Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 10, 1885, Page 2

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A{QUESTION ABOUT Browi's Iron ANSWERED. 1The qupstion has probatly bean aaked thousands Wlioh arepataie plzmician wonld proscribe IROR B Shwmbcal i il mabatantiate. o assartion Shat there are mors \nxunmmn of jron than of any o snbstanc used in medicine This shows eon: fustvely that iron is acknowledged to be the most portant factor in v coessfal medical tioe, Afmmarkals e fact, that pricr lfllhl;’ml- 1 of NS ) BITTERSno at Aoe not injare BROWN'S IRC NBITTERSH et ciaas hesdnche, or produce constipation—all other trom medieinesdo. Bt OWN'S IRON BITTERS enres Indigestion, Billonsnens, Weaknoss, Dyswopsin, Maluria, Chills and Fovers, Trod Feeling, G meval Debility, Paln in the Bide, Back or Limbs,Headache and Neurals —tor all thess ai/ments Iron is presc: [ U horarer.doss BROWN'S IRONBITTERS, novermies rte.® Liks all other thorongh medicines, 1t T2 Son ‘takon by men Lho. Arek armiom. of eiit is renowoed en_rgy. The muscles then become s the dlgestion improves, the bowels are aott \eomen the effect is usually mors rapid And mi "J begin at onos to brighten; the skin clears By color comiea o (i chesks; mervonsmess ? fanctional derangemonts beoome ragte r, and If & nursing mother, abundang sustenanos wapplied for t) {ld. Remember Brown's Iron a0 O, o madioin, that 13 fot i Phyeteians und Druggiets recommend . Gennin lis Trade Mark and crossad red lines o2 wnpper. TAKE NO OTHER. AN AR ORI sitE oor BROAD GLANY . wongine b S L 38T APERA TING CKES1T LG ANT FARE BRI BRAL ARATINN OF 357 "IRPLGT COORTNG STOVE v pohi DA CLARKE e e R o 11 I“A2%A written guarantee of cure glven in ovei Gundoreaken. Contiltations Free and ?n.cnd. Dr. Clar! Wgtings (In plati cnvelol Wo atamps. D, CLARKE, M, D., 156 S0, CLARK ST, CHICAGO, KLbe Book and ) rat Frightful Case of a Colored Man, 1 contracted 8 fearful caso of blood poison in 1858 was treated 1 y3ome of the best physiclans in At- Ianta, They uecd the old remedies of morcury and potash, which biought on rheumatiem, and impair- od my 'digestive orgsnv. Every joint in me was swollen and foll of pain. When I was given up to dle my physiolans thought it would bo v sood timo to test the virtues of Swift's Specific. When I com- menced taling 8 8. 8., the physician sald 1 ocould not live two wocks under the ordinary treatmort. He commenced o give m> the mrdicino striotly ac- ©cording to directions, which I continuel for several months. 1 to-k nothing else and continued to im- . prove from tho very fim " Soon tho_ rhoumatiem i Joft me, my appetite bhecame all right, and the ulcors ; which fhe doctor said were the most frightful he' had over scen, bogan to heal, and by tho 1st of Oo- tober, 1884, 1 was & well man again. I am stronger now than I over was before, and weigh more. 8. 8. 8. i has eaved me trom an early grave LM McCLENDON, Lom McCleokon has besn 1o tho employ of the Chess3Carloy company for some acars, and. I know the abovo statoments to be true. At the timo he Degan,takinz Bwiits Speciflo ho was in horible con- dition. I régard his cure almoat miraculous. W. B. Cross, Manager. Chess-Oarloy Co., Atlanta Division, Atlants, Ga., April 18th, 1385, i LOOSE’S EXTRACT | RED | - QLOVER BLOSSOM The Great Blood Purifier. 5 ¥ OURES [ Oaxcers, Huriors, Sosss, ULckns, Swerr 1INGs, Tumors, .ABoEssas, Broon POIsoNINGy Oaragga, Satr Rukvx, Bovsieras, Ruxv- MATISM, and all Hlood and skin diseases, A PRICE 81 PER PINT BOTTLE, 4 OO0SE'S RED 0L OVER PILLS, Cure Sick Head- 4 ache, D) gpopsla, Indigestion, and Constipation, 08 0f 26 pilia 26 cwés; 6 boxos §1. Loows's Rp ¢ VAR PiLi RuMKDY, €uro sure, b0c per box. For O sato by all druggists, 0 eddress J' M. LOOSE & CO., 3 Monroe, Mich. Bend 1. w tostinaoniala. q9 DR.IAIRS | ASTHMA GURE 1 This lnvaluable spesifio 1 willy aed ently oures all kinds of Asthma. The mos obstinste and Tong standing cases 1iaid pros uptly b0 e wondertul gurlag proportles. It ls keown throughout he world A for ta unrivaled efficacy. q J. L CALDWELL, olty Uinco ‘s, Nob.; wites, Jan 4 9, 1884 Sinoe using Dr. Halr's Asthma sure, 4 ‘ore than ono year, my wilo has been eutlrely w nduot even a symptem of the di \essohas appoared. WILLIAM BENNETT, Richland, [ows, writes Nov, d. 1838 Thave been afiliotod with Hay Fever and Asthma since 1850. 