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K STREET PAVING. Pmaha’s Streets Compared With Strects of Other Cities, A Reporter in Search for an Item Discovers an Interesting Case—Vain Search for Re- lief~Found at Last---A Frank and Interesting Interview, A reporter moand in soarch for an item vornl days s n regard fo th Al sion that the very fAvVO) ly with th y in the United Btatos, Baitimore, Md., s well-paved city,the ptrects boing mostly puved in what is known as o cobble-stono Whashington, D, C.. i3 United ions, eing paved with th asphaltim and what 8 known s the Beiginm block, A gray granite iock somewhat slmilar to the red granito block ed (n Omaha. The streets of St. Paul, Mina., Bro largely p is known a8 tho ar blocks. r . O r ith asphialtum aud granito bloc wo stroots paved with the codar ing n showing of paved streets seeon the eounlrw While on this tour of investigation the ro- orter engaged in conversation with MK WILLIAM TELFORD, ‘enth street hetwee ason and Packdic streets) stroet paver empl Murphy, Mr. Taiford lomnn, Was . ho kranite blocks on Fourtventh stroet noar apitol avenue, and bei sted by tho ro- eted that individ ry ploasantly. id_Mr. Telford, “I have boen paving Ptroets now for nearly two yoars. It is a fairly 00d business, and pays about as good A8 most utdoor jobs.' It being an_outdoor job fs, in act, the only objection 1 have to it. A man orking on the streets is liable to be caught in sudden shower and got wot through bofore o can reach sheltor, and in the fail of the our, with winter olose on us, we must work ike Trojans to get our contracts finished heforo he extreme cold comos to stop u orking at my busincss about ono year ago I ok a hoavy cold, which brought on a severo scking cough and numorous sic hondaches, wouid be working in the morning, when about 0 0'clock a sovere houdacho ‘'would come to stop work for tne g0 home and lie down, when the h would assail me aad make life miserablo i o n oeling rofreshod s 1should havo feit, I would el more tired then whon I went to bed. I hon becamo seriously alarmed and consulted ‘p doctor, who told me I had weak lungs. Ho reatod mo for quite a whilo, and I could obtain v rolief. 1 changed doctors, and changod sev- ral times, but could get no reliof. I could not ork more than ono or two dnys & weok; I pent all the money Ihad, and the major part f my brother's money, all for nothing, for I a8 gotting worse instond of bettor. I had ibout given up all hope o ever gotting well amn. Aftor & ymit to Kansas of about two eoks in the vain hope of obtaining some re- fof in the obange of climate, I returned to atia discournged. In looking over the dail Apers 1 moticod the A1vOrUsGMeNt of Dr. J. Crosap Mooy, nnd concluded 1 would make one oro attompt 'to regain my hoalth. I visitod i8 office the next day aad had him examineme, hen ho told mo I had catarrhal consumption, ut that he lhou*lu he could oure me. Idon't now why. but 1 had confidence in what ho aid and had him place me on treatment at nce. 1 commenced to get better after th rat troatment. I slopt woll the first night; hud 10 cough, no more night sweats, and got up in he morning greatly refreshed with my night's leep. 1 have only peen under his treatment for two weeksand er to-day than I have hy. 1 lost 30 pounds weight ghined about 10 troat “g’ Dr. McCoy, 0 a8 well as any objection to my publish- Ang this Intorview?” queried the reportor. | “None whatever,” answered Mr. Teiford. “I m very glad to add my testimony to the many hat the doctor has, and if 1can do anything i;“ b humanity by testifying to r. Mooy’ am rflr{iwlllinnm do 80" ' The r:gmrler thanked Mr. Telford for his rankness. and contloued on his weary way fter lnformation. STATE OF NEBRASKA, F " COUNTY OF DOVGLAS, | 59 William Telford, being first duly aworn, do- 8 and says that the forogoing statomenc is correct to {he best of his knowlodge t. WiLLIAM TELYOR Sworn to and subscribed in‘my presence this $0th day of August, A. D. 1887, W C. 0. ROEMER, Notary Publio. Mr. Telford resides on South Tenth street, be- weon Mason and Pacific stroets, where he will ully corroborate the above statement to any ne who will call or add; nim there. LEADS TO OONSUMPTION. 