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——— AR e i den R RenSmn. N TRADE | rn/ MARK Absolutel Freo from Opiates, Emetics and Poisoa. 5o #8 AXD DEALERA. THE CHARLES A_‘vdu':ELEN €0, BALTIMORE, MD., James Medioal Institute Chartered by theStateof [11i- 0is for the express parpose of givingimmediate relietin all chironic, unnary and pri- vate diseases. Gonorrhoea, Gleet endSyphilis in ail their complicated forma, also all diseases of the Skin and Blood promptly relieved and permanentiycured by reme. dies testedina Forty Venrs HUUGH® Special Iractice, Seminal kness, Night Losses by Dreams, Pimples on tha Face,Lost Manhood, positieely cvred. There o cxperimenting, The appropriate remedy a8 at once used in euch case, Consultation, per- of by letter, macredly confidential, Med Icines sent by Mail and Express, No marks on package to indicate contents o sender, Address DR.JAMES No. 208Washington St.,Cnicago, lil. | Early Life THE PRES ip About the Members of the Lower House of the National Legislature, Gos ONE MEMBER WORTH $15,000,000 of Congr and Outline of Their Respeotive Carcers, casmen an directory m and The now congressional tains some ve t nis ¢ new congress, says a W pondent. T have fore three hundred house, written by v in ) ng the make up of shington m corres of the pr themselves. The full of intorestin and by making a tabulated statement, [ am enabled to give you & number of curious genoralizations The phy in the n cor nal directory of that of M Hahn of New Orleans, which t fully half a page, and the shortest is of Ballentine, of Tennessco, who his life in thres lines, and states that | ived a classical education, and «l to the Forty-cighth con at, and is now olected nth AGES OF CONGRESSMEN The oldest m this congress is J Wait, of Connect cut, who was bor Sty and s T4 years of age. The young est man s William McoAdoo, of New Jorsey, who was born in Ireland Octobor 20th, 1852, and i3 34 years old. Next to him comes Charlie Voorhees, of Wash. | ington Territory, who is also 83, but who was born in June instead of October There are in the present congress four men whoare over seventy—Wait of Con- neetient, Bliridge of Michigan, S on of Misslssippi, nnd Ju Kellcy, of members asent longest autobiogrs that roce wis dem Fort Nebraska National Bank OMAHA, NEBRASKA. PAID Up CAPITAL <1+ 8150,000,00 Stonens, May 1, 158 H W Yares, i A E Torzatiw, Vice Ww. " V. Monsw, Pri HW. YAies, Tiwas S, ek, AT Torsany, BA"KING OFFICE: TIIE IRON BANK. Co. 12th and Farnam Stroeta. Gonernl Bunkine Business Transuctod. Pianos and Organs — AT~ MUSIC HOUSE OMAHA NEBRASKA. TREASURY DEPARTMENT, LR OF T U 1NCT N, Docomber 10, 1855, by sutisfaciory evidence pre- ) the nodorsi it has leen mudo toup © & thut in tho city o1 Omahn, | Aandstato o Nobraska has complice o 0f Lao et Of congres 10 tlonal I inking OUrPOTwe OXistenco nnd provoed y 12th, L2, therolore, I, Henry W. Cannon, comp- trol'er of the corrency. do horeby certify that ‘The Owahn Nutional Baank, in” the city of O nahy, in the uty of Douglas, and stute of Nobrasku, is authorized to have succession tor the poriod sp ‘ol in it 1 monds nruicles of nssocintion, nuinely, untdl ciosv 0f busiuess on Docomber 12th, 1 0. In tatimony whoercof witness my hand and seal l of office this 1uth ¢ay of Decomber, 150 H. W. (AsNON, ) Comptroller of the Currcncy. No. 1u4, dsot inty o1 Douwlns, with all the nabie N itions 10 extend their for other purposes, ABs {eic. WHITTIER 617 St. CharlesSt., St. Louls, Mo, Debility, Mental and i Mercurial and other Affec. I Throat, Skin or Bones, Blood Poisoning, s Ulcers, aro troated wits oparaieisd Ll prloelylea Kafuly Privatey . _Diseases Arising from Indiscretion, Excess, Exposure or Indulgence, which nrodoce soms of the Eolow Gebiilly, dimatis of slghs and 04 ey + vereign or by il frea, fnvitod A Positive Written Bindiog, acal wonderlil e a0y mOr iarried ‘o it Popriar editio]) 71 | R | ¥ Or the Liquer wadil, Fomsely Qured by Administering Dr, Haines' Golden Bpecific. T4 can be given hua vup of coffe e knowledge of the poeron takiug ', (a Burmloss, aud will effoct & peruieiit cure, whether the pacient s u 1o a0 atolulic wreck. 1L bus be Shndleof basen, uud In every (st B followsd. 