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STRICTLY PURE IT CONTAINS NO OPIUM IN ANY FORM IN THREE SIZE BOTTLES. PRICE 25 CENTS, 50 CENTS, AND $1 PERBOTTLE 25CEN | BOTTLESs are put up for the a commodation of all who desire & goo and low priced Cough, Cold andCroupRemedy THOSE DI LRING A REMEDY FOI CONSUMPTION ARY LUNG DISEASE., Bhould secure the large $1 bottles. Diroction accompanying each bottlo. Sold by-all Medicine Dealers. DOCTOR WHITTIER 817 St. CharlesSt., St. Louis, Mo. A veguiar gradunts enguged (n the s nd Wioow Dy ‘ovher Phyai Fecldents \oid tions o Blood Polsoning, old Sol aralieled Sudeous ikoting prinelyien Hatuy: Privet] Disi ising from Indiscretion, Expost or Indulgence, which produse some o debility, dimoew of Fmaneul'y eured., o vealed envelope, ‘freeto any addre Becor by mai rec, Invitod and stiletly A Positive Written Guarantee gir able case, Medicin sent every vhere Ly mall or expres MARRIACE CUIDE, 260 PAES, FINE PLATES, Bindlog,sénied ur 60, 1n |oieg ‘e pletures, beu Lo 11T : Articien on £ ofreney. 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Tam a native of Eng that country 1 contracted poison, as un out Englaad, hut was not cured. o8t ndnizing pains in my bon, ered with sorcs ali_over my body and limbs suffor and was co Finally [ complotely lost. all' hopo in that coun: for America, nnd was treated g ry, i £ Rocsevelt in this Physlcl wiih the hospituls. 1 saw th and 1 nined to givo it a trial. s entirely, was In my e New York City, June 1 vell us 1 eve Frep HALFORD, In March of lnst year (1884), T contracted blood avannah, G, ut the time, poison, and being in tul th od very much e time, 1 did not get wi ment th means. 1 Swift's for trentment. nor was I cured b; have now tuken seven bot cific and am sound and well, dove the poison out through boils on the skin, DAN LeARY, Jersey City,N. J., Aug. 7, 3d Bt A FINE LINE Ox Pianos and Digans —AT— WOODBRIDGE BROS’ MUSIC HOUSE OMAHA, NEBRASKA. 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It Lins been glyen 1o thoti 0wads of cases, and I every instance a perfect cure has followed, It ne r tails The system ouce ed with the Specific, It becomes an utter Lmpossibility {or the Hquor appetite (o exist, FOR SALE BY FOLLOWING DRUGGISTS: KUHN & €O, Cor, 15th and Denglas, nnd ‘uming Stw., Omukia, Neb, Council Blufty, Lowa, or pamphiet containing Lundreds ) Uhe be L Women and imen from untrv. clagnt cloth and glit land, and while T was in a terrible blood for two years was under treatment bor patient at Nottinghum Hospital, I , 08 Wil as by a prominent # in New York having no conncetion ri's Specific, 1 took six T can sny with great joy that they 1 am a3 sound and om_rheumatism at tho | under the trent- any of the usunl 3 Co., Drawer 5, Atlanta, NITRVOUTS DEBILITATED A ved a free triad of thirty days of the use } ¥ou are all ‘of Dr. Dye's Colebrated Voltaie Telt with Blanhood, and all kindred troutles. Also hood ruaranteed. No risk 48 in. in scaled envelope matl rred fre. fruted punshle o VOLTAIC BELT CU,, Marsball, Mick Ladies Do you want a pure, bloom« ing Complexion? 1f so, a few applications of Hagan’s MAGNOLIA BALM will grat- ify you to your heart’s con- tent. It does away with Sal- lowness, Redness, Pimples, Blotches, and all diseases an: imperfections of the skin, It overcomesthe flushed appear- ance of heat, fatigue and ex- citement. 1t makes a lady of I'HIRTY appear but TWEN. TY ; andso natural, gradual, and perfect are its effeets, that it is impossible to doteet its application, nsory” Appllances, for the speedy relief and pen Btnen oub ot Moot el 1ol S Sl Rty Gt uicriisiases, Complate restoration ta Healdh, Vi, ox wared, i THE EVILS OF SIBERIA, The Remarkable Experience of a Prussian Novelist, A Curions and eresting Analysis of the Causes of Crime-—-Death of a Oonvict, A correspondent of the San Francisco Chroniele, writing from London says: The Rusgian government never intend- ed, as was explained in my last letter, to execute the novelist Dostojevsk, his companions. The whole affa sentence, the scaffold, the firing ) and the referees—had been arra not rehearsed, beforehand and simply a farce. But how hideously cruel! One of the victims, as I have al ready mentioned, went mad and mained mad all his life long. [t is curi ous question whether it would be mor trying to a man's ner and men equilibrium to be told suddenly—in the midst of his ordi y occupations and when he was expeeting nothing less— that he must die within an hour; or, after being imprisoned, tried, sentenced and led to the place of exceution and seen death staring him in the face, to hear t he W to live. A curious question, but unanswerable, s by somebody who has undergone both these ordeals, and I never heard of anybody who had. One man’s experience, morc- over, would not settle the point. Much would depend on time, circumstances cter, 00D OUT OF EVIL. Dostojevsky was always of the opinion at his' imprisonment, trial, alm ex seution, and subsequent transportation ved his reason. Owing to puv.