1 l’ xistod In the head and the yappar part of the throut for any length of time -tre pationt living in & district where people ro subjoot Lo catarrhal aifection--and the dis. ago has boen lort uncured, the catarrh invari- bly, sometimes slowly, extends down the indpipo and into the bronchial tubes, which ubes convey the wir to_the different parts of he lungs. The tubes become affeoted from ho sweliing and the mucous arising from atarrh, and, in some instances, become plugged p. 80 that the air cannot got in_ as froely us it h Shortness of breath follows, and the atient breathes with laborand difficulty. here is & sound of crackling ido the chest. At this stage of g 13 usually more rapid 0 patient has also hot ashos over his body. @ pain which accompanios this condition is £ a dull charactor, felt in the chest, by reust bone, or under t! in may eome and it fow days and then absent for several others. The cough that cours in tho first atages of bronchial catarrh is ry, comes on ut inter , hacking in charac- er, and i8 usually most troublesome in the Orning on rising, or Foing to bed at night and may be in tho first evidence of the disoase ex- ending into the lungs. Somotimes there are fits of coughing induced by the tough mucus so violent as to cause vom- ting. Later on the mucus that is raised ound to contnin small particles of yellow er, which indioates that the small tubes in the unics are With this thero are fton stroaks of blood mixed with the mucus. n om0 cases tho patient becomes very pale, s fovor, and expectorates before any cough phears. In some cases smal Jmnsses of cheesy sub- tance aro 8pit up, which, when pressod be- woen the fingors, omit #_ b other £ases, particlos of i hard, chalky ro aro Pitup. The raising of cheesy or chalky lumps idicate serfous mishief work in the lunga, DOCTOR J.Gresap M'Coy Late of Bellevue Hospital, N.Y AND DOCTOR Columbus Henry 310-311 RAMGE BUILDING -Cor. 16th and Harney Streets, Omaha, Neb. Whore all curablo cases are treated with suc pss. Medical diseases treated skiifully. Con umption, righi's D D 4, Rheu “Mdmh“hfhl US IJIIIIAHI u\' All di 0 the sexes a s nlty., (. 'ARKH OURED, RSN A QoN CLTATION at offico or by mail $1. ffice hours: 9 tolla.m,; 2to4p. m.; Ttc Os-. Sundays inc! mn« receives prompt attention. o0 (hroush the toaier sad 1 - thite possi © mails, e thus possi for those unable to mal fourney W ob- Succossful hospital treatment at thelr 08, NO lotters answored u wceompa- Miied by 4o in stum pe. w:“:m *bvthg“:m-.l..u ‘d&n’ rooms ONE DAY IN THE COUNTRY. The Pretty Legend of the lndian Plume. A VISIT TO HORSESHOE LAKE. A Picturesque Pla An Attractive Retreat for Rest and Recrea- tion~Duck Hunting and Fishing. Written for the Omaha Bee by Sandy Griswold. There is not much of romance to the every day man in a trip from this city to Horseshoe lake, the nearest hunting and fishing grounds of amy considerable no- toriety. Still, there are some pretty, picturesque views, too, that even a dolt must notice. Long, sinnous reaches of the river, with their background of em- erald bluffs, strike the eye and enliven the scene between here and the ancient Mormon settlement of Florence. That is about all, save to lovers of nature, who, like Thor, see beauty 1n everything, the solitary old snag,the barren rock, the naked plain. Otherwise, the country is one unbroken stretch of rolling land— fields of wild sunflowers. which, with a mingling of other vegetation,'and a towering oak or a graceful elm thrown in here and there, with an old tumble-down rail fence, would be most exquisite, in- decd—fields of ripening corn and brown stubble and jungles of noxious weeds, reticulated vines and bramble and briar at every whipstitch, with once in a while a sluggish, intermittent rivulet, un- worthy of the name, and the painting is sketched before you for criticism. No grand old woods, no charmings farmsteads with fields and fences, drive and walks, and everything as cleanly, neat and methodical as a model house- d, such as ure to be seenin the older astern states, are here to stimulate the ancy and engage the mind. But they are coming. Nebraskaisa grand state, and her farmers, intelligent, thrifty and imitative. However, once through Flor- ence and off to the northwest, then east, over the vrodigious backbone of a line of giznnti bluffs that follows the majestic Ligsouri for hundreds of miles, and the scenery, while it grows hardly more startling, is more varied, more engaging and entrancing. 