etc, I have not seen a sick day in a gean, since I took Hop Bitters, All my neigh- ors use them, Mrs, Fannie (ireen. 83,000 Lost. tour to Europe that cost me $3,000,done e lows good than one bottle of Hop Bitters; “‘they also cured my wife of fifteon years’ ner- “vous weakness, sloeplessness and and dys- pepsin,” R, M., Auburn, N. Y, 80, BLOOMINGVILLE, O , Sirs—1I have been suffering tes tried your Hop Bitters, and it done me good than all the doctors, Mies 8. S, Boons, Baby Saved. Wo ara s thankful to say _that our nursing Daby was permanently cured of a dangerous and protracted constipation and_irregularity of the bowels by the use of Hop Bittors by 1ts mother which at the same time restored her to perfect health and strength, —The Parents, Tochester, N, Y. 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. i by D AT, WUPPEIMANY, G0L8 AGENT, BROADWAY. N, ¥ 5 The fittest subjocts 2 s mal m for fover and ague, K;U. JALEBRATER and romitton the debilitated iousand nervous. such persons, Hostot- ter's Stomach Bit- tersaflords adequate protecticn by in- creasing stam- tutlon,and by check- We 1ok ircegularitios of ' the liver, stomach > 3 and howel. Biore- 3 over, it eradiowes ial complainta pATOMACH obstinate type 2 ' and standa alone un- T o g2 @ equalled among our 4% national remedies. Dealers generally. ™, For gale by all D MASTER'S SALE. In the Circuit Court of the United States, for the District of Nebraska Monadnock Savings Bank) v, * In Chancery. Alonzo Moe and Marina Moe. ) FORKCLOSURE OF MORTGAGF. Publi notice Is hereby given that n pursuines and by virtue of a decrée entered In the above cause on the 23d day of December 1884, L Ellis L Bisrbower, special master in chancery in sail1 court will on the 18th day of April 1885, st the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of the sald day, at the North door of the United States Court Houseand Post office build- ing, in the city of Oa aha,Douglas County, State and District of Nebraska, auction the following de t wit: west quarter aud the West half of the North-oast quarterof s:c.ion twenty,one (21), the South-wett of section twenty-two two (2). North of range sixteen (10), P. M, in Frankl tato cf Nebrask . u EY§ OMEUFI’:T'I;I'fiB’A‘H VETERLEFICS For the Cure of all diseases of Horses, Cattle, Sheep DOGS, HOGS, POULTRY, Used successfully for 20 years by Fare mers, Stockbreeders, Horse R.R., &o. Endorsed & nsed by the U.S.Governm’t. z@~Pamphlets & Charts sent free, HUMPHREYS' MEDICINE GO, 109 Fulton St., New York, Humphrsys_’ Homeopating + Specific No. 2k s0 30 yoars. 'rnocV{ suocesstul remedy for Nervous Debility, Vital Weakness, aver-work or other causes, and largo vial powds [ BOLD BY DRUGGINTS, 0 sent 3 Roice: Aditreas. Tt m odicine Co., 109 deility, loat or fatling powers, Kake oveicon Feid o ERIE MEDICAL CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. PHOTOGRAPHER 218 North 16th Street. 0ld Bee Hive Stand, The present proprietor wishes it understord tha all photographs e made eatistactory before bolog delivered from this gallery, The old mansgement retires and Mr. H, K. Gray succeeds. NURSERY STOCK Those desiring Fruit or Ornamental Trees, Vines, Shrubs and Plants, will consult thei own interest bytalling at the real estate office of E. L. Emery, 1306 Harey St., or 2200 Farnam St Orders for spring planting must Kiven soon, CAUROHLY CANUANS, How the Good People of a Boston Ohurch Knjoy the Delights « of the Variety ttage. Boston Correspondence Pioneer Press, Boston soclety 1s about as fresky in its {deas of propriety as a mule is In regard to obedience. One would hardly expeo- ted that blue-blooded mammas, members of high standing In the church, would oonsent to their daughters doing the high-kicking act in sawed-off akirts and flosh-colored tights before admiring friends of both sexes. Nelther woald one expect the church to countenance such Black-Orook-edness. Yet such is the fact. It was only the other day that I saw one of the finest cancan asta ever scen off the stage or outofa demi- monde ball room, at a dancing en- terta'nment held under tho auspio:s of & well-known Boston charch—the Appleton streot chapel—the congregation of which is made up of somo of the tonlest society people in the clty. This lmb-elevating