1 followed your directions and b am happy t0 say that I never alopt b stser in may lite. T am glad that T am amoug the many who oan speak 8 #0 tavorably of your remedics. s A valuablo 64 page treatise containing similar peoot from every State L the Us 8, Cenais and Grest . § Britain; will be walled upon spplication. Ol Auy drugglst not having It in stock will procured. soordsr. Auk for Dr. Hair » Asthma Cure. DR, B. W HAIR & SON, Prop's Clu'ti 0. el ¢ g vure, P iilad., p Buol ,|by which he sccumulated his coloseal upplled by J. A. Fuller 8 Co | enatly, too emslly I thiok, Had our ‘nudn stood lower our present diflicultles “WHERE ROLLS THE OREGON.” The Lewis and Clarke Explorers Glide Down the Columbia to the Coast, The Wonderful Results Following the Explorations of the Northwest— The Fralt of Jefferson's Foresight, Written for the Ber, No, IX, When Lawls and Clark reached the country of the Mandans Iate In the fall of 1804, they bullt a fort and named it Fort Mandan., There they passed the long and dreary winter, In Aprll, 1805, they sent their bargs back to St. Louls with ten men and dispatches. The party had been out eleven months and no tid- ings had been recelved from them. They then started on thelr forward journeyJin to the wilderness, and on the 18:h of August arrived at the extreme navigable point of the Mlissourl, 3,000 miles from its moath, having averaged twenty to twenty-five miles a day. Crossing the dividing range of mountains they found themselves among the Nes Perces, as stated In my last. Those Indians treat- ed them with marked kindness. After spending some time with them and re- cruiting their strength and resting thelr animals, they descended the western slope of the Rocky mountalns and found themselves among the Fiathead 1ndians, who aleo treated them in a friendly man- ner. There they struck a Jarge branch of the Columb!a river. Giving medals to the chlefs, the latter farnished them with canoes, and in them the explorara floated down the branch of the Columbla, seven handred miles into the maln Columbla river, and passing the Cascade mountains entered the bsy into which the Columbia empties, on the 15th of November. They had solved the problem of a northwest patsage to the northwest const. They left St. Louis on the 14th f May, 184, and on tho 15th of No- vember, 1805, they camped on the shores of the Paclfic ocean, near the British poseesslons, aud in the land of which Bryaut wrote : ““Where rolls the Oregon, And knows no_sound, Save its own dashiogs,” It was a long, tollsome, ventursome journey, fu!l of hardships and dangers, and which required jaet eighteen months and a day to accomplish. The dresm of Jeffsrson was realized, and he was en- abled to obtain some information as to that portion of tho territory embraced within the Louisiana purchase, which was one of the conspleuous measures of his adminlstratlon. 1f the splrits of the departed are endowed with coneclous- nes of what transpires on this earth, that of Jefterson mu:t be filled with satlsfaction at what It to-day beholds. Eighty years have worked wondrous results, ‘Che journey which Lewls and Clarke were just cighteen months and a day in making, is now effected Infive days. Such are the results of progress and development in this land. For- merly there was some apprehension that the ncrthwest coast belng separated by such a vast distance from the national capital, and frcm the great body of the union, there might be less attachment there for the union’ than east of the Rocky Mountains, Bat how groundless! There are on that coast as strong bul- warks In the hearts of the people for the defense of the nation in {ts entirety as In any other portion of the union, Little did John C. Breckenridge, whose term of vlce president had expired on the 4th of March previously, know of the people of the Paclfic coast, when he said, in the senate to which he had just been elected, at the speclal seeslon of congress called by Mr. Lincoln in July, 1861: *Nay, more, air; you will gee further separation, Lhopeitis not ‘the suntet of life glves me mystical lore,” bat In my mind’s eye 1 plainly see ‘coming events cast thelr ehadows before.” The Pacific slope now, doubtless, s devoted to the urion of states. Lot thls war go on til they find the burdens of taxatlon greater than the burdens of a separate condition, and they will assent to It (s ecparate condition). Let the war go on until they see the beautiful features of the old confederacy beaten out of ehape and comellness by the brutal- izlng hand of war, and they will turn sslde in dlsgust from the sickening spec- tacle and become a ssparate natlon.” What valn aud foollsh prophecy! The purchase of the Louisiana territory reach- Ing round to the northwest coast, and the acquisition ot California as & result of the Mexican war, formed a vast bulwark of strength for this natlon, and proved its rock of defense In the west during the civil war. The party passed the winter of 1805-6 in quarters built by them on the banks of the Oolumbla, llving mostly on elk and fisth, 1n March, 1806, they started on thelr return voyage, but were less fortu- nato than they were on thelr advance journey, having several encounters with hostile Indians, They, however, reached thelr boats withont losing any of thelr party, and floated down the Yellowstone into the Missourl, and then down the latter, stopping again to have a councll with the Omahas, but agaln unsuccess- ful, as they were absent on the warpath ora bunt, They reached St Louis on the 27th of September, 1806, having been .bla;xubnm t I‘:’lo ylu and four months, A great geographical and geological problem had been lolgsd. i e The territory proper of Loulslans was then organized, and Capt. Lewls was made Ite governor, He, however, in a fit of despoadency committed suicide not long afterwards. Three years after thelr retarn, John Jacob Astor organized two expeditions <o the northwest coast, one around Cape Horn, and the other up the Missouri, followlng the route of Lewls and Clarke, and engaged extenslvely in the fur trade, fortune. JonN M. THAVER, GaAnp IsLaNp, August 8, S —— Oanada's d o Ruain,” Eamilius Irving, Q. C., formerly mem- Parlisment for Hamillon, sald the ‘1 eee the Toronto Globe 0y that the Northwest Province {s likely to become the Ireland of Canada. In my opinfon the state gf this country is very serlous, much more €0 than the Government will admit or your friends in New York have any Idea of, We have batlt two largs lines of raflroad which can never pay, Ihe cost of the Canadian Pacific has been $120,000,000 and the re- turns by no possibility at precent con- ceivable can ever cover tte running ex- penses This money has been birrowed THE DAILY BEE--MONDAY, AUGUST 10, 1885. would be less. We have squandered too much because we have been able to bor- row too easlly, and it has landed us In {n this position: We owe about §60 per head for every man, woman, and child in the country, The Canadian Paclfic runs from the heart of the country, where poe- ple have no great deslire to travel, to Oolumbla, where there sre tome 20,000 white men who have not the means to travel, For some 400 miles the road runs through a country unable to sapport a population of fifty to the equare mile. The syndicate who have balle the line have reaped an immense profit at the cost of the Dominfon. ThisI do not think they will cwre to lose by continvlng to run the line at a loss. They will say to the Dominfon Government: ‘Now, gentlemen, here s your rallroad; we can’t afferd to run it, so ran It your selves.’ “INow look at the financial position; if this year's accounts were falrly stated they would show a deficlt. There seems no chance of an Increase of revenue, and next year we shall have to face two m!ll- fons at leas: on the wrong side. Inad: ditlon, th \des promised to Lower Canada must shortly be paid. Let us then antlcipate the moment when Canada atrives at the Inevitable end of that road to ruin on which she has entered. e ——— The Russian Officer, Contemporary Review, The arlstocratlc youth of Ruesia com- mence thelr military career in gymnasla (schools), where they receive a liberal ed- ucation at the age of 10. Religion, lan- guages, history, mathematics, ctc', form part of the course, which lasts for seven years; but drlll, fencing, gymnastics, and swimming are subjects to which coneid- erable prominence is given, and each sghool hs a uniform In which the scholars invariably appear. At the end of the year they are medlcally examined, and only thore who are physically fit are per- mitted to be examined for cadetshipe; Thoss who aro rejected may be appolnted to different cflices under the goverament. The corps d’elite are held out as induce- ments to those who pags the highest standard of examinatlon. Thers are eighteen or twenty of theeo at the differ- ent portions of tho empire. They feed the eight cadet schools which provide the higher class of officers. Of these the imperlal corps of psges is the arris- tocratle, and supplies most of the officers of the guard. The remainder are at St. Petersburg, with the exception of the Alexander school at Mozcow, and the Finland cadet corps at Helelnfors, the latter being exclusive- for natives of the duchy of Finland. The Michael artillery and Nicholas en- gineer cadet schools farnlsh, as ihelr titles Imply, the higher claes of artillery and engioeer officers, The progymnasia, of which there are eight, receive boys of any class, 10 years of age, a small per- centage of whom join the army dlrect a8 non-commissioned officere; the re- mainder supply the Junker echools, after a seven years’ course. The Junker schools provide the bedy of officors. The course lasts for two years, and only those cadets who obtain a certain figure of merlt are appolated to commissions, The cadets, In additiosx to theoretical inntruction, have a most practical course of study in sketching and outpost duty; they also go Into camp for four months in the year, and take part in all drills and exerclses, Batteries, rqadrons, and battalions are formed, all manned by cadets, These schools are in the difter- ent military distriots, and under the staff of those distrlcts, and the instructors are taken from the best officers in the dis- trict. ———— The Railroad Whistling Nuisance, New York Sun, The Massachusetts rallroad commission have made thelr first recommendation under the new law of that state with re- gard to locomotlve whistling. H, F. Mills and other cltizens of Lawrence pe- titloned for the rcgulation or prevention of whistling by the engines of the Boston & Maine railroad and the Boston & Lowell rallroad within 5,000 feet from the intersection of the two roads with Parker street. A hearlng was had, at which no one appeared for the railroads, The commisslon have since reported that they have heretofore ralsed the question whether the use of the whistles asa dan- ger signal has not done more harm than good, *‘the accidents that 1t saves being, perhaps, overbalanced by the acsldents that it causes by the frightening of horses and by the deaths resulting from loes of eleep.” They ar» of the opinion that the free and indiscriminate use of the whistle has lessened its value as a danger slgnal, and asserts a% ordinary crossings in compact nelghborhoods it msy be forbldden with a balance of advantage to the public. They report that the Boston & Albany ratlroad, ax long ago as 1875, at the ro- quest of residents along the road, dls- continued the use of the whistle except a8 & dacger sigunal without experlencing any evil cousequences. The board granted the petition, and added thatas to signals by whistling from one employe to another, the board could pass no or- der, but belleves much of such whistling Is needless, is an inexcusable annoyance to the public, an infringement on thefr rights, and ls, in many caees, Indlctable, ———— Told by the ¥ior, Dotroit Free Press, “‘Yer, the artificlal banks along this river, made capltal breastworks for the confederates,” eaid the pilot as we steam- ed down the Misstasippl. ‘‘Safely shel- tered by the heavy walls of earth. I've had mor'n cne crack at a Yankee gun- boat myself."” *‘Then you were In the service.” “*Must have been. I belonged to a sort o' Independent troop, and most of our fighting was from these ‘ere banke. Do you see that grove away up there?” **Yes.” “‘Well, In war times a big house stood there, Flfty of us were eating dinner there one day, when somebody saw a Yankee gunboat along about here. We all rushed for the bank, and when she came walong we opened with our mas- kete. By and by she replled with a shell from a gun., It strack the bauk near the top and jlst lifted about ten wagon loeds of dirt up in a heap and let it fall on our captain,” Kl bim?” “No, 1 reckon not, but ic burled him clear out of sight.” *‘How did he feel when you got him out?” ““We did’nt glt him out.” “You didn't! Why not.” “Too busy holding an electlon for some ona to take his place. We couldn’t think of everythingat once, you know, and then It \vas euch a cheap and easy way of burylug a man, They might have duog him out s/ace the war, but I reckon he was no good, Been there too long.” e et ~No business of importanca was transacted in the police court 'aturday morning, Several prisoners accused of intoxioation were re- leased. Jack Bannett, cbarged with disorder- ly conduct, went up to the county jail, in de- fauls of @ $10 and costs fine, AL JOHN- A CHAT WITH GE STON Proud to Be One of General Grant's Pall Bearers— ‘StoneWall" Jack- #on as & Leader, Chieago Herald, General Joseph Johnston, the well- known Confederate leador, who at Mrs. Grant’s specisl request was selected s pall-bearer by the President, arrived at the Palmer House Thursday from Port- lsnd, Ore., on his way to New York. General Johnston, thoogh now well along In years, stands erect and looks every inch a soldler, He s about five feet ten Inches In helght, and his clozely cropped beard and mustache are snow white. What remalns of his halr is also white, but the locks are scanty now, although the eyes are bright and the voice pleas- ant. *‘Were you pleased at being Invited to be a pall-bearer at the funersl, General?” the neribe Inqulired. “Yes, I was very much gratified at having the opportunity to pay my respects to the memory of General Grant,” the General replled; ‘‘and I think that both Nerth and South should do honor to his memory. The South has, and, what s more, the General had almost as many friends In the South as in the North. At the tlme It was proposed to reinstate General Grant the Southern representa- tlves supported It qulte as strongly, If not more 8, than the Northern, and I am sure the South mourns his loss.” ““Would it be falr to ask your opinion of General Grant as a general, you being an old foe?” No, 1 should not deem it right to talk on that subject; but 1 will say this: At the close of the year 1864 things were apout equal between the two armles. The Federal troops were stretched out in such a long llne, 80 that when an attack was made on the Southern armles, who were on the defensive, a sufficlent force could always be collected to stop the advance of part of that line, and such belng the case, the rest of 1t could not advance wlthout thelr communteation being broken. When General Grant took commsnd he massed his forces into great armler, cne under himse)f and the other under Sherman, and by this means completely crushed the armied opposing him. I do not say the result would have been different in tho end, bnt I am sure of this—that General Grant hastened the conclueion cf the war in & remarkable manner,” ““Then you glve no opluions?” *No. I have had a bad experionce of opinions, When I was commanding on the Missiaslpp! during the war an Englich officer came to me with a strong letter of Introduction from Mr. Mason (at that time Commiesloner to England), asking me to show him all the civility I could. Of course I welcomed him to the camp, at least, if such it could be called, as he had no tents, but only some cooking utensils, ana during the time he was there he had frequent talks over the camp fire. In one cf these, in spesking of the respestive merlts of Longstreet and “Stonewall” Jackson, I said that the former was the better General from a strategioal point of vlew than Jackson. Six months afterward I recelved a book In which the whole conversation was printed. Now, as Jackson was a perfect idol among the Presbyterlans of the South, you can imsgine that I became exactly the opposite.” “Then you do not consider Jackson a great General?” “Not as a strateglst, but as a divislon commander and fighter, yes. The actlon for which he got most praise was reslly a defeat, and that was the battle of Cro:s Keys. Jackson and Ewell's Corps were opposed to Fremont and Shield’s and Jackson was in command. Shield’s was advancing on the opposite slde of the river from Fremont, and had a compara- tlvely weak corps. Fremont had a strong one. Jackeon’s corps was the stronger of the Confederates. Jackson detailed Ewell to attack Fremont, while he watched Shields and prevented him crose- ing the river. Ewell defeated Fiemont, and then Jackson crossed the river and attacked Shields. but he was beaten un- tiill Ewell came to his aselstance. Yet Jackson for this recelved the thanks of Congress. The ldea of a man with a superlor force watching an inferfor while he dispatches a weaker force agalust a superlor is scarcely strategy.” The General left for New York by the b o'clock train, A gentleman who trav- eled with General Johnston said that the General told him it was one of the proud- est moments of his life when he received the request to be one of the pall-bearers, and that he had rldden seventy-five miles and driven 200 by stsge befora he could get at the traln. The old General spoke In the highest terms of the general- ship of tha late Gieneral. ——— Insane Patients, On Saturdaye’s B, & M. train from Lincoln Dr. McFarlatd, of Jacksonville, 1lls., came In with eleven insane patients from Wyoming who have been for some time past at the State Insane Asylum at Lincoln, The present crowded condition of the esylum, has necessitated a trans- for of the Wyoming patlents, They will be taken to Jacksonville by Dr, McFsr- land, there to be treated in his private Institntion. The names of the unfortu- nate people are, James Castello, Theo- dore Palchow, Thomss Lindsey, Henry Goetz, and Lina Robertson, of Albany connty, Mary Baker, Carbon county, Christian W.Fredericks, Andrew Jensen, and Sarah Anderson, Sweetwater county, and Alice Russell, of Laramie county. Dr, McFarland is & genial gentleman and a man of great experience in every phate of treatment cf lunatics, The atlents who have been transferred to is care will recelve the best of treat- ment and have every chance of recovery, where recovery is at all possible. The dootor spoke very kindly of Dr. Mathew- 800, of the Insane asylam at Lincoln, and said that he had recelyed the best of treatment at his hande. The party left in the aftsrnoon on the 2:15 Wabash traia for Jacksonville, ——— When Baby was sick, we zave her Castoris, ‘When shoe was a Child, she cried for Castoris, When shie became Miss, sho clung to Castoria, When shio had Children, she gave them Castoria e ——— Ohanges Wrought by Time, Baltimore American, Jay Gounld might visit London now with pleasure, Cyrus W. Field was act- ually recelved with loud cheers yesterday by the very directors of the cable com- paoy who, at the last meeting, denounced him as a stock jebber, snd demsnded bis retirement from the board. Time and great public dinvors work mavrelous changes, hpy. THE GREAT, Lo V) GERMAN REMED) FOR Y>> AIN. f QURES e Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Headache, Toothach. N“l"l'lmu Swel! O WHITTIER G197 St Uhacies 82, B « 0o Debility Giourial an Throat, Skir av Aonas, 3ln & anc Ulcers W i ARRIAGE GUIOE ! Dreams, itivelyeured. There B by lette fcines sent by M package to indi ler. Address DR.JAMES,No. 204Washington 5t.,Chicago, 1. B G TR 5 . WUPPERMANN, BOLE AGEXT, 51 BROADWAY, V. ¥. REMEDY F1i eausing Prom Manhood, remedy.has discovered o which hie will send FRI Aaddress J. H-REEVES Deeline from Diseases of the ato Gland CUK rrors or <idneys RED n *GANDEE" Rubber g ut fl 1c CAND] double th, on the ball, and give DOUBLE WEAR, | Most economical Ruby Boot in the market. Lasts longer than auy other boot and the PRICE NO HIGHER, Call and ex- amine tho goods, _- FOR SALE BY FOR SALE BY T.M.BRAY AFINE LINE OF Plnos & Dot —Al WOODBRIDGE B05, THE ONLY EXOLUBIVE MUSIE, HOUS IN OMAHA NEB. FOR Man and Beast, Mustang Liniment is older than most men, and used more and more every year, REMOVED. The Onlv MISFIT CLOTHING PARLORS HAVE REMOVED FROM DOUGLAS STREET, AND ARE NOW LOCATED AT e

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