1 made the trip recently in compan with a gemtleman with whom I havi spent many glorious days upon all the best ducking grounds between Kosh- konong and the Chesapeake. We went upon a sort of an excursion of explora- tion to overlook the prospects tor fall duck-shooting in Nebraska, and returned with convictions that they are great. It was o pleasant morning, only Sun- day last, just after the furious thunder storm of the night before. The blue vault was of that tender transparent tint through which we seem to penetrate into nnbounded depths,and overit the wan ? summer breeze wreathed its gracefu cloud paintings. Now a turreted castle, now agpillared palace, next a fleet bears up, then a long cavalcade of knights on snowy steeds, & troop of Spanish mule: teers, a caravan of Arabs and their undulatin geamels, palm trees, banyan ragged masses of cotton and then superb Himmalayan peak. The landscape, too, was full of revivi- fying animation. A vagrant breeze set the tall grass in graceful motion; the red- headed woodpecker, the same, bright, shy, nuc{ bird the country over, with an upward slide clutched the " bark of some old dead tree and rattled with his flinty beak till echo laughed again; ¢ hair winnowed hie sable shape far overhead; the groundsquirrel made a brown streak across the soggy road. and the rabbit, jerking his long ears, bounded athwart our winding way. fn(mquently a farm house was passed, & welcome relief at ::{ time, even with their straggling out- buildings, unkempt fields, scrawny or- chardsand barbed wire fences. But just amile or so north of Florence, nestling midst a very crypt of seemingly impene- trable undergrowth, perched “upon the apex of the loftiest of all hills, and off a quarter of a mile or more from the road, and the vision was greeted with a magnificent picture, ndeed; the ro- mantiec suggestion of old world baronial life given by a beautiful brown residence, with unique angles and pointed turrets, and belonging to whom I know not. But we were soon by and over the bluff, the horse laboring throug h several inches of sand as we passed down an avenue that nad been cut some yeuars before by brawny arms from out a very concrete of wild plum, sumach, hazel, grape, box- wood, scrub-oak, gnaried cottonwood and pig-hickory. ere and there, on either hand, was an expanse of wild meadow with wooded acclivities. The sunlight breaking through the scurrying olouds, lay like a golden mantle on the distant stubble tields, embroidered at the odsau by the shadows of the hazel and and the oak. On we rustled; the new- ness, the picturesqueness, the romance of the strange scene delighting us. The un- certain light tinged the adder’s tongue into deeper purple and made a scarlet in- taglio of the Indian plume, fittingin some cranny of the bank along the narrow road. THFE INDIAN PLUME! 1t is a lovely flower, rising in a slender epire of superb scarlet, nearly a foot high, its delicate petals like the gerani- um’s. While the crimson of the sumack and the russet of the hazel burr glowed, the Indian plume seemed to almost blaze in the fervid sunshine and to kindle into rub; li}ht the green nooks where it nes- tled- ['bhave always admired the flower, and once, ten years ago, when hunting deer up on the Thunder Bav rver in north Michigan, 1 keard from an old Chippewa Indian the legand of its birth. any, many moons agone, Oonomo was tho sachem of the Chippewas dwell- ing hfi the river of the Thunder Bay. One daughter was THE LIGHT OF HIS LODGE. She was called the Indian Plume. Beau- tiful as a star and pure as a snowflake on the wintry summit_of Michiiinack. She waus betrothed to Monowayno, who was as fleet as the wind on trail of deer or foe. All went happily and the life of the sachem’s ghter was like the days that the Indian summer smiling in the sullen face of winter, breathes in purple mist through dingle and dale. But at last a dark cloud swept