performance wasn't called the cancan, bat was dlrgaised, for modesty’s sake, under the titie of ‘‘Spanish dance, by Ls Petito Gertrude ” This rising young ballet glrl was a ten-year-old mias, rath er protty, but with hair-pln legs, painful to look upon. She had not arrived atthe dignity and deception of pads, Nearly five hundred fair-fat-and-forty mammas, bespectacled grandmas, substantial pas and *‘just-blooming-into-womanhoods’ tat or stood around a large hall awalting the debut of the youthful dan. seuse. Bang went ths plano, a equeak- ing of the fiddle and a blast on the cornet, all together, and “La Petite Gertrade” slid down the waxed floor on alternate big toes, and proceeded to wave her ‘tootey-wootsles” at the and- fence in time with the musle, I could not help thinking of a grasshopper on a warm atove when I looked at her man- euvers, although I will admit that ehs was far more graceful. She wore a pretty dross which might bave been large enough for her when mauch younger, a lace shawl and fan. I can't undertake to describe the ‘‘steps’” she went through. She kicked one leg, then the other, hopped, stocd on her toes, twirled, and, in fact, did just about the eame as the ballet girls do on the stage. During her performance I lived in mortal fear that she would lose her footing and dissolve into fragments on the floor like a vase, w0 feagile did she seem. But she got through all right, was loudly applauded and received & bouquet. Next came a “pas de quatre” by four misses, some- what older and more maternal than “La Petite.” I'wo wore drasses to the knes, and the other two locked bashful and awkward In pants and cavalry beots with jingles on them. They curved and cav- ortad in trae stage style and recelved their share of applause from the appre- ciative audlence. Then thirty-twomisees, ranglng from slx to twelve yeara old, in- dulged in ‘‘Les Varletes Parleiennes,” other dances of like nature following. It was rather a novel and interestiog affalr, taken all together, but it strikes me that it cannot have other than a bad effest upon there young girls and that it is brirging the church ia rather close con- nection with the worst part of the stage. I don’t know but what this would be a good chancs for {he soclety for the pre- | vention of craelty to children to slip in and Interfera, although that is not likely, however. Everybody knows that it Is no easy matter to learn ballet dancing. ————— ILL-GOTTEN GAIN, The Deathof a Connectiout Misep win Who Founded a Fortune by Stealing $105,000, Pelig Kenyon, aged 60, recantly died in Griswold, a rural manufacturing vil- lage in the eattern part of Connecticut, leaving property worth, it is estimatzd, 50,000. Kenyon was a bachelor, lank, keen-eyed, aud bald, and a typlcal Yan- kee., He diad amiserable old miser, The boast of his liie was that he started a machinist at 17 and at 21 was worth $75,000. Pelig Kenyon’s mother was a hard- fisted Yankee woman, honest but ambi- tious. When her son left the old farm, more than two score years 8go, just &s the plowing for oats was about to begin, to seek his for- y.|tune in a Boston machine shop, the widow was mad at him, She took hold of the plow handles herself, and told Pelig never to come back again until he had made his pile. He finally got a po- sitlon as watchman at Henry Hender son's Jarge warchouse, One Saturday afternoon the house receiyed after bank- ing hours a cash payment of $105,000 for a crop of molasses, The money was plscad in the cash box in the oftice for eafety. The safe was both fire and bur glar proof, and the presencs of a trusty watchman ia the building convinced Mr, Henderson that the great packages of bills would be as secare there as aay- where, That night, as soon as Kenyon was laft alone he openad the safe and the cieh box, etaffed the bills Into his pockets, locked the doors behicd him, walked to tke depot, and took the evening tra'n for Patnam, Coon, At 12 o'clock that night be drove up {0 the old homesterd in Griswold, At 5 the nmext morning he was at the Putnam depot, aga'n, bat minus the money. Sandsy night be resumed his dotics as night-watchman In the warehouses of Henry Henderson, He was arrested on spiclon but nothing could be proved gaiost him, Ooe dsy