1t mever fail , KUHN & C0., Cor. 13th und Douglns, nnd IS & Cuming Stk Omaka, Neb.! A D FOSTER & BRG R 4 il Blum, Town, o ToaT it froih e boae untalolug buad 11 Parta of e couniry. <Xt hus bocn and still is te el of 1 E ines wll tho eloments for perfoc growth ws in 0 othor. Ttis s tact thut moro children hive von saved nnd suocesstully rearod by Kgo's thun by nll the other 1vods combinad manu- and s the ondorsemont of 1 ) Food 18 the most relinhle food Id for (nfants and children. Itcom- HAGAN'S Magnolia Balm is a sermot aid to beauty. Many a lady owes her fresh- ness to it, who would rather oot tell, and you ¢an't tell. atonul Bk, | Ponnsylvania pty-stven mermhors of the present ¢ have ages ranging between Ny IRty Seven are between fifty and sixty vears of ] re between forty and flfty; and thirt between thirly and forty years of ag Of the twenty seven | n sixty and seventy, ex-Governor Curtin, of Pennsyl nia, and Frank Wolford, of Kentucky, o Comstock, of Mich the lmmber millionaire, is 67, Hic d, of Pennsylvania, who has Thadde. Stevens' place, is 61, and - Cl Neill 61 thongh he does not look ney, of Massachu of Kentucky, 61, and ‘the tall, rough, an gular Holman 6. Judge Taylor, of Ohio, appears to be 50, but is really 62, and 2 Liew ttis 63, and shows every year it. Reagan, of Texas, is 67 | of Hlinois, sixty and growing gray | honr, of il is sixty-five and John Randolph Tucker, same stite, sixty-t West, of New York, the paper-bag il lionaire, is of the same ageas Tucker, and Geddes, of Ohio, is sixty-one, and_ s yet agreat meny gray hair's to Throck morton, of Tesi sixty, Campbell sixty-four, and Henderson, of Iiinois, is sivty-one. Of the congressmen between Mty and sixty, Carlisle starts the list at fitty, Hitt, of Ilino's, follows at fifty-onc, and Warner, of Ohio, the silver dollar crank, is of the same age. Gene venor s fifty-two, Sam en, and Bra lifty man of twenty nkin, of Wisconsin, is about fifty-tw Caine, the mormon, is | Hifty-six. with enough children for sixty, and Tom Browne, of Indiana, is also flity- six The one hundred and thirty-pight con- gressmen BETWEEN PORTY AND FIFTY comprise some of the bramicst and most active members of the honse. Reed, of Maine, at-46, isin his t the same age, is fast gre Gov. Long, of M ng and ind S0 Ran of is rin his hu:u?. s head of silver, while iy, of Kentuek Lam Walter Phelps' of the no white hairs utall. Mauj. 41 years old, ex-Secretary of the Gott i+ 40, while the colornd cong from North Carolina, O'T Na- poleon King hus seen 43 years, Symes the man who suceceds Belford, 45, and John Joe Wheeler, 4v. Between the thirties and forties we find Thomas, of Tinois, whois 88, Wilkins, of Obio, is mothy . Hemphill, of Carolina, 36 ahoney, who suc the gray-haired Richelien Robinson, is ¢ WIHERE HEY WER UCATED. One bundred and sixty-four of tho membeds of the present houso have had collegiate or academio educations, and ity put themselves down as having ined at the connon sehools. The majority of colleginte bred men come from smiall country colleges, academios, and seminarics, and many of them state that they have graduated at some notod law school, such us Harvard, Ann Arh or New York wvard has seven col lege graduates, Princeton four, the Uni versity of Virginia four, Bowdoin tw Dartthouth four, Union three, Yale two. Ambherst two, Brown two, Aun Arhor tive, Jeflerson two, Franklin two, und numerous other col It is curious to look al reconds us given by Bragg stuges that he was™ edy yers Smalls, of South Carolina, was sclf educated, and Houk, of Tennessee, edu cated himself while working at the i net makers' trade and by reading by fir light at night. Judge Kelloy got his edu cation as a printer and proof-reader, and General Grosvenor was trained in a coun- try log schoollouse, Pulitzer had a pri vate tutor; Hepburn, of lowa, was educi- ted inthe common schools ingoflice; Outes was sl Tuulbee and Boutello b THEIR EARL A number of the congressmen taught school in early life; some, such as 1% of Ohio, ¥ son of linois, Sessi of New York, Heistand of Ponnsylvania, and Floegar of Ponnsylvania, were renred on furms. Kell worked fiv Yoars as a _iu rueynun jewoeler; Spoon of Rhode Island, worked in mills and on u farm during his boyhood, und Collins of Massachusetts, hegan Life as an nphol ster Weaver of Nebraska, worked us a furm band by the month from nis Yo old to seventeen, and Reid, « North Carolina, has acted ns a colleg | tutor. Gen, Le Fevre, of Ohio. wus once | & consul at Nuremburgz; Hitt of Hlinois, | w secretary of the ntion at Paris; wtin hus bieen minister to Russiag elps represented the United States the comrt of Vienna Three members of the y ut - eongress | bave been pages in the houso, uud . one | was a pilot in the nuvy and o slave. A baker's dozen of the members have been conneeted with ks, and fully half thuse put themselyes down ws bink presi donts, " YLVANIA HAS MOKE OLD MEN in llmuu of sorvice than any other state, and the two oldest men in the house come from it. Judge Kelloy bas been twonty four years in cong, Randall twenty two, and Charlic O'Neill tw All of these men eane from Philudel a, and the three have had sixty-six ye con rressional scrvice. Holna, of Indiang, ladd twenty years of congress; leton, of Mississippi. sixteon; Blout, Bl uu\fl Havmor, twelve; l(.uulull:h and e schools Steait, wnd Joho ton, while Hiscock, Sl arlisle, Reed, of Mai i hawe served ¢ THEIR POLITICAL BEGI 1t is eurious to note the oftices held hy (~unfir\--~nn-n bofore thoy were eleeted to the hiouse. Twenty have boen iy twoenty-cight have oecupied vavious judi il positions, ety hive been justicos C f ey O'- | tts, is 61, Wadsworth, | Morrison | is | v Belmont, who is 34, and Editor Pu- | of | and | THE OMATA DATLY BEE, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1885, of the e aoven Four ng, 1 wias a_collec lLieriffs, and urd it nd slatnres tures boen been ‘ lgis Rave [ have MeCre school r of interal me 8 eity HEST CON The n the 1t n L. Scott Y0000, rlie Felton and that he owns wal Feltonisa v wbout five feet six % ponds, and | K of il n g ghtly inclined to the Roman, ey and _an o mnging 1<tache, SMAN honse _has been of Erie, who A Californian | i« pnt down ! " rth & t S W | 000,000 over forty 12 yen bi mt which_is now mixed with n sprinkle of groy. His complesion i k. He has very small ot, dresses like a practical bu and is very democratic in his | is n gooil speaker, is full of ideas, and has {nade the impression here that he is a jolly good fellow. @here is nothing of the | snob about him, and he never talks abont his money. He made a good fight during the last campa il many were sur- prised that h slocted FELTON AND SULLIVAN His opponent was o man named Sulli , who w, tall and commanding as | nis small and retiving. Subivan had « great idea of his importance, and he ox pected to beat Felton casilp. At one meeting ho drew himself up to the full Leaght of his six foet, threw out his che and said: “Gentlemen, if T could have my opponent on this platform beside me, anil you could compare us and size us up, 1 think you would liave no trouble in which is the better man. to represent | in When the votes wera connted Felton had u Iarge wajority Velton was born in New Yorkof | e well to do. Before e reached manhood, the family met with reve | and the of sevonteen he went to | California to make his fortune. He stud- icd Tuw, but only tried one He en sragod ih various speculations until now he s one of the richest men on the P const. He is noman of wide reading, considerable eultur and of cnough o to stand by his convietions whiat evor be the will of his party Sogpe Value Nails. ways rents | The Financial of Tenpenny Chicago News the bottom of the {olph stro and an_indifforently hed m ing bad clothes and'a, worse abont despairingly “Oh, poor fellow! involuntarily murmured nle woman with eyeglasses and sympathy, “*he just looks as though it | was the Tast nickel e had.” Ihe other nine passengers looked ex ely sorry, and the tintinnabulations | li-punch | of the conductor’ solated throt wrloony like melan »m sone distant convent titterently washed man shiver as the conductor tower piton &1V | camealong. “Fare, please. My dime, sir, just fell throngh the foot- k there on the tioor.,! SWiheree “Right down there, sir; it went elean out ot sight, “Yos, indeed, Mister ¢ | posed the little womsn. | it 1etor,” inter- “L saw him lose “Never mind,” eaid the couductor at ), ““here is your 5 cents change. D'l | ;inr] the dime when 1 take the car into the | barn.” Then cwr* man the cond r debar) Crossing. | Not long subsequent he ascended into a | Madison strest transpor Somothing clinked on the floor soon after. **Fare, si id the conductor, inter- rapting the frantio search which he was making among the interstices of the foot- body thought what w kind uotor was,and the unwashed :d at the Halsted street “I've lost my dime, sir, and it—" BifY ! “You are the—" Bang ! Bianked tramp who worked that—" B Biff't “Dodge on moe lust week.” “Bang ! Bar The women sereamed; the men laughed; and he, fishing hinsclf out of the slushy snow, looked Unutterably bankrupt as ho spitefully cast away his remnant stock in trade—a handful of tenpenny nails. ey The Chess Championship, New York Times: Dr. J. H. Zukertort, | the world’s champion, arrived yesterday by the steamer Etruria, and will compe with Steinitz, the ex-world’s champion, for the chumpionship of the world. Both | zentlemen are well Known in chesscireles n this country, and Mr. Swinitz has made | this city his hotue, and edits a chess paper I Dr. Zukertort was in this cily in the fall of 1834, and gave a serics of exhi- | bitions of blindfold chess games in Stoin. way hadl and in other placesin the United States. He then wentto England and the continent, and there also gave exhibition | ggames, und beat all the skiflful ehess play- ers whom he could meet. He won the matches for the championship of the world in Paris in 1875 and in London in L] Just before embarking for this country he was banqueted by o St sund the City of London chess ‘he mateh with Steinitz for the world's sumpionship and §2,000 a side, will be begun under the awspices of the Man | ten Chess club, whose rooms are at No Seventeenth str in tho first week in Junuury. George Green, the J" sident of the club, said that the hail ad not yet beem selected. The eondi tions under which the match will be P yed are asfollows: Fifteen moves will e allowed per hour, neither more nor | less, and not more than three @unes arve 1o be played inone weck. The contest ants will play in this city until cither of them scores four games. Then they will 0 to St. Louis and play under the aus- | Pices of the St. Louis Chess club until | either seores three ames, and the wind ap will be in New Orleans under the aus | pices of the ns Chess, Chocker, | and Whist The eontestant who shall first score 10 games will be declared winner and ehess champion of the world. | - —.— forced to Volunteer, W Webster, & colored transgressor, | was arrnigned before o Texas justioe, who | “terms cagh on | por | ministration point with prid, | now in prog | hav | inty | afew of the | imitation g clinked on | said 1o the doomed wan STl ot you go this time, as the evi dence Lyou is not very conclusive | 1oy wind i SThank you boss, thank you kind! I wishes all “de odder judges would treat | me like you does. Yer a gennerman, | But don’t you comne here ri 1 have to be severs with you.' | may be sure [ am gwinter come | heah wo more. I didn'c come dis timo Hit's de policeman what fotches me ebery time. Ef you waits, jodgo, till I comds | here all by myself, you ‘will be a hes older den” Methusalum,” - PEARLINE is hig by housckeepers and ol | who have tried it. No soap is requir | and clouning is done with a saving of | much time and labor. All housekecpors | shuuld use i zuin or - Bo sure and ask your gracer for the | bread made ut Smith & Loerke's bake No. 52 Main strect. $tisthe very b vude, Ty itand be convinged. - cough muy be considered a little hing, Tut sometimgs it ends in a coflin There is no di however, of such a resiilt it Red Stae Cough Cure is taken in of tho peace, vue bundred aud nine or ; tme. DEAD LEFTER OFFICE SALE, ng Ocllaotisn to bs D “Terms Cash on Doliver, | { Ao In osed of The Catatogne'Incindes Bverything | Excopt an Oysinr Stow aud a tussinn Bath, promiises to be unually brisk at n nextweck, By order of the postmaster-gencral articles which have weumulated in the dead letter office will be dizposcd of and no questions asked delivery.” A log ng of what the accumnlations consist been published. Tt shows that th 1 he offered to the highest bidde lots of miscollancous thing 20 relig ious and_seet books, and HECes ¢ eiddy and thoughtless jowolry Washing ton ¢hurch fairs, with “Christmas in view for the sale of what wre characterized in i itions us “usoful and fancy ar- likely to find in_ this doad lot wzanr a powerful rival for the local patronage. And nohody need be surpris. ed if betore the week eloses some Wish- i on eorrespondent wlegraphs to his pa “A most gratifying revival of busi vss here, and the ad to the sule << at the dead letter empori um a8 a crushing refutation of the nsser tion that a democritic restoration would tendency to paralyze the material rests of the country,” The name of the gentleman who pared the catalogue does not apped its title-page, unid - wo aro sorry, for we | should like to praise him by name for tho digerimination in the use of words he dis- | played when he ealled the 8,200 which comprise the bulk of the acoumu Smiseclancous" It is safe to say more miscellaneous™ eollection | rler the hammer. Here are lots selected at shazard from the eatalogue. Give ear, O ye lovers ains, and attend all ye who fre uetions of blue gogeies, meersehaum pipe, ariiic flowers, sheet musie, antomatic tooth yair gentleman's spiked shoos, plug | broken concerti hoy's dami hair erimpors, bass-viol s, two | " wool fascin iLscent bottle,chimney-clean ato-masher, rubber coat, maeramo v, hair front and curl, puzzie, rubbor civealar, tuning fork, butehers’ apron, ro- ary, sewing machine attachment, Water- bury wateh, pack playing eards, moth- caten