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STRICTLY PURE T CONTAINS NO OPIUM IN ANY FORM IN THREE SIZE BOTTLES, PRICE 25 CENTS, 50 CENTS, AND $1 PER BOTTLE CEN I (FOTTLEs are put up for the a commodation of wll who desito & 00 And low priced Cough. Cold andCroupRemedy ANOSE DESIHING A REMEDY FO1U CONSUMPTION ANY LUNG DISEASE. Jhould secure the large $1 bottles, — Divection accompanying ench botilo. ‘DOCTOR WHITTIER 617 St. Charles St., St. Louls, ifo. “alar gradante of two Medisal Coll I ireatment of C i et B Y Sty Pubers show and S oW residnts Know Nerious Prostratlon, Debillty, Mental and Physical Weakness ; Mercurial and other Affece tlons of Throat, Skin or Bones, Blood Poisoning, oid Sores and Dlcers, 4 with oy el o e Bty Privarey. Distasos Arising irom Indiscretion, Excess, h o i il alan 1o e soclely 0T Tomnles, eoafusion of ingo tmpropor o AR (30 Beeor by X o A Positive Written Guaranteq gi fablecace, Mediciunacnt evory whore by mall of expresss MARRIACE CUIDE, 60 PAGES, PINT PLATES, clsgant cloth and gilt budio, ecaled 0 50 o Over Bty wondet ] pan i aud many 5 arrin n, v. Wailitler. F.200, Addraes3rabo o s SWIFT'S SPECIFIC I8 nalure’s own remedy, mado from roots d from forests of Georgin, The abovo sents the & munufacture nwo. aod has bheen grad- ually inereasing until o §1 i85 ow ary 1o suppl preat Veg- Tioad Purif r, eatarrh, 7o, ul 1 and blood without the use CO., i, Atlanta, Ga 1 etubl serofuls, taint, here ury or pots "HE SW LT T W. i st a R i fiaprdonce exnsin Premature 1 N vous Derlit fio0d, &e.havin tried in va Disdiscovered. TR Lost & York City. A YINE LINE O¥ Pianos and Drgans. —AT— VWOODBRIDGE BROS' MUSIC HOUSE OMAHA, NEBRASKA. DR. HAIR’S Asthma Cure. This invaluable gpocific readily and perma. nently cures all kinds of Asthma, The most obstinate enses yield prompt- Iy to its i It i3 ko fhroughout the world for s univaicd ALDWELL, city of Lincoln, Neb., wr 1884 Bince using Dr. Hair's 4 T more thun one ar, my wife has hoon entirely well, and not eyen n symptom of tho disense hus wppeired 1 AM BENN T iy sthma sineo 18 d wm happy slept bettor in my lifo, 1 /mMong tho many who can &po your romedies, : A vilunhlo 64 page treatise containing similag PIOof from overy state in the U, wnida nod Great Britain, will ho mailed upon application Anydruggis! ot having 1t stouks will pro- ©uro it T, Richland, Towa, writes, Boen uflicted with Hu 1 followed y say that T nover m gl that 1 am 50 favorably of HAMBURG - AMERICAN Encland, France & Germany. e stemmships of this well known line uroil it cowpurtments, and hin, both safe und agre Eutes and Buroy uys and Satu LON- boug, (PARTS und HAMBURG). ~First cabin, $50-$100, Steorage to Dloome ' 50, a Do yon want a pure, ing Complexion ¢ i fow anl cations of IHagan's MAGNOLIA BALM will grate ity you to your heart’s con- tent, It does away with Sal- lowness, Redness, Pimples, Blotehes, and al) diseases an imperfoetions of the skin, It overcomesthe flushed appears ance of heat, fatizgue and ex- citement, It makes alady of THIETY appear hut TWE I'Y 3 and so natural, gradual, and perfect are its effects, that it is impossible to dotech its application, ADVENTURES OF THE HANLONS Around the World in the Early Days of | Their Stage Life, A Tourney in KEgypt—A Journey Across the Desert—The Jug- gernaut, Some men have fonght themselves into fame, others were born famous, but it re- mained for the Hanlon family to tumble into fame. It is remar) arge o family following the same calling. Father Hanlon and his nine sons were all connected with the stage in some way or other, and principally with the acro- batic and pantomimie branch of it. Mos of them began as low comedians or “walking gentlemen,' but finding that their aerobatic elders were making more shokels they abandoned the sock and buskin fom the tights and bismuth. There was in London at that time (1847) 1 man of magniticent physique, a superb ath- lete, and a man of model strength. His name was Lees, He appeared in gladia- torial parts, and had even higher ambi- tions, sort of eould Amcriean London two boy: he An visited with his or entertainment, ™ con- ting of acrobatic acts of a high orde 1t struck Lees as the very thing, and, to- ctier with George, William, and Alfred Lanlon, ho began o tour of the world, All three were wonderfully expert, and the entertainment ught on” every- where, Owing to the nature of it they were enabled to travel all over Europe, no matter what language was spoken. France, Spain, Germany, Austria, Italy Russia, Turkey, Egypt, Ind Australi the United States from New York to § nd almost every South Ame sed by the wa s, andeverywhere they wi h honor. After the death of s the young men’ twice again cireled the earth, though not in forty minute: like Puck, nor i forty weeks, for trave ing W w slow matter in those days. Thet ous adventures literally