over the Chippewas, and the white-haired old sagamore, the frolicsome boy, the strong warrior and the blossoming maiden fell alike beneath it. The nation cowered before this re- sistless foe. Oonomoo bowed his aged head ana died, and Monowayno, the fleet and the brave, was sent upon the shad- owy trail. The tribe veiled their faces in dread, The great Maniton wasangey with s children. In vain the calumet sent its smoke from the lins of the prophet toward His dwelling place. In vain was the wolf-dog slaughtered to drag away the sins of an unhappy race. One day the prophet declared the Mani- tou had appesred to him, He ceme in a night of storm, of lightning, of tempest and death, but in wondroua splendor that shone over the turbulent waters of the Thunde bn{ And thus he said: **Not the smoke of the calumet nor the blood of the wolf-dog will soften my wrath, The evarm blood of the human heart slone will appeasé it. That spilled, nfimn will my smile beam upon my children!" . The old prophet ceased, and a deep silence hushed tte crouching nation. And then like & waif from an naknown realm, the slender lndian Plume glided within ireling the cordon of flrlm warriors e t hunder gm Prophet on the banks of the ay. ‘gl‘ho Indian plume is a beautiful flewer," said she, in her tones of music, but now as sad as the wail of the wind in the time of the falling leaves, ‘let the blood of her heart wash away the sins of her father's people!” Aud grasping a knife from the belt of one of the braves she rushed close to the stream on which she and Moriowayno had skimmed together in their birch canoe, and plunged it into her bosom! ‘I'he red blood epurted upon the earth, the keen biade had cleft her heart! Reverently and sorrowfully did the warriors ift her in their arms, and silently and solemnly did they lay her slender form beside that of her dead lover, When the next morning trod through the forest, his golden fingers dallied with the spot that had been stained with the blood of the slender Indian Plume. No blood was there, but instead, a slender tflower, red as the flush that kindles the cheek of the sunset as it sinks in the &loom of the night. ‘The death cloud vanished like the leaf of May before the breath of October,and s00n ils presence darkened no more the hearts of the nation. And ever after was this flower worshipped by the Chip- cwas, Ottawas and the Pottawattamies. lhe warriors twined 1ts blossoms in thdir scralp-locks, the maidens spangled its glowing sparks over their tresses of dark- ness. When the chill breath of autumn blighted it they mourned; when the late summer warmed it into bloom they were happy. To this day it glows in the heart of the remnant of tl as an emblem of love and uns; votion. HORSE SHOE LAKE. Butam I forgetting Horse Shoe Lake and the outlook for canvas-back, red head, mallard and widgeon? Along about noon, after innumerabie mishaps, and losing our course several times, we reached the lake country, and the rond narrowed and grew more exe- crable as we approached, with thickets and broad tufts of wild grass in the cen- ter until it dimi i into a mere trail, doubling and twisting like a water snake in_the -herbage of the mendow. Side cul de-sacs enticed. the wheels of our phaton, whence we were frequently obliged to back to get upon on the road and through which, now and then, t sturdy steed forced them by strength, over sand and rocks and a film of agglutinative mud and water. A thunder-pump rose from her seat in the wild rice at the road side, and fanned heavily away with a hoarse cry, the light glittering on_her brown shape; that feathered buffoon, and peculiarly Ameri- can bird, the blue jay, scolded from every clump of pucker brush like an old woman, while the crow cawed mockimgly as he flew ucross as if delighted at our plight. Finally, however, after paying an ad- mission fee of 10 cents_each and 10 cents for the horses, at Necal's corner, we drove down a lane bordered with seraggy willows and odorous weeds, and the lak ¢ lay before us! The view now changed as suddeunly as the scenes in & theater. The banks of the lake are low, with a sparse woods along the shores, which frequently yield to broad spaces of natural grass, wild