Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 21, 1886, Page 5

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A SAMPLE JOURNAL SPECIAL. | The Big Blund-,r Mmle by the Lincoln Orzan in Looat Daw THE NEW INSANE HOSPITAL. Notes Abont the State House—Liyely Satdsfaction at Fitzgerald's Blece tion—Three Divorce Cases Started—Other News TFROM TITR NER'S LINCOLN RUREAT.] florts of the republican ma n Lincoln to boom Daw make his departing days a sortof ha ofglory are fairly astonishi times and are made with a disrogard to facts fairly appalling. In Thursday morning™s Jour nul the following b ing dispatch was given & prominent position. It was &pecial dispatch from Norfolk, and pre sumably the special artist there was fol lowing instiuctions Governor Dawes arrived this evening and was received with m enthusia The | military band of Fort Niobrata_was at tho aepot to welecome and © tue governor Wwho o from the depot to his quar ters by a large body of the G. A. R But how differcnt the nctual fa ts in the case, for the governor has not been at Norfolk at all and dispatches of a day later stated that Mr. Dawes was down in Saline county struggling with his backers to fix up the aries so that his politi cal end might be delayed, if possible, for A fow mouths longer, and so that his ar. rangements to keep open house this win- with a stuffed genatorial boom for the entertainment of the legislators who might not be wholly and irre- tiovably lost In fac at the time that the Journal, through lli(lnp'\lvh has the military band and the G. A, R. boys escorting Dawes from the depot at Norfolk amid banne boquets, that functionary v traveler at the depot at_Crete, a hundred and fifty miles aw. Perhaps there was method in this ‘ocating the governor in the midst of an applanding camp-fire for public attention, while the official hi gelf was looking oyer his searitied down in Saline d . veterans at Norfolk, ? nd boquets, would have gone wild over the advent of the governor in their midst, as the dis pateh would make one belie 1 then porhaps they wouldn't from the hari kari time that his backe were ng down in his home county, where is known the best, to keep the people ing en masse and mumifying him ly, the governor would not have rs $plit with the blare of brass bands in any part of the state, with the one exception of the Duchy of Mathew son: STATE 1HOUSE NOTES. Tho board of public lands and build- ings have returned from their inspection visit to the new insane hospital at Nor- folk, and report the building as all under roof aud the finishing work well under way. Under th w the contractor could not draw any puy for work until the roof was on the bui but the samo being completed, 60 per cent of tha contract is now ready to be paid over to him. The contract price of the asylum was §64,000, exclusive of steam Leating and pluinbing, The rumc llIMulhmu'u t tho insane Wospital here has not been fe out, and neither the board or others expect to facts, for no castie in feudal time was moro vigorously guarded or Kuwvwml of more state see than the iuthewson eastle where the king stands ready to behead an insurgent on the shortest possible notice. Among the visitors at the eapital build- ing yesterday we Attorney General Dillworth, of Hastings, and Mayor Scott, of York. General Dillworth was inter- viewing Attorney General Lecse on wat- ters of business. Captain G. P. Winterstein, doputy %’x“l e, 18 m-mtm ‘the soldicrs’ i» ot Notfol }*”[‘ ent_ot he () hio veterand in Neb) . Mr. Winterstein is attempting to perfect the roster and reach old Ohio veterans at this reunion who have never attended the state gatherings. Major Franklin, of the secrotary’s of- returned yosterday from Kausas City, where he accompanied Mrs. Frank- lin‘and the children who have gone to the old Kentucky home on amonth’s ents were received inio the 10 asylum in the lust two days, om different points in the state. E OMAHA CORRUGATED IRON COMPAN have filed their articles of incorporation with the secretary of state, C: 1 stock $30,000 i shares of $100 same may be increased to $50,000 by a two-thirds vote of the stockholders. The object of the corporation shall be the manufacture of corrugated iron for building purposes. The parties whose names are subscribed to the_artic "H. T A The election of John k/m-rnld