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THE GREA MAN RE FORPA Backnche, Sprain Price, Fifty Cents, THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., So teadnche, Toothache, Bruises, efe. Cures I"HFUM/\TISM NEURALGIA, hache, ete. Dealere, Proptietor. At Drugglsts an. SWIFT 'S SPECIFIG reosanry 1o able roluls, ooz tnint, heredit of mirgury ot THE SW1} Y. 157 W. 2 st npply the tr food Teiner i made from roots orgin, The above its man M0 abratory This gres it e _ Drwwer Co., WH&TTEER 7 8. Chinrlen St tions of Throat, Skin or Bones, Blood Poi oty pimp) T emaics, e Tlive Writt Mediciae sent e Louts, Mo, ity, Mental and ; Mercurial and olher Affece ning, Jith upaniiciod ction, Excess, Anra some of thy dimn. A fusiis of In every . wall ov expren MARRIAGE g:um: 200 PAGES, FINE PLATE DR. 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T am wlad t ntiso ning similar in tho anada winl lod upon application it o stock will pro- i, ONSII bave s positive rem G wse thous A POSITIYE PTI flN. 1y for (he above disean Curo without medi- Patented Octo- 1876, i One box will cure the most obtinate case in four dnys or loss, Alan's Soluble MedicatadBouges No nunsouous d sundulwood th RBin by d Prico $1.00, il 0f pri s of cuboebs, co ying the Sold by all dru For furtl it il of 1N 10 produce dyspeps wtings of the stomaca, sts or mailed on particnlars sena P, 0. Box 1333, C. ATLILLAIN CO., 8 Joh st the oW York. othsatlymSe Jamas Modioal Inetituts Chartered by theStateof Llli~ uois for theexprecs purpose of givingimmediate relietin all chroiiic, uninary and pri- @ vate diseases. Gonorrheea ¥ complicated forms, slso GleetandSyphilis in all theif ] iseascs of the Skin and lood prompt; permanentlycured by rer dies testedin a Forty Vea iali*ractice. Seminal 't Losses by Dreams, Pimples on fho Fuce. ,Lost Manhood, entings 1 at once used in each case, sonal or by letter, sacredly confidential. icines sent by Mail and Express, positively eured, There he appropriate remedy Jonsultationg, per- Med- No marks on package to indicate contents or sender, Ad DR.JAMES No. 204 Washington 8t.,Chicag 1 for sample his ud qum.uu. A Clear Skin is only a butitisa looks like Balm beautifics, parl may have it; part of beauty; Every lady at least, what it. Magnolia both freshens and tions of the Federal E Recoll Scout, Li His Reckless Movements in a Confede alding — Startling out of the ate Lines, ' st and ¥ 1 from the river t and Louisiana, which wer yops after the wns of Vi risoned by federal tr of Vicksburg, was one Licut E Irishman. Wm. B. Field, of Nat Miss, gives his recollections in the Phil- adelphia Times, of Earle follows Earle made himself a terror resi dents of and West Baton parighes in Louisiana, and when mission thereabouts, whatever it have been, was accomplished. he passed up the river with his band of forty or fifty men to Natchez. His reputation had preceded him and the hapless country peopl trembled, Active, rest bold ever in the sadd mning some fresh incursion. His band committed &0 many outrages of a character utterly at variance with all usages of civilized war it w determined by the nearest confederate cavalry commander, Gen. Wirt Adams, to detail a spec scouting party to look after him As commander of Adams sele Lieut Wisconsin man, who came before the opening of hostilities, and who had proved himsclf a good find ent 'nmn;_v soldier. He wi mitted to se- cet his men, to the number of eighteen or twenty, and his only orders were to put a stop to Earle's o lations. this end Paddock sclecte the village Fayette, twenty-six miles from Natc us his' base of operations. This little town was the center of a cultivated and wealthy community of planters’ families, almost every one of which was represent edin the confederato army. The gray wniforms of the s proved a talisman which opened every hospitable door to its woanrers and, being ehiclly young men, youths of gentle Lirth, it is not surprising that they Should have been tempted for o time to Jose sight of their appointed n sion and yield themselves willingly to the unwonted pleasures of socicty RECEIVING TIDINGS FROM A< ehieek to these gay roy the tidings from below that been out on a foray from Natchez lady whose son whs in General Lee's iy acted as distibuter of letters from absent coufederate