-rxly. anxiety, composition under difticulties, and probably want of suffi- cient nourishing food, his nervous sys- tem had become so thoroughly unstrung, was €0 much troubled with imagi adies and what he ealled *‘mysti fears,” that only the shock caused by his rrest and the events which followed prevented him from sinking into & con- dition of chronic insanity. ~ At any rat Dostojevsky thought so.” It must, how- ever, be admitted that on most men the suflerings he endured would have have a precisely opposite effect—dri utterly mad. And he did bly. Penal servitude in Siber time, was probably one of tl punishments a man could undergo and ive. Dostojevsky had four years of it. Yet hard as was the labor, cruel the dis cipline, and rude the climate, what troubled him most was never to be alone. He was always under somebody's cye; even when he was in his cell at night “ho could never be sure, from one moment to another, that the sentinel on duty or one of the wardens was not watching him through the peep-hole made in the door for that purpose. Another troubl almost at, sometimes he felt iteven more ki 1s the denial of all ties for w te had things to say that he burned to put down, \fi the use of his pen would have been not a di traction only, but an unspe Wble —a pleasure that would have made I forget that he was a prisoner in bonds. 10US MAN. t some of our r m lers to Dostojevsky was o man of All 5 strong religious fecling. if they b distinet pose i his wor igious pu ¥ 2 man whose sympatl g and pity for the soor had a distinetly religious source, The only book he saw during his penal servitude was a copy of the Gospels. For four years it never ‘left his pillow. He read it every night by the dim light of the dormitory lantern; he taught othe ud it, and while his comrades slept ound in its pages that which fortitied his moral nature and gave him cour: and strength to bear the heavy cross tl as laid upon him. He Ful it all down rward, told the story of | in a book 'to which he “g: significant title of “Memories of House.” But he could_not write explic- itly of himself or deseribe his own expe- riences exactly as they oceurred. That would not have been allowed. His hook had to run the gauntlet of a sev 1 sorship, and at the period in question the very fact of there being political prison- ers” was officially ignored. The mere mention of such a thing in a hook would have caused its proscription, and, not improbably, the punishment of its author, AN INGENIOUS DEVICE To evade this difliculty and to be ena- bled to poit lerings of an edu- ted man in n bagnio, Dosto- jevsky imagined a hero, a certain Ale ander Goriatchnikofl, noble and instruc: ed, honest sted, sentenced to ten years' pen ade for killing his wife in a fit of jealousy —justifiable jeal- ousy—for like the wons parable, she'was taken in the very act. By this pedient the author has attained his ob- jeet, which is to describe the punishment that may be inflicted on & man who, ex- cept oné venal fault, had done wrong. Ile is put in irons, sent with a chain-gang to Siberia, thrust into a bari guarded by soldiers, and peopled with 300 or 400 malefactors from every part of the vast Empire of the Night—Muscovites mainly but with a_sprinkling of Tar Kerg- hiz, Poles, Jews and ¢ Dur- ing ten years of wear 1labor Goriatehnikot's (Dostojevsky’s) sole dis- traction was to observe these poor devils and study their characters. From the ons thus made have resulted a . onderful and incomps pycholo studies, all neces the durker side of human natu; astudy could only be successfully at- tempted, by one who, like Dostojevsky, had been o denizen of the hell which ho deseribes; like him, gifted with both sym- yathy and insight, und who, forgetiing ]m amoment the faults of his fellow- suflerers, could