rice, reeds and Lilliputian cane, called in- differently by the man who presides over the only domicile within view, parks and wild meadows, They were skirted next the hmpid waters, either with thick- ets or swamp maples, the green of the opposite shore being seen through the loops and vistas of the folinge. Some- times these bayous wind like bays into the recesses of the background woods, beckoning the fancy to distant nooks of beauty. Here and there, in the forked head u{ a dry tree, the nest of the fish-hawk, a rounded mass of Tay, withered sticks. From the abun- §nnce of water in these, woods, the hird haunts almost every gcene, and his gracs ful shape, and wild scream, gives a sav zo charm to the place. Spread over the shallow waters was a broad tloor of lily- pads, glistening as if in green varnish, e rice and reeds and moss chook what might in some seasons he a passa- ble channel. After feeding the horses and gorman- dizing on our own lunch, we learned from the man that runs the place the ins and outs of the puddle, then took a boat for exploration. We skimmed over the shadows in the water,where some jugged branch g was so accurately depicted, it seemed that the skift must be rent in gliding over it. Black soaking logs, almost burried in the water weeds along or pomted from the bau the King-fisher and the the grey plove vanished at our approac 1 among the ric e ina while, a startled teal would wi an old hen mallard, with her resounding qu:wk«lu:mk-:}\mck q-u-a-c-k! g-u-a-c-k! would rise'and quarter aw It did not require any gre time to convince us that Horseshoe lake is a famous ground for ducks, and guess- ing from the numbers already in, the shooting this fall is wonderfully promis- ing, but'still we rowed on. We at last reached a big bend to the left, and round this we went and 3 broader sheet of water. dotted with many fields of reeds and rice, expanded at our prow. The view was surpassingly beautiful. On each side the lnke curved gracefully away, at the left in an nninterrupted line, and at the right hlendinq to all appear- auces with a network of small islands, and, on the point of the nearest one stood a tall crane, like a post, evidently wait- ing for n chance to drive his long beak through some unwary bass or perch. Then as far as the eye could reach were headlands, crescent bays, island edges and liguid vistas that ex- tended outward until swallowed upin the flags and rice and weeds of the shores. We stopped and gazed upon the lake in its wild beauty, with playful breezes darting over its gloss and the sunlight kissing it into radiant smiles, and then, with a sigh of regret, turned our boat and were on our downward way to the landing. The dash of the oars echoed pleasantly and the ripple of the wake macde hollow angles and pulsated among the lilies and rushes of the margin. Here I thought once would I live; here, in this free wilderness, this tranquil realm of content, where honor is not measured by success, where pretension does not trample upon merit, where genius is not a jest, goodness not a seem- ing and devotion not a sham. Here where the light of aay is undarkened by wrong, where solitude is the parent of meditation and eloquent of God. Here would I live, listening to the loon's strange bravura and communing with all those teachings that guide the insight, soften the heart, and punfy, while they exnand, the soul. ‘Ten o'clock, however found me snug in bed, but threatened with a chill, at my hotel in Omabh: ——— Don’t Laugh erve People. Their sufferings are very real, al- though you, with your vigorous physique and strong nerves, can scarcely believe it. Rather suggest the use of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters which, in removing every truce of dyspepsia and regulatin, the liver and bowels, strikes at and o.g tirpates the most prolitic cause of chronic nervous trouble. ‘That nerve-shattering disease, fever and ague is among the formidable ailmentay to vhe removal of which this genial remedy js specially adapted, Nervous prostration, resunltin from prolonged mental or physicial efi fort, 18 also a state of the sysfem where the intervention of this tonic is very de- sirable, more particularly