Mr. Hender:on walked into his cell and said, ‘*‘Pelig, this thing has gone on long enough. Yoa stole that money.” ““Well, whut{fl did?” coolly replied Pelig. “‘What if you did! you tcoundrel;why, I'll send you to prison for life,” “No you won't, Mr. Henderson. Massachusaits law provides seven yesrs only for the man who steals from his em- ployer,” Pelig raplied, laughingly. *What do you mean?" said hfl Hen derson, ‘I can't earn $100,000 in seven years, Mr. Henderson, andycu know I'm bound to bea rich man, ow, I have got that much and after I've been pun'shed for many years for taking it ils mine; don't you s3e " The merchant was baffled, For $30,- 000 Mr, Henderscn fically signed an in- strument putting Kenyon oot of harm way with the lon's share of the money . his pockets. Kenycn wes re'eisad, and went at once to Gelswold, crawled under the horse stable in the rad barn at the old homestead, and drew forth the buadle of §105,000 in bills intact, He counted out $75,000, and, going fnto the house, s3d o his mother: *'Mary, there's my pile.” “No good will come of i, my eoa,” she sternly responded. In ten years he bad doubled and trebled his foriune, but in the meantime bis mother haddied, as bad all of hls near relatives. He went back to the old farm in Griswold, snd made it the falrest in the land, but the honest country people THE DAILY BEE-~FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 1884. held aloof from him, and for the rest of his life Pelig Kenyonlived alone,a soured and rapidly-aging man, with no enjoy ment, saving the piling up and gloating over his {ll.gotten wealth. He was found dead, alone, in front of his treasure- chest, sitting upright {n his chalr., ——— How She Dashed Down Hill on aSled, Clara Belle took the last rlde of the sea- ton on & bob sled at Albany and she thus dencribes In the Clocinnati Enqalrer ssme of hor experiences: ‘Thewas a yoang gen- tleman on the bob In front of me, ana to my consternation, he began fumbling at my feet. Before I knew what he was about he had me by the tos ¢f cach foot. I locked around snd saw that some one of the men was holdiog up each girl's feet in appearently in the same way, and jast then some of the men produced fish-horns and began to blow them, and ths sled commenced to slide down hill like light- ning. But the young gentleman who held my toes allowed my heels to dig into the anow, and from each of them there plaged a fountain of ground-up ice and snow that shot right into my clothes and began to pack up most unpleasantly under my knees. On the long and tiresome journey tip the hill 1 told my friend Nell- te, and she became indignant, ¢¢‘Held your toer, did he?' she almoat shoated; ‘well, he's a perfoct Miss Nancy. T'll give you my partuer next time.’ “‘When I reached the top of tbe hill I wss all aglow with the exerclse, and the slight of scora of long. elastic, flylng bobs made me eager for another ride, Again FRESH WATER BEASTS, An Oregon Stage Attacked by an Army of Salmon, New York Times. The recent frightfal accldent which happened to a stage in Southern Oregon oannot fail to call the at'cntlon of the state anthorities to the necessity of pro- tecting settlors sgalnat tho attacks of salmon, The atage in questicn waa orosa- ing Applegate creek when it was sud- denly attacked by a drove of salmon, The stage was Instantly overturned, and the hungry fish swarmed over it, while the stage driver, with great presence of mind, cut the traces of his horses, and throwing himself across the off wheel horse—a powerful animal, formerly tho property cf Dr. Goodrich, of Olympla— managed to escape, The dispatch which conveys to us thls painful story says nothiog of the fatoof the stage pasien- gors, but, unfortanately, there is every reason to belleve that they fell viotims to the saimon, The Oregon salmon has long been re- garded by experienced western hunters a8 tho most dangerous animal infesting this continent. It is much larger than the salmon of the Atlantic cosst, and un- like the Jatter, which is a timid and inof- fonslve fish, it ls foarlese, aggresiive and crael There is scarcely a river in Oregon which is free from salmon, and many of the streams are rendered pracitcally im. passable by the numbers aud ferosity of I put the big