flannel jacket, cheviot shirt, adjust- sle corsets, plagues, one old damaged ving brush, 1 mburg edging, cork- serews, birthdiy card, conductor’s punch, tter cards, dairy themometer,paint on velvet, cigar ‘box opener, child's bib, revolver, crucifix, rein holder, paper dolls, white plume, roller _skates, tancy wnner, box of damaged coflin tacks, ar al moss, T tachments, game of ) M Chifstmas tree candl@ sticks, bee fumigator, hirness trimmings, lemon squeczer, hind's ciros. soap, mouse-trag, monkey-wrench, small eloek th anned atskins, megnets, charms, viows of Cincinnati, fduretden packages of cignr- ettes and an acordeon Withont stopping to extend this list further it may be said, in aword, that such is its exhanstive miscelluncousness that i includes everything known to the profes- sional shopper with the possible exception | of an oyster sgew and a Russinn bath. It is hardly neddssary to remark that the lers of thid paf as they run their % over the things that have *“‘got upon list," will ha_moved to kuulh‘ pity of for whamn the miscellanies woere in- tended, but owho never received them. And obviously' the largest measure of sueh sympathy will zo'out To the person whose ; y white hair and decply corru- gated brow mark him a8 the nian who wrote for that_automatic toothpick, but sot it. There ure some Juunw that one is better without, some t] get along without a pinch, some can dispense with just as well as not then there is the automatic tooth-pick ‘The public can ouly hope that the melan y man to whom this one was ad- 11 attend the sale next woek and ed in bidding itin. “No matter how barren the past has been,” a man with an automatic tooth-pick in his pocket ought to tind life worth living. A sad but unconfirmed report reaches us that the postmzster general will be present in person at the sale with the de- | sign of seeuring the accordeon for hini- self. For his own sake we trust the ru- mor is unfounded. Let it come to be known that Mr. Vilas has purchased an | accordeon and intends to learn to play | npon it, practizing in the department and at his residence at odd hours, and who enn depict the gloom that will settle down upon Washingion socicty? - A FEARFUL FATE. Ness §8 now in | quent i ¢ the thos Torrible Sufferings Occasioned Eating the Prickly Pear. Los Angeles (Cal) Bxpress: Ruu were el it on Monday about wmun | who had been found on Saturday on the plains beyond Cabuenga Pass, nbout | twenty miles from the'eity, alone and un attended, and suffering worse than a thousnnd deaths from eating the tung, th fruit of the prickly pear. This morning an Express reportr called upon Dr. AT Bradley, and rned faom him the story of the man's horrible fate Last Saturday Dr. Bradley and two others were out hunting on the plains he youd Cahuenga Pass. The rouds are fear Tully washed “out and cut up by the late n, and very in_ many When they were a point ¢or v off the road, and about eight yond the Los Angelos river, north of Cabuenga Pass, somothing attracted th attention to one side, and they turned the course of the team and drove toit. Coming nearcr, they pereeived a man on his hands and knees, with his clothes partly off. The exposed portions of hix flesh were all raw, and the man wis writhing in the spasms of puin. Dr. Brad loy at ¢ went to work to relieyve him, but had nothing jith bim with which he could belp themgn. Atter doing what he could, he benrd the man's s erman by bivth, und a bee m been workingdon' a bee ranch n Fernando, [latgok sick, and the W afraid haayvonld die on their d Literally turned him out to per started o come to Los Angeles to get licf, but lest His wiy and his food gave out He had heard tiyd the tuna or fruit of the prickly pajr ghetus was good o cat So when he got 1o the water tank, near where he was_found, he gathered ot of 1 stewed it and a the stew (o seanove the innumerable ers biethe rest of the fruit and ant down Bis Hthront with the rest of fruit and pdded to the tortures which he had undergoner The tana is o great astringent and i 1 him costive in un atrenmie d 0. The tuna stickers fu ened themselves in the inner lining of his throat, mouth, stomach and bowels 1 greatly inflamed them, producing agony that ean not bu deseribed. In this awful state he had been for nine d: when found. His condition was such that he could not bend his body. The abdomen was rigid and swollen His s Weroe stif and a raging fever was upon him They left him their provisions and imme dintely set out for town arriving hero lato Baturdaygnight. They went to the police station and were roferred o the sheri's oftice. Under Sheriff Thornton heard the story and look a deseription of the roud wui with Deputies nd Hammel got a team and started that oight, hey | ched all Sunday but coule find | him and returned home Dr. Brulley could nob rid bis wind Spt- by T ors not | medicines | warranted | Sleeping as mueh as formerly | he slept 1 | enc | | volver | handed hit over t u poli | jedge, 1 [ and 'Twill also_ fine you | “Lhe only man he urday night of the man's suff rings, &0 on Sunday morning he and Morrs Lowis procured a double team and took with them medicine, instrument and provis ons and wont to the plac Dr. Bradley worked with the man ssveral hours, bt could affor him no pormanent relief, the tuna seeds havi ed the stomach and intestines and resistir s at | dislodgement. The man wa ¥ T Tieved, temporarily, by s doctor's min istrations, Dr. Bradley and Morris Lowis glept on the gronnd” Sunday near him I'e man's condition was he conld no ught in wi at hand. T emained with him till Mon day aftern and then 1 on their refurn, arriving in the tween seven indeight o'clock evening, much exhanstod their trip They went to the off evening and had They deeline to pilot the officers s the place unless th expenses paid Dr. Bradley says they lhave already been out the hire of a double team, with and_provisions, beside their I'he ofticials say they are not in going boyond common of humanity, and that is the hresent status of the case, which is horr Jle to contemy A’ human being dying one of the most painful deaths within twenty miles of a city of 40,000 Provlog and not. u - hand lified to save iim. No doubt if & party were organiz to go for his relief, and “take n mattress inalight spring wagon to bring him back on, if Lowis or De. Beadloy could be induced to act ns pilot. Unless sonme thing is soon done the coroner will have to gro out and got the man's dead body, The unfortunate man's name is W. J Johannis, sherifls another conference in to time dictates : pe— HE SITS UP ALL NIGHT. A Young Man Who Sleops Only a Few Hours Kach Weeks, Ovroville (Cal.) Register: A singular ease has lately come to our notice. It i that of a young man who practically does | without sleep.” The name of the young man is Henry Johnson, and he has worked for the past two years for differ ont farmers no cotionwood — creck, amo whom are M. Wick andJ. W Patterson. Johnson is a stont robust voung fellow of 20 or 21, and exeept being of o restless or nervous | disposition there is nothing wnmsual obout him. Somo four years ago the young man found that he was able to do with much less sloep than other young men of his quaintanee. He could stay up all » at dance and not feel the of sleep the next day, or he could res s late hour and not feel sle the next morning. s need for sleep” decereased so much that he beran o numbe rtual wakefulness during For the last three months of 1 was awake nineteen honrs a day, while v April, 1884, he was sleeping 1éss than fonr hours h night. His health was ood, and so he thought little about not During the summer and fall of that year w5 than three hours each night, but one day Ins sttention was ht by anarticle in the Sacramento Bee where it stated that loss of sleop would canse in- sanity. He then began to eat heartily, and would drink Lalf w glass of porter be fore going 1o bed lo no difler about his sleey 50 he eoncluded that he was an oxesption to the rule, and paidd no further attention to his wakeful ness until the summer of the present y when he found that he was only slecpi four or five hours in the whole week He eame to Oroville one day alk with Dr/T. W. S whout himsolf he doctor saw thathe was i good health and deemed that it would be ima o induce sieep by the use of narcotics. He by however, kept close watch of the case, and taken a variety of notes to lay before the state medical board at its meet- ing. Young Johnson is now able to go without sleep, for ten days at o time, and gets along well with only four hours sleep ina week. Hesays it is no particular benefit to him, as he got tived the same as other men, and has to rest the <vme num- ber of hours that they sleep ner- ally sits by & fire in n comlo rm chitir during the night and often reads the grenter part of the whole night. The case is a singular ong, o say the loast, and de serves the attention of scientitic men, e dnstin THE KANSAS WAY. Utterly Withoat Effcct on a Hard- Fisted Ohicago Liveryman, Chicago Tribune: Charles Roberts, a young man from the wilds of Kansus ver, went into 'y 8t Sunday night to hire u hovse and” cutter, but the liveryman did not like his looks or the s of his female compun ions, and declined 1o intrust a team to Roberts without a driver. This did not suit the Kansis man, and he fourished 22 in the f. of the liverykeeper with the remark that he could pay for all he L and drive anything that ever wont on ofs. As atarther indocement for the prompt compliance with his wishes he ¢ ly displayed o huge seven-shot re g horse-owner knocked him saptured his wenpon, and then i Being wceustomod 1o driving steers in Kunsis does not warrant your assumption h handle a f trotter in Chi- remarked Justice White to him yestirduy “Lain't takin' back down, nothin’ what was t drivin® or ridin',” said the as ho ta fond look at his re , which the oftficer luid on the desk “How is it you earry such a murderous waapon s thist Don't you know you ar not on the plaing now, and s peiceable 1 s no use for such thingsy" I'm s quict an’ ponce’ble m er flipped a whip round a stec hide, but I don’t allow no hostler as eve tossed hay to tell mo I can't drive. Wh, an stuy on any beast us e wore born, or hold the lines to ‘em fur the gun, ye sec, Tu ter do collec tin’ to Wielits, an’ had to have her.” “Huve you got u liccuse Lo curry gun’ “No sirea, we don't that whar | come from.” “Well, we will keep the weapon hero now, 50 that you ean't get into trouble 0 for carrying need no sich as it, and $10 for disordérly That's jest my pile, by gosh," re marked the prisoner, as he counted out $2) to Clerk LeBuy. Ll Another One on Missourl Chieago Mail: Two well known ecinns—one an Winoisun and the ot Missourian—had a tilt in the Grand Pac rotunda lust evening. The plush-coy- | 5 oen a delighted andi- | superiority had | 15 of the repartee, with the udvantages of wit and celebrity slightly in favor of the M vian SOt strikes me that yon never heard abont the Missouri woman who was mar ried o a colored furmer down here in the southern part of our state,” finully broke out the Iinoisun SRome years uge ud o belated on the pike near cided to apply at s farmlhon The woman who auswered dechined o make any ba and divected him to the said hor husband was il could ack a wine got i lodging i with hi where sl Cows, ut the 50 he ro the house, ‘Mada, suddl, I could not discover your hushand. The only person I diseovéred in the harn wis ‘But that wis my husbind, ' excliimed my me thit of i you for r Nell, l his s a5 L 5 friend, ‘you do not méan to tell you, a white woman, wre the wifo Digg 1 nm aatoni et} nocdn't bo," was e ! folks think [ did very she married u Missour | oy TEE CIIXTA. > =] PLACE I OMAIIA TO BUY FURNITURE s One of the Best and Largest Stoe'es in th AT DEWEY & STONE’S U.S. to Select from. No Stairs to Climb. Elegant Passengzar Ele M. BURKE & SONS, vator LIVE STOCK COMMISSION MERGHANTS, GO, BURKE, Managor, UNION STOCK YARDS, OMANA, NEB. REFERENCES ~ , Neb.: Columbus State Bk, fonal fiank. Omnhi, N Will pay cusiomurs’ deaft with bill of Inding att UNGALLANT MR, CLEVELAND. He Omits Mention of Women i His Message. Mrs. Lillie Doverenx Blake addre large number of ladies and a fow men on “the events of the week as aille ing the interests of women' in N EIKk's building. No. 51 Un‘on I’ terday afternoon. Mrs. Biako is pre of the State Woman Saffrage Association Ihe speaker called attention to Presi- dent Cleveland's mesas and said that he utterly ignored mentioning the women of the nation “He spoke about the Mormons Mrs. Blakes “ho spoke about the Indians, about eattle, and mentioned John Roach, hut he ignored the women of the nation Other lies thought it a shame and wanted o know what the Prosident meant by such neglecet Mrs. Blake prepaved a resolution, which was adopted. It vead Resolved, that the President of the United Stare: by his failure to mention in his mes sage to” Congiess the demand of the wouen of the nation for political frecdom, has negle nonmortanity to use his intlnence on the 8e of Judiceand given snother proof that the interests of a distranchised and wis represented are always ignored and overloo| STRICTLY PURE. IT CONTAINS NO OPIUM IN ANY I'ORM m anid IN THREE SIZE BOTTLES. PRICE 25 CENTS, 50 CENTS, AND $1 PER BOTTLE €3 15 CENT BOTTLES wro putup for the ne. o R conmodation of ull who dosire a guod and low priced Gough, Cold and CroupRemedy THORE DERIRING A REMEDY POR C NSUMPTION OR ANY LUNG DISEASE Bhould securo the 'arve §1 botties, Recow pruying each boti Bold by all Medicine Dealers. Diroctions Sickness, St.Vitus Dance, Alcohol- Diccases, Dyspep- sia, Nervousness, '\e mm@m@mm | Sick: Hleadache, thenmatisn Infailible remedy I8 at Land? The afl willfind 1t 10 bo'n constituticon =l speeilic v hen siek s to conrt suffi andinvitedeatii. §47= Correspondence freely suswered, G E]T A SPECIFIC FOR ismy, Opium Fat- Nercous Wealness, Brain Worry, Jilood Sores, & fountain of vitalily and vigor, s ref The D, 8. A, RICITMOND ALTYINE €0,, St, Josepb, Yo, s‘“ ~. Tpllepey, EVER FAILS, Spasms, Convule ing, Syvhillis, Berofula, Kings Billousness, Costivenzss, Nervoizs Prostuation, Kiduey Troubles and Irreyularitics. und exhilirating s a cool, gushing spring of Wiler 10-the puretied snd TN fraveler in Sold by all Druggista, $1.50 per botlle, or four bolldes (or $5.00 wons, Falling Zui, Ugly Blood ‘Who eares for the doctors’ snecrs when this the desert, o decline takiing a suce renvdy FI SALE 30 Cofv 30 N § Scrofula of Lungs. Tum now 40 years old. and bave suffered for the lust fifen yours with u lung troublo bive spent thouruuds 0f dollars 10 wirost tho march of this diseno: hut (omnoreey relie! w i all thit Tobimined, T was unfii for iy menusl Intor for soverul yours A frien | 8trongy voo ommended th y of Bwiri's Spocifie 8 8 S0, claiming that bo himsel: hu | heou vreatly hino fited in some 1ing troublog olved to try §tThe rosuls are remir My couih his loft me my sireneth s \od a1 weirh =1ty pounds move thin 1 ever did in my life, LChs bion three s e staco | stopod 1 Ui o dicine. Lt have no Fennm of the A there nee oo pa s or 1oy (0111 my s 1o the horiost kind o auical Work, and foolns woll us 1 over 1o wits 10 miwke, but I am honest when | my oxistence and bealth £ dny would e voerount 10 1y dnty | §tv it 1 failed (o bear 1h's ¢ vor the merits of this wonderiul medici 1.3 Mo, Aln. June 25, 1855 w cutively vezotable 4 SKin Distisos wailed frec L1k BWIFD SEECii Co., Druwor i, Atlunta, G, o 46T W, 5k sty N, ¥ ot 1 Owe G . timony o Treatizs on il Man and Beast, Mustang Liniment is older thag most men, and usgd more and wore every year, Morchants and Farmers Bank, David City, Nob.; Kearaoy National Rau',Koae 1ambns, Nob Mebouald's Bank, Novth Platte, Nob, Omaha Aohed, for two-thirds valie of stock, | Railway Time Table OMAHA T o followlne is tw prrtaie o traing by co o arrive! and de. i fard fime at I O, nreive and dopurt from ol 14th and Wal ) nnd K all othors 1) BHIDGE TRAINS Pridie tedns wo ko eave T TR S h) 8 A0 S 1At hl ¢ 3200 B:00 ITCPETR ™ Lonve 'en - o tor Omnhin | 105 10 0 13 34T b Ab CON B TN Arrval anl e s £ v dopot 1 Counoll Bh; DEFAKT. depot 1" 30 10:0 i o p g 152 p. m triins iy from the Aunive AGO & NOIETIW ESTERN, Muil and x, resa, Vi dation Lre s Chicaio & <ISLAND, Nl Fxpross, Yt Accommod wion Y reos CHICAGO, MILW AUKEY & 8T L Muil nd Ky pross \pro 8 ouieAtn, Na LY AW Mait Bk v M PAUI )N 8 QUINCY na By progs Apress DUIS & Louis Exp Ex 2z 22z Ezxz 15 L 0 w00 85 Lol T KANKAS CITYy 21 10K & COUNCIL U1 0:00 A M Muil i Express ] N L press X i Sioux (1 Ar. Pl WS WA RD, UNION PACL Pacille Expross Deaver Expross 0. & REP. VALLEY. Sl und Expross. . | I NN NEB. Ml and Expross. Night Expross 5 SOUTHW ARD. PO MISSOURE PACIFIC, Diy Expross Night Express. | KOS )& O, Via" Plactsnouth NORTHW ARD, AN P ST LML & O b Sioux City Express - “Bite Ouklund - Accominod’ Dopart. BASTWARD, At Cy 1t & Q . " at South.. STOCK YAIDS TRAINS Will leave L. P depot. Ouaba, at 0:40—8 6 3 wids tor Omuh i p.m iy excopt Sunday; ), diuily exvept blon: v v 7105 AL M 150 1. M Dovurt. AN P | B 13208 Avrivo. AN P 6i2id .. Dopa AN 105408 - B 9:208! B:45) Depurt €, duily except =atur.u! dity, NESTORED, AR A Premature Docay, Ner. voun Deldlity, Lost Man. Lonnd, &o. ia ety s discoverad a gimplere!fclire, w |!"uu‘un\Muumr"h)n'nn ; ich Lo will ke FRE to his fellowvanTarers, Address J HLRLEV LS, 43 Clathwinstree!, Now York City. A Sandud Medical Work for You g and Middlo Agel divn, omiy $1 by mal, pusthaid. ¢ fon‘wnd CVery iy e, mindienend TP 107 1] Aeuto nnd or 21 ya s I9 e To ed o gt e Fary it v | Bl 1 Assactation. L t Nelwco of Life should bo roud by the yaung far WALIRICION il by L WG D volbte Gt Wil Vo 0 the Selency 1111, barent, gue n © or D W IL AL, Bunton, M1k, Wio fn Lauirhig skl nid expari- [ [0 0% Lkt (4470 . s KNOW THYSELF “CANDEE” Rubber BOOTS WITIL DOUBLE THICK BALL, Ordinary Rubber Boots . I\\n-nr( tfist v Loots ara Sultesd o s o fled the s, ciuns, ® b sucossfully cifailure, doutie on the bull, and DOUBLE WIA Most economical T Lot dn e iy La«te louger thun other boot wud tie PRICE NO U1GHER, Call und exe FOR BALE 1Y ‘T. N. Bray GENERAL AGENT, 1612 DOUGLAS STREED. Ouaia NEsi,AsKA PENNY #UvAL PILLS Y"CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH." Fhe Griziund aud Only Gonnine. AL Vuller & Fulleg FRI4SKA OUL ToR AND KEE B b o Thetry ¥ s [ s Pub., Omaha, HOUS BT web, H.