Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 3, 1887, Page 5

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' {HE OMAHA DAILY BEE: FRIDAY. JUNE 3. 1887, A STATE REAL ESTATE SALE ebraska Lots in Lincoln to Be Auctioned Off To-day. A RAILROAD INCORPORATED, The Oxford & Kansas, a Branch Line of the B. & M.—Hastings' Life Insurance Company—Other Capital Oty News [FROM THE BEE'S LINCOLN BUREAU.] To-day occurs the sale of tho 800 state Jots in” Lincoln, and it will be watched with a great deal of interest and by many buyers. The appraised value of these lots is considered low, but that fact will make the sale of the entire number all the more probable. Some of the lots are fine, and some on the banks of Salt creck are very poor, but they will all be sold. The terms are reasonable, only one-third payment being required down, and as’| many of the lots are viewed with envious eyes, the bidding will be spirited. The proceeds of the sale will be used to beau- tify the capitol grounds, and the amount will be sufficient to make the grounds the handsomest in the west. A BRANCH LINE. The articles of incorporation of the Oxford & Kansas railroad, a branch line of the B. & M. system, were filed ye: day with the etary of state. The line iis to have its business office at Oxford, and the road is to run from that place to the Kansas line, and presumably run through northwest Kansas to the Colo- rado line or beyond. The capital stock is fixed at $1,700,000 for this branch, and the familiar names of G. W. Holdrege, J. G. Taylor, C. D. Dorman, C. J. Green, Thomas Miller, P. S. Eustis and W. A. llifmns appear as the incorporators, The Union Life Insurance company of {{nflungs has amended articles of ncorporation with the secretary of state. The capital stock under the amended ar- ticles is fixed at $100,000, in shares of $100 each, and the proviso inserted that the stock may ve increased to §1,000,000. The company's indebtedness is limited to 10 yer cent of the cupital stock and its busi- ness isconducted by a board of trustees und the date tixed for the commencement of business under the old articles was July, 1885, and under the amended arti- les June 1, 1887. The incorporators are Juvid L. McElhinney, Charles H. Deit- xich, Alexander H. Cramer, Morris L. Alexander, Jacob Fisher, L. Loda, John WA. Casto, and Thomas E. Farrell, STATE HOUSE ITEMS. v The Buffalo German Insurance com- pany, of Buffalo, has applied for admis- ®ion to transact business in Nebraska, and been furnished the requisite formula to follow. The auditor’s oflicials were figuring the amount of principal and interest on county bonds yesterday that counties have to meet the present year, and certi- fied statements will be forwarded to the different county oflicials at once. Auditor Babcock has gone to Valley county on a business trip for a fow days. Dr. Hepkins ot Wyoming, the state veterinarian for that territory, was Lincoln yesterday in consultation with e Nebraska live stock sanitary commis- qiun cver the quarantine questions and he admission of cattle to Wyoming, through Nebraska. Captain Hill went home to Beatrice esterday, to attend the high school commencement in that place. Attorney-General Leese has moved his ‘,nmily from Seward to Lincoln, and has ecome a resident at the capital city. NEW STREET RAILWAYS. The action of the rapid transit line in Eommunciug to lay track for their road a8 aroused the plans for other street railways and they promise now to be fquickly formulated and work on them commenced. At the office of Harris & Harris, on Wednesday evening, a meet- Ingx of the incorporators of the Capital Heights street railway was held and the following directors elected: W. A. Har- ris, J. A. Rollins, H. P. Martin, W. S. Bottsford and 8. Sprague. Fourteen thousand five hundred dollars was sub- ccribed at the meeting for the building of he line and the company voted to com- Jnence work as soon as the franchise was ranted. The line of the road is to be rom the center of the city out Randolph streot to what will become Fortieth street in East Lincoln, WORK FOR THE BOARD OF TRADE. “‘It ocours to me,” said a member of the board of trade, who recently depos- ted his membership fee, “‘that there is other work for the board to engage in aside from the work of establishing a dreight bureau and the lowering of rates for the wholesalers.” The board of trade, iu the iden of this member, is worthy of {bromhar interpretation than at present s ascribed to it, and 1n his opinion ghould embark in much necessary work in other directions. There has nothing materialized as yet in the advertising way and no work has been given atten- tion outside of the one of 1n rates for avholesaters. 