beard between my knees with all the skill that way necessary, and held my toes up for Nellie's partner, who now sat in front of me, to clutch them. Bat he did nothing of the sort. His hands grasped my ankles firmly and away he went, with a rush and roar, over the bumps, through the lines of specta- tors, and 50 on to the end. My face was scarlet as I descrlbed my experience to Nellie. I got no sympathy for her. ‘Yes,’ she sald, ‘he knows how to held ;nel'a feetup. He's parfectly splendid, o ls.” " o — David Dudley Field on the Names of | American Towns. Mr. David Dudley Field, in a lecture before the American Geographical soci- ety, expressed his disllke of the system of naming towns in this country, and gives his opinfon of what would be the proper thing. He objects serlously to the nomenclature in vogue in the Rowdy West. He does not llke such names as You Bet, Sawdust, Big Coon, Cut Shin, Toad Vine, Skunk Lake, and Fish Hook. Yet Mr. Fleld will hatdly clsim these names to be un-American. There fs a breeziness, a neat abandon about them which is as clearly recognizable as the alr of Yenkee Doodle. It is true that the objects elected as having some connection with & town's loci- tlon or orign arc mnot the most attractive In every instances, but just at that perled in a western town’s history when it gets its rame the chances are that more attention s paid to poker than to etymology, and that ths ploneer in selecting a title has profound regard only for its applicability. The only fault with him is that he gots mometimes a trifls frisky. When Mr. Field goes farther, and attacks the practice of giving Amerl- can towns classloal nimes, or of addiog the Franch “‘ville” to a propar name, as “Jonesville” or ‘‘Smithville,” he takes a stand whero he will find sensible people supporting him, Equally will he be sap- ported in his advocacy of the eoft Indian names to towns In the land from which the Indians have been driven, Even Oshkosh may pass—it {s Americin. But ought not somethlng to be done with Bismarck, Dak., out of regard to the American hog, and to Babylon, L. I, on general principles? o — A Successful Imitation. The counsciousness of newly marrled couples has provided 8o much mirth for a heartless world that there poeitively ought to be a law enacted prohiblting the dry old bachelors, spinsters and prosy darbys Jovay from smiling anywhere within a mile of a bride and & groom, On the other hand, it 1s perhaps as well for young brides and grooms not t err in the effort to imitate *‘old married folks” in the manner the San Francisco Chronicle records: “Now,” eays the bride, “Henry, I want you to distinctly understand that L do not wish to be taken for a bride. I am golng to behave exactly as if I were an old mirrled woman. So, dearest do not think me cold and unloving if I trea you very practically when there i3 any- body by.” “L don’t believe I can pass for an »ld married man. I am so fond of you that Iam bound t) show it. I am sure to give the thing away.’ “No, you mustnt, It's casy enough. And Tinsist that you hahave jast liks an old married man. Do you hear! ‘“Well, datling, 1'il try, but I know I will not succeed.” The first evening of their arrival the bride retired to her chamber and the groom fell in with a poker party, with whom he sat playing cards until 4 o’clock in the morning. His wife spent the weary hours weepinz. At last he torned up and met his grief-stricken bride with the hilarioua question: “Well, alnt I dolng the old married man like a daisy?” She never referred to the subject again and evergbody knew aftar that they had just been marrled ———— Tortures Which Devotees of Fashion Infiict Upon Themselves, The recent health exhibition in London bas called attentlon to a mcst dange:ous fashion which, begioniog with actreesss, has crept into the upper clrcles of soclety, This is the deadening of the skin with bie- muth t> produce the paleness characteris- tic of consumption, Actresses and asturs have always uted some plgment for the bands to make them unnaturally white and this has produced a disease of the nafls, It is curlous that among savages and clvilized people equally the skin which 1s the most Important window of the body, is systematically stopped up with cosmetics. Now