of this city, to the presidency of Iua Irisn Na- tional league of Ameriea, is recarved with lively satisfaction b; l.hu many friends of "Mr. Fil rald his home eity, and it is probable that lhey will ex- press their septiments of satisfaction in a public reception upon his return to Lin. coln. Mr. Fitzgerald is known by the people of Lincoln to be one of the most open-handed, thoroughly in earnest men in this country on the question of Irish solf government and Lincoin people are proud to have their city headquarters for the league in America. BUEAKING THE RECORDS. Yesterday three cases were filed with the clerk of the district court for divor and the roputation Lancaster county has even as being prolific in legal separa- tions promises to be maintained st the next sitting of the eourt. One of the Vs suflerings. another rings, and the other peti- tionis made by a woman, NUMBER ONE is & ease brought by Rebecea Klock- meyer against Heo Klookmeyer, and the * petition r th beces was & widow vroperty; that she married a p and that in the years that they have lived together it has n a oase of her money and her labor that has supported them. In the languago of the petition, also, it is related thut a few months after marringe the plaintiff found that instead of having for a husband an humble follower of the meek and lowly Nazarene, that she had an ugly, abusivé man, whose abuse drove her children from home and has made life to her a burden. Therefore, she prays to be released from matrimony and o have the property. CASE NUMBER TWO is brought by Anna Fries against John Fries, whom it would seem are parties from Pawnee county, and the plaintiff re- ites that she has not been supported for fifteen months and that hor husband re- fuses to live with her and says he loves hor not. The plantft alleges that the defendunt has eleven thousand dollars worth of land in Pawnee county, and she asks the court, in addition to a divoree, that she be granted her rightful share in these premises. THE THIRD CASE is one whersin the man recites the harrowing faot that he is the abused and his wife 1s the }rg peive party, This is the ease of ugh Blaney against Mary Blaney. The lun vrl.m.h is drawn “t reads like -mluu novel and almost brings tears o the eyes i the reading, sets up ex- ATL'RDAY treme PY"I(\'V‘ and v’w nan mrr‘l\l'l\‘! | that his wife, with_others, have repeat | edly called him a he aaid he ¢ to | bein the pen with . the other convicts bas the 1 to shoot and poison him, | ¢+ nd has had him (ried for aduliery at | ch time she assaulted bim 10 open tand had to be taken in chargo by evidently a surc ca Y NF strength outs rters, and while Lincoln pol iticians anticipate an increased vote for that party seem to_fear results for adjourn it amipaigh in - the way troots that o Journal com candidate for the sta nate. bo so there will be a still greater ng time at the coming of the pri | maries U'he police locked m_the cooler yoster: day a chap charged with stealing some fifteen thon: rars The officers were getting out search warrants after the arrest to recover the goods » is a noticeable improvement," said a Lineoln architect, “in buildix the present year, and 'you can find scarcely a pusiness building in course of constriiction but that 18 being run up to three or four stories. The day past for two-story buildings i Lincoin In police” cour! yesterday throe ine- briates were on the docket for trial. One paid out and two were committed. Haverly’s minstrels played to a packed house in this city last night—the opening of the season at the opera hous, 3. B. Chase, J. 8. Kittle, C. W, Harvey, W.'D. Bowen and J. H. Betzer, of the Blade, were Seward people in Lincoln yesterday AT LINCOLN HOTELS yesterday might be found the following George W. Sprague, York; H. Cotter, Wahoo: W. H. ¥ . J. T. Price, C. 0. Bates, Beatrice; T. M. Hopwood, Holdrege; A T Dunbar; Johu Clement, ' Elmwood Dobbins, Omaha; W. P, Saunders, Beatrice, invalid's Hotel and Surgical Institute This widely cclebrated nstitution, located at Buftalo, N. Y., is organized with o full staff of cighteen experienced and skillful Physiciins and Surgeon constituting the most complete org tion of medical and surgical in America, for the treatment of all chronic discases, whether requiring medieal or surgical means for their cure. Marve