1f encrgy is not aroused ‘llre boara will lapse again into a long eep. AFTER THE BANQUET, General Hawkins, ajor_ Brown Colonel Luddington, Captain Furn{ and other Omaha membeis of the Loyal Legion, who attended the banquet at the Capital hotel, dvrnrwd homeward yes- Ccrdn}vl highly delighted with their trip and the elegant banquet to which they sat down, So 1mpressed were they with the inuer that they unanimously passed reso- utions of congratulations to Mr. Brown, the steward of the hotel, for the elegant xepast. On the 24th of June the mem- bers of the Nebraska commandery of the Loya! Legion in Nebraska have an invi- tation to attond the annual gathering of the Kansas commandery and they will attend in large numbers. This gatherin _will be held at Leavenworth on the 24th of June and as the Kansas legion was in stituted by the Nebraska members their reception on the occasion of the first re- union will undoubtedly be of the most cordial character. A special train will be chartered for the trip and itis ex- coted that the number from the Ne- raska Loyal Legion who will attend will at least be fifty. The paper read at this meeting just held at Lincoln was upon the Pea Ridge campaign and was repared by N. 8. Harwood, of this city, t will be publish ABOUT THE CITY, ‘The building of new lines of street rail- way and the rapid aporoach of actual paving has increased the real estate transfers and sales are increasing. Mr, Goodman, of Omaha,and Mr, Stevens, of Crete, were among the heavy purchasoers of recent date. Judge Pound yesterday heard a case in- volying the title to a tract of valuable land in the vicinity of West Lincoln. The case is one of the Judge Hilton ones that were travelod through numerous courts. Judge Pound has taken it under ad vise- ment. The Barr versus Carr case was n'\till' in the hands of the jury ut noon yes- erday, Mr. H. T, Clarke of Umaha and also equally of Lincoln was the suceessful competitor in the bidaing for Envlug in the city and wus yesterday by the council paving committee awarded the contract Which will be ratified at an early day, the material selected, ana the work cowm- menced, o . Burglars plied their avocation at West f Lincoln Weadnesday night, entering a do or more houses lnfi helping them- tg the watches und loose ehange of the inhabitants. A half-dozen watches Were gone, aud numerous sums of monoy rnnv‘x from ten dollars downward. Tt was West Lincoln's initial experience with burglars, Robert Malone, the driver of hose cart No. 2 in the paid departmoent, was mar- ried yesterday to Miss Bridget Owens, Rev.” Father Kearney performing the ceremony. The fi epartment boys are busy now snioking and offering con gratulations, The police court lapsed yesterday into o state of quietness that was unusual. But one old offender, who face has long been familiar to the court, was up for a hearing and was quickly disposed of with the usual fine. ‘I'he next entertainment on the boards for Funke's opera house is Roland Reed in “Cheek," the date for the appearance being Wednesday cvening, June 8, Reed is always a favorite in Lincoln. The offico of the city engineer is now cated over the Dr. Child drug store building. The new addition to city headquarters is needed sadly for city offices, The temporary frame building located in the rear of engine house No. 2 will be removed to the esty waterworks park and used as a city hos —n The Brand on Uain was not more fearful than are the marks of skin dise: , and yet Dr. Pierce's “Golden Medival Discovery” 18 a certain cure for all of them. Blotches, pimples, eruptions, pustules, scaly incrustations, lumps, inflamed patches, salt-rheum, tet- ter, boils, carbuncles, ulcers, old sores, arc by its use healed quickly and permas nently. tal, i bilaitin. Queer Things a Wire Recalls. Sat Francisco Examiner: “When 1 first knew Mrs. John Mackay,” said Henry Thompson, a gray-haired pioneer of Siskiyou, yesterda the Baldwin, “‘she was a fittle it of a bare footed girl at Good Yeur's Bar. She couldn't have been over twelve years old then, It was in '35, and she used to walk around among the miners and watch them clean up the gold. She enjoyed it as muck: as any of them, “Her father, Colonel Hunge! ford, who n L.os Angeles, lived there then. But three or four when he moved to Downieville, daughter becume the reigning belle the town. “It is strange what a life-tim forth. Now, at the time I spes was worth more money than anybody else in the vicinity of Downieville. Now I've got next to nothing, while the bare- footed little girl, who long since been