do fill a hook, for they were collectec by them to a French author ed into Enghsh, ‘most singular experiences,” e Hanlon to a Chi reporter the other day *took pl in Bgypt when we first started out with Lees. It was a hazardous thing, that fan trip, but Lees had plenty of We reached Alexand nd he erceted a temporary theater i t about $12,000, and was the first thi 3 the kind ever erected there by Europ The € ns patronized us fairly w but the natives came sparingly. The looked on impassively, shrugged their said it w v ood, and went back to theie seraglios, their pipes, and their coflee, we lost money v, and moved at last to Caro. assured that a theater style of entertainment Once more Lecs ain he lost ,000 by an Amer rted out 'to visit the py lays’s journey from Cairo. : > missed otr boat; and, rather than wait over, Lees, who was an. obstinate man, determined to walk bae g the desert. The Bedouins have ding motion that takes them across sunds without leaving an imprint, but we sank ankle-deep at 'y step. Then, too, the erooked river crossed our h three times. Lees com- pelled s to strip, tie our clothes upon our heads, and swim cach time, dressing again and repeating the performance at thie next bend of the stream. We arrived rusted, sun-burned, and hungry at 4 in the morning,only to'find the city gat closed, Some friendly Bedouins for n smuggled usin through At'that time the viceroy , who was poisoned six He lived in o palace in an onsts midway between Cairo and Sy and we wer to give a perfort ance there at a grand fote which he w accord the “resident consuls, en lors, Th rticu larly green and cool one in the center of desert of burning sand. The p v aflinir on an oriental plan, T oceasion, it faivly with a brilliant uniforms of the and the pasha’s suite, the arms armor ot the men, and vanners and flag of the attendants, We performed our part of the programme and were accord- d seats of honor legzed) and chibonks, Then came a pasha's part of the entertainment. On the field'in front of the brillinnt semblage he ranged, facing cach othe 100 Bedouins and 100 of his e all mounted on Arab steeds, ] in which mone; Risley entertainmont accumulate nanied and gave, nd after- “Oue of ou A ME, Ge with would pay. theate robbed of months 1 to In it a Bedouin rashed forw then, javelin-like, his lance fell in the ace of the other, unhorsing him instant- ly. Inan instant the whole 200 men were mixed up in the sham battle, Scores were unhorsed and trampled under foot and some_ tovrible face and body blows Phen they would separ and re) the scene. 'The tonrney about an hour, and was e i the least, At tho end the Pashu cs the most valiant of the lists, and aking a spear in his own hand, struck the he ble blow in the The man raised his hand to his m: ted his master and retired. le, too, ies of India, arvest ahs at their home, It w nong the mount nessed the wonderful glers und magicians. }-Il, u of them, for and afterward by visiting the during the ns that we wit- ats of Indian jug- Iwon't pretend to you wouldn't be: any of them, so r rkable ‘The snake-charmers, with their d de cape did some won- derful thi A duel between one of these snakes and amongoose favorite sport there, The snake-charmers have a cheerful habit of extracting the fangs of these snakes and then s sting the veptiles ia the houses of Europeans. When the snakes are discovered the ghtencd people send for the snake- who neve ails to be wathin and the rogues go of ‘charming’ the means of the tam- of drum. Whi harmless snake by tam, an infernal spee we were in Madras, we visited the ju, gernaut. It is about tw the size of Gircus van, built up in a conical s and covered with golden images, medil- ons und sypnb: A short” time after we left the pries ot permission from the ¥nglish government to use the car in a procossion, The right was granted, but no sooner was the car put in motion than the peoble by the thousands b to throw themselves under its wheel religious eesticy—g practice the govern- ment had prohibited “and suppressed for twenty years. The result was one of the disturnimeos which pres the terriblo sepoy rebellion.” - - Phe geological formation througt the Mersey tunue! passes is the ne sandstone rock, and has prove | excavation, - - An Olgo doetar who has been “colleet- ing faets about opimn eating, believes he exn demonstrate that the use of narcotic is most conimon in towns whete the. sule of aleoholte beverages is not permitted. ble to find so | | hogs from this ¢ Howeyer, he searched for some | { nothing of the numbers that 1 extended tour of | I w i N | s01 THEOMAHA DAILY BEE:FI{URSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1886, FIELD AND FARM. A Sure Preventive of Hog Cholera. To the Editor: Permit me to relate, for the benefit of the farmer, through the columns of your excellent paper, a certain conversation