as its useis to quiet and rel he tension of over- wrought nerves. The Bitters are in- valuable in rheumatism, neurs aad ‘kndnl? troubles. ' Employ no sulbstitute lor 4 N CLAR| i WORKSHOP, How Careful the Great Manufacturer was in Making ¥ Lens. Ona table 1n Alyan CIAtk's manufact- ury at Cambridge was ' the finished Pulkova lens which weighed 450 pounds, and consisted of two lenttes each thirty inches in drameter, sayg Otto Michels in the New York Sun: Generally these lenses are made to accurately tit, and are *nlnad together with Oanada balsam, but n such Inrge glassos as the Pnlkova and the Lick, they are fitted in ® metal frame with an adjustment so that thcy can be made to approach each ether, or other- wise. If a single lens were used, the object inspected would bo-fringed with various artificial colors and other defects due to spherical aberration, but by the simple artifice of wsing two kinds of glass these defects are cured to a great extent and a nearly perfect image 18 cured. When the evening was sufliciently ad- vanced the great Pulkova glass was placed in its temporary fittixg in the gar- den. There was no moon and the dark- ness was 1atense. The glass was brought out on a four-wheel hand truck and lifted into *the tube by five men und fixed by revolving it in the screw fitting. The tube was forty-ive feet long and weighed with the attending fittings about seven tons. Two piles of brickwork supported the whole. There was no clockwork movement and the roughest apparatus was employed, the telescope was raised ana moved by a guide rope, the motion of an equatorial movement being initj- ated by using a common win Al the motion of the earth caused the obje to pass across the field of the telescopw, the observer gave the order “toilow,” when a slight turn of the windlass kept the object in view. Such were the {uuuh appliances used to test this §60,000 lens. The planets had all set, and I had to be satistied with a view of a fixed star, which is an excellent object for testing the optical properties of ‘a lens, but very uninteresting otherw as the largest telescope can make little impression on a lixed star; no disk can be seen, merely a speck of light, The star selected was a small one, and barely visible as n pale, minute vbjeet. On looking at it with this magnificent instrument its wonderful light-gathering powers were at once evident, for the star shone with the lustre and b ancy of an electric lighg. It was an object which brought out all the imperfections of the glass, and to the yes of Mr. Clark and kis sons many were evident, and, it id, two mouths’ work was necessary to correct them. Duriug the trial the lons was low- ered and flve men revolved the glass in 1ts fitting. On its being placed in posi- tion again oue of the sons was ahout to muke another test when the old man shouted: **Wait, boys, let her cool.” I was curious to know what this could mean, and Alvan Clark explained that the correction was so delicate that the heut from the hands of tive men holdin, the metal case of the ol ve would change the correction,so 1t had to *‘cool.” On the front or crown ghiss lens was a very marked flaw,due to the lapping over of a stratta of glass iy cooling. By measurement I found it to be one and a quarter inches long, by one-eighth of an inch in diameter, almost it the center of the lens, near the front murface This was a yery provoking cir¢amstance in a $60,000 gl Mr. Clark; had_ ordered another disc of glass, but Prof. Von Otto Streuve decided to accept the damaged one, at least for a time, as-it seemed very doubtful when another glass might be expected to be made in France. This flaw would not alter the definition of the lens, but would mercly stop a fractional part of light passing throigh the lens. s e S The cleansing, antiseptic and healing qualities of Dr.” Sage's Catarrh Remedy are unequalled. ‘_..