there s a devel- opln? morbid fancy for repulsive ghastli- nees in local soclety, and the bismuth powder servee the purpose, The result may b better imaglned than described. Of course the face and hands, if cov.red with ln{’ plgment to keep them white cannot ba often wathed, and thus the best means of ridding the body of lte perilous gasses Is cut cff A novel means emp'oyed by young ladies whose paternal subservience prevents them from procur- ing the drug, is to fasten the hands above the head, to the head-board of the bed every evening on retiring, thus prevent- ing, to 8 great extent, the free circulstion of the blood through those members for a lengthy period, and vltimately weaken Iog the'function of the vess:ls. Tke tor. ture the devotees of fashlon fnflict up:n themselves {s not inferior to the practice of the inqaisition. C — There are a numbir of eligible young in Pembloa ocuaty, D ikota, but no young women, They have pooled their issuss and deputes one of their numkerfio go to Boston to secure wives for the rest the salmon {nhablting them. To hunt the Orsgon salmon requires iron nerves and great ekill in the use of the rifle. The unsual prasticeof the hunter is to hide himself on the bank of a stream and to gend in his dogs to ronss the sal- mon from theirlair, When the fish come withln gunshot the hunter fires, and un- less he kills or disables the game at the firat shot his chances for 1ife are small. The Infurlated fish will, in most cases, turn upon the hunter whote shot has been Ineffective, One blow of the sal- mon’s tail almost invariable proves fatal, and If he can oncoe set his terrible teeth in the flesh of the hunter he cannot be shaken off. The only chance of escape is for the hunter to drive his knlife into the fish’s heart, but such a blow to be effec- tive must be delivered immediately be- hind the pectoral fin, and it requires the utmost coolness for a man to face the rush of a maddened salmon and wait un- til he can stab him In the only valnerable part. Scores of hunters who have s cessfully fought the grizzly bear have fallen victims to the Oregon sialmon, and scores of others, crippled and mangled, survlve to tell the story of thelr blood- curdling experlence while in the very jaws of & monster fish, Were the salmor to confine them. selves wholly to the water they would be comparatively harmless, for no man would be in danger unless he ventured inasalmon pool. But, unlike most of our American fishee, the Oregon salmon is in the habit of leaving ths water and wanderlog through the forast in search of prey. Men, women, and children have often been chased for long dis- tances by ealmon over the lonely Oregon roads, and an enormous number cf sheep and cactle have been killed and de- voured. Two years ago the torest in the neighborhood of East Melville, in South- ern Oregon, was infested by & palr of salmon of unusual size and feroclty. Hoardly a night passed that some . settler did not lose a valuable domestic animal, and no less than five human llves were sacri- ficed almost within s'ght of the Methodist meetlng houze. The people of the town never went out of theic houses unarmed, and they lost so much sleep in conse- quenca of the nightly and Incessant roar- ing of the fish that Jife was really a bur- den to them. The t>wn authorities offer- ed a reward of 81,000 for the head of elther of the two salmon, but no local hunter was bold enough to make the at- tempt to galn i*. These formidable fish were finally killed by a party of hunters —nine In number—from Tacoma, who, asslstad by a pack of well-trained fish hounds, tratked the salmon to their lair ina small pcol! of stagnant water and shot them with a Gatling gun. Twenty- two bullets were found fn the body of male and seventy-four in that of the female, The former fell dead at the first fire, but the latter, although severely wounded, rushed on the hanters and suc- ceeded In killing one and disabling eight dogs before ehe was finally conquered. In wiater, the Oregon salmon, rendered more fearlees than ever by want of food, roum over tho country in packs and droves of from twenty-five to a thoueana fish. No exact statistics as to the annual loss of life by salmon ia Ocegon are at present accessible, but it is believed that in proportion to its population Oragon loses as mavy Inhabitants yearly by salmon a8 Tndia loses by tigers. The only way in which to meet this graat evil is for the state government to offar a reward cf, say, 8100 for every salmon killed within its borders. Such an offer would cause an instant emigra- tion of thousands of fearlees hunters from every etate in the Unlon to Oregon, Some lives would, of course, be lost, but the salmon would soon be practically ex- terminatad, and it would becowe poesible for a stage to paes even Applegate's creek without being attacked and de- s‘royed by salmon, o ——— The Bhah ot Persia. London World, Probably the most rastidls man on the face of the earth ls Nussir-u-deen, shah of Persla, asylam ¢f the universe, and king of kings. These two tltles, as se- riously given to the absolute monarch of Persla as we apply the more modest term majesty, are not insppropriate, for from the royal fiat thera is no appeal. Almost immediately on his accassion the shah had the good fortune to escape a dater- mined effort at assassination made on him by a band of fanatics of the Basbi sect. These men, communlsts in the vilest eense of the term, under the ex- citing influence of persecutlon, made a bold and nearly successful attack on the 1lfe of the Persisn monarch, It was hap- pily frostrated, aud it 1s needless to add that the unforiunate fanaties were crually put to death, The varlous heads of the government departments peti- tloned for and obtained the privilege of ending their sufferings, and thus the great noblemen of the kingdom put the poor wretches ont of thelr mitery in the public equare by sword, dsgger or pis- tol. This near escaps from death nas caused his majesty Nuesir-u-deen to change his abode with curious frequen- oy, He still dreads the knife of the fanatic. Another reason for the sudden and fraquent movements of the sheh is his Intense devotion to the chase. When hunting snd fishipg (and here be it re marked that his majesty s a first-rate shot with a rifle) the king of Persls ls happy, and, o fact, the nomadic cxist- ence of his ancesicrs ls aluost necesary to hlm. Swarthier than most of his sab- jeots, of middle height, his appesrance is 80 well knowp, sincs his visits to Eurcpe, that It hardly neads deecelption® Very short-slghted, he {s s:ldom withont bis spectacles, and until he opens his mouth he glves rather the ides of the [== mild Hindoo. But when he spasks in bis loud and imperions way all idea of mildoers dieappesrs. The ioud tove, however, Is more the effect of constant habits of cemmand; and the custon of addressing his myjes'y in a low tone, that s observed on all oooasions, probably tends to make it CHAS. SHIVERICK, FURNITURE UPHOLSTERY AND DRAPERIES, fon, the more notlceable by contrast. Al. Pass Sevator to o q608 . p o " though the king of Persla has a larger By OMARA, NEERASKA, | o e e eollection of jowels than any other mon. S SEESINESRASKAY woe, arch, save on stats occaslons, such as the publio talaam of t he new yoar, he| = very scldom displays any of them. He is_strikiogly plan In Ms dress. The full-skirted frock coat of black cloth, or . Tow at tlmes of finest cashinsre shawl, which | Geesd i e In winter time is lined and trimmed . with priceless fur, is his ususl wear; but the colors are generally dark. Q- = In the capital the shah may be fra- _— quently econ on horacback, and, like all Persian gontlemen, lo rides well; his | s horses, with long and uncut tails, dyed | €#@ 4 5 — crimson for some six inches at thelr = tips (the jeslously guarded privilege of m the king and his sons), are distinguished e by thelr value and beauty., Here, too, A~ <o the shah's quict taste is apparent In the . i sombor materials of his ssddlery, though | Wele of courto each spirifed charger has its pure gold or joweled neoklet and trap- pings, and theso barbarle ornaments cer- e, “Tuding - aione hie eres| 409 and 140(:Dodee 8t { C“WuhEE ) Omaha Nea on application gooerally on the ground, his majesty still maintiigs a staff of some dozen royal ronning Wy i, €16 0100040 in his state livery of s:arlet and gold, and G5 O wearing the turreted hats of other days, with thelr jingling ornaments, and each armed with his silver staff of office, hover