which I had some cight years ago with an aged well-to-do farmer, who lives just east of the town of Earlham, Madison county, Towa, while we we in district fair in Guthri subject of hog chole a subject which has been, and is at the present time oc- eupying the attention of all farmers to a greater or less extent. The groat ques tion with them is, what will shield their 1 disease? As I have this farmer's plan I will found, by following from that time, a sure preventiv relate to you what he say: I never Jost any hogs with the cholera,” he said; “my neighbors' hogs would die of the cholera, and they would haul them off by the wagon load, and my hair would and straight up, fearing that my turn would come nest; but L always sailed through without loss." By this time my curiosity began to be excited as to what his plan could be, for I had been in the same hx as his neigh- bors—hauling off cholera hogs by the wagon load that T had lost. So Iasked him what his plan was, and he went on to state as follo “My hog pasture is composed of both timber and prairie, and has good running water. 1 have a dry place for them to sleep, well shel- ered from the cold windsand storms, not too confined, but so that they have of pure ur. My next step to iave two troughs, in one of which 1 kept slackened lime and in the othor salt These 1 neve lowed to get empty They arc of sufticient size so that all my pigscan have access at their will. Herein, in my opinion, lies the se- cret of my success.” Bear with me, Mr. Editor, while I offer two or three thoughts in connection with this subject. 1. This man’s preseription is not hogus, neither is it in the line of any patent i it counterfeit, but is ¢ ive ¢ time. I have tried it ever since that day and found it to be such, 1 have raised several hun- dred dollars’ worth of hogs without one case of hog cholera, 2. Pigs that are raised on this plan, ng access with their mother to this salt and Lime are always in healthy con- dition, the hair sleck and appearances always good,and they will squeal for more corn’ every tiime any one goes near the corn crib. 3. There will be no dainty hogs run- ning around from one ear of corn to an- other and then be looking around throngh the fence at the neighbor's hogs, perfeet specimens of the running stog 4. The sure and true I),I‘l]t)\'l)\]lf of this matter 1n my opinion lies right here, and it holds true in man as well as be As long s the system is kept in condition there i zer of dis 5 n a powerf: ive and an exterminator of ever, hat tends toward discase and v antidote_in all cholera times. tis a twin brother, powerful sooth and sustain animal 1i < antidote lays at cvery farmers door and he can compound its ingred; dminister the dose and save his patients, besides saving the expenses of a doctor. The hog is quite an intelligent ani- They know a stranger at first They can foretell any sudden ge in the weather hours “before it makes its appearance, and 1 1 seen hiogs at an exhibition that could tell the time of day by looking at a watch, and could beat any one at a game of cards \d, also, conld answer any question that cas propounded, and I truly believe that they would be their own ceessful doe- { they could only get at those things that their nature demands will, such as lime, salt, pure w; ¢ and healthy food and a comfortable place in which to live; in my opinion if this were the treat- ment that the hogs of cur country re- ceived such a a thing as hog choler: would not be_known, hut when the shut up in a dry lot and not half fed, se no lime or salt’in 0 common dog's age, drink mud and wate 1t mouldy or ten corn, have no shelter, ete., it e be other than that they will hav some disease 8. Accoding cholers by vomitin; of appetit genuin health The to my observation, Ops itself in three w by purging and | stupidity, all of which are produce ) zement of the hogs' system, sich as a foul stomach or 1 derangement of the bowels by the cumulation of worms or some other ob- My faith is so strong on thi re not what the obstruc- tion is, if the hog had been accustomed to lime and salt to run to at will all of its life, these eholera symptoms nevor would have made their appearance. Hoping that these few thoughts may prove bene- fleial to our farmers, I reniain yours re- speetfully., Wt 1 Kier, Congagious Diseases in Stables. When we consider for a moment the namber of diseases of a contagious nature to which horses are subject, und the care- less manner in which they are exposed to the same, it is astonishing that weido not have epidemics of this d oftencr with our horses. To fully appr @ the risk that is incurred, we™ need only visit the city or country towns on_court days or Suturdays, and see thenumber of horses of all kinds and conditions that stand almost touching cach other in ilable space abont town, 1o say re packeil The latt ym coming in every together in the publie stables, L vule, are much safer f with disease than those outside, nsible stableman would allow an inside his stable that is affected with any kind of contagious disease 1f he kncw it but it often happens that neéither the owner of the horse nor the stableman is aware of the discase until it is too late to remedy the evil, Contagious discases of a most viruluent character may be perpetuated for an in- definite length of time by feeding horses in stalls where disease has existed, Of this kind we may mention glanders and punish iteh es Ily. Either of these most fatal disorder be conveyed to other horses by feeding’in a stall ‘whe horses sufl with them have been for no aninis | kept. To destroy the virus, take a pint of sulphuric acid and put it in & bucket of water and withan old mop wash all parts of the stall, especinlly the treugh and mang as well as thesides of the stall, Then put a few pounds of stick Iphur inan old iron pot, and stopping the stable as well as possible, burn it, S0 a to fumigate the stables thoroughly,takin, due precautions against fire. 1t is'a good plan to set the pot in a tub of water; then itewnsh with lime and carbolic acid, This will protect them thoroughly, Potatoes as Pig Food. Much of the value of potatoes as a hog food depends upon the ®ooking. If fed large produce scouring and do not all thinks a writer in_ the {ational Stock Journal, This is due to the fact that potato is composed rgely of stareh as to make cooking an alimost indispensable aid to digestion. A little raw potato is beneficialto the bog’s stomach when fed largely upon corn - Itis laxative and cooling, allay- ing the feverish tendency arising from e heating effects of corn, When fed to realize the most benefit from them for futtening, they should be boiled soft, and if g fed with them. cooked together. Potatc and eorn weil together, the former giving bulk and the latter concentrated nutriment The potatoes have more value, judicions 1y fed, as promoting heaith than for nut viment. Although - were puiritious than @0 | monly seen ifi the attendance at the Stewart | county, upon the | they should be | ! ble the | any other roots, the potato, nevertheless, is ¥b per cent water, so that its nutritive value is far below that of corn. In fact, it takes 383 pounds of potatoes to be equivalent in nutriment to 100 pounds of dry corn. 3 A Handy\Wagon. The box or Turtiber box wagon, as com- has a body with nailed or serewed to nd_ cross-picces. _and which is a fistuie. In many localities westward, ifstead of having a tightly nailed box, a better style for many pur poses is emplbyed. Ordinary side- are laid in 'place against the uprights from each axle, and are held there by stout hoops, oné being attached to the up- per edge of the side-board, so that it can shp three or fonr inclies down from the tip of the upright. Then running length- wise of the wagon, resting on the axles between the side-boards, are placed . h picces of scantling 6x3 to fill the intervening space. The ends of these stringers are slightly drawn down, o as to cnable a person to eaten hold of any - dividual one. Each scantling has screw- ed onto the lower side, inside the axie at each end, a piece of wood as a blocking to prevent the stringers slipping out of place. Dirt and rubbish of any kind can be piled in such a wagon as in ordinary Tunber w n, but can be unloaded far more rapidly, by first removing one side- box 1d then raising up and removing the scantling, thus letting the load fall to the ground. the bottom li,x‘hflx s the sideboa Pasturing ¢ About ten years ago Mr. T. (an Ohio farmer) had two small fields of wheat frozen late in the spring, when the plants had made such a growih that he consid- cred the crop would be nearly or quite a total loss. He determined to” leave the frozen herbage rate, and turned a flock of sheep s of the fields. They stayed on it until they “ate it clear to the rround.” That field measured three acres aud :lded some seventy bushels of wheat. Another one of acres, similar in all conditions, but whice was not pastured down by sheep, yielded only about forty bnshéls 'I'LN unex- lw(-h-d result gave him a hint which he us followed up evor stuce. o pastires his wheat regularly, depending upon it to a great extent for green food for ewes in milk. In 1882-§ he had ten acr in whi on which he kept forty-six ewes all winter, and he reaped 270" bushels twenty-seven bushels per acre. A yes ago he had a three-acre field which he pastured heavily, and he cut twenty-five bushels per acre. Mr. William Moore, who is to some extent associated with Mr. L in sheep, also practices pasturing his wheat at times, and he relates an instance where he let twenty-tive ewes, with their lambs, run two months on a five 1d of wheat until about April 15, harvested twenty-nine and three-quar bushels per acre. Ar, Thompson' gener- ally lets his sheep stay on the wheat until April 20 trequently they e it down so closely ehat the fieldshows about as much carth ¢oloy as green. Makin ‘ain Crops. pplying Manure A writer on the above subject in the Nutional Stotknan coneludes "his article with the following summing up: Enlarge your barns, house all your stock, build & manure. shed and stop all wastes and leaks, ) Study what your soil and the erops you grow need, agdithen, as best you can, feed 80 as to makéspeeial manures to meet the demand, Thorough &eqiintance with processes of plant growth is necessary for judicious manuring, ,\fml_\ fertilizers within reach of plant root ,ibe it their natore to run near (Ilu-, suyface or down deep into the ground, The time fo apply manuves must be governed by the method of pr ingit, 10 a ¢! lerable extent; but be sure and avoid putting it off till a busy season of the year, when s and hands are needed in cultivating and harvesting croj Depend mainly on the barn for your manure supply. Stable nsanures do double or tripple duty; they not only supplant it food but have a mechanical or emical aetion that brings out the fer- tilizing qualities of thesoil, a very impor- tant iten, The problem of farming consists in making the soil inereasingly fertile. Ma- nure is the farmer’s saving’s bank, and if more of them would have large heaps of it eyery ~rrin;_>; 1o spread upon their lands, instead of moncy interest, they would prosper better in the end. Seasonable Hints and Suggestions, Cream makes better butter to rise in cold air than to rise in cold water, but it will rise sooner in cold water and the milk will keep sweet long Never allow stock of an, in contact with your trecs. You might as well plant_a young tree as to allow ¢ , horses, pigs or sheep to get at it for The or kind to come ay of really saving food and promoting the thrift of the flock is good shelter. The better the protected from the cold the less food it requires to keep their bodies warm. Colonies of b that have been wintered in warm cellars should not be hrought out too soon, as the change will be too sudden, It is carly cnough to place the hives outside when natural pollen comes in. Don’t allow the wats hen-house and stand all duy in o solid body of ice. Fowls can't drink it, and they have no means for quenching thirst if you condine them and thus neglect this important matter. Farm products have a selling the place of production. That is the commercial value, The Iso have an additional valne to the farmer who cou- verts them into a more condensed form by feeding them to stock. That is their feeding value, It is estimated to fr in your alue at that a half bushel of grain twie y is a good feed for | sheep. Corn and oats mixed make bettor feed than corn alone. The sheep should have, n addition to the grain,all the hay, fodder or steaw that they will cat up clean, with waitdy - within convenient ac- Boiled potitorg with a little bran over them or a hehd of eabbage placed within r Hoak; or a liver cooked and rubbed up fitle ‘or’put through a sausage mill and the, ngxed with mill feed, are all zood to kepp ehickens in good health and make thethens lay at this season of the ) agaL R wilkigzrow faster on milk not too rich. They Wilt'fatten faster on richer milk if they Hp got have more than they can digest.” Igastion is what tells, Skim milk is \uIl.anM to the calves to be raised, A bhindful of linseed meal will cause the calf to thrive better. Oat- 1is excee r\n J The commalt ¥Wlow sweet carrot is an sxeelient vegetable as is well known, for and cattle, of which these animals fond. Tt is la y used in Eng: well as i ince, by poulterers, and especially as a valued ingredient at fattening time, to boil and mash up with the soft food, Fowls that roost in trees often frecze to , besides beconing subject to cap )y owls und thieves The swaying of the branches deprivesthem of rest,and they become debilitated and feeble, be ing unable to gfford a profit, as well as requiring a longer tinie in spring before beginning to lay Cattle do not 1« stalks unless t) and mixed wit il butts of corn are cut very short ain, and even ometimes ke them more paiata- bughman suggests remedy that the st [ s helore heing fod to the cows, dnd soaked until they are softencd, lish the tal 3 JUST AS BAD AS PAINTED. Widespread Commotion Caused by the Terrible Confession of a Physician, The story published in these columns recently, from the Rochester, N. Y., Democrat and Chroniele, cveated a deal of comment here as clsewhere. Appar- ently it caused even more commotion in Rochester, as the following from the same paper shows: Dr.J. B. Henion, who is well-known | not only in Rochester, but in nearly every part of Ameriea, sent an extended arti- cle to this paper o few ¢ ago which was duly published, detailing his re markable experience and rescue from what seemed to be certain death. It would be impossible to enumerate the personal personal inauiries which have been made at our oflice as to the validity of the article, but they have been o num- rous that further investigation of the subject was deemed nes Ay With this end in view resentative of this paper calied on Dr. Henion at his residence on Andrews street, when the following interview occurred. *“That ar ticle of yours, Doctor, ated quite a whirlwind. Are the ements ahout the terrible condition you were in and the way you were rescued, such as you can “Eyery one of them and many addi- tional ones. I was brought =o low by neglecting the first and most simple symptoms. 1 did not think I was sick. Tt true I had frequent headaches, felt tived most of the time; could eat nothin, one day and was ravenous the next; fe dull pains and my stomach was out of ovder, but T did not think it meant any- thing'serions. The medical profession has been treating symptoms instead of diseases for years and it _is high time it ceased. The symptoms I have tioned or any unusual action or irritat of the water channels indicate the ap- proach of Kidney disease more than a cough announces the coming of consumy tion. We do not treat the congh but try to help the langs. We should not waste our time trying to relieve the headache, pains about the hody or other symptoms it @o directly to the kidneys, the source of most of these ailments.” *“T'his, then, is what you meant when you sail that more thin one-half the deaths which oceur arise from Bright's disease, is it doctor?” “Precisely. Thousands of di torturing people to-day, which in are Bright lll 280 in s forms. It is a hydra-headed monster, and the slightest symptoms should strike terror to every one who has them. 1 can look back and recall hundreds of deaths which physicians declared at the time were catised by poplexy, heart disease, pheuamonia, malaiial fover nd other common compluints, which I now were caused by Bright's dis- 8e.!" “And did all these cases have simple symptoms at firs “Every one of them, and might have been enred as I w by the timely use of ) me remedy. m getting my eyes thoroughly opened in this mitter think [ am helping othe he fa and their possiblo dang Warner, who wis tablishment on nort v earncstl m had in- find, by 70 to 80, its 0 per cent, Look at the prominent men it 0 off is taking oft every year, for while many are dying rently of paralysis and ap- poplixy are really vietims of kidney disorder, which eauses heart disease, par- alysis, appoplexy, ete. rly every week the papers record the death of some prominent man from this scourge. Re- cently, however, the inerease has been checked, and I attribute this to the gen- eral use of my remedy.” Do you think many people are afll ed with it to-day who do not lize it “A prominent professor in i New Or- leans medieal coll was lecturing be- fore his class on the subject of Brizht’s disease. He aarious fluids under microscopic analysis and was show s what the indications of this iy were. *And now, gentle- s we have scen the un- ions T will show you how it appears in o of perfect” health, :..m] he submitted his own {luid to the usual test. As he watehed the results his ountenance suddenly changed—his color and command both left lim and in o trexabling voice he said: “Gentlemen, I ave made a painful discovery; £ have it’s disease of the kidney's. than o ye: he was d¢ htest indications of any iculty should be enough to st ror to any one.” “You know of Dr. Henion's ea Y ve bothread and heard of it.” wonderful, is it not?” “No more so than a great man, that haye come to my notice as been cured by the same means.” “You believe then that Bright’s discase can he curec “1 know it . I know it from my own and the experience of thousands of prominent persons who were given up to die by both their physicans and fri 2 “You kof your own expl what wa J “Afearful one. T had felt unfitted for business for year, not know what led m ever, I found it was Kidney thought th was little hope the doetors. 1 have since Jearned that one of the physicians of this city po me out one day, saying: “Theve g man who wiil be deiud within 2 year, believe his words would have’ proved true if 1 had not providentinlly used t remedy now known as W Cure," “Did you make a_chemical anuly the casé of Mr, H. Il Warner some three 20, Doctors” was asked Dr. 5. A. timore, one of the analystss of the te board of health, *Yes, sir,” SWhat did this analysis show you?” YA serions disease of the Kidneys ! “Did you think Mv. Warner conld re- covery'” “No, sir. T did not think it possible.” “Do you know anything about the rem- edy that cured him?" ve chemical s and harmless. » Henion was cured five years ago, and is well and attending to his profes sional duties to-d in _this city, The standing of Dr. Henion, Mr. Warner Dr. Lattimore in the community is b yond question, and the stateménts they make cannot for a moment he doubted. Dr. Henion'’s experience shows that Bright's disease of the kidneys 1s ono of the most deceptive and dangerous of all diseases, and 1t is exceedingly common, but that it can be cared if taken in time. Mict- n,” he said thy indic in I'ne dney rike ter- But Ldid When, how- flicnlty 1 anid so did Lo = THE TWO GOVERNORS. A Classic Tale of the Good Old in North Carolina, Richmond Reformer: A great years ago the governor of North Car received a friendly visit from the gov- rnor of South Cavolina. After a real North Carvolina dinner of bacon and yams, the two governor's lit pipes and sat in the shude with ad emijohn of real North corn whisky copper-distille easy reach The wis nof up about those governor Sy North Caraling St histor in the homely but vigorous language of his section *There they sot and smoked, and sot and smoked, every ance and a_while taking v anutual pull at the demijohn with the aid of the gourd, wi used a5 n goblet. The - conver- Carolinn within iing stuck A demucrati analyzed it and find | and | nes | wany | i | of the back yeranda, | FURNITURE, One of the Best and Lay GEO. BURK REFERENCI ney, Neb, Natlonal Bank, Omahia, Neb. ation between the two governors on the subject of urpentine i rice, the staples of their respeetive states, and the further they get into the subject the lower down they get into the jig, and the lower down they get into the Jug the dryer the governor ot South Car- olina got, Who wis a square dvinker and A warm man, with about a miliion pores ry square inch of his hide, which enabled him to histe in a likely e of corn juice, or other e, and keep careas time well ventil nd generally ysready for more, while the governor of North Caro lina was 0 more cautious drinker, but was mighty sure to strike bottom at rout the twelith drink, like as if nature I measured him by the gourdful, Well, they sot and smoked and argued, and the. governor of North Carolind was as hospitable as any real southern gentleman could be, for he ladled out the whiskey in the most libe man- ner, being paviicular to give his dietin- cuished guest three drinks to his one, and gauging his own drinks with great f he didn’t he might d of his argument, and the It run dry before the gover- nor of South Carolina should be ready to dust out for howe, m which case it would look like he had not properly obscrved the laws of hospitality, which wounld have been a self-inflicted thorn in his side for years to come, and no amount of apolo- gy could e his mind or enable him to feel warranted in showing his counte. nance to his fellowmen, espeei in his home district, where for generations it had been a | main point with every gentleman to keep his visitor well supplied with creature comforts, and to hand him a 2ood gourdful as a stirrup-cup when about to make his departure for the ho- som of his fumily. Singular to relate, the cantiousness’ manifested by the go ernor of North Carolina was of no for at one and the same time_ the wentdry, and the governor of North € olina, much to his “subsequent mortifi tion, when he learifed the fact afterward, dropped off into a quict sleep, while the governor of South Carolina continued to keep on with his argument, holding the empty gourd in his haud in close contigu- ! ousness to the demijohn, and wondering at the appa :nt-mindedness of his litherto attentive host to whom, after a minute and a half of painful silence, he | made use of but one remark: “Governor, don’t you think its o long time between drinks ¥ The remark v overl corge, body servant of the governor of orth Garoling, who, knowing that there something wrong, took to the woods, cere he remained in- seclusion for three | but the governor of South € 1l receiving no reply from the governor of | North Carolina, monnted his horse and | vode sadly homeward with an irvepress- ible feeling at his heart that there was coming to be a hollowness in friendship and that human nature was in iger of driffing into a condition of chaotiz mockery.” —— w When Baby was sick, wo gave her Cartoria, ‘When sho was a CLild, she cried for Castoris, ‘Whon she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, Wiien she had Childsen, she gave tham Castoris, e [ been o real estate hoom in a within the last six months sed 100 per eent in value | rd of $150,000 has been in the inst month for There west Austrs Land his ineres 1round. Upy nt to Sydney inyestment Railway Time Table OMAHA, The following 1s the time of arrval and de. parture of trains by Centrul Standurd time the docal depois, Trains o C., St P., M. & O. urrivo and dopurt f epot, cornor | of Mth and Webster st ainson the B, & M., Cy B, &Q, unid K L& B from the ' &M, depoti all othiers'from the Union Pacifio dépot. i BRIDGE TRAL o trafng wii leave 11, 15 10:00 Brid . dopor a6 W11 b ey sl B10: LINES, f trains from tho Bluus: Arvival and denaric i-for dopot at Coune YO CHICAGO & NOLTUWEST Mail und Express, 7:00 . JAceommodation 420 CHIEAGO & 1OUK ISLAND, Mail wnd Expross Accommodution Expross CHICAGO, MILWAUKER & 81 FALL 110 4. M Ml wnd 00 9P, ;5 9:19 A, CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUING AN Mait and Express 6:20 p, O B . 9115 Al A WABARH, ¥1. LOULS & PACFIC, cal. St Louis Express Locil vunsfer8t. Louis kx Transfor CITY, B JOE & COUNCIL BIUEES. Aluilund Express 7 Expross O15 ¥O01Y & PACIHC ..Bioux City Matl Bt 1l EXpro WESTWALRD. I EXpress Denver Expr 0% REP. VALLE Muil wnd Ex 1. & M. IN Ml and ¥, Nixhi Exjres ARBIVE, 9l A, 15 p. FRTOR KAN AN 1 1034 SOUTHWA D, SOURL PACHL bay Bxpross aht Expres NI & '’ Plaftsonth NORTHWARD, g joux ity ¥ (it A ¥A M1 | winl seave s 20:45--10:i 1esve Stock Y ws . 12:00-] 20~ (34 i, NOTE=A (ruins ity Iy except Suiday; | . daily except Seturdiy, D, didly 3cobt Most | dav, i inlly | 4 d by | 7 TEINS CHEAPEST PLACE IN OMAIIA TO BUY BABY CARRIAGES, Et. IS AT DEWEY & STONE'S est Stoclks in the U.S. to Select from. » Mannger, A STANDARD MEDICAL WORK UNION STOCK YARDS, OMAHA, NEB. Si—Merchants and Farmers' Bank, David City, Neb., Kearnoy National Bank,Kea r Columbus State Bank, Columbus, Neb.i MoDonuld's Bank, North Platto, Neb, Omaba Will pay customers’ draft with bill of 1nding nttached, for two-thirds valuo of stook. No Stairs to Climb Elegant Passenger Elevator, M. BURKE & SONS, LIVE STOCK COMMISSION MERCHANTS, FOR YOUNG AND MIDDLE-AGED MEN. | ONLY $1 u TRATIY Yo oMALL, ¥ TIALD. A Great Medien) Work on Manhood. Fxhausted Vitality, Nervous and Physioal Dehility Promature Deely miseries resulting only. Send now. ton mine Men Parker, N o A book for Ttcontning A Man, m i ovory m: reors af Youth, and e L full @it waarantoed o baw finar. S by il 11 M o p i merinl awarded mechnic and profes: country for §2.5% ¥ instance. tion, 1o 1ho | Priv samble, s, @ anthor by tho Na A. V. Dissoll, ‘273 Of the Fourd tho roudor i rot 165600 0 Lig2 13 Worth moro to tho voung and ot men ot this. soneration thin all thagold oa 0f Calif and the sil LA Ts snnorh and mastorl ous und Addrogs tho Poabody N No. § Buliinel stroot, on all di nd roo rimines of Nevada ks and qumpl 1hopos of any ily wrocked Manchester 18 0f greater value than ull the od in this country for the past titution physical debility. dical institute. Cuses req sinnto Avalcians i ape Ing skl tront- Detroit. Kreo . or Dr W, H. 0ston, Miss. .who ray 11 nd oxpi I o bnf- . Such casfully without an' instance of fuilure. tion Omshin Boe. DRUMKENNESS Or the Lignor siabit, Positively Cured by Haines Adn * Golden Speci Tt cau he given in a cup of coif the barml, cur &0 aleobolic wreck. sands of cases has followed. im f L i the *knowled, and It pregnated with he person tak eilect . pernan att inevery instan never faiis, The the Specilic, it beea istering Dr. tic. T tew withouy {sabsolutely tand specdy 1t I8 s moderate drinker OF It has been give in thous perfect cure ystem once omes an uiter impossibility for the liquor appetite to exist. FOR SALE BY FOLLOWING DRUGGISTS: KUHN & CO., Cor. 15th and Donglay, nnd ing Stw., Omuha, Nel A Call or writo for pamphlet o 151h & Cu D, FOSTE & BRO, Council aini Blafy, Towa. ng Lundreds 11 e best women and mien from itrv. YROVALPILLS “CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH."” e Original nnd O R Between Antwer 04N, el Mail, suil LY, nou D, n; Took Ly miil, KEALE. TE TAE BIC AL GO B U FFALOMNY Red Star Line | Carrying thel v Royal and U ing every Saturda &N A Quick, Parman nited States ay 2w York T0 THE RHINE, GERMANY, ITALY, HOL- LAND AND FRANCE. Salon from $00 to §100. Excursio §11010 §18). Sccond Cabim 530, PHss $0, Wri Floernge ght & Sons, (i New York. Omabia, Nobraska, I &P, ticket ngent. it neral HANRY DEUSL, ani 1. Moores, W Petor Bt, L. Hou 1o thut wor Ao eral fnve ply You are allowed a freot; of 1 i trate dres. H. W H ho Culigraph is n bow you K in 3 (hrce 1% 10 11 S 2 CYIT S pu aro wlovied a A parn i 12 VOL turns oif 2ICHELTEO. /- MACHI v y displa iy 3 n poL r invontion ain nnd e of dear Il but twic 108 does 1o i it e s ind PE, O v wid W rwood & bost) tor o hand, ¢ RS $1 cach, s the pon, uitord w0 do has 5o less hand, cr sayod o a8 much (it easily © 15 el and it gives yoirseve s 5 divil 1 s on your: u, Neb,, siern Towa, all kinds of IRV GRS DEBILITATED M ofthirty days of the uso and pers tality and <" A1s0 for ha 105 i valch, VigoR, K 13 I b tar o o b bl OIAHA, NEBRASKA. wpila ay 1, W. Yar AL Tovz A V. Motsk, A 18865 ident. ALIN, Vice | H, 5, 1t D Lews Touzaras, BANKING OFFICE: 11 IRON BANK, o'\ General Lunuid and Faren 3 Business $250,000 26,000 Yreside s, Cashioy, Jou § COLLINg, 5. Reg ol e cotri Bus: 2 ‘Nebraska National Bank