__.L Strange Harplike Musicata Funeral. Savanuah News: A most remakable story that is well authenticated comes from Bauks county, concerning the burial of the late Dr. A. D. Chinault. He died on June 18, of fever, and was buried June 20, at Winn’s buring ground, near Lula. After the graye had been pre- are, the corpse carried to it and all the rum:r:\l rites performed, the coflin was lowered in the vault and the grave was just begun o be fiilled. a strange noise was heard that sounded like musie from a harp. The crowd was considerably agitated, and a general comwmotion fol- lowed. No one knew what or where it was. To some it appeared to be in the grave, and to others in the trees. There 15 no doubt about there being a strange noise being heard, one that will, in_all probability, never be explained this side of eternity. Rev, H. Cartledge, who was conducting the funeral rite ys he did not hear the noise, as he 15 a little deaf, but noticed the cougregation was excited and that there wassomething un- usual operating upon the audience. DR. SPINNEY S. E. Cor. 13th and Dodge Sts. Successfu'ly Treats a'l Nervous, Chronic and Private Diseases of MEN AND WONMEIN Dr. 8. 1s well known as the founder of tho Montreal (Canadu) Medical Institute and pro- prietor of the Spinneyvilie Indrmary. The Dr. Bas hd 27 yoars' experieice i the (tentment of chronic and sexual diseases, and his eiforts boing crowned by wondertull success, he would call the attention of the afllictod to his long standing and well earned reputation as suffis cient assuranoe of his skill and ability. NERVOUS DEBILITY. Spermatorrhaea, Partial fmpotency and all Qisensos of the nervous system and sexual or- gans speedily and permanectly cured. BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES. SYPHLIS—A disoase most horribie in its results —completely eradicated without the uso of mercury, Charges reasonable. Y A me Who may be suffering trom tho etfects of youth- ful follies or indiscretions, will do well 10 avail thewmseives of this, the greatest boon ever lald at the alter of suffering humanity . DR. SPIN- NEY will gunrantee to forfeit $50 for overy case of seminal weakness or private disenscs ind or character which he undertakes to cure. MIDDLE-AGED MEN There are many troubled with' too frequen evacuations of the bladder, of4on accompanied by a slight Smarting or burning sensation and wenkening of the systom in & manner the pa- tient cannot account for. xamming the urinury denosits & ropy e t will often he found, and sometimes small particle of albu- mien will appear or (e solor B bf i thin, milk- ish hue, again chansing to a dark or torpid ap- pearance. TIERE ARE MANY MEN WHO DIE OF THIS DIFFIOULTY, lgnorant of the cause, whioh s the Bocond stage of semin: . TR DOCTOR WILL GUARANTEE A o ns Office hours 9t012a. m 1 th® 6 to 9 p. m. N. B. Persons unable'to visit us may he treated heir Medicinos a press. Cow LY OR DY LETTER, F) Send stamp for que: Call or address DR, SPINN 13th street, Omaha. n st find eireular. ' & CO., 105 8. S. T. BALDRIDGEy A. M., Physiclan and Surgesn, Offlce, Cor. 15th and Farnam sts. Residence, 2621 Farnam st. Hours. 9to 11 a. m,, 2 to 5 p. m. RICHARD NUAN, M. D., OCULIST AND AURIST. THE CAPITOL HOTEL Lincoln, Neb. The best known and most lar hotel the siate. - Location ou::lnl. ny;:nynl:m-nu Il'l.l Nu‘:uufl e for commercial men and o blic gathe: e % & T S ) hJo_ nnn Warranted a Sure Cure for_Rhouma- Neurnlgia Boro fyes, and all Tntlammations. Diphtherin and up cured 1in from thirty to sixty winutes. It you wish to know” what this wonderful remedy 18 doing for guffer- ing humanity, send for circulars. T. B. FORGY, Roow K, GRUENIG WK, NORRIS, WILCOX & RIBBEL, One Price SHOE STORE 1517 A Douglas Street OMAHA. Stevens Bros,, Real Estate 1513 Farnam St A large list of city and farm Property & Stocks of Goods, For Sale or Ex change. Wholesale Dealer in Agrienltural Implements, Wagons, Oerriages and Dugglen Jonos girest between oth LININGER & METCALF CO., Agrieultural Implements, Wagons Carriages, Buggies, Rie, Wbo!ofl-lo. Om _ha, PARLIN,ORENDORF & MARTIN ‘Wholosale Doalers in Agriculiaral Implements, Wagons and Buggies. 901, 803, 006 and 07, Jones #8 A. HOSPE, JR., Artists’ Materials, Pianos and Organs, W13 NI!III Street, Omaha. ““HIMEBAUGH & TAYLOR, Builders’Hardware & Seale Repair Shop Mechanlics' Tools and Buffaio Sealos. 105 Douglas st Omaha, Neb. Books and Stationery. 4.7, KENYON & CO., Who esale and Re:all Booksellers and Stationers, 1622 Dougias st., Omaha, Neb. Telophone 801. ‘orrespondence solicited. W. V. MORSE & 0. Jobbers of Boots and Shoes. 