Mrs. Mackay, is the richest lady in Paris, and her daughter is a prince: *“The days looked just as bright to me, in those carly mining times, and prom- ised just a3 much as they did to John Mackay, Flood, or any of the rest of the Californians whose fortunes are now so stupendous. But the lightning didn’t strike me. 1had a good many mines, but didn’t find pay in any one of them, 80 am running my little ranch up in kiyou, and I guess I'll have to be con- tented. Idon'tsee any other way to do. 1f 1 make $200 or $300 & year over my ex- penses, that'’s about as “zood as 1 can ex- pect, while John Mackay, who used to tumble into his bachelor couch tired and weary in his eabin up there, now manip- ulates » thousand and one big things, has an Atlantio cable and a postal telegraph, the lutter line of which runs across my little ranch in Siskiyou. *‘That wire often starts me to thinking about these things. Whenever I see it, 1t recalls old days, and oftentimes I lay awake at night thinking about the as- tounding changes of ‘a brief life. It throws me into a reverie, and 1 wonder 1f the possibilities to my children are as great to them as they wero to Mackay. “Yes, it does make me a trifle sad. A man hates to waste his life, doesn't he? But I think if I had it to do over again, I'd start into business in some promising town. lmhiht not get very rich, but 1 think it would be better than going out into a lone region in the hills and risking everything on a venture. The sure, safe things isn't so bad a thing after all.”” —_— She has the complexion of a peach, Pozzoni’s Medicated ComplexionfPowder did it. Sold by all druggists. gldises o ety The Duchess of Galliera and 83,000 of her countrywomen have presented a pe- tition to the municipality of .Genoa, ask- ing for the restoration of the statue of the Madorna above the gates, in the recognition of the preservation of the town during the recent earthquakes. = Pozzom 8 Complexion Powder pro duces a soft and beautiful skin. It com- bines every element of beauty and purity. Sold by druggists. Taati gy X . A Pittsburg somnambolist walked ofl of a balcony the other night, fell about twenty feet, was picked up and carried into the house, and then after a time he awoke. The shock of the fall, which sprained s foot and bruised him gener- u‘llv. did not rouse him from his sound sleap. If your kidneys are inactive, you will feel and look wretched, even in the most cheerful society, and melancholy on tho ollicst occasions, Dr. J. H. McLean’s Liver and Kidney Balm, will set you right again, §1 per bottle, —_—— ‘The Baltimore Sun says that E. Berry Wall always carries with him when he travels an assortmeut of wnlkinfi sticks, which cost him over $100. Mr. Wall and his canes have recently boeen in Baltimore, ——— Old Louis Fridetts, seventy-year-old citizen of Fall River, imagined that he covld walk on air. He tried it the other day by walking out of an open window, and now lies gerously injured. The National Disease Downed. Hundreds of so-called diseases under various names are the result of indiges- tion, and when this one trouble is re- for more than fifty years—BRANDRETH'S conquered. least harmed. a8 The Btrongest, Purest, ':3 ll):o.llhhdlh Price's the only Baki 00 most Mo enntaie Ammonia Lime . , 2 K A RTINS moved the others vanish, The best known remedy for indigestion, accord- ing to thousands of testimonals, is one that has been used in the United States PruLr. These Pills'will cure the worst form of indigestion or dyspepsia and by their use the national disease is easily —— A calf belongipg to D, B. Stevens, of of Cassville, Wis., was picked from the track by a passing train and carried on the cowcatcher to & point opposite the stuble, when it jumped off, not in the TRIAL OF STRENGTH. Rallway Monopoly and Legisiative Enactment, Black Diamond. Since the 5th of ‘April, when the inter- state commerce law took effect,the coun- try has been treated to & most extraor- dinary spectacle—n trial of strength be- tween the power of the government on the one side, and that of the railroads on the other, As yet it appearsan open question which side will be victorious, while the commerce of the country is compelled in the meantime to shift as best 1t may in a sea of uncertainty, ting the termination of this battle royal, The law proposes to subject railroads to certain conditions in connection with the transportation of passengers or mer- chandise, yet i consequence of the ambiguity which characterizes some clauses of the enactment a wide range is left for the interpretation thereof."Clause number four appears to be the most un- satisfactory to the