round the shah, while one remains at the stirrup to Indicate the royal pleasure Behind come one or two of the minlsters then pell-mell the throng of mountec courtiers, secretaries, officlals, and thelr hangera-on, while the royal body-guard of Irregulars, each with his gun slung in a scariet cloth case across his back, mix promiscuously among the mlscellaneons crowd of one or two hundred horsemen, without whom the shah is hardly ever seen. Tho royal carrfage most in vogae with his majesty bears a suspleious like- ness to one of our sherif’s vehlcles; eight °, e 2 o DUFFY’'S " T R — Malt Whiske Do you know what it is? Ask your P! Ill ul or Druggist and he will e S ria, ive Sure Cure for Mala ULANT AT 11 low forms of e ANTIDOTE FOR CHOLERA .= o h’ulr(;u! :rs harneased to it, the palrs belng We are the only concern in the United States who are bottling and selling to the Medical ridden by four postillions in scarlet. As| % profession and Drug Trade an absolutely Pure Malt Whiskey, one that Is free from arule the king 1s alone, the only excep- |4 FUSIL OIL and that is not only found on the sideboards of ‘the best families in t tion belng when accompanled by ene of | sg¢ COULLY, but also in the plysician’s dispensing room. i the great German Chemist, says:—¢I have made an anal, hls eons or the prime minister, or perhaps Pt D R ol e T e Y some rellgions magnate. Erratlc as he fs o3¢ Malt Whiskey, obtased mostly by extract of malt convusion and a very careful o3¢ fermentation and distillation, is entirely free from fusil oil and any of those In his movements, psssing from one | ye3 Feruenios flc'"m.r,[oun “atoonols sohich fre sh orten 10 RE ovund in whiskey. I therefor nub:nbl“ palace tfi l:vther- :hy ;nfill OMMEND IT TO THE MEDICAL PROFESSION. route may general e ascertained b, - S GbRRFvlig b Kb foarriorati who earu | (o |BRrs b rest fully eprinkle the road the king will ue. b Nor is this a needless form, as the ord!- | % nary state of the roads, if they mey be dignlfied. with that title, Tound Toheran is s'milar to the dustiest of Derbus. The king of Persla ls very carcful of his health, and his French phyalclan, Dr. Tholozon, is ever within call, 8o that the unfortunate doctor is as great a gadabout as Lis master, the asylum of the universe. His majesty enjoys very fair health, a MALT WiLls slight paralysis”having ‘28 yet been his ting. and y e ey B SURE & only allment. His habits of life are tim- | ¢ [ pecially by the gi )5 Von Fonder ple, his dict plaia roasts and boiled, If ¢ family housekeeper_at slight_e Raw l{h‘l{hh-nk un;l, our he ever indu'ges in the bottle-deep pota- T Y Lk 5 ot AL Erom 81 tions of his predecessor on the Peralan covered with a ¢3¢ throne it can only bo in the recewes of A AT his anderun or harem. There lsno out- ward siga of any such Indis:retion. The king is an early riser, 4 or 5 a. m. beiog his ususl time in the summer, This givea him a long day, but he bresks it by Pty TEeclf— | o Malt Whiskey 1 o fquor that 1 | clean and unaduiters uatiedly | EXXXXXXR RS IN FACT, IT IS A BEVERAGE AND MEDICINE COMBINED and_those afMicted E MALT WHIS] K. ty for commen Y and with it IVE CURE [ XXX 230020 NARN R RS n taken foF o Tew weeks, the prev rom Consumption and the like d . the sunken and blood f the b onting of rooping spirits revive, while all th tronger and b richer blood than they b fore carbon than the disease can exhaust, thereby | wmeeesS0LD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS AND FINE GROCERY HOUSES. s Price ONE DOLIILAR PER BOTTLE A > Quart Bottles sent 1o any address in the United States (East of the Rocky Mou a elesta. It s the royal habit when tired rely packed in plain case, press charges prepaid on receipt of S8, to be shampooed by his attendante, and s A « A, it is thought no Indigni'y for a high offi- .UUFFY‘ MALT l]!MURE. clal to be told {o assist in the kneading | % '4%6%% *etets '8 proczss, Of the delights of shampooing, Europeans, as a rule, bave no idea. It i3 a real art, and is carried_out to solen- i tific perfection by some of his msjesty’s more confidential servants. e —— 2 SAVED BY WHISKEY, l Why a Delighted Darkey Painted the Town a Luminous Color. _— ' Detroit Free Prees. Yes, sah, you might not believe it, but shua as I'm latheria’ youf chin, whiskey saved my life.” The speaker was a bandsome colored barber in a neat barber shop near the Brush street depot. He was preparing the face of an equally handsome reporter for a shave. “Yes, sah, I owe my life to whiskey, an’ 1 aint ashamed t> say so. It hap- pened in dis way: 1 was cook on the steamer Atia, an’ was a-ruunnin’ 'tween Gwaglan Bay an’ the Soo, One day at Collin'wood I went athoa an’ got a little trifle of sunthin’ to drlnk, and then thinks Z e Ialittle of dis stuff wonldn't go amies The large packing honses are now in op2riiioi, aud aldition s cost to-mo'w menin’ when were ont on dat|ing 60,000 are being added to them. air cole bay. So I gets a bottle, ““Well, when I way startin’ to navigate up de gangway Captain Savage he looks down frem the prowiuade deck and says he, ‘Cack, you can’t fetch no whiskey oa boa'd dis hea cratt, just leave dat bottle on the dock.” Well T just slewed enough to be sasey, an’ so says 1, *Well, Cagto, if my whitkey can’c go aboa'd I can't. ‘Al right,’ says de ole man, ‘jos you st3p to de office and get what'a commin’ to you for 1 can’t low no man {o take whiskey on my boat, ** There way $7 22 commin’ to me, so 1 steps upan’ gets it. 1 ‘spacted he'd msk ; ; g | g mcpm stay, bat he meant business, so I For information, maps, prices and terms, apply to the company’s of. ot my apron an’ csp an’ left. I cyme|fice, 216 13th street, Merchant’s National Bank Buailding, first floor. right down to Sarnle and got & job first an o among th of being nourished wi Lots Again on Sale And Large Ones at That. 60x150 feet, with ;20 foot alleys, and str.els 80 and 100 ft wile. Those that buy lots while they are cheap will get the benefit ot the sure rise in value: South Omaha is going to be a large place. The live stock market, the +lavghter,packing and dressed beef housesand other establishments, the ralroad facilities, together with the pure spring water from the company’s works, and the healthy location, is bound to makeit so. M. A. UPTON, Asst. Sec'y. and Manager."§ GERMAN D, WYATT. held to be un:olvable, ———— On .one of the Azore islands, St. Michael's, the people invariably dccp the family name, (ach being known by en tlrely unlike tides. The same nam ax¢ slao applied 10 elther sex iodiscrini- nataly, thing in the Belchamber House, Nex' mine came in an’ s3ys he, ‘I thought you was on the Aria?’ ‘Well, I qua’lled wit' donea good job by that,’” says he, ‘for she's done sunk nn’ all bands “ceptin’ two went to Port Huron, an’ dare shua 'nough we foun’ the Asla bad gon’ down with nearly two hundred people, Says I, *Whiskey alnt such a bad thing after all, bavo some, mays L' Now, my yourg| = Cumingsand 20th Ste, ¥ - Omaha, Neb. fren’ you've heard talk of palntin’ a towa fairly tore up the groun’” 5 e ——— . i o - Richards &Glarke San Francisco Call. | . W fugr Ry e T TR P 1Y 0 Machinery &tastings . < B mouated in the observatory prepired for " . it at Mount Hawilton, will be the larg- ~1a ]l le The whole ummtryd l[uell]‘n futerest in Q B2 N ] D having thi lendid t t i Iy SO ot B R P AUTOMATIC ENGINES, BRUSH MACHINES, ELEVATOR CUPs, have been succe:sfully cast and only need polithing to be réady for use. In look. | peppmam SEPARATORS. ARCHITEC TURAL WORK. that the moon will bs brought within | PN/ TIIIEN CORN SHELLERS, BRIOGE IRON, thirty mtles of the earth, and that dis- y solve problems that have heretofore been | QI LY /N BOLTING CLOTH, REPAIRS OF ALL KINDS, ENGINE GOVERNOR'S, CENTRIFUGAL REELS. BRASS CASTINGS, HEATERS AND FILTERS, LEATHER & RUB'R BELT'G WELL AUGERS, ROLLER MILLS, BRICK YARD CASTINGS, day when 1 waycookln'suppa a fren’ of de ole man,’ says I, ‘an lef' ner.’ ‘‘You got drown.” Afta suppa ma an’ my fren’ ‘Who sald it was?’ sald ke, *Well‘ let's red. Why, red was noname for it, We — The Lick Telescope. Lick telescope, when completed and maha, Neb. est Instrument of the kind In the world, place. Itis understcod that the lenses SLIDE VALVE ENGINES, SMUT MACHINES, ELEVATOR BOLTS, Ing through this teleacope it Is reckoned coveries will ba made on’ that plenct to | IGAGAGILN CORN CLEANERS, WROUGHT & CAST IRON, WATER-WHEEL GOV'NORS SCALPING REELS, SASH WEIGHTS SHAFTING ‘PULLEYS HANGERS &BOXES

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