2411 Farnaw st, Omah: Manutactory, Summer STORZ & ILER, Lsger Beer Brewers, 1521 North 18th Streets Omal b, SOV " "CLARKE BROS. & C0., Omaha Cofree and Spice Mills. O Flavoring B 4-16 Harnoy EAGLE CORNICE WORKS, John Epencter, Prop. Manutacturer of Galvanized Iron and Cornice. 933 Dodge and 108 and 105 N, 10th st.. Omaha, Neb. RUEMPING & BOLTE, Manufactarers of Ornamental Galvanized Cornires, Dormer Windows, Fin Metalic8kylight, ete. 3108, o 1}11 Omaha. WESTERN CORNICE WORKS, C. Specht, Prop. Ga) 1 e, A rod Pal o Hceale REyTut. o aind 1) B, e Bhomatas e e e Carpets. Ta Pieiz \ STUDIO! 1406 Farnam §t., op- posite Paxton Ho- tol. T am ready for bu- siness and will make a speclalty of artis- tic Photographing The best facilities in tho city all work guaranteed to B irst ci in evel CLOTHIER, ) GENTS' Furns'g Goods Huts, Caps. Trunks Valises. 1207 Farnam St., Omaha, Neb. . G, SCHMITZBERGER, werchant Tailor, Fine Tailor- ing, A Specialty, 416 S. 15th St. Omaha, Neb. Proprietos. |} 0.5 HEGiNS 0YSTER —AND— Chap Honse, 1201-1203 Douglas St. Ladies’ Cafe and Restaurant, 1400 DouglasSt, ONAIA, ‘Open Day CANFIELD, Hatter —AND— Furrier, FINE HATS, Latest styles just in. LADIES' FURS Made to Order. REPAIRING Promptly astendod to. 405 South 15th St, Rauoe Brock, OxaWA, - - Nes, OMAHA CARPET CO,, Jobbers of , Carpets, Curtains, Oil Cloths, Rugs, l.!nolfum-. "'l'""' Kto. Iiflm treed. W. L. WRIGHT, Agent for *bo Mauufacturers and Importers of Crockery, Glassware, Lamps, Chimueys, (? 'l'le;. 317 Bouth 18th st i b (.’Lfl/l{lflfl M. ELGUITER'S Mammoth Clothing House, Corner Farnum and Tonth Biree:s Omaha. Neb. " Commission and Storage. Commission and Jobbing. Butter, Bggsand Produce. Consignments solieited. TioadquaRers for Btoi rry. Boxve aud G Bas 141 Omaha. DDELL & RIDDELL, Storage and Commission Merchants, Bpecialiies—Butter, Eggs, Cheese, Poultry, Game, Oysters, oto., eto. 138, iith 8t. PEYCKE BROS., Commission Merchants, Fruits, Produce and Provisions, Om ST FMAN & CO., Produce Commission Merchants, Roultry, Lutier, Geme, Fraite. ete. 220 8. lith st eb, Coal ans Linu: R "C. F. GoonAN, V. Pios. . und Treas. )KE & LIME NY, Jobbers of Hard and Soft Coal, 209 South T'hirteenth Street, Omnha. Neb, J, JOHNSON & CO., Manufacturers of Illinois White Lime. Aud Shippers of Coal and Coke. Cement, Pl Lame, Hi Fire Brick, Drain, Til Ofco, Puxton Hotai. Farnam st Telenhone 811, _At‘:nu and Todécco. ~""MAX MEYER & CO., Jobbers of Cigars, Tobacco, Cuns and Ammunition, 215 to 223 8. 11th st., 100 to 1024 Farnam st., Omaba, Neb. WEST & FRITSCHER, Manufacturers of Fine Cigars, And Wholesale Derlers in Leaf T'obaccos, 3 ARG 10 N, Wih sirek Onatacs | on 18 Dry Goods. . E. SMITH & CO,, Dry Goods, Farnishing Goods & Notions 2 Jlfll and 1104 Douglas, cor. th}!l J)_lnn Neb, Distille Distiliors of Liguors, Aleohoi and Spirita. _Importers 'and JoLDErs of Winesand Liquors. WILLOW SPRINGS DISTILLE' £ C0. and ILER & CO., Importers and Jobbere of Fine Wines and Llu]!’lul‘ ufaoturers Tndia Bit- . K. SAW Y Exi, Manufacturing Dealer in SmokeStacks, Britehings, Tanks and Geno ul Bollor Repuicing, 115 Dodwe strot, Omaha. ; F. L MCMANUS, [ BI‘I.LIVAF.— OMAHA WIRE & IRON WORKS, Manufactarors of wlr;n and lr(:'n Rll"ll!& Desk Rails, Indow Quards, Flower Siands, Wire s 3 N.10th. Orders by mail v:)mmly':ll:‘:::.!l:u OMAITA TUMBER CO., Deal All Kinds of Building Material at Wholessla, 18th Street and Union Pacific Track, Omaha. LOUIS BRADFORD, Dealer in Lumber, Lath, Lime, Sash, Doors, Bte. Yarda_Corner Tth and Douglas; Cornes Wb and Douglas, o CHICAGO LUMBER CO., Wholesale Lumber, t BB Lith llrIM_. (‘HIBI»NQ?._'LCD‘D. A . DIETZ, Lumber. 15th and (‘ll!lor!ll !5'!“" Omaha, N}Im 3 FRED W. GRAY, Lumber, Lime, Cewent, Kte., Rtc, ~ Cor.6th and pouglas ste.. Omata. Nox N T. W. HARVEY LUMBER (0., To Dealers Only. o it R CHAS. R. LEE, Hardwood Lumbes, looring. 9th and Dougles T, Managey " JOHN A. WAKFFIELD, ‘Wholesale Lumber, Ete. Imported a4 A land Ce . "Aeont for B iInhuEes 1y draulic Coment aid Iione” ‘Quincy White. UNION STOCK ¥ARDS CO., Of Omaha. Limited. Johnm F. Boyd, Superintendent, N, P. RICHMAN. Ju Il BLANCHARD R, RICHMