Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 27, 1885, Page 2

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THE DAILY BEE---FRIDAY, MARCH 27" 1885. BEST TONIC, : 8, combining iron w uiokly and _eom: nelgeation, Wei gols 1 s Chilin as aralghn it lo for Diseases poouliar to 1l who lead sedentary 1i ire the toetl,, case heada ONSUPAtION —otier Jrom medic: iches and purifies the blood, stim 18 the assimilatior of d Belching, and ssitude, TASk of eugto RNV 2 Uadtsputed 1a the BROAD GLAIN: . viagte ‘TEBY BEST OPERATING, QUICKEST SELLING AND ‘A0S PEATRAT COORIRG SOV Kver offered to the public. Mendelssohn & Fisher, ARCHITECTS Rooms 28 and 29 Omaha Natl, Bank Block ‘uGoRSS0RS 10 Dufrene & Mendelssohn Goo. L. Fisher, formory with W. L. B. J Architeot, Chiogo. jantgotm J. F. SEGER, & MAXUPACTURER OF Harness ¢ Saddles 'AS Uno of the mosd complete stocks of Harness, H Sty Whips, Brushes, Hotso Clothing, ete., hand. 110 N. 16th 8t., Bet. Dodge and Capital venue, mfed1mip R A e Clark Sireet, Cinicadoudee > 1 e 196 Soutk VIENNESE COSSIP. A Religions Sensation of the First Magnitude, Catholic and Hebrew—The Bociety of Trade and Finance in Aristo. oratic Austria —Pontiff and Magyar. Correspondence New York Telegram, Viesya, March 0, 1885 —The ap- proaching marelage of Baron Sandor Pop- er von Podragy and Countess Blanche astrone, which was announced to youby cable the other day, has caused Immense excitement In Vienna. Baron Popper, a8 you know, 1s a devont Jew. The count- ess 13 a plous Oatholic and the meice of Cardinal Pavebianco, The papal dis- peneation has been granted in the hope that the husband will eventually embrace the Oatholic falth; and, as cablea, the children who may be born will be brought up as Oatholics. o The matter was under consideration at Rome for nearly a year before Leo XIIL mede up his mind, out of regard for Car- dinal Paneblanco, to grant the dispensa- tlon Fora long time the Hungarian comgltriou of the bridegroom-elect could not belleve Inthe possibility of such & unfon, ' ly was rewarded by bringing to light one of the trensures, Another hour's work socared the other. But what looking objoects they were. costed deep with mold and dirt, An offer of & few dollars _for them was promptly scoepted by thestore- keeper, and taey wers taken away and cleaned and now serve to adorn the offico as stated. To describe the work on them would be diffioult, the inlald or dove- talled sllver designs bolng of such elabor- ato and varled charactor. The vases are covered with wreaths, leaves, flowers eto. On the sides are dragons, Mr, Olark is “‘as happy as a olam at high tide” in the possession of the treasures, and would not part with It for anything, while on the other hand the st rekeeper is mourn- because ho did not keep them himself. e —— Pierce's “Pleasant Pargative Pellets," Positively Popular; Provoke Pralse; Prove Priceless; Peculiarly Prompt; Preceptibly Potent; Producing Perma- nent Profit; Precluding Pimples and Pustules; Promoting Parity and Peace. Price, Petty. Pharmaclsts Patronizing Plerce Procures Plenty. o — AN ECCENTRIO MAN'S WILL. His Relatives, to Whom He Left $100 and a Shotgun, Contest His Will, Goshen, N, Y.,”March 22.—The will of eccentrio John Sammons, of Mont- gomery, who dled last December, is boing contested by ralatives, on the ground that A submisslye churchman, Baron Pop- | ho was insane when the will was made, B happened to be on a vislt to the|Hg was worth $11,000. Heleft 8100 and ungarlan Primate, Cardinla Slmor, | 4 double barreled shotgun to his relatives, lately, and the Oardinal, referriog to the | and the balance of his estate to the Mont- match, remarked:—‘‘We live and learn somery Mothodlst Church, of which he daily. Hitherto it was supposed that|ways member. The meney was left to marriages betwoen Christlans and non- | ¢he church on condition that it keep in Christfans were forbidden. We now |50 conditlon the vault In which he was loarn that the Pope may, in cortaln cases | hurfod, A trastee of the church is to ermit them, He had never avalled | ygit the vault once every month, and to himself of his right to do so, but what | recelve one dollar for every visit, Holy Father has ordered must bo vight. | "Sammons had kept In his house for His will is law. yoars a number of coffins_and his_house The bride elect s deecended from an- | wag overrun with ca's and dogs. When- ancient noble but impoverished Italidn | gyer a cat or dog died he had 1t placed 1o family, Under the name of Mme, Mar- |4 coffin, and faneral survics were held chesl, her mother made a great roputa- | gyer it, It then had the same burial that tion as a singer and taugh singlng int Vi- 15 dead person would recotve. 1f any enna, The nobllity of Baron Fopper is | neighbors or friends remained all night recent, It dates from only four years |in his house he insised on placing a c:ffin sgo. The young bridegroom 1s “““l}' under their beds. He ate his meals in thirty, and Intends to carry on his|the cellar from a board lald acrosy a swill father’s wood business. MISUEGENATION IN FOREIGN EYES, The actlon of the pope in this matter has naturally caused much excitement In ecclesiastical circles, Twice hay Tieza’s bill about mixed marrlages been thrown out in the upper house by the bishops. And now the pope has decided in favor of Tisza. For two hundred years past no such marriage as this has been sanc- tloned by Rome. The case is the first of the kind ever known in Austro-Hungary, and the name of Popper will henceforth have historic significance. A NOBLEMAN OF FINANCE. The death of Count Eugen Kinsky, a fow days ago, cast a gloom over Viennese soclety. Count Kinsky was president of the Vienna Anglo-bank and one of the moat interesting social celsbrities in the Austrian capital. Hir wit was proverbial, One day, at a meeting of the Anglo-bauk directors, be remarked: “Why do we give ourselves so much trouble to extend the business of the bank?” After all the dividends go {into the shave-holders’ pockets.” Onanother occasicn some lawyers asked him for his advice on a delicate question. “‘Gentlemen,” he replied, ‘I amtoo lit- tle of a lawyer not to see the question clearly.” A saying of his about music 1s also worth quoting: *‘Slnce Wagner was invented 1 have no more liking for opera, The old Italian operas have ceased to please me, and I am not yet ripe for the new Wagnerian operas.” Royal Havana Lottery | (A GOVERNMENT INSTITUTION.) Drawn at Havana Cuba, Every 12 to 14 Days. * IUKETS, $1.00, . . . HALV! 91.00 Bubjeck $0 no lefllflm. nol controlled by the partiesin intorost, It 1s the falresh thing in bhe mature of chanoe In existenoce, For blokets apply to SHIPSEY & CO., 1212 Broad- way,N. Y. City; SOLING R & CO,, 108South 4th 8. B ), Mo ,or M. OTTENS & CO, 019 Main St., Kangas Olty, Mo. B Coze e Debllity Manh Decay Broriie prescription of & aciel specialior (ion ugeiste can ALL It Address . AP ARD A “O\, . KOTIEIANA. MO “Lnken no omor nourixhmont " B testify to the worth of B INFANTS AKD INVALIDS, Liest food in Liealth o ick. 5. 1w all drgcists, Book sent fre. FOOD CO., Itncine, W DtOS Fice in B Alpa.” James Modioa! Inetitute Chartered by theStateof Illi- nois for theexpress purpose. of giving immediate relietin all chronic, urinary and pri- vate diseases. Gonorrhaza, JGleetandSyphulis in all theif complicated forms, also alf discases of the Skin and Blood promptly relieved and permanentlycired by reme- dies,testedina Forty Years 3 tice, Seminal Weakness, Nigh Pimples on the Face, Lost Manhood, positively cured, There L no exporimeniing: The appropriate remedy 18 at once used in each case, Consult sonal or by letter, sacredly confident n icines seot by Mail and Express, No marks on package to indicate contents or sender. Address DR.JAMES, No. 204Washington St.,Chicago,lIl. A T A .5 A b L HAMBURG - AMERICAN PACKET COMPANY. Direct Line for England, France and Giermany. Tho sceatmships of this woll known ltne are bulld of tron, In wator-tight compartments, and are mished with overy requisite to make the passsge both safe and sgroeablo, They carry the United Fhistareand horordare. for Plomoats (LONBOM 8 D lurdays for e mw":u,sl’llill ?'ndyHAIBU&D,o“ o ) 3 o from Hamb $10, to Hambas #10; rouad m;“n hmubt::xm. 5 and Henry Pundt Mark Haneen, F. E. Mool Tol, Th in Omahs, Groneweg & Bohoen! agenta In Council Bluffs. C. B. KICHARD & Gon. Fass. Agle, 01 Broadway, N. Y, Ohas K minskl & Co., Geners! Western Agouts, 170 Wash- low 84, Chioaro, NL MASTER'S SALE, In the Oircuit Court of the United States, for the Distriot of Nebraska Monaduock baviags Bank ) In Chancery, v8. Alonze Mce and Mariua Moe. | YORNCLOSURN OF MORTUAGE. Publio notice s hereby given that th pursuaney and by virtue of & decrce sutered in the above ceuse * on the 23d day of December 1£54, I ELlis L Elerbower, special master {n chisncesy In said court will on the Utk day of April M85, st the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of the said day, at the North door of the United States Court Hou Tost office buld- 18 County, State and Disirict of Nobraske, sel at suction e followia do- cribed property, to-wit: ‘:fll I‘.:l%l North west 'lunm aud the West half of the North-east quarterof s:ctiou twenty,one (21), the Seuth-west of section tweaty-two ( oW mhlln 0 (8). Norkb of rauke sixteen (10), Wit of he oth M. uklin County, 0 of A aaks. T k. O ELLIS L. BIERBOW s, Salictor for Campl linant, Sp'l Master 1 Chancory. 0:15:20 97-apr-3:10 . Count Kinsky's wife was and Isch washer woman. ‘I have wedded a woman of the people,” he would often say. ‘‘The blood of Kinsky's ls so old barrel. Once ho kept the coffined remains of a cat 80 long in his houee that the author- itles had to compel him to take them out and bury them. The cat was a favorite of his, and he thought it might come to life agaln. Some time efter his mother was buried he exhumed the remains and put them in a box in his wocd shed, whers he kept them until the authoritles inter- fered and made him re-inter them. In 1855 he predlcted that he would die on a certain day, and on that day he had the undertaker and invited guests at his house to be in readiness for his death. The hearing in this will case will come up April 1, Torturc in Russian Prisons, A Nihllist imprisoned in the Troublete- koi Bastion has managed to communicate with the outeide world. He says the prisoners are almost starved on mouldy food. Disagreeable diseases prevall. The use of combs and soap is forbidden. Jallors are cruel. Vermin are abundant. Rats are eating dying prisoners. This is almost as bad as dyspepsla. But the tor- ments of dyspepsla need not always be endured, for Brown’s Iron Bltters will conquer the disease. Mrs, Willlams, of Starkville, Miss., was tormented wlith dyepepela, and her davghter with deblill- ty. Brown’s Iron Bitters relleved both. ——— A Mountain that Moves, Teese River Reveille. Over in Churchlll county, Nevada, there is a great carloslty, mention of which we do not remember to have ever seen In the papers, The curlosity that ltis time to Infuse a little new plebeian blood into it."” — PILES! PILES! PILIS! A SURE OURE FOUND AT LAST! NO ONE NEED BUFFER, A sure gure for Blind, Bleeding, Itching and Ulceratod Piles has been discovered by Dr. Williams (an Indian Remedy,) call William's Indian Pile Ointment., A single box has cured the worst chronic cases of 25 or 80 years standing, No one need suffer five ‘minutes after applying this wonderful sooth- ing medicine, Lutions, Instrumenta and elec- tuaries do more harm than good. William’s Indian Pile Ointment absorbs the tumcrs, al- lngs the Intenso itching, (particularly at dight after getting warm in ) acts as & po\l]l.fin, fives instant relist, aud 1§ propared only for iles, itching of 'the private parts, and for nothine olse, Read what the Hon. J. M. Ooffinbe,ry, of Cleveland, says about Dr. William’s Indian Pile Qointment: *I have used scores of Pile Cures, and it affords mo ploasnre to say that T have never found anything which gave such immediate and permanentrelief as Dr, Wil- linm’s Indian Ointment, For sale by all drug: fite o malod on receipt of price, 0o aud 1. Sold at rotall by Kuhn & Co. 0. ¥, GOODMAN, Wholesale Agent. — —— HISTORIC VASES, Objects of Art of Rare Workmanship and Value, San Francisco Call. In the office of the Uniou Paciffic rail- road company, in this clty, are two vases of black Japanese bronze, and connected with them is somewhat a history. The vases stand about nineteen Inches high, and are of very handsome and elegant de- sign. As near as can be ascertained the, are in the nelghborhood of 150 years old, as the character of the motal and the workmanship correspond with the bronze wade by the Japaness at that perlod. Tho{ were imported there about 1851, coming over on ove of the old salling ships that plied between the Orlent and 18 nothing more or less than a traveling mountain of sand. The winds have gathered together a great heap of sand and kept it constantly moving like an immense glacler. It crawls steadily along over valleys and through canyons, never riring—the sands maklog a low musical sound as they rub againet each other, . | much as they doaround the Sphinx every morning at sunrlse, which gave rise to the legend that the stony statue was greeting the morning sun with a song. But the moving mountain of Chuarchill contains another peculiarity. While its sldes are symmetrically formed and lay in folds ltke solidified waves, there Is no cone at the top. Instead of its going to 8 peak there is a hole there made by counter winds; and whoever s rash enough to ecale the ridge and go Into that hole pays for his rashness with his life, for the fickle sands yield beneath his feet, and the more he struggles to get back the faster he sinks until ho is smothered to desth. The Indians tell of several of thelr tribe having thus been swallowed up, and no trace has ever been found cf them slnce. o — The Mail-Bag Contraet Taken From Rochester, Rochester Post Fxpress, By a decislon of Postmaster-General Vilas Rochester loses one of her indus- trles, which for the last four years had employed about slxty men. On the first of January, 1880, a contract went into effect between the United States govern- ment and John C. Lighthouse, of thls clty,for the making of all the leather mail bags and horso mail pouches for the next four years. This contract expired De- cember 31, 1884, buc Mr. Lighthouse has retained his contract until the prea- ent time, On the 12th of January the postoftice department advertised for pro- osals for performing the work during Fhe next four years and three months from that day the contracts were awarded, to|* this port at that time. For several years | take effect April 1. During the four tbaylwarn stored away In a Monl“o{nez’ years that Mr, Lighthouse has furnished strect store, About 1870 they were|the bags and pouches to the government, placed i the window of the store to serve [his shop has turned ou’ about 50,000 fur- | ag ornaments, and while there attracted | leather mail pouches and about 8,000 the attension of Mr, Clark, now acting as | horse mail bags. The azgregate sum re- traveling sgent for the Union Plclfiu“ in | celved for them has baen about $300,000 this city. joeing them every day, Clark | At the rates specified in the new con- became seized with s longing desire to | tracts the eame number of bags and posess them, but as they were mot for [pouches will cost the government about sale he hhsfl to o:num l:;nl:lelf with look- | $22,000. ing at them as be passe . - 3 v ‘or upwards of ‘i’i.va yeu{ the vases re- Gorman Colonizers, wained In the window, when they were| Next to the British and the Dat:h the removed, and nothing more was seen of | Germans show the greatest adaptabllity them un'il a foew days sgo, when Mr, |for colonizing. No part of the world s Clark In passing the stors remembered |free from one of these three nationalities them, Wondering what had become of | and they, more than any other peoples, the broozes, he entered the place and |seem to plant colonles—a vastly different found that it bad changed hands, and no | thing from the mercantile settlements of one seemed to know what had become of | other nations, which are not colonies in the vases, One of the clorks, however, | the proper sense of the word, The dls- suddenly racollected that they had several | persion of the Teutons covers a wide area eara before been thrown Into the yard |but thelr chief love s the United States, n the rear of the store with a lot of rub- | whera 1,960,742 are to bé found. The bish. figures are from & Berlin authority. In The rabbish plle was visited. It was|Russis the Germans number $04,209; high and wide, and it was thought that|Austris, 08,610; Switzerland, 95 b perhaps the bronzes had been removed. | France, 81,088; Great Britian, 40,731 Clark, however, obtalned permisslon to | Australian colouies, 25,945; South Amer. prospect the pile, and getting s pick and |loan countries, 12,574; Holland. 42,026; ehovel, went to work. He labored hard | Belgium, 34,196. Bweden and Norway, for upward of an hour or more, and fina!- ] 2424; Algeris, 4201; Italy, 5221, o — QUERETARO. —_— A Vislt to the Scene of Maximilian's Execution, Mexico Letter to Baltimore American, Queretaro {s 7,000 feet high. Its pop- alatfon s 50,000, and Is built on a hill and is surrounded by hills, It was founded by the Aztecs, and was captured by the Spaniards in 15631. We went to the Hill of Bells, cslled ‘‘El Ceno de las Osmpanas,” southwest of the city, whera Maximilian was captured and shot, The view from the hill presents to the eye one of the lovliest panoramas outside the Valley of Mexlco, The valley Is broad and full of verdure, and large fields of wheat, barley and alfafa, and gar dens of bright blooming flowers are on cvery slde. TLong hills skirt the val- ley sll around, and off apon the hill site the oclty, its glittering domes and white houses almost dizzling the eyo. Near the brow of this hill we came to the three small monuments markiog the spot where Maximilian, Miramon and Mejia were shot, The monuments once ocon- talned ralsed letters, in brass, reclting the names and partioulsrs of the tragsdy, but the ruthless bands of the relio secker or fiend, have l.ft but fow of them to tell the tale, An lron railing surrounds the monuments, One Me. Ball took a fine sketch of it, and near by we cut a cane as a memento of our visit. We met an old soldier at the spot who was with the Mex- {cans under Gen, Escobedo, and saw the emporor shot. He po'nied out to us the place where he was captured, and gave us & pathetle account of his manly death. He confirmed in every particular the ac- cepted accounts of his captura and death, and of the treachery that put him in the hands of the Mexicans, It was through the treachery of Col. Miguel Lopez the emperor was taken prisoner and his forces subsequently surren- dered to the liberals. Maxi milian was trled before a court-martial and sentenced to be shot. Persistent efforts were made to save his life. The Princess Salm-Salm is sald to have rfdden to San Luls Potosi, {he seat of the republican government, 160 miles distant, and begged President Juarez to pardon the adventurer from Mirambar, The government of the United States was appesled to in vain. None of the European potentates ventured to inter- cede, and Maximiltan, together with his comrades In arms, Generals Miramon ond Mejla, was shot on June 19, 1867. His body was subeequently taken to Vienna for interment. The night be- fore the emperor's execution he wrote the following letter to his wife, who was then a ravivg mantac, confined in one of the palaces of her father, the king of the Belgians: “To My Beloved Charlotte: If God ever permits you to recover and read those lines, you will learn the cruelty of the fate which has not ceased to vursue me since you departura for Europs. You carried with you my soul and my happi- ness, Why did I not listen to you! So many events, alas! 850 many unexpocted and unmerited catastrophes, have over- whelmed me, that Ihave no more hope in my heart, and I await death as a de- livering angel. I die without agony. 1 #hall fall with glory, like-a soldier, like a conquered king, If you have not the power to bear so much sufferivg, if God soon reunites us, I thall bless the divine and paternal kand which has so rudely stricken us, Adieu! Adicu! Thy poor Max.” Alas, poor Maximillan! As we stood on the spot where he was ehot, we could not resist the temptation to pity his sad fate, In splte of the fect that he was a usurper, We had seen the gilded coach in which he and his beloved Carlotta ead driven in triumph over the wide paseosof the City of Cortez; we had paced up and down the marble portico of the grand palace of Chapultepec, where the eye of the emperor could take in the grandest and most magnificent panerama in this western world; we had seen his medals and decorations, his plate and his por- tralt, now on exhibition in a Mexican museum; and we stood on the spot water- ed by his blood, and where his last explir- ing breath had gone up to the Great Judge of all men. I repeat agaln: We pitied him, and we pltied the men who had the power to eave him and send him back to his dear Carlotta, and would not do {t. In the language of our Dr. Rich- ard McSherry: ““He dled like a hero. He had done his best to redeem a fallen cbuntry but had falled.” We left the hill top end decended into the vallay, and as we took a last look at the three mute mouuments near the brow of the hill, we could not but think: He was an usurper, but bad he lived he might have done much for Mexico. But God knows beet, and He alone can evolve good from evil, o — Coughs and colds cin be cared without narcotics, Use Red Star Cough Coure. e —— ANIMAL CURIOSITIES, The Job of Gapturing Them Attended by Enormous Expense. New York Mail and Express, *“It is the general bellef that the effect of African colonization s being felt In the wild snimal trade, and that conse- quently the prices are much lower,” re marked Barnum’s agent, Mr. Tody Ham- ilton, as Jumbo was led into the ring to go through his performance. *‘But it s a mistaken idea altogether. Colontzation has not extended to the jungles of Abby- ssinla and the far interior of the dark continent. Even if it had reached the outakirts of the home of the lion, hippo- potamue, tiger and eleghant, the prices of thete animais would remain the same.” ““How Is that?’ asked a writer for the Mall and Exps It requires in the first place an cut- lay of 830,000 to start "after a batch of wild animals in Abysainia. The men who undertake to get them are not natives, but Europeans who have made It a pro- fesslon. They get the natlves to asslst them in capturing young animals, To do this the old have to be killed, and often a fierce lion sends a [Nubian spearman to paradise, “When a sufficient number of the young have been captured a great expenee is incurred furnishing goats’ milk to them. The chlefs and shelks of the desert fur- nish the goats, sending a herd near the place where the animals are corralled. Another expense ls the deposit money the shieks frequently exact as a guaran- tee of the return of the Nubians who are employed, In the march homeward through the desert the young animals are transported on the camels, and many die on the way, They are currled to the Suez canal and shipped to Europa, If the jungles were colonized the wild animsls would seek other quiet baunts in the Interlor, s0 I cannot see how the expense of get b ;{ting them would ge lessened. To sum up, the frelght, the trouble of ¢ pture, and the risks run of bringing them to Europe slive are the ltews which make wild snimals costly. As they grow older and become acclimated their value iu- cresses. If I wanted to sell an elephant to-day 1 would bave to mention whether acolimated or not to make a difference of a thonsand or 8o dollars. There ls abont £4,000,000 Invested in wild animals In the Unlted States, not including ele- phants. Thero are sixty elephants in the United States, rang/ng In price from $3,000 to $20,000. 1f an elophant is trained and acclimated 1t will bring $20,- 000, But those that are stopld and can- nct be trained never bring over $3,000 or $4,000. In my opinion it will be a great many yoars before wild animals wiil be come cheaper, no matter how clvilizatlon and colonization advances in Afrioa.” Educated an erienced, Hood's Sareaparllla is prepared by C. 1. Hood & Oo., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass., who have a thoroughknowledge of pharmacy, and many years practical ox: pericnce In the business, 1Itis prepared with the greatest skill and oare, under the direction of the men who originated it. Hence Hood's Sareaparilla may be de- pended upon as a thoroughly pure, hon- cat, and rellable medicine. ——— THE IDIOTIO PRACTICAL JOKE. A Serious Scquel to the Pranks of Merrymakers, Providence Journal On a recent Sunday a young married couple of this clty visited the home of the lady’s parents in East Providence and re- mained during the day. During their absence a fow of thelr intimate friends planned a surprise for them. The furni- ture was displaced, a night-dreas hung upon the clock, and everythivg was done to make a scene of disorder, The jokers esgerly waited the return of the unsus- pecting couple. The lady preceded her husband into tho house and lit a match. The flickerlng fame lit wup the scenc and displayed to her startled gaze the disordered tion of the room. Her eyes qulckly fell upon the white object near the clock; the startled shriek she uttered bronght her husband bouading into the rcom. In a moment she was struggling hysterically, he vainly endeavoring to bring her to her senses and allay her fears. Her heart- rending cries brought the practical jokers trembling into the room, and they gazed with blanched faces upon the terrible re- sult of their foolish act. It was evident that something serious had happened and Dr. Hibbard was hastily summoned. He found, upon examination, that the shock had caused the rupturs of a blood veessl in the head, the result being similar to concusslon of the brdin, Tne lady sinco then has lingered betwen life and death, but she Is now deemed to be In a fair way of recovery. The feelings of the prepe- trators of the *‘joke” can bo botter imag- ined than described. Suflice 1t to say that the act to them has had its terrible lesson and should ba a warning to all who seek to make fun by shocking the sensibilities of othera, et ELECIRIC RAIL WAY MOTORS. By Next May Expected to be Accep- ted Successes. Now York Commorcial Advertiser. President Johnson of the Electric Rail- way Company of the United States: **We have been making prollminary testa of our motor at the ehops of the Edeon Com- pany in Goerck street, and have every reason to be eatlafied with them. All that remafns for us to do is to transfer our mo- tor to the car which has been arranged for it. In the beginning of May we expect to make our trial trip on the Second ave- nuo elevated road. The car will ba built by the Pullman Company, and will be taken to our works and an electrlc motor be {nser- ted In each truck. The Pull- man company manufactures a number of the Manhattan company’s cars, and when we have completsd our motor all that will be neceesary will be to place it. One of the advantages of our motor is that it can be Inserted in any car, and that the Increase In weight will not exceed a ton to each car. As the Maohattan compa- ny's locomotives weigh at present sixteen tons each, the uee of our motors will save twelve tons of dead weight to each traln of four cars, and as the weight will be distributed equally over thirty-two wheels, the straln upon the structures will be very materially reduced. We hope very soon to solve the difficulty at- tending electric railways, and we trast that by the middle of May clectricity as a reitway motor will bo very gencrally ac- cepted as a succees.” Sarvival of the Fittest, Boston Journal, The horrid brute!” exclaimed Dors, in a tonc of warm indignation. ‘‘What 1s 1t?” asked David. *‘Why, this prize fighter,” Dora re- turned, ‘‘The paper says he attacked an inoffensive man and beat him tll he died —the.wretch! Pity the other man hadn’v killed him,” “1 don’t know about that,” said David, blowing out a great cloud of smcke, with a critical air. *‘I don’t see but that 1t carries out Darwin’s theory.” “‘Darwin’s theory?” faltered Dora. *‘Certaindy. They fit, didn't they?” “Ye-es,” Dora hesitatingly aseented, with a mental reservation regarding the ungrammaticism: “‘that is, the prizs fighter did.” ““Well, then,” sald David, triumph- antly, “‘wasn’t it asurvival of the fittest?” But Dora refused to answer, She knew if she gave him his first on that he'd steal clear around the bases. — A Kentuckian's Outfit, Chicago Herald, A tall Kentucklan came aboard a train bound for New Orleans, He was soon on speaking terms with one-half of the occupants of the car, and informed them that he was golng to spend three or four weeks at the exposition. *Yes, eah,” he sald, “‘I'm going to put in & month, and I will live in wy satchel thah, just ss I used to when I was traveling the circus with & hoss. I nevah encumbab myself with a trank, sab. 1I'm all prepared for| amonth's trip, and I have everything I need right here in my satchel.” "Half an hour later the tall Kentuckian finished telllng a good story, and was so pleased with it himself that he Invited his ac- quaintances to join him In taking a little +good old Bo'bon county whisky, made | ¢ in '73, Thefsatchel was opened up, theamszed travelers sawthat it contained six large bottles of Bourbon, four boxes | % of cigars, and nothing more. Baut it was royal good whisky. — e Origin of Ammonis, Ammonla Is obtaived in large quantit'es by the putrefaction of the urine of ani- msle, —Zncyelopedia Britannica Every housekeeper can tost baking condl. | 1 Ho powders containiog this diegusting drug by placing a can of the “Royal” or *An drews’ Pearl” top down on a hot stove unti] heated, then ‘remove the cover and emell, Dr. Prices Cream Baking Powder does not contain Amwmonis, Alum, Lime, Pot ash, Bone Phosphates, (prove it by the above test). It s prepared bya Physican aud Chemiat with special regard to clean linees and healthfulnees, e0 Stan y tn/m:kf/ MARK thsolutely Free from Opiates, Emetics and Poisona, A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE OURE s, Kore Thr -~ it and Deal aler 10 promptly e Zpress chany B, by sending i oee THE From experience 1 think Swift's specific ie 8 very valuable remedy for cutancous disenses, and at tho samo time an invigorating tonio. JAMPS JACKOX, Chlef Justico of Ga. Atlanta, Sept. 1884, INOCULATED POISON.—After trying all the othor remedies Swift's Specifio has cured mo sound and well of a terriblo blood y contracted Nom & nurse. Mns. T, W. Luw, Groonville, Ala, POISON OAK.—A lady hore bas been entirely cured of polson oak polson by the uso of two bottles of 8. 8.8 R, S. Bra proro, Tiptonville, Tenn, ULCERS 25 YEARS.—A member of my church has boen cured of an u'corated leg of 25 years stand- ing with two bottlos of Switt’s Spoocitc, P. H. CruxzLew, Pastor Moth. Ch., Macon, Ga. Switt's Spocific Is emtiroly vogotablo, Treatise on Tood and Skin Diseascs mailed free. The Swirr Sercieic Ca ,, Drawer 8, Atlanta Ga,, or 59 W. WEEKRASKA LANL AGERL) LI (R A REAL GENERAL DEALERS IN ESTATE: 1605 FARNAM STREET. - OMAHA., Havo for salo 200,000 acres caretully solocted lands In Kustorn Nobraaka, at low price and o easy tcrma Tmproved farms for sale In Douglas, Dodge, Coltax, Platte, Burt, Cuming, Sarpy, Washington, Merrick, Saunders, and Butler countles, Taxe pald in all parts of the stata, Money loaved on improved farms, Notary Publio always in offico. ~Correspondence soliolted DOCTOR WHITTIER t. Lonis, Mo. 1icges, han Leen longss ) how and all ofd residents know . or, Proscration, Debility, Mente] mag Physical Weakness ; Mercurial and otner ~tece tions of Throat, Skin or Bones, Blood Poltuwsay, old Sores and Ulcers. ar A Positive Written Guarantes scribing above d. male o fomale: FREM MMARR ACE GUIDE! flne pl Mustrated {n eloth and gil¢ dindiog, 30e, oy ¥o uper covers, 3te.. Thba b eoutaius oubtiul or 1aquiriive waat o8 ot ‘lilgrest 0 all. | Heallt Beadts =now, L 5. ar vrometed by \te 0vion g e BLODD. Tere R and KIDNEVS, Ty HEALTH I couy 'fy Ang only ae Do ot expe M. R. RISDOMN, Gen't [nsarance Agent RKPRESENTS| Phonix Insurance Co., London, Cash Assota, Westcheater, The Merchanta Glrard Fire, PI Woman's Fun STETTERS Tho fluest tonic for norvous poopla i1 Hostetter's Stom ach Bittors, which in suros portect di- o ine = fluence of thisbonizn by / nemcless anxiety Bi§reRS . i ity of the dyepept; wives way to ob foundation, ure the reerless Invizorant. By all Druggista and Dealors gencrally. fulness Toestablieh EXECUTRINS' BSALL, In the matter of the estate of Poter llanse Notic health on & sure For salo decossid, 1 paying the valid clait for the pu ot of the districk court of raid decea sell at public auction. Mai bip 14, ran; o i citqr.of ee. 5 township 14, t quartor of the northwest quarter ofsce ton oleht (4 0 MAI Execufriy of sa L, Attorney mi2:19-20 Tl Ty Writ Is the wimplest, best and most complete type writer wade. Hab lnterchangeatle typo plates, has fow parts and prints {rom the face of the type, In- stead of Ihrough an inked ribbon, Frico oply $40. Sead for detcriptive clroulars. GEO. J. PAUL, AGENT, mlddswim P. 0. Box 714, Owaha, Neb. Manhood Restored = Lvictim of youthiy ature Dech us , Lost ry Known eif-oure, ufforers. OMAHA! A CROWING CITY The remarkabls growth of Omahm during the last fow years s a mattor of great astonishment to those who pay an oocastonal visit to this growln, :13;—“. development of the g&nb % the necesslty of the Belt Lins Road—the finely paved streeta—the hundreds of now resldences and mu{ business blocks, with the l%opuhtlon of our olty more than doubled in the last five yoars, All this Is » groat surprise to visltors and is the admiration of our oftizens. This rapld growth, the business activity, and the many substantial improvements mada a lively demand for Omaha roal entate, and evo? investor has made a ] profit. Sinoe the Wall Street panle May, with the subsequent ory of hard times, thers has been less demaud from specnla- tors, but a falr demand from Investors seeking homes. This latter olass are taking advantage of low prices in bulld. ing material and are securing thelr homen at much less cost than will be poealble a year hence. Speculators, too, osn buy real osta! 3 cheaper now and ought to take sdnah © of present prloes for future ro . . The next few yoars promises greatos dsvelopments In Omaka than the 1] fiv) years, whioch have been as good sy we could reasonably desire. New man- afscturing establishments and large job- bing houses ara added almost weekly, and all add to the prospoerity of Omaha, Theve are many in Omaha and through- but the State, who have tholr monoy in the banks drawing a nominal rate of In- terest, which, If judiclously Invested In Omaha real estate, would brlng them much greater roturns. We have man) bargalns which we are confident wl bring the purchaser large profiis in the nesr future, We have for sale the finest resi- western pa:ta of the city. North we bave fine lots at reason- able prices or Sherman avenue,17th, 18th, 19th and 20th streets. West on Farnawm, Davenport, Cuming, and all the eading 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 building of the street car line out Farnam, the pro ty.in the south part of the city. Tha by the Stock Yards Company ané the railroads will certainly double the orice in ashort time. We also have some fine business lots and some elegant inside resi- dencer for sale, Parties wishing to mnvest will find RUme good bsrgayne by calling 1 \ & s REAL ESTATE BROKERS. 213 South 14th 8t Bet veen Farnham and Douglas, P.B.~We ask those who have property for sale at a bargain to give us & call- We want only bargaine ‘We will positivaly not handle prop erty ak more than its real value.

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