ous success has been achieved in the cure of nH- wsal, throat and lung di s, i ses of the S, ases, dis ses peeulinr v aints und skin dis algia, nervous debility, phralyms, epilepsy (fits), epermator impotency and Kindred ctions. Thousands are cured at th homes through correspondence. Tk cure of the worst ruptures, pile tumor: icocele, hydrocele and strictures is guaranteed, with only a short residenc at the institution. Send 10 cents in stamps for the Invalid’s Guide-Book (168 pages), which fil\u! all particulars” Ad- dress World's Dispensary Medical Asso- ciation. Buflulo, Ny — A story 15 told of a young girl who has v company in the person of a young man who is forever and forever a-Kissing her, likes n share of this sort of weetments, but quict frequently palls on her tasto. He invited Bor %o riaé tho other ight night, and she accepted, fully reali that she would be made the target of no end of osculatory practice. Out on the road, in the moonlight, the young man handed her the reins, placed his arms about her vaist and thén drew near to her. She said nothing, Handing back the lines, from somewhere beneath bher wrap, she drew out a base ball catcher's mua strapped itto her face and reached out for the lines, . The most stubborn and distressing cases of dyspepsinyield to the regulate ing and toning influences of Hood's Sar- saparilla, Try it. e L ‘The girl being absent, the lady answered the door bell. She was ‘xccm(u«l h) an embarrassed looking man, thus: ** cuse me, madam, but Lo come for your remams.’ It was the swill merchant. This is alleged to have happened in Bos- ton St. Jacob,s Oil is the only remedy of the kind used by athletes when in train- ing. e The bath in which the infamous Marat was when Charlotte Corday rid the world of him has been sold by ‘a priest of the diocese of Vannes to a Paris wax works showman. The price was $1,000, whic s devoted to the uscs of a religious Swift, sure, pleasant, pure— Red Star Cough Car ¢ ——— The natural gas interests Miami county, Kan., bave received great impetus within the past few days, and great envhu; n has been created )y § z flow of gas in the new well of the Paola Gas company, at a depth of 850 feet. The company has three wells connected with the city by a vipe line for some time, and the new well gives them » volumé suflicient for all pucposes of light aod ' fucl for domes- tic and manufacturing purposes, Two other companies have been organized, who will proceed immediately to sink wells in the city limits, and, 1f necessary, will go to a depth of 1,500 10 2,500 feet. -~ Physicians in(unu us llml Rbeumatism is produced by the presence, in the blood, of certain irritating acids developed 1n the stomach, and taken up hy the absor- bents. Dr.dJ. H. McLean's Liver and Kidnoy balm will eradicate the poison from the blood, and cure rheumatism. $1,00 per bottle. ———— At Valeartier, Canada, on Friday, a blazing meteor, probably ' ten feet i eir- oumference, descended from the sky. After touching the earth it assumed a strange appearance, oreating terror in the minds of the country people, many of them conjuring up the worst fears and looking t.,rwmA( to the speedy dissolution of the universe. Just previous to this oc- currence the sy lowered and the heasts of the field sent up distressing cries, bringing credulons persous readily to their knees in a supplicating postura. Within the last few days the lightning has boen very severe, and earthquake shooks have been frequent. e D Kirk's German Pile Olncunent Sure eure for bind, bleeding, and itching Piles. One box Las cured the Worst cases of ten years stauding. Noone need suffr ten winutes after wsing this wonderful Kirk's German Pile Ointment. 1t absorbs tumors, allays the itehing at once, acts as & poulth gives instaud relief. . Kirk's German Pilo Ointment is prepared only for Piles and lching of tho privele parts and Bothlag slsc, ery box is warranted by f our agents.” Sold A\hfl,glsb.mulby wail on receiptof priga, DR. G 0. BENTON, Psop, Jleveland, O. Bold C. ¥. Gooodman and Kubn & Co., 1ith aud Dougins 18th avd Cuming - AnObhio farmer, near Cedarville, ex- hibited twenty-two potatoes the other day weighwg forty-three pounds, and cluims to have a six-acro lot of just such potatoes. F’ACTS AEOUY RAILWAVS The United States Leading the World | | supposed to e peenliarly in Roads. Poor’s Manual of Raiiroads of tha n ates, " for 1886, w h has just me finw the press, ghows thatthe num | ber of miles of railroad “‘construct: the United States in 1885 wa | aggregate mileage for the who m 1 at the close of the 128,067 the rate of incr year being 2. pe cent 1 not inclu X ted roads, from w r and traflic operal 1884, | 1884; their unfun gainst §244,600,596 for 1884, The amount | of share capital and_indebtedness of all the companies for 533,179, against §7,676 1 the rato of por cent. The n\rmv'« of all (h\- roads making re ns, inc \m(un: oads, equaled peiuy Ry 634,608 for 1884, the incres 5, the of increase being 0.21 per . The earn- ings from freight_equaled £5 902, from passengers, $200,883,911; from mis cellaneous sources, § . The op crations and expense of all the roads for the year equaled £303,0 the et earning heing 9,4 The gross earning: entire capital nvested equa y nearly 10 per cent; the net ne 8.5 per cent. The amount of inte id the past year equaled $180,4 02 for 1884; of dividends, for 1881 percentage of d on the funded debts of the companies the past year equaled 4.77 per cont, against 4.66 per cent for 1881, The percontage of dividends paid to the whole share eapi- tal equaled 2,02 per cent, agai cent for 1884, The earnings per mile of ted the 4 equa 663" per mile for the dec per mile equaling §398, the rate of deerease per mile being 5.8 per nt. In the meantime the tonnage moved by the railroads has increased about 10 per eent, being 437,040,00¢ tons in 188 inst 309,074,749 tons in 1884, The movement of tonnage by rail is steadily increasing, there being at the samo time a slight falling off in rates, the charge for moving a ton of merchan’ dise one mile in 1883 being 1.057 conts, agamst 1.124 in 1831, The past year un- xluuhlwllf marks a point of lower depr: sion in the gs of our railroads to their mileago t to be witn for some 3 the present year showing ible improvenient upon the pus Attention is called in the introduction to Manual” to new features. It issup- b_]‘ a dire ry of r' ors con names, It contains a tabul \tement showing the dividends paid by all the roads ot the United States for the last eight years, with the periods of their p: mont, whether, annually. or quarterly; also statements showing the highest and lowest quotations, monthly, for eight ye: for the nctive stocks and bonds dealt in at _the leading stook exchange of the conntry. In re gard to the (nereased fullness and uni- formity secured in reports from more than 1,000 companie acknowledg- ment is made by the editors to the railroad commission in the variousstates. Yet, as a means of securing better re- sults, it is suggested that in the absence adequate supcrvision of railrouns by the United States or by the several states, the New York Stoek Exchange mignt supple- ment in many important particulars th action or want of action of the proper authoritics, requiring from all com ni a condition of listing and of re maining listed, full information to be made a matter of record, the publishers of the “*Manu to have free access to such information and to have authority to demand on behalf of the stock ex- change whatever is calculated to throw light upou the condition of their affairs. §|xu1 “l furq tign is now ?hwmud m Londdn throug] n the efforts of Henr, Burdett, :met.\r) of the Share and Losn Department of the London stock ex- change, and made public tirough a very valuable work. The “Manual'” contains 1 interesting table showing the length in_kilometers (.62 of a mile)of all the railroads in the world, in which the fol- lowing totals appear: Europe, 13,80; Asin,30,703; America, North ana South 0,755; Afviea, 6,720; Austraia, 12,14, Grand total, 470,197, or 201,522 miles, of which there are 123,110, exclusive of elevated roads inthe United States. The Length of Life. New York Sun, This is a very interesting question, and students of vital statistics have devoted much attention of recent years to scarch- ing for an answer to it “Will you kindly tell me whether the av- length of human life is increasing or diminishin The statisticians of England figure out that ife in that country has somewhat increased in duration during the last generation, and sanitarians attribute the guin to _the better care which has been aken of the public