look for that divine spark which is never wholly absent from a hu- man soul, even the most degraded. Some of the convicts told them their story, and soveral of them, besides being exquisitely pathetie, are masterpieces of dramatic narrauon, IMPULSIVE CRIMES, Dostojevsky found that more of the erimes commitied by these unfortunate: (as he always calls them) were alway due to that excess of impulse which seem to be more common to lllm Russian char- acter than to any other, and for which the Russian language hus a special word, qtchainia. It signifies the morbid im- pulse that most people do some desper- ate and insensate deed: ast them- selves down from a preecipice,to throw themsclves under the wheels of a loco- motive, to commit murder or to take their own lives, 1tisan impulse which the emotional Slays tind less easy to re sist than people of the Ar sixon and ample of this Teutonic races. As an e tendency, Dostojevsky tells us the fol- lowing story, which he assures us isa sober fact; ~'Two peasants, men of ma- tu old friends and quite sober, ar- rived one evening at an inn, took tea to- gother, and asked for a_room in which they might pass the night. One of them noticed that his companion had a new watch and chain, the latter ornamented with glass pearls, He a decent, honest low, and for his condition, in e umstanc But the watch and chain pleased him so much that he felt t he must have them at whatever cost The impulse though he knew it w wicked, horrible, mad even, he found it impossible tofresist. 8o he took a knife, and when s friend’s back was turned approached hing stealthly from behind, and raising his eyes to Heaven, while b wade the, sign of the cross ‘and: mur Lofd, purdon e for the merils of Christ,”" gave his vietim the death- stroke and took the watch. A CONVICT'S DEATH. One of the most remarkable incidents of Dostojevsky's prison life was the death of a convict, told with wonderful power and realistic force. The man’s name was Mikhalloff. He died afternoon, on a frosty, ght winter's day. *‘The sun, I remember, was throw- ing his oblique rays through the grimy little windows of onr hospital chamber The luminous flood nurvh straight down on the dying man’s bed. He died uncon scions and painfully. The agony was long; it lasted several hours without br From the bre k of day he had 1 imable to recognize those who came ar him. They tried to procure him some relief, for they saw that he suffered much. He breathed hardly, deeply and with a rattle. His chest labored as if he wanted air. He threw off the coverlet, then his clothes; tricd to tear off his shirt, as if he conld no longer bear its weight, Those about him came to his help and took the garment away. It w pitiful sight, that long, lean body, the legs and arms shrunken to the very bones, and the ribs standing out in relief like those of skeleton. On all this body there wer but two things, a wooden cross and iron chains, It looked as if tl tenuated feet might now cnsily be slinped out of the fetters. For half an hour before his death there was deep silence 1n ourroom; we spoke only in whispers. Those who walked stepped sottly. The convicts spoke little, and about indifferent things, from time to time stealing glances at the dying man, who rattled more and more. Toward the end his wandering and un- certain hand felt for the little cross, as if that also was too heavy for him. The; took it away, and ten minutes afterwarc he dicd. AN IMPRESSIV “Then we knocke formed the sentinel. Tooked stupidly the sanitary ofticer, He comes, sees thy the man is Teally dead, and after some other formalitics the guard is summoned. In the meantime one of the convicts sug- gests in a whisper_that it would be well to close the eyes of the defunct. This is done and the cross is put back in its place The face hardened; a ray of light played on it; the mouth was haif open; two rows of young, white teeth shone between the thin lips, drawn back to the gums. At last :l‘mn red the under officer of the guard with helmet and arms, followed by two inspectors. He wentslowly forward, regarding doubtfully the conviets who crowded around him. Whe: the body he stopped suddenly, as if he were fastened to the floor. He scemed fright- ened, The sight of that dried-up body, naked and fettered, overpow d The under oflicer undid his chest-str: doffed his helmet and made the the cross. He was a veteran, gray, diseiplined A TOUCH OF NATURE. “Iremember that at this moment the white head of old Tchekounof was close to that of the under oflic Tehekounof watched the man with strange attention, looking into the whites of h and regarding his every gesture. Their ey met, and all at once Tehekounof’s lowe lip began to trembl the convict, NE. y door and in- A warder came in, le, and pointing to the dead, murmured as hé turned aw ““‘He had’a mother—he, too.’ “The words pierced me like Why did he say them? How came they to his mind? "* * * They raised the body; the inspectors took up the camp- bed on which 1t lay. The bruised straw crackled, the chains clanked on They lifted them up and e the corpse. traightway talk umed, became even noisy the under o . NOW outsic ridor, send somebody for the black: He was wanted to take the ivons off’ the dead man. Terrible things usea to happen in the southern slave s and_ Mrs. Stowe’s Incle Tom’s Cabin’’ thrilled the world with horror, but the ho deseribed in that book pale into insignificance when compared with the horrors which not very long ago were of daily occurrence in ‘the ‘J:u'k empire of the and which, I greatly , come to pass even yet A Wise Man Paid in His Own Coi Chieago Herald: 1 tell you. sir, it is xelaimed the n arrow. s idand anoutrage,” t assenger in the smoking car, with a atisfied look at the wd which had gathered to li centlemen,” he went on, “the ris a cheat. Itis worth on to-day. And the government which tries topalmoff on the people an untrust- worthy, short dollar, 1s not worthy popu- lar confidence. Our statesmen know that the silver dollar is worth only 80 cents, and yet they donot give us any relief. What kind of a government is_it, gentle- men, which upholds afalse coin? Would we ride on a railroad which would scll us 800-mile tickets for 1,000-mile tickets? Would we buycoffee of a grocer who gave us only thirteen ounc to the pound? Certainly not, And this fact this 80-cent value of the silyer dol known to all men. Then why not eradi- cate the value at once? Here, boy, giv me a morning paper.’ And the wise man who loved the sound of his own voice herenpon hand out a_ silyer dollar. The train boy gave him his paper change and started off, “Hore, boy,” exelaim eagerly, *you haven’t change “Yo the wise party, ven me enongh I have, too," retorted the youtl “count it over and see if there isn’t 75 cents ther Seventy-five and fiv ak ecighty, you know, ch, boss?” Buf, you you oundrel, T gave you a silver “dol—a I—run along, you young rascal. tlemen, the reform of our monet ing evil of the day. If we are frecmen w 11 not sub- mit to these wrongs any longer. We must rouse and defend ourselves—that's ’\\'l ve must do, con-demn the blasted u Booth's Ba A Newport, R. T den, the summer res Booth, the actor, is for It is situ- ated on Indiun avenue and commands a fine view of the Atlantie, and has been made a most charming spot. Mr. Booth has expended lewuvu?l“ 000 and §50,- He has had by and batl ing-houses erected and a steam ongine to pump water up into his house and it is provided with the most thoroughly complete modern arrangements, The are about eleven acres of the ground. Mr, Booth's friends say that he has made pro- fossional engagements which will take him away for soveral y He is going to the Pacifio slope,and thence to London and Berlin, and finally will make a long professional visit to Australin. Mr, Booth offered to lend the place to_his danghter, but she has no ‘desire for it, and he has determined to get rid of it. He will let the s until'he can find & purchaser. ul says: “Booth- of Edwin Friends of Booth say he has ne comfortable since he' came here, feeling the loss of society, — e AnOpening for the Boy. Chicago Herald: ‘“‘Yes, that boy of mine is & smart lad,” said a proud pa on an east-bound train, pointing to his six- year-old heir; “I'm taking him down to Boston, where I think he will find an opening. 1 helieve there’s a big chance for him ther “What mak “Why I says to him, ‘Johnny, who is the smartest man in the | world:" ' I thought ho would say his papa, but he didu't. He repliod: ‘I am, and don't you forget it." Now I'm taking him down to Boston, where he'll have a row up in the direction his Fhat boy was designed by nature Joseph. Cook’s suceessor, and 1 don't believe in flying m the fuce of Providence,” at the body and went for TIGATS THE CORRECT THINC. Manager l‘mg‘uh Thinks It's the Natural Dress) For Women. Why Hile the Beautiful?—Morality | in the Boxes—=Wives and Other Wives Hitkbands—Gossip Anput the Ballet. U — ““The stage {lidn’t make me immoral, anyway,” said Manager . Henr French, of the Grand Opera honse, whe a New York Herald reporter asked him for his views on the topic thatis at pre- sent exciting much interest in theatrieal circles, and quite as much general com- ment, He said it with a blandness that very refroshing. Then he prearranged his buttonhole bouquet, wiped his gold-rimmed e glasses and looked somewhat interested- ly toward a knot of pretty girls who were picking their way scross Union square, . “You see,” he continued, “I have heard that the stage is yvery, very im moral, but I don’t know about it person- was ally. 1t there is any wickedness there I it to keep out of it. It doesn’t scem like wickedness to me, though. Perhaps that is because I was brought up in Paris and got used toitearly. It scems like only a natural thing now for a woman to dress n tights." “It never strikes you s immodest?" “Why, no I suppose that they do earry it a little too far when they dis- pense with trunks, but it don't make me blush and I don’t believe it does most men, They all like it and appreciate it; must have it you know. The dear, good, solid old legitimate is all right and is duly appreciated, but the public want the sauce piquante as well as the roast beefin the drama. A diet without spice is a very tivesome one e Y HIDE THE BEAUTIFUL? “You don't think, then, that the spice is destroying the sense of co “Notatall. The public h educated up to tights. They in an artistic | enees any immo effects nting that shows women in tights in the backgronnd, ana that's all a s picture is. After all, w is it that is shown? One woman is just like ences, the female another, with a few trifling diflc ln-rhu]u form i We all know what , and if it is 2 beautiful thing wh rit up? There isa very little indi hty associated in the exhibition of a lot of nude women. I have got a better opinion of the people of New York than to suppose thi¥t they go to the burlesques and comic operas o See nakedness sim- ply because it s nakednes HE LIKE T, T00. t dod the) for? A liter: “Well, no. They go to langh. These things are very fanny. Some of the too, are verystupid und are duly re deemed by the pretty sights they show. went to sée one awhile ago and immedi- ately went to sleep. When I woke up 1 found a lot of prdity girls in tights on the ing'their ‘heels in the ai One sang ‘I like it, I'do.” So-did 1. Then the girls went off and I went to sleep agaif. I didn’t feel unusnally wicked “after it, either. The sensation mor l'v-wmlt‘lt\llv being hored, sinned inst than ginyging,” said the blase Mr, ench, very there was nothtg: in this naughty enough 16 be entertaining. WY TIGHTS ARE NOT SCANTIE “‘Do likel vou think the ballet 1 to become any scantier than Not in New York. It re worn at all. just so far ched now. can consolo themselyes with that fact, Over in Paris, though, they are ahead of us. Lsaw sorne pl there that would make New York howl if they were produced here. name for them. R Wh They we , that is no awful. But,” and the ecallous manrger sighed despaiingly, v could not’ be put on in New York. The people wouldn’t stand it. They are funny, though. Oh, awful funny WHEN MR, ETS UP “In your experienc tractions cut into legitimate mueh?” “On that subject T am on {he fence. Youseoin my theater we have both, ranging from Shakespearean tragedy down to what are popularly termed leg chorus.” So Idon’t waat o take up cud: i;vlw)nn' ber side, I think es (‘\«'\\ lolding its own ali right, and the stag is in healthy condition as T have vy known it. The people und. appreciate it better and the ent ments are of higher orde turning out better actors than eve d a the business when you come to talk about its morality, understand 1 ) e no personal knowl: edge on the subject. A gr al bigg ficld could be found for that quest than the greenroom offers.’ IMMORALITY IN THE BOXES, “Where? “In the boxes, for not as large asthe g instance, reenroon They are but 1 known, on occasions, more solid, respect- able immorality packed in one of them than you can_ possibly stow away behind the scenes. Every man about town and people who are daccustomed to heing in publie places will tell you that, kye night the audiences present an wwfil showing of wives with other wives® hus- bands. 