commercial world, as the construction which has been placed thereupon by nearly, if not all, of the railroads, though to be expected from their standpoint, 15 certainly cal- culated to make the law obnoxious to the people at large ! is without doubt the best means th. could be adopted 1n order to munufac- ture public opinion in favor of the repeal of that section of the bill when con- gress agun meets. Is it not possible, however, that these tactics may over- reach the desired objeet, and that the power of government may be strong enough to assert itself by not only modi- fying the clause referred to so as to make it absolutely clear in all its bearings, but by placing 1ts interpretation beyond the reach of sophistry, depriving it of all superfluous technicalities? The section of the enactment treating upon the long and short haul provides that no higher rate of freight or fare shali be charged for the transportation of freight or passengers for a short distance than for a long one. It does not say that as much ntay not be charged, but no higher rate. This leaves the matter to the discretion of the roads, and as nothing is mentioned concerning a maximum or minimum rate per mile, they can charge as much for 200 or 3000 miles, if so they sclect, as for a 1,000 miles, only not more. 1f the Iaw mimed ata positive recognition of bona fide values, a graded scale would be no diflicult matter to establish, and the present more or less arbitrary inter vretation that has been made by the raile somo hope that~ cor will realize its power in the premiscs | changing this clause commensurate wit! the demands anc best interests of the commerce and industries of the country ardless of fictitious representations. ng over some of the unimportant :atures of the law, it must be admitted that the strict prohibition of railwa; pools and the diserimination betwe large and small shippers have m points in their favor, provided railroads would show an inclination to accept and adopt them in good faith. Is this evi- dent, however? Some of the provisions may be taulty and antagonistic 1o the trua interests of business. Is it as much the law, however, as the peculiar inter- pretation that is given to 1t, and would it not be more in_accordnnee with broad business principles to make an eflort toward adjusting apparent shortcomings somewhat in compliunce with the regu- lations vrescribed and in consonance with the spirit if not the actual letter of the enactment, in order to demonstrate at once where the pruning knife may be applied with justice and cquity to all? Nothing has been done as yet to follow such a course of action; on the contrary, every movement made appears to be di- rected toward proving the impractica- bility of the measure. Instead of equal- izihg rates pro rata on short and long hauls, by cutting down the former, rates for terminal points have 1n many in- stances advanced to an outrageous figure, soas to become absolutely prohibitory. This the law evidently does not Vi and it is questionable if the people will calmly submit to such domineering policy, such an exhibition of misapplied power in opposition to the good intention of government. 2 The enactment in its present formis evidently incomplete and requires revis- 10n, yet 1t has awakened a desire in the minds of American people for something in the shape of inter-state railway Jaw,so clear, compact and_comprehensive us'to withstand equivocation or sophistry, and it 18 to he hoped that congr session will so amend the pres s to give it the desired perfection. o the pro-slavery barons 1 acquired such dominance m the affairs of the national government that it made them arrogantand they at- tempted to rule supreme. What was the result? I3 it to bo supposed that monop- olies will fare otherwise when by chi- cunery or brute fo they propose to dictate? —————— New Jescy Names. Bloomtield (N. J.) Citizen: If any cor- respondent prefers Hogtown (which is reached by mail from Rahway) he must surrender Sodom, embraced in the cir- cuitof Hunterdon county. If he wants Sacamac in Passaic let him eschew Hoca- mic 1 Burlington. There isa Whisky Lane 1n our own purview, which ought to be nearer than it is to Tumble in Hun- terdon, Ragtown in Cumberland, Reck- lesstown in Burlington and Double- trouble in Ocean county. You can abide at Comical Corner, Uoontown, Rum Tavern, Crass Castle and in two Tattle- towns—one of which hails from Ocean county. Unexpected Bog may set a fe low agoing, via Skunktown, for Sexton: town, and he can pass through two Scrabbletowns ol way, Pickletown, Postertown, O Hat, Long-a-coming, Goosetown and Secatitude, convey the traveler through maize of prosaic Franklins (eight), Fairviews (five}, and a host of others which go in pairs and trip- lets, while Feebletown has apparently desired no duplicate. These are but samples what New Jersey can do ‘when she 1s pushed of to her inventive trun She can even furnish us a Hell’s Kitchen in Ocean county, but she has only a single Point Pleasant for the entire state. Fighting Fish, Boston Herald: There is a hot-tem- pered little fish, known as Betta pugnax, and kept as a sort of domestic pet by the Sinmese to display its prowess for the Mongohan amusement. \Whenin a state of quiet, its dull colors present no re- markable sight, but if two be brought together, or if one sees its own image in & looking gluss, the little creature be- comes suddenly excited, tho raised fins and the whole body shine with metalic colors of dazzling beauty, while the pro- 30(’h~d gill membrane, waving like a black rill round the throat, adds something of rotesqueness to the general appearance, D this state it darts at 1ts real or re- flected antagonist. The Siamese keep these fishes in globes, hike goldfish, and the Malays often stake large sums, or even the freedom of them- selves and their families, on the prowess of a particular Betta. e That Tired Feeling Afflicts nearly every one in the spring. The system having Decome accustomed to the bracing air of winter, is weakened by the warm days of the changing sea son, and r(:rmlg yields to attacks of dis- euse. Hood's Sarsapanlla is just the medicine needed. It tones and builds up every part of the body, and also expels all impurities from the blood. Try it this season. ITCHING FIVE LONG YEARS, NEW BLOOMPIB HOP BirTens to say to you that 1have heen suffering Nve voars with a sAvere it ehing ali ove ), MISS,, Jan. 3, 185, well und wy " Kin s well, clok ENRY KNOC 0D AUTHORITY— & ¢ cotly wmazed at o had an - Goon,_ Wonn: ¢ v We the run of y thing ko it He, h 1ke. The witer here moirly thirty it 1 her Lo periect’ health aod strength, (ENTS, RABLENESS, Tho derful and marvelous success, in i knows ails them (pr by ihe use th v Bt Tivey' bgin © n 1d keep it up unil perfoet health aud sirengih s restorod, WICKE FOR CLERGYMEN. “Ibalieve itto boull wrong and even wicked for oler or other public men to be led into giving testt to quack doctors or vilo staffs eallad medie but whon a really moritorions article is mude mmon valablo remedios Known to all, and A8 U 0] 11t 1 iherotc or Hop Bitters for the up ot u vinz they ha without them, T sum it up, six long years 8t 1of wileh wis stoppod tors taken by my wi ork fr 4 Yo S| e lossof n duy.and 1w their benefit, "~JouN WEEK NEVER FORGET 1f you are sick Hop Bitters will surcly aid Nature in making you well when all cise fails. If you ure costive or dyspeptic, or are suffor- ing from uny other of the numerous disonses of tho stomach or bowels, it is your own fault if you remain ill, tor Hop Bitters is & sovereign remedy in all such compiaints, ou are wasting away with any form of disease, stop tempting Death this mo- L and turn for a cure to Hop Bitters, If you are nervous use H op Bitters. If you are a frequenter, or a resident ofa minsmatic district, barricade your system aguinst the scourgo of all countrios—malarial, epidemic, bilious and intermittent fevers—by the use of Hop Bitters, 1f you have rough, vimply or sallow skin bad breath, pains and nches, and feel misorable gencrally, Hop Bitters will give you fair skin, rich blood and sweetest breath and health. That poor, bedridden, invalid wife, sister mothor or daughter, can be mado the picture of honz w=h Hop Bittors, costing but a triflo, Will you let them suffer? Tn short they curo all disénses of the Stomach Bowels, Blood, Liver, Nervgs, Kidneys, Bright's Disense. $1000 will be pald for & cuse they will A Natural, Palatable, - Reliable Remedy In TARRANT'S SELTZER you bhold A nizund old; d ol ¥ And Sick Hoadache, When TARRAY Vi opart, TZER eas Leon tried. \ Embody the highest excellens cieain shapeliness,comfortand "B durability and are the reigning favorites in fashionable cirel- 2, Ourname is 14.6T.COUSINS, on every sole. 'NEW YORK. ‘With sliding Dctachable Springs. (¥ Better than ‘Whalebone or Horn,. &) and guaranteed never to break. Price, $1.25. For sale by leading wholesale and retall estab- lishments, MAYER,STROUSE &CO. 412 Broadway, N. V., Manufacturers, o e ———cenc BONED WITH KABO, G T - orices. Sol ywhore: Bewaro of wortiless iini- None genuino withoat Bail's name on bOx. CHICACO CORSET CO 102 FRANKLIN STREET. CHICAGO. 408 Broadway, New York. MAZRSER, A MANHOD e ihood, ele., having overy Lhown romedy has discovired o simpl. st R RN o New York and Oma 1308 FARIN AM-ST. EACH PURCHASER OF GOODS TO THE AMOUNT OF $2.50 W'ill e Prfesernted ~vritlhh a Ticlzet THE NEW YORK AND OMAHA CLOTHING COMPANY 1308 FARNAM STREET. Y FEVER. All sufferers frem Hay Fove Smoke Ball and **Debellator prior to August Ist, symptoms of the disease that date, we will REFU Last summer t s remedy was used by muny isfaction in every case, suilercrs, and gave s moke" gives immediate relicf in sthma, Bronchial and Thront Affeo- tions, Heuduche,'Croup, Colds, Lung Discnscs, iken in connection with our Debel- CARBOLIC SMOKE BALL C 1ghton Block, Omaha, Neb. Safest The fi}ast- and Vapor Stove Made. C. W. Sleeper, head of St. Marys' Av Holmes &Smith, South Omaha. Campobello Islan This beautiful. isls mORL ALiractive i Tios in Pussamaquod 0 betwopn the malnlaad und Grand Manun tago of thirty-five miles lays, chnsms and inl d, now famous as ono ot the Iths i shoro fr. Indented by nums in o hills that offer rara charms to tho lovers of uo. wl1{T8 thut Overhiang tho sea for man: i The view of thuso might r forthe Journey the The Hoteis, to be Opened July |, aro tho finest to be found east of Boston. Thoy aro benutifully furnished and appointed v ih both axterior and interior ve un air of homelik: And tho drives Stubles ure well equipped with well und driving horses “The bonting und fishing aro excallent, and canoes with Indinn guide ET TO CAMPOBELLO, Take the stoameors of the International on Mondny, Wednosdu arriying ut Kastport the followlng morning at ‘AT unnex steamer conneots with all steamers at 0 miles distunt. s ay Do checked through ¢ rom Bar Harb stewmer at B W. L. DOUCLAS $3 SHOE. Stylish, Durable, Easy Fittin The hest §3 8hoo fn th vea great satisfaction. All utton, Congrers and Lace, 000 dealers thoughout the ot keep them, send name S e O arat 8. If your dealer on postal to W. L. DOUGLAS, ARE OF FRAUD. unscrupulous dealers n asl BUEAY, Brock For sale by Kelley, Stiger & Co.,cor and i5th-sts,; Honr: eward and Saunders s a Clothing Co. TRGE W Aother—Laura, why do you quarrel with Willie? I thought you wero playing keep house with him, Laura—Yes, Mamma, T was, but ho would not get mo a eake of Sapolio, and I had my house-clean. ingto do, and T won't play with him, He is notnice like papa is to you. “The branches may bo tralned, but not the trunk.” Teach children tho art of oleanliness, and how to usoe SAPOLIO. It is a solid cako of Scouring Soap. Tryit. ¥ No.14. [Copyright, March, 1877.} New ModelidenM(')?fier Five Sizes. Will cut higher grass than any other. Has noequal for simplicity, durability and ease of operation. This is the latest Improved Ma- chine in the Market. . Low Prices. Send for circulars. @& PHIL STIMMEL & CO. " OMAHA, NEBRASKA. State Agents for Porter’s Haying Tood and Jobbers of Binding Twine. Lawrence WW Ostrom & Co. FAMOOS “BELLENAY &4 OF BOURBON.” il IsDeath to ‘\‘fl‘ Consumption, Malaria, A N I Bleeplessness, Chills and Fevers H # Or Insomnia, and Typhold Fever, gl Dissimulation, Indigestion, 0t Food, Dyspepsia, Ten Years 014, fBurgioal Fevers No Fusel Oil, Blood Peisoning Absolutely Pura. N oRe NUY TS | LT or io MINY PART 0f TRE D PRCLING 17 oF fuse ou BtFoRE 1119 PoTIE The GREAT © APPETIZER This will certify that I have examined the Bel'e of Bourbon Whisky, received from Lawrence Ostrum & Co., and found the same to be perfectly tree from Fusel Oil and other deleterious substances and strictly pure I cheerfully reccommend the same for Family use and Medicinal purposcs. J. P. BARNUM, M. D, Analytical Chemist, Louisville, Ky, For sale by druggists, wine merchants and grocers everywhere. Price $1.25 per bottle If not found at the above, half-doz. bottles in plain boxes will be sent to eny address in the United States on the receipt of six dollars. Express paid to all places east of Missouri River, LAWRENCE OSTROM & Co. Louisville, Ky ‘Wholesale and Distributing Agents, RICHARDSON DRU@ CO., and z RILEY & DILLON, Wholesale uor Dealers, { Omaha. Families supplied by GLADS10NE BROS. & CO,, Omaha. RELIABLE JEWELER. Watches, Diamonds, Fine Jewelry, Silverware The largest stock. Prices the lowest. Kepairing a_specialty. Work warranted, Cor ner Douglas and 16th streets, Omaha. Licensed Watchinaker for the Union Pac ificRailroad Company. AS BRIGHT'S DISEASE, DROPSY | WEAE, MEN)| i CURR DY this NEw InPaovED & Diabetes are Cured by the Asahel Mineral Spiing Water S RBULA T Renorys Deaths from them rifioos, Dischargos i b %, Vand | borta 00175 Or Lo AutTercrs kio 10sh. 0Id physiciun’s advi Wnd Dook, With particulars and cuses free n 291 Broadway, New York,

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