heaith since what is called samitary science has become a subject of special study. The great losa of life has always been at the beginning, in infancy, and public hygiene directs its efiorts towards the prevention of the filth diseases which more particularly test the endurance of children under tive years of age. But is the vital condition of the race improving? Dr. Thomas 8. Sozinskey of Philadelphia writes an elaborate paper in the Medical and Surgical Reporter to express his doubt s to whether that is s0, and presents an_array of figures of the mortality in England and the United States which will not give our corre: poundent much comfort 1t appears from our census of 1880 that of a hundred deaths reported during the census year, 4) were of persons under five years, 52 of persons under twent; only 29 of persons over fifty, and ouf, 10 of those over seventy. ‘These figures Dr. Sozinskey calls astounding; but the roturns of child mortality in_ the eities was even more startling. The propor- tion of deaths under five years of age is reported for the whole Union at48.7 per 1,000 of living population, gwhile in the oities which register deuths it was 88.4 per 1,000. Apparently, therefore, the mortality among children was twice as great in the cities as in the country, but liy the larger urban figures aro in t oxplained by the circumstance that in the eities the death returns are more complete than those in the country. Deaths under five years also are less likely to be reported than those of older persons, and, therefore, the percentages of deaths at differcni ages above fiv years given by the census are, as Dr Sozinskey remarks, much greater than they ought to be. Even as the table llmdulm average age at death is not far up in the twenti In England and W, ales, where the vital statistics are accurate, the deaths from 5 to 20 years of age in 1850 were less than bpu cent of tho whole, as _against_over {u: cont in the United States. From s 85 they were 21 per cent thero, and in the United States from 20 to 50 they were 24 per ceut, In England the deaths of porsohs over 18 were abous aausl £ the doaths over ’I(Jln.ru In England and Wales only 83 per ocent of the deaths Wi of persous over 45 years, and in the Unitea States only 30 per cent were of those aver 40 years. Whery is huan life longest, think you, good frieud? lu France ana in Ircland, n poor, tortured, whose people, 4 Dy skey says, are oblivious to sanitary scionce. Nearly five in o hund red of tho dentl land are of por 35 per cent are | New York and Omaha Clothing Company of England and the United States | per cent, or nearly one-half, are over 45, France is another ntry whie! T behind th go with respodt o sanitary seience, r cent of th aths ar 25 per cent over 70, only « en under 5 y per cent of young people fro Dr, Sozinskes therefore comes to t conelusion that the vital condition of t actory.” And he of life there and that “if the vhy: ople ot Ireland, 1 people poor and comparatively jgnor: ant of sanitary sci ¢, is immensely su | perior to that'of either, there must bo in | uences at pl both England and the | United States which much more than countarbalance all the beneficial effects | of the sanitar neo in practice in cither country.” The lives of some chil dren may be saved, but the peovle die young, The intluences working against the race he hoids to be the artificial mode of existence in civilized countrios - WILD WESTERN WINDS. Some Sample Stories of Their Very Kecentrie Parformances. ke Tribune: A gentleman from nd another from Kansas were sitting with a Coloradoan on the Walker louse poreh Sunday evening during the lively lmh- dust storm which drove every: body else indoors and filled all eyos, ears, and pores exposed with Utah sofl ‘I've been here quite awhile,” said the ada man, ‘‘but I've nev seen a wind here yet that amounted to any- thing. I tell you that Neyada is the place where they have winds, 1've seen the wind come up there all in a min- ute and everything would fly, Cobble- stones, and signs, and tin cans, and bar- rels, and dogs, and goats would all go down the street together. One day I saw the {tin from a roof over 100 feet Jong rolied up by the diploma of & young girl graduate and el the whe ength of the town in Virginia City, and and s soon as it got beyond the city limits, where there was nothing to break the force of the wind, it just spr roof out like a tablecloth, and to) shreds like it w “That's nothing,” sarcastic marked the Kansas gentleman; “‘you talk as much you like about high winds, but I'm telling you that Kansas is the bunner state for zephyrs. Why, that’s where we have eyclones and corkscrew winds. You read a good deal about cy- clones in the newspapers, but you never »a word about the corkscrew gales; ou bet you don't. Any man who dared to publisha word about thein would be lynched! If \mopluuu(- de knew about them it would sln{»imm ation and spoil the prospoets of the whole state “Those corkserew winds just wind around and twine into all sorts of places in the most eccentric manner po:sib; There have been se cases of people having their netks Wrung just like you'd twi a chickends head off. People who understand the country all build their fences in the tract of climate where these winds prevail so 18 to have their post holes dug for them. 1've seen a pile of lumber stand n the site ‘of a fence for three months waiting for one of those breezes, just because the owner was too slack and azy to dig the holes and so kept waiting, from day to day, hoping for a breez 1ts a risk, though, because there mwhl happen to comé along an unus; blow and dig a cellar, but in that case the man would probably buila a house where he intended to put a fence I've scen one of them gales enter a win- dow what had been left open :\ml cork- serew a baby out of its crib and twist th bedclothes into a coil so hard that they could only be separated by an ax. I've seen _a cook stove waltzed into the mid- dle of the room, and all sorts of things like that occur during those kind of winds. You don’t have much wind in Colorado, do you?” Well, no,” said the Coloradoan, ‘‘we L‘Im‘ t hav any winds (o amount to iing, but it blows ® few minutes ti now and then. The winds ate peculiar as the d—I, too; I never saw anything Jike them an_ywhert_ else. They are what you might call discriminating breezes, They don't have so much force as some combined air I've beard of, but what they do counts. They don't seem to penetrate like a New England north- but still they do_penetrate a little . and they have their effect, too. A northeaster, "you know, will cut right into a man's bones and wmarrow, and chill him to the quick, These sighs of Boreas do not penetrate but a little way and they blow funny, too. I've scen man go'along a srreet, and it would be blowing a hurricane on one side of him, and on the other side it would be a de calm. I've seen a mule stand br: the wind blowing behind her r tail blown right up struight, and one ear put away shead of her nose while the ear on the other side would be in a natural, calm position, and that side of the beast would be Rwe.lling! It will take the skin off one side of your face and not touch the other. Isaw aman with whiskers get one side of his face shaved by a wind like that, as clean as any bar- ber could do it. A small boy and a do were walking with him at the time, and thoy cach lost one ear. I've seen a man lose ope leg of his pants and a cout-tail, and get his hat khocked all over on one side. They don’t do any particular dam- age, those winds, but they are as pecu- liar as they can bat" Ll L A tunel umlor the sound from Sweden to Denmark is among the big engineering schemes talked of. PUREST AND STRONGEST MoOsT PIRPIOT MADE Prepared with strict regard 10 Purity. Strongf Health{ulnoas. Dr. Pricvie Baking ¥ £0 Ammonia, Lin: I, Dr. Vaailla, Lewon, Orange, PRICE BAKING POWDER CU., Chicago and 8t. Louls. A po//zmzm “THE QUEEN OF TABLE WATERS" “APOLLINARIS reigns clone among Natural Dictetic Table Waters." BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL. May 31, 1834, Of all Grocers, Druggists, & Min, Wat, Deatirs. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. UST 21, 1886, EISMER & HEHDELSOH, 316, 318 :nd 320 fune St., Phi " WEAK, NERVOUS PEOPLE And others wuftoring from i 1 7¥0US abiliLy , exBAUSTING: piure m"\?‘ifl'mmru g Riasile Trases R. W. J. HORNE, INVENTR: TEslleEt P heley esthing, Aw- alg commlncanu. ALB & CO., Boston, Mase Notice to Contractors, JOTICE is hereby given that the Board of Trustocs of the Auburn School District, Auburn, Neb., will receivo sealed proposals for fon ind completion of & two story and ment brick school house In no taiils and specifioat llis & Co., rohitects, of U Plans, dotails and spec o ofiice of the beard, at Auburn, Nob., s, on and'after the sixteonth (10) Aviguse, aitll the teenty-sith @) day jrust. 1830, AlLbids will bo doposited with th secritury of the school board on or before 7:) Qleck p. m., on the twenty-sixih ) dy 1886, at which timo the bids will e’ BGurd rosorves the rightto rojoct any or all bids. By Order of tho Sencol Boacd. A L. PREY, Prosiden Di. A. OPrERMANN, Bcorotary. cretary of the school the office of the | Between Antwerp & New York YIELDS T0 EVERY MOYEMENT OF THE WEARER, the diagoaal elasticity of the cloth will ot Tequires 6o breakl laney nuun-m by selier afler belug worn ten FITTING, HEALT Bt raeablS Cortat oo ot stamp 1 on waside orl Cor CHOTTY BROS., Chieago, monumw h.,.wmn.o. Messrs, Kubn & Co,, DREXEL & MAUI-, Buccessors Lo J. G. Jacobs UNDERTAKERS, AND EMBALMERS. At the old stand, 147 Faroam st A nuhuhg;ux-l prowply steadod GRAND OPENING ! 1308 Farnam st., Omaha, Neb. we say we are going to open with the largest and finest line of Clothing and Furnishing Goods Ever shown in Omaha, we mean what we say. To prove it to yourselves, come to the opening and see. Also get one of our beautiful souvenirs. STRICTLY ONE PRICE. Remember, Our Motto is “Honesty and Good Value for Your Money.” We Open about September 1st KEYSTON B MALT WHISKEY THE BEST TORIC!, UNEQUALEDfor CONSUMPTION WASTING DISEASES and GENERAL DEBILITY. PERFECTS DIGESTION VAL L IAAARITID (THE BEST THREAD ror SEWING MACHINES VUILLIVIAIN SIX-CORD SOFT FINISH SPOOL GOTTOP —— Full Assortment for sale t0 the Trude by —— VINYARD & SCHNEIDER DEWEY & STONE, FURNITURE = | One of the Best and 1 Largest Stocks in the Umtqd States to Select From, Lo T OMATES MR Holman’s I,lu'rnml Stomach Pad Holuan’s Liver and #Io Pk AR, Holman’s Liver un'l tomach Pad aro earily worn, safe and reiia Proyents Soa Sickness, Cholora, Smalipox, od In thousands of cases aud we R ptins, Typhold und or: that\n all cuses whera (ho Tivor, aploen. kid. ops i bowal are Imenived: Dit. Hotan-e aba | ALL DEUGGISIS 0F sout on rocelpt of are at once the best, quickest und cheapost; and e §2 they have made permanent cures in thousands of HOLMAN PAD O |, cases wiiaro modicins Jis) bom usod wifbost aay 120 William St., N. Y. M. BURKE & SONS, LIVE STOCK COMMISSION MERCHANTS, @EO. BURKE, Maonger, UNION STOCK YARDS, OMAHA, NEB. REFERENCES: Merchants' and Farmers' Bank, David ¢ Neb.; Kearney National Bank, Kearney, Neb. { "Columbuns State Blnk (ul\lmb\n Neb.: 'MeDonald's Baok, North Platte, Neb.; Omaha National Bank, Omaha, N Will pay eustomers® draft with bill of lading attached for two-thirds valuo of gtook THE C. E. MAYNE REAL ESTATE and TRUST CO. S. W. COR. 15th AND FARNAM, OMA A, Property of every description for sale n all paris of the city. Lands for sale in every county in Nepraska, A COMPLETE BET OF ABSTRACTS Of Tities of Douglas county kept. Maps of the city stato or gounty, or any othor information desived, furnished free of charge upon app.ication. Red Star Line [gZa=mrmmy Currying the Belgium Royal and Unitod Btates Mall, suiling every Saturday T0 THE RHINE, GERNANY, ITALY, HOL- LAND AND FRANCE. FALL AND WINTER. Salon from $M to §:% Rxoursion trip from £110 to $1:. Socond Cabin, outward. #5; prepuid, #45; excursion. $4. Btoerage nassgn 00. T. Arinbrust, 2203 Cuming st. at low 'ralgs Poter Wrisht & Sous, Geueral pwinan, 1217 Furoam st Agents, 85 Droalway, New York ming floury Punit, 1215 Barnam st ; P ' Kunclo, 610 South 10th st. Fiviia i Froemaa, 1524 Farnao st UIA South Nith st. box_will cure | fhe most obtina caso in four diys ar loss. COLLEGE OF NEW JENSKY, | PRINCETON lan'sSolubleMedicatadBouyes | 0% G GhEsh koo o sk, NG nyuseous doses of eubsbs, copatday of NEW JERSEY eodulwood that 4re certaln (o produce dysp: s Hia Dy Gostroying the soatings OF S stamch, lomistry: " Blolo Price $1.50. Bold by all druggists or matled on | A i E the ,L yecelptof price. For furthor particulars sent i 108 1he uaual fovelzoulat P O Bax i ‘acduia hiacewotion i Lo Mathematie. 7. C. ALILAN CO., E S At et Slobasts New ¥ork N 3, Physics. ahil Astronomy. u EA~ pt. Lith and 15th. 198 ¥ Vo ti-autlyins SadBlae i ioriuttion upsly 10w

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