soldiers to their home people and vsually con through the federal lin uch as be delivered in Natchez, likew ¢ of those to be forw rimics. Licutenant lady's residence one ance of n negro, family by forc seized \\uh his ‘Own woman in her hound her to a 1 band ransacked the iated to their own trifles they ied enant, after seeuring seribed and d togethe the way of letters or writ conld Tny hands upon and re-entered the feder dayoreak. The worst mitted by this oflicer this narreative. Licuter A s ¢ example only is planatory of the anxiety the confeder authorities ture, 1o the Rouge his may this party Gen B. B. Paddock, a south shortly of EARLE le 1 to under the sle Alamorous entrance hands this ttire and roug Meantinme and The gal- victim d lines trocitie: e supp: arle is d befi min for his cap AFTER THE DARING LEADER, the word and Pad- dock’s sconts, armed with doul shot- guns and arny revolvers, went scriously to work. Every road leading out of Natchez was picketed by th eral cay- nd many a dash was made to earry off'the videttes by the active scouts. Five of us rode leisurcly up one winter after noon until within a hundred paces of the post, where we were within full view the two memby of the Second New Jersey cavalry then or duty as videttes, Off to the right, out of the road, the writer saw an oflicer m viding u magnificent chestnut hor e in utter ignorance of our presenc Fired witl desire to possess the noble animal I bee oned to a comrade and ende: et between the ofticer and the I'his was all but pmplished Drake, who accompanicd me, but had not perceived w! ter, sud- denly eried out s ad l Yankee! Th and a fo long leaps of his grand charger quickly put him within his lines, Howey charged the obtuse videttes and took them nicely in A DUTCAMMN'S NARROW ESCAT Billy Smith shouted **Surrende ho_seized the nearest man’s Ugh! Ugh!" w the soldicr tightly g was no time to parley and hout to shoot, when the second vidette, 1o had yielded on demand, exclaimed Don’t shoot him; he's nothin® but a d—d Dutchman and don’t understand a word you The carbine was wrenched from tli d—d D.’s hand and the two cap- tives quickly sent to the rear under the escort of one man, wlile the remaining four of us turned fo receive > of the reserve picket th buckshot. his checked P 0 and, as darkness fell, we rode away un- rmed fter the surrender of nd w Joersey e , Lieutenant Colonel Yorke commanding, wis st tioned in I on th 3 the writer made the acqu numbe ul<|n|u-1~ and € (Tom D him the This iment held in small este we feared not to To horse was now pickets when ripped his gun, There Swmith was in ) showed Somo I m by the ekle its detachments at great odds, But the Fourth Illinois which was relieved by the former mand, was made of sterner stufl, Thie or four of us dared not_recklessly cha a dozen of them, and in all our de with these fellows discretion was rar mored. When thi we chase they fol Towed with the swiftness and tenacity of the hound, and, when a squad of them id ron from us, "twasonly becanse there was no alternative. Drivi in thewr pekets and cupturing the outposts was our chic ti while w 1o en counter Farle and this finally became so annoying that the Federal eomander in Nuteliez concluded to put a stop to it With this end in view regiment of ne infantry would oceasionally be “hed quietly out at night and station voad beyond on W scouts m e in ambush on some vidette post. One d nglo scout ing the was approach- As he entered a deep et whiere rold passed between two b & negro who knew him sprang out ing his bridle wayed him T ring w almost 100 late, As the horse wheeled ve bundred black faces were nbove the bashes aud five Lhundred gloaming muskets were leveled on the solitary rider, To surrender to troops was de o0 flee_and leave the frieudly negro to their bafil rage was infamy! An extended hand, & quick ng aud the scout and his preserver e ol unscathed amidst the builets. But Esrle’s depredation continued Daring the hours of darkness he would sally Torth and spread conste 1 throughout a wiole neighborhood. the sun rose his blow had fallen and he l was safe within the lines, One night a 1ks and ck A SCOUT WHO WAS A TERROR { Duchessc ived to smuggle | | wood b | untrimmed of | vored to | who | 1 the answer, while | the | Minden | theso | | that MF. whistling THE OMAHA DAILY BEE W imap and wit _havoc as ho roc suble guide would enable and buf T the riv wproading oy him im o lhaps the fc uld find him re oy passed and Padd His band wa hospitah! o the village at d 1t Smith to whom to 1 th h of Earle's riders Ord ng him to gather with all haste the s tered men Smith mounted his | lion, Moro, and gun in_ hund waited th fo EA Presently throug! he tramp of hoofs l~1 ly discern the outline Whe thirty paces he er “halt}” “Char (he response from thefr leader Smith's heavy deer gan roared and the rushing lumn halted Licutenant Earle had fallen from his horse. Two buckshot had entereda his face, one h shoulder and one his brenst I'wo of his men were Killed and several wounded 18 carried into the and hor: nearcst ho ' were prepa to remove him to Natehez. He rofused to be taken, and, telling his men he was X them 1o leave iim and re tirn” within the fe lines at once. This they did, and when Paddock, with such of the scouts as he had coleeted, ar rived it was too late for pursuit, Earle was taken nextmorning to a gentleman's house twelve miles away, where he died of his wounds on the third day. —He was buried in the “Red Liek? ehurchyard Jefterson county, Mississippi, and his remains still rest unless exhumed by agents of the government for internient in some national cemetery. - WINTER FURS. om he hea and at length eo of men and A Demand for Fur Primmings - Bright Sutin Linings, . the long, comfort \in present the iinst the eald blasts my of these ave lined’ with mink le, wh ceonomy I be of Liciliecnne or satin. There is no economy in the plain black Fre K thac in one ies the fatal shiny gloss, 1t mistake for those who practice my through neee cheap girments wi unmistakably stamped with their price and length of life no one would like to insur nd re- cei ttention accorded 101 poor lation is wiscer to econon in some- thing ¢ for the on: cothmt outside wrap with a lo Some of the 1 quite short o 1 i Ie ne style extend ne the dress, the back tournure, Never hast display fur trim oS Hudson B: Russian sable tails that form round the of the garment; ble far-lined In fur cloaks selves of winter, I o is the Ameriean season is 0 g sity , other {ront e of of edge o 50 the tisher-tails and border next in routine are the ba of r, lynx, marten fox, n hare, i, and rieh dol- have These and un fat carved t fur wraps are Thero e protty coguettish nd turbans pf phat, tehnied harp bows of seal-brown velvet, or abird’s liead and pom brilliant birds’ capes of fur bunds 1 made trimmed except tons eaps with not approved of of healt in fact, are nounced by physicians and se ple. The urs for Little chi in all qualitics, from_ th X set to the most costly n conts and cloaks, muilz and caps. Favorite sacques for the littl ve curly gray krinmay with caps muls to correspond., "The ave prefty white cony sets, but m the way of by 18" unexeepfronable, with nd” bright satin linings. A FAMILY HISTORY,. Sad Outcome of the W a Once Captivating Opy A Philadelphia special of Januar) 1ys. Mr. and Mrs, oCharles Camlb ted after ten years of married life the former “taking his littla son, W sending him to the andmother at Ciiestout has charge of her .\I.u'unl . Mr. Caunblos was o young, rich, and roker in this ¢ m He wooed and won Lillian Conway, then at the itof hor popularify ds an $ years of age, tall and command? ing in figure, with a handsome fac prety wd @ sweet soprano voi She from the st aiter Iy na ad hus not been before public since that time exceptas a lead Ing soprano in the Unitarian elurch at Germantown Mr. and Mrs. Cam- bloshave been living at Chestnut Hitl for ars past until recently, when they suite of roon No. 1104 Girar E Mr, Camblos f iled in business not long after his marriage and sinc that time has had a desk in' the banking house of Winthrop P Swmith, aml has Kept hisiplacein the bodrd of brokers. OF late years the mareinge, which gaye much promise of health, wealth, and hap piness has not prove a vlvlulnllll one There has heen Jdeton in the elo which both have tried to kecp from the yiow of the public. Some months ago Mr. Camblos took a trip to Europe for his health, He returned about five or six weeks ago. Things have gone from bi to worse between the Imu‘\u couple culminated on the Iast day'of the old year in Mrs. Camblc ctinig hy for from her rooms the sister of hor hushand, who, it is allege e there and in sulted her, nee of Mr, Camb los. That : sung at widnight in the Presbytevian church at German town by speeial request. Her beantiful Sing Loty red e yoars, of his there | , then | cdded Life of Wld | n they had advanced within | d | | dragged off to N | MeCt concerned, | | att | knows inor 1o purchuse | 1861 voice wis admired and highly commented | upon by the lurge audience prosent, most ull\\hum had gone espec to heur the A few days age were drawn up and her husband Both have which they have consulted trom time time. To-day the wife notitied him she had borne with him long enough that hier mind was made up ¢ the stage rs. Cam ns that lier husband 1s insane from drink 1 the time, is quarrelsome, petule: profane with hevself and her and that he left her without money A friend who knows sc articles of s wetween My uration to and return to children a cent of of the insid | history of the married life of the couple, that she bracelet some y throp Smith for funds, Her diamond eng went for §200, and a few duys before last Christmas Mrs. Camblos was foreed to procure a loan of $200 on & thonsand dol- lars’ worth of furniture m o storage wure- house, part of which belonged to her sis ter Minnie. Mvrs, Camblos was seen this evening. She declined to say other than Camblos had gone” away with her boy and placed him with his grand pother, and that she was determined to 0 to \(\\ York and go upon the Bl n. "L shall take my little girk with "she said. “Iamsare 1 shall soon el m\' little boy back again, for unless Ar. Cimbios .......h his hubits ho will not live long.” Mr, mblos, it is under- o R P charges aguinst his disposed of her dimmond ) 1o Banker Win ler to raise went ring me, all | and | that | | eabinet is E | hefore | state, lives in ah | ciety. | takes | No man n in England the conduct of L and ¢ ! net Her SOME BVCONE ‘TATESMEN harged Cabinet Ministers and Whose Names Are Only M It is astonishing how fow of men, says the Washing Boston Evenin it { Senatots orics, onr public m correspondent wd, remain in eave ind ho have held s to sink into ¢ of men w every tongu wd ol t R n 10w easy ed entirely A Ivn of those who pl a larg ital remain here after th l(!M\ do it is to becom Washington takes the worthies of expres o lives Genoral - Grant anned and bought house, but wy v York to let his name in Wall strect, As for formoer cabinet ofliec who made wlan made by a stroke of a ot wany of them remain in Wash Old Hu loch, Johnson's tary of treasury-«and again ealled to that post in the dying weeks of Arthur adm tration, lives a few miles ont of the city, and oceasionally his benign face is seen in his carri »out the street: but thisis not often , whom Gen. Grant made sec treasury to please Mr. Boutwell When the latter chosen senator, is still on the court of claims, where Gen, Grant placed him, and looks justas he did o dozen years ago. He is , has un elegant h und his carcer as head of a great ¢ nent is almost forgotten. The same is a’most ident v trucof Judge Harlan, head of the bama claims eourt, who w ,\h coln’s secretary of the interior, but hus alwost disappeared from public yiew. Boutwell, three times of position, which he ae to become head of the treas nt, practices law before the departments, largely in commoreial e and obtains la tainers as connsel for foreign governients in the various inter: national arbitrations that are const Ty going on. He isnearly sixty-cight years old, Dut his hair s not vet gray, his green bag in hand he is act ney wetices in town, N of the inside Washin Listory during the war and for he was he all the time o 1 commissioner of in il revenu gressian, seeretary, 1 writing his men readable if he puts in th Another one of Grant Postn r General Cres stont arty with lor but s ill the alert, Just Al part day Iin little yes here do <o be used ar pen wton 1is tern 1 senator, hich will half he knows old on. now Deard now e is fin ernment counsel in th court, which, ks brou for several yours, e is very pre it of the banks fier ot its start from General Grant's > whi ¢ president i irant’s old Rob any “Pelknap and both of whosit ¢an be seen here tknap Irands is n hair '8 white, owing b anim c3 with the the caricatuggs which appear in th trated papers do him no mox tice. Belknap, is an claimants heFor the ments nl - wongr He liv a blameless jife gpd seems to have lost nothing in the s of his fricidy by the blot wpon his administration. of i war departiment. The western a'ntd men all say that*he is innocent and that he took the blanie and bore the m,.u]u\ at the time in ovder to shicld the reputa tion of those who were really ;Iu- auilty . How close tl t mu e to eall for such n sacrifice ean better be surmised than named. But it s only simple fairness to say that Belknap was more sinned against than sinning, wl the man who reported the facts ainst him in the house did so with the knowledge that Belknap would i the humiliation in silence. Nor oug to be left unsaid that Gen. Grant, in ing Belknap from impeachment by ccpting his res n, did it not to uilty man, but to hide o story the which none ap te save thos know how it all was. Belknap Robeson to the common mind are ciated, but they are men ot dilke mold. The lattér I'see nearly every day driving about in an old phacton, hewvy- fleshed and carcless l‘nnw‘l 1 to be rich, able and ambitions, he is mosg s verely let alone, For his downfail, that of Keifer, was complete Horatio King, of M iine, who began life publishing o weekly newspaper in com pany with Hannibal Hamling was post master general during the lust months of Buchanan's admir He is o spare, thin old man, whe wonderful memory for historical ¢ ||u| d. its in reading papers belc 1bs, of which there are togion in - ‘These are the only ex-cabinet oflicers who live h iless there is added ex-Seeretary Chandler, who has returned here this winter. He, too, is disappointed man, whose apples have turned to ashes in his hands, His friends teil me that his days of nctivity and his physicians say that it'is only by quict that he ean liv . Who was u senator from Florida the war and went out ndsome new honse on Connecticut avenue and s devoted 1o so. He is very rich and apparently no interestin polities. An odil cter is 13" Smith, of Vir inii, now ¢ ars old—white Tieaded, but o His politi cal life dates b depart pity who and 1ily lit chay five years ten yoeurs, onee Tefor and agai acity when tl Ho 1w in his £ hiis experiences ang Tential e dat dete in congr of Virginia, the Union {Wice governor it went out of acting in rehellion colln clement when tell can always be found at ceptions.” Hys title of balf u centudy, When he was T the state more mile wis entitled to, but it never seemed to diminish s popularity. His greatest ' on Christinas day it contest over the Py by dohn Sherman was de davy he oceupied the floor sainst time and e s siall enp which I in his des e mek ted in than he e e e A Nugget, to the vi the commissioners to Holdrege, we ean bri plenty of wigy to prove that came in a grantd 'special car in co with some of the railroad oflicials town knew of their inlended visit an hour before they arrived, that the royal trio were not in town oyer one hour, and during that time they were sure riding at a salury of §2,000, in of visiting the business men mquiring into their gricvances. Now in view of the salary that these men re ve, and in yview of the fact that they the ereation of 4 st legislature in ect opposition to, and in the face of un overwhelming vote of the people against the commission system, we think they certainly owe thé people more than a rapid pissage throngh the state in a pali | ace cur. What is their great hurry Wiy not let the citizens of the various cities and towns know a week before hand that they will arvive at u certan time and remain long enough to rn something of the situationr — Why net: We ure sure the people are not a fraid of them. board THU RSDAY, JAN l ARY - | a8 he lay [ keeping step | thinking of what 2 | of the pi and with | ve an |t from | |e.n like three | are over | g with his | He took | and | anud | ".lSSfl. i (AMP FIRE STORIES. | Tie Tun of the Camp—Good Reading for | Boys. | | General Brisbin's Reminiscences of | the Days When the Boys Went Soldiering i Wa Iments and we lowing from its Everybody Gen. Dick Ogles one of the most promin fi, t war Llis first regim nk, the Sth 1llinois infantry and Gen Dick s he now called was then a jolly man, a d officer and had fiva lot of suckers in his regiment. One | day while down in Missouri, his drum corps went out into the woods to practice | | wand while they wore fifing and dromming 1 Gen Brishin il of 11 He was ures in the was, 1 W away for dearlife, along came a fat shote The fifes died away, Hw rattle of the | drums ce nd the corps dispersed to | surround wnd eateh the | Only the | | dutch bass drummer was 1elt to pound | away and keep up the noise, 80 as to : drown the squeals of the poor shote Was S00n over and poor pigsy was de | How to get him into camp without bel | | observed was the next guestion, and it Wwas unanimously resolved that he should | be put into the hbass drum y i dram - was unheaded nd the stored away, and _the big Duteh [ drammer took him up, drom all, on his neek. The pig was heavy t the bottom of the drum ted ¢ ort of lever on the strap made it cut deep into the back of Dutehy's | neck. Stll Dutehy stiuggled along, | as well as he conld, and | and | fine mess of pork | wer. The Killing taken wp more time than { they su i just they o the edgre of the camy, they saw the reg ent filng out of th for ride nnd the adj colo 1|v<‘|1| “allin there and adjutant to the d « them towas Poor Dutehy w | the heavy | nd he | drum - mujor Tine car d dis mooch Youm said the dru then haw Close up there with the bassdram. Forward.' poor Datehman got line mehow, but not had noticed him d drunk, as he staggered heavy Going dram corps the colonel voice of thunder B wlh you, ¥ | gre contidence | Bis colonel,, sided up o his hov ul stretehing up his neek as high as he could reach, said in a low voic *Mine Got, Kernol, der ish a big in der tram, a | putitul hig, und 1 yill nd you der 1 bestish quarder.” Old Dick took in the | situation in an instantand with a wink to ‘Sick, Why didn he would have had for « as 2ot amp el with iant and shouted | | and he | | | corps arade the ndd Wl carrying rishered to” the Got in himmel L | ongher.’ | U major, and | e slonel | was | the | 1 the pa mntil the e thought he along under up to . the | inquired inu | is the matter | an, who had »d nature of | Did you s ¢ | you say sc fn (o his quarters ime | is sick.” Dutehy took the hint rateful look at the colonel, st wWith his pig and hisdram of the line he sat down to il gelbe strap out of the back of | neek which had cat his head about haif off. He tried hard to rub of his spinal column, and took his own | time i reaching his quarters, but he got safely and with the 100 is‘a tradition in the old Sth THi | nois in that evening Col. Dick Oglesby had fresh pork for supper and 1 leave you all to surmise where it came from. TUE POWER OF P L want,” said Gene tell a lintle story about chapl benelit of y chaplain over Lewis) who' is a great pr strong in prayer. Many are (I told of the prayers offered up for union during the war, but I doubt if thing can beat the following W hile the army at Corinth, plain went on the line of hattle with resiment and hegan (o pray. nn, 1 ‘On, S4Oh Just and the not unless While he was® concluding his closing | prayer another shot eame along and a rivato in the ranks arose and holding up | in o stentorian voice: “Oa | v rebel shot send it up L but if it is a union shot the enemy ker nd with o red ol | soon as he AVER. 13 ins, the her “to the (Dr and the any- wive Lord lets re ena shell chaplain they 1 whistled added: lay down Lord, rms.’ | , 10, their { his hands sad, | Lovd, if that among the tr let it come down among | flunk. | e | A Great Hop Field, | A coma, Wyoming territo i ! pondent of the” Cleveland Le ays SAt the rear of the house appeared a0, o o scene. Here stood acres of hop- wonderfully luxuriant in growth, [ alling in rich brown festoons froni holes eighteen or twenty fect in J 'rom these musses of vines not | | hop had heen picked this were now laden with | From the leaty crown on pole ‘.my,,,m a shower of elistening drops, | | producing all over the field a ringing pit pit s they touched the ground, while | | sbove thew, exhaled under the iner ing heat of the sun, r thin clouds of | | shiming vapor. On every hand tall trees | kemmed the clearing i, There were only two dwellings sight. One of these stood across the river slightly ob- seurcd by mist. As everybody knows, | | the exedssive dampness ‘of the sound country is due to its position hetween th Gireat Sea and the ( de mountains. Phe vapors exhaled from the ocean, not | being able, as they roll inland, to sur mount th mighty summits, turned back, conden ecipitated to carth in rains, fog plen rs und m the: ixty-three has on anark will ‘Why is the | liops vee said that 1 hops nota ba year, nor | thatt N.mp]\ s this year at the pickin A TS had sunk several thous; *-I 4..\‘. | eultivation of his cr ) £ un | caring would add mo | to the amount, and s s tendency of the mar nothing in his pocket acrid fruit hang. Further in the son it | full to the grou o the 100y W Nextspring both will b plowed under, the ec nation formiy ne of the most unique fertilizers ey mployed. It turned out, howeyver, wher | too lute to Iy that the " im 4 a little, ¢ h 50 that something have been put in bank ng taken Last s sanm for From ment id wner would put let the acres this vof t op on th 1,000 may he formed tained the pro “Phe average yield of hops per any of these oxtrensely fertile valley from 1,500 1o 2,000 pounds. In speci favored locations it Wounts up to pounds, while on thin sils it may 01,000, Mr. Van Ogzle has devoted cight | vs to the industry. During this time Yiis stceess has been varia From the five and one-half acres with which e b 15 hnrsest wis over six tons. which { Sold in New York at 25 cents @ pound That was and enormous proflt. One year through the loss of the vessel on which it l »Mir dvop | market in tho st s erease out | | tle frontier settlement. | ridden into | coatless ruflian who served amocke | ~1m|v||ml 10 thé door where n I—IP’II: CIEAEDSILLAC D I OMAIILA TO B‘EJ’? FURNITURE S AT DEWEY & STONE’S the U.S. One of the Best a» s in to No Stairs to Climb. Elegant Paswrwel Elevator d Lorgest Stoe' Seleet from. M. BURKE & SONQ LIVE STOCK COMMISSION MERCHANTS, GRO. BURKE, Managor, UNION STOCK YARDS, OMAHA, NEB. NCES:—Morchants and Farmors' Bank, David City, Nob.: Kearnoy Nat ney, Neb.: Columbus State Bank, Columbus, Nob.; MeDonald's Bank, Nocth Plat Natlonal Bauk, Omaha, Neb. ¢ Will pay cusfomurs’ draft with bill of Iding attached, for two-thirds valuo of stock. nal Rank,Kone Neb, Owmaba REFRRE! Ranw'\.y Time Table OMANA To following fa the time PATture of traing by Central Stan the local depois, Tr o the O, arrive and ¢ their dopot, of Tith and Webstey st M, Co Bl & O, and K 11 & M. depot] all othe dépot. was shipped, his total erop found ready s of Juan de Fuea. A powerful tonie must have been produced by that wholesale mingling of hops and salt. What better use conld possibly © been made of the hop, outside of Lread-making and medicingl - serviee In 1838 he came out with only £1.50 to low for his own year's work. " That was < from the Union Pacltlo a year of very low prices. This season BHIDGE TRAINS hé has almost literally put his moncy in X S the ground. Sl taking the tme” to 7 18 10:00 ther, the pursuit has brought him a jioste) ol cloan profit of between $10,000 and $a0, H '”""',’umh. a 000, Itis believed and hoped by those 2. et . who desive the best things for the terri tory that hop growing,” now <o widely wrried on, is but an inerdental indus and that it will give p the near ture to fruit cultive 1 leading purs of the Sound valley {epot At o3 110 A, 405100~ 5150 1152 p. m. CONNECTING and i epot at Coun LINT 1 h | Bludy Areival from tho transfor DEPARE CIICY G0 & N i ARIIVE, 300 P 3 s 0 1, ' RO Decay of the 'l Wil AL Londen Laneet quotes Joh tncement that the decay of teeth is which e “peculiar o nd shedding The ter's a dise vouth teeth are ubjeet to it than those intended to Lwe seldom or ever teeth begin to rot ) dds o o N the if not more so, Tast throt 7 e a g 5 W f “This keep miy oM N 3AN I Apross ol B 3 i WANASH 151 31 Local St 00 M Fransters KANSAS CLTY 3 AN 300 1M W fifty ye notahle man can until after middle ¢ he count on keepi o the end, T secms to be reason for thinking that deeay of t his commoner now than it uied to he. Assummg this to he | the fact, it would be intesting to inquire whether the wything in onr m mode of Hife which™ has o tenden cause the teeth to decay shioned notion about cafing vids and the likeisexploded. N IR Dennrt. AN DN O, & RE Mail and g B & M. IN NI : : Miil ana 1 2 exple nwhile | oL B0 Night Expr it may be worth asking if want of vi; Depart SOUTHWARD. is not a cause of decay of the teeth, AN T 10 VACHEC if the want of vigor obscrvabl x | 10 v Expre certain elasses of ehildren and youn LS T sons is not due to the increasingly : i character of the lives the youny | with diminution of fresh air and A nd that gravation of | AN 1 brain and nerve worry | S0 - the educationary and s of our modern life f America are par- | 705G Vi iNatsmonth of the teeth, |~ STOUK YARDS TRAIN Americn Wil teave U, . oot Ouali, it need mental | 10:45—10:55 0. m,§ 24 G:50- 320 culture and the pr ir0 boslowed | oY Slook Yards for Ol I 011204240 0 pem pon them. They dressed | "RomgeA tram B dnily except Sunday like adulis, and they are * 1 i an iily excent Saturday: D, daily except M intellectual sense, to the serious depreer- | ation of the organic material of o the human body with its brain and fl%flfi E? ves is -composed, and of the vital cn- % dB Or the Liguor taabit, i 1 by Adi y with which it ought to be endowed.” Maines' Golden 8 . It can be given foa cup of ¢ st 9:20n] 8: T5atl Depart NORTIL mental fask which cha developmental sta The young people ticularly subject to decay and the young people of conspicuous for their ad 1de Oaklnnd Accor LASTWARD. PN, Csy B & Q. Iy Frontier Idlers. ", Hitcheocek, in Outing for Jan I can imagine no l|||v mor K than onc of idleness in a lit Yeul have never mining camp or eattle town without recognizing the luck-lustre » and slouchy pose of the confirmed loa er. Onece at Ash Forks, a colleetion of dozen shanties west of Fla I, ofive or tea without 1 s ubsolutely it aud apeedy int i moderate drinker or reck. 1t bius been given in thous a0ds 0f cases, and n evVery Instance o perfect cre followed. Bt never inils, Tho systom ouce Smprognated with he Specific, ft beconies an utter | tmposibility for tho liguor appetite 0 exist, "!*11 ‘o BY FOLLOWING DRUG 3 O & CO., Cor, 15th dinner brought me o glass ot milk. It 1510 & Cuming Sin. had turned alittle sonr—no wonder, for [ A.D. FOSTER & BRO. in that desert the sun beats down Co 1 Blufs, Towa, with a topical heat. Quite conscious of prmphlet containing hundreds Al TrOm e oSt WORICH Wiid men possible unpleasant conseqnences, 1 ob oI women st asa b ccted to my milk, The bearded waiter, - — « Wrms akimbo, stared d e buly | ri fia Tho Land of Oranges, at the bulky Lindlord, and made known my coni plaint. No less than four idlers followed Sunshine, that landlord 1o my table. The unfortu- 0 nato glass of milk was passed In silonce and Tropical Scenery. down the line. 1 feit the situation 1o be A ot 401100 fest, ‘"13"{1’5 serious, “blanked if it ain’t sonr!” ;’r"‘:“‘m.fll{'flkuu‘l‘}/ofl%'vnnrn)"nn spoke at lust the portly host, and every | ooman ana ohild sould own a Jot. High, dry, soafor cchoed, “blunked §f it - ain't!™ | yolling fand. No awamps, or malaria, Houses, Bloros, hotol,already bulit. Beveral trans daily: Five-nore orange grove tracts, $200 each, A platof tho town, showing strocts, 4 chureh ity {iopol, &0, 0.7 alho fine Orangs Grovo in olgh an aleobolic 11 or write Sblanked if we don't e that ranch- man drink the milk ws the verdict of nymede; and the four murmured, Shlanked if we don’t!?”” “An’ of he kicks, we'll hang him!” And p HCuss us of we milk was the event It furnished Wt and speoch is treasured now memory. Ao 7 USEDINALL STRICTLY PURE. mnzmmun Gt APWEEC S and Prcag with clezant, 48-pago descrip 3 colors, Drilliant color Jong printed st o tlve hook of our town, and over 600 Jand purchasers, Pop- ulation 75, and Tivals wm-klr REFER- Cl W, 11, Oal , Pres. National Cltizens Bank, New Yoric, Imdu‘w\ for full particulars, L. K. HeWRY, PRESIDENT, 179 Broaoway, New YORK Sitvor Aprings Fla won't!” of the ) them material for Doubtless the mat as 4 precious CINUINNA T, cnst‘ < o= Nebraska National Bank roup OMAHA, NEBRASKA. PAID U CAPITAT ,000,00 BinrLUs, May 1, 15 0000 MW, Yares, e A B Touz W, IN THREE SIZE EOTTLES, W. V. Mok CE 25 CENTS, 50 CENTS, AND $1PERBOTTLE | 14. '\ ¥ NT BOTTLES nre put 1 dation ol wl who d PR £ CE 2';.. chrh, Cold and GroupNemedy LING A KA ED BANKING OFFICE: IREON BANK, . 12th and Farnam Streota, Isusin 7nrn Co MEN: > ¥ EHTE MEDICAL COL. B UFFALOMY. PERNYRUYVAL PILLS HICHE TEH‘{; LH(;LI&H"‘ aud Oniy HORE D CONSUMPTION‘ OK ANY LUNG DISEASE Ge crul Len ing 8hould secure (he A Sold by all Medicine Dealer: lar SMlehester's NAME PARER At Drugs o CBT ke hav ;‘m tri