1t is done openly and regularly, Everybody understands” it and winks auf it, but though they are twice as bad themselves they cant about the loose lives of ‘the women over there behind the footligl NOT I BUT BUSINESS, topic th brought up in,u#'uimu“i n, Mr. French, «s #it changed h ing tone to thay of a fin of native and sforeign plays. matter of business that an) man can see the reason fo managers produce fo has been continued “ithe nse level b Americ: rn plays becan u wded they can do it gheaper and with less ri They can buy, ‘thi American rights to a fo quit ap as they ean a new one from a playwright re. ‘Then it has been tried, got'a repu- to bagk if, and, consequently, not ag mydeh risk in producing it. n by had for the scenery, Gos- Models ! tumes, ete,, ;#.41 covied g less expens ate them, Tliat ?.e wrights stand’ &8 poor a_show, from commereial reasons.” han it would cost to” origin- purely - THE COSTLY DIAMOND, A Prospect That a I Will Be Ievived. National Republican: Alvin Pattoon, | ant, has | the Cincinnati diamond mer been duzzling the eyes of Washingtonians for some time past ‘with his rich wares, Mr. Pattoon showed the reporter the much discussed diamond necklace cons tainng forty-one diamonds, the larg seven carats, in the middle, the nextt six carats ), aud graduated down to one t and a half, being the last dias mond on each side. white, old mine-stones: but most from ey are all fine, some from Ing Brazil, countries which gave us but few dinmonds in our day. The necklace, therefore, w 400 carats, and the dealer estimated it at $10,000) My, Patton always has more orders selves greatly with ornament £11,000 diamond with bought of monds—a st monds stretehe member of cong: is_your favorite game?’ 1 My only gan accept your proposition for 1 surprised that a man in tra the same ehance man is a v take an even chance he bought th land Stanford of di The, the United States at $1,000,000. The liest dinmond is that owned by M Mor; New York, and has been offercd monds? There, it 13 many a year ago, and left ‘Digmonds may be found e are found in the bed of what was like a picee of alum with about it. within, and scems to have a knot in a ) wood, which is softer than the outer cir cles impossible to cut n diamond of g promise bec within it mond is one of long pr: quires the ex as well as mechanism guess gold, orany other metal or ¢ the ha The best we have is the g not st are inferior. A slender, d: calling himself who lias been honi much as though he thought | ionable hotel and cultivated so world quite of M ssreet, where his distinguished appe ance and flow of polite slight G al favorite three w at the W, lor provided fo stumptuous style, of choice vi sidered too iment is it is can't if They can only n disrobing and that point Pradish minded people absolute lieved by the unsuspecting lady and niece. Tl from the Ger and other presents, nor did on account of hi more than r: ON THE have the hghter | i of the His 1 roposed or, und tl they had been coolly o swindled. He oy and an old trunk filled with rubbish of no rstand it and | Jurse | or remittanc Among behind to mourn his departur lor of whom he procured numerous costly suits of ¢ between § and shocmaker: heard { amount, There are several the youth's or ly bolie him some little money, and urr master. a detective has started west to find - A POLITICAL REMINISCENCE How Garfield and Hayes Declined the Cleveland Tines republicans 1 lives of Garfield and Haycs, wh might reasons, and because of some s on the eleven republic: al assembly who not vote for him, and by no ¢ the tim the eleven were won away, but the cight remained firm of power ory Much | why American play- | ccaying Fashion | with houses, Po this were signed the numes of the eight—Gen. J. C R. Conrad of Por honimg, Georg considered it f Guutiewmen than he can fill for diamonds of a spee- ial kind to mateh others, he obtained by continnal seeking. ! They can not ought in the market, but are only “Washington is one ot the greatest places 1 have ever struck,’ said Mr Patton, ‘especially this year, They have turned Washington into the universal resort, and these receptions and lead the ladies to coneern them- Isold an setting the other y to Mrs. Arnot, of Elm: She has fine diamonds, She has au_old pin 100 diamonds in it. Her hushand me a star with fifty dia rin the center and the dia- plong a bar. Arnot is a ess and a bright fellow and He was rather a stranger to me,and when showed him the pin he said: ‘I will you a game of cards for that. What said to him rds is euchre, and 1 1 will play you to be a little de would take that he did as a gentle- id to the hotel man: “T'hat genteel fellow. He will with you.' So he r pin of me. Mrs. Le the largest collection monds on this side of the Atlantic. re valued at $200,000." tton estimates’ the diamonds in r of ¢ he'pin.’ He seemod nd he st Mr, ¥ an, widow of Governor Morgan, of It weighs twenty-two carats, for sale at $36,000. is the great field now for dia- “Wh “The Afri an field back of Cape Nu d, Humboldt passed ¢ the sign_ . The between clifts, There is no suc diamond known in the trade for e in nature. The word used for diamonds in the rough is bort 1tis a Dutch word. The rough diamond looks little gl Tt is harder on the outsid coro Tike picce of very fi of the wood. Sometimes it is use the Ihe art o is a hard place of cutting the d ctice, and re- ise of cconomy and tasto It_is nearly pure Its origim is wholly a matter of It is as ultimate a thing almost as Alement. It is rbon. dest thing in v mands been found in the “Have any d ited States Noj; nor 1y precious gems whatever. rnet, which is tly a gem, and cven our garnets Mr. Patton drew out of his pockets whild talking, diamonds valued at $70,000. 5 A BOGUS BARON. Philadelphia People Swindled by a Titled Fraud. A Philadelphia special of Feb. VSt rk-complexioned youth, 3aron Hermon von'Ubell, ed by Philadelphia ety for more than a year, and who te of Allan Arthur when 1t's son was at Princeton lel- v one ations.” His rest ereditor: the women who honored by the baron’s attentions. On his arrival he ightecn months ago, he stayed for some weeks at sh- v. Then fashionabl at 1722 Walnut emoved to the Wm, T e with man accent made From that et house. Mr: - his wants in the most and nothing in the way ads and rare wines was con- »od for him. He leome to Amer on ac al serape at hom and desired to live quietly here in Phila’ delphia. His story was® thoroughly be her attentions e of boquets the fact for rhteen months he did not pay one cent board do_anything picion which hie had Ly rece! e difficulty in t, however, on the eve of t to Europe with Mrs. Tay harming niece, proved {o m that he was not at all that he rimed to be, and convineed them that nd unconscionably left about Lp. m., taking rything with him but an' empty box, Ine whatev amounted addition to i for him scv- ing him ber Iong looked bill he hich Mrs 1 Dills, voluntec ding the from Be ) other creditors whom he left AL A tni- il whose bill foots up and $100; numerous hatters mtlemen’s furnish- |l id two or three jewele His tc lebtedness is estimated at somethin, , and when all his ereditors ax m it may reach a still la stories afloat as to gin, the one most general- 1 being that he was valet to the ron Von Ubel, who, on dying, left that he res- ted and adopted the title of his dead Deseriptions of him will be tel- phed to the police of other cities and im, l | Ohio Senatorship. (0.) Letter to New York The talk going on in Columbus about some republican being d United States senator by demo yotes with the aid of anti-Sag sealls an episode in )\ cit 1t have been senator’ by simi menns, but could never have bien pres dent, Tt was in the close and heated contest of 1872, Sherman i rve-election, but, from tion of money question, there w 0 members' of the gener greed that they would would be bound neus decision in his favor. for action approached thre of They held the balance \d the democrats stood ready Sher any republican other than man for whom the eight might east their votes and after the com the following dispatch was s Garfield, congre: Y ou ean be ¢l The night proceding the election et had been made, to Gen member of who was then a ted United States senator to-morrow's eonfercnee by our voles, the aid of the democrats of the two Caseent of Lake, d. . Kirtlund of M H o Pord of Geaw Gage of Paulding. Fulton and Fallis: of Hailt and Chapmun of Cuyahoga nost instantly eame the auswer, shoy ing thut Garfield Lad not hesitated nor a moment L thank you for the offer s@ TEXE CHEATEST PLACEH I OMATITIA TO vi" FURNITURE, BABY GARRIAGES, Etc DEWEY & STONES’ Oneof the Best and Lurgest Stoclks in the v.8 to Select from. No Stairs to Climb. Elegant Passenger Elevator. M. BURKE & SONS, LIVE STOCK COMMISSION MERGHANTS, GEO. BURKE, Manager, UNION STOCK YARDS, OMAHA, NEB. Bank, David City, Neb.: Kaarney Nitfonal Merchants’ and Farmer: 3 McDonaid's Bank, North Columbus State nal Bank, Omaha, Neb. draft with bill of lading attached for two-thirds value of stock. Nebraska National Bank OMAHA, NEBRASKA. Paid up Capital ... Suplus May 1, 1885 . H.W. Yares, Columbus, Nb, kindly made, but I can never consent to be eleeted United States senator by democratie Hayes was then near the close of 0] de for him, but he had He consented firmly and respectfully deelined. said that his relations to Sherman such that, while he would lik tor, he could not for a moment think of An attempt was then ny to unite on Gen. J. Cox, whom the dem- vVice President. HuGues, Cashier, Jonx 8. CoLLINg, EWI1S S. REED, W. V. MowaE, n, while the eighth Cineinnati—c THE IRON BAN. COor. 12th and Farnam Stroets. General Bunking Business Desses ek curen. Trial paoks noted—that were willing to be conside there was a deadlock attitude townrd the majority of the publicans of Ohio wouid have that he would have retired to p on the expiration of h S — Tompkins, M. D., 177 Clinton “*“Dr. WAR| 0. F. DAVIS & CO. Nebraska Land Agency General dealors in Real Estate and Real Estate. y of those insidious Diseases of pinal Cord, where loeal stimulation must be obtained, and where | tions fail, marked retief from GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 1878, BAKER'S Broakfast Cocoa. ranted absolutely pure Cocoa, from which the excess of Oil hus boen removed. 1t han thres timea the strength of Cocon mixed h, Arrowroot or Bugar, {| and is therefore far more economle cal, costing less than one cent & It s deliclous, nourishing, casily digested, and. ed for invalids s well ns for persons in health, rs everywhere. (0., Dorchester, Mass, Railway Time Table bencfitted, by plicing strips of Allcock’s from base of brain to end of spine. all cases of spinal irritation, weakness or nervous prostration, I recommend All- s Porous Plaster Where Engl Red Clifl (Colo.) Sentinel: The follow- of Oroville's Radmirably ad: es house, and t is the only language spoken here, guest using the w root for rotite, swe for drummer, e waited upon by Bufte County’s 601 and glver in which to feave the count s tour for tower, uit, commerei; 11 immediately V. DAKER & Tise following Is tho time of arrival and de- parture of traing by Contral Standard thno at Trains of tho C., St. P, M. & e depot, corner ainson tho B. & - J. & 0. B, irom the, 1l others'from the Union Pacifio BRIDGE TRAINS. Dridge trains wii_leave ( O, arrive und dopi ot 14th and Webste M, C. B &Q. B." & 3. depot: al CAPITAL PRIZE, $150,000. “We (‘;:\I::;:tyx':'x'zl;ll:l'n\‘ hat we supervise the nuge and_control and that the sam y. fairness und in good uuthorizo tho with fuc-simiios its udvertismon Compnny, and inperson the Drawines themse conducted with ho faith toward all purtios, Company to usc of our signatur p. v for Omaha a rdepot ut Council Blums Accommodation 3 & &g & We, tho undersizncd anks and Bankors, will e Muil and Expr e® P terios which way bo prosent 134 OULS & PACIFIO, Pres. Louisiana National Bank. BAMUEL 1. KENNEDY, Pres. State National Bank, AL BALDWIN, Pres. New Orleans National Bank, ENTED ATTRACTION, ALY A MILLION Dis’ LOUISIANA STATE LOTTERY COMPANY. Tncorporated in 1808 for 2 tor Educational and Charital Lund Expross. A part of tho prosent 5 NORTHWAKD, wwnber drawiings will tako place 06 Ouklana Acc 190th Grand Monthly EXTRARDINARY QUARTEALY DRAWING In the Academy of M Tuesdiy, Marel superyison and mahoze Via Pistismouth, Under the persona ment of Gy, G isiana, and ( - i A trains daily xcopt Suturda, 13, duily except Sundays JusAL A, Earcy, of Vi iy exoept Sundspgiy CAPITAL PRIZE $160,000. Notice--Tickets are $I0 only. 2, Tenths, $l- SAND Pitizi oF ARGE PRIZES OF 18 CONDUCTED BY Royal Havana Lottery Drawn at Havana, Cuba, February 13-27, 1886 ° CNMENT INSTITUTION) Tiekets i Kifths APPROXIMATIC OXImation prize Wholes §5; Fractions pro Prizes, amounting to Application for rates to_clubs should he mude only 10 the office of the company in Now Or Subjeet to no mu Iy Lo SHIPSY & )., 1212 Bronds OITENS & 0, 6l : Orders, or Now ¥ er, CUTTEney by express () witids Bt OUF XPEnse) ums of §5 wnd upe a, A. DAUPHIN, Nuw Orleans, La. Or M. ADAUPIHIN, Make P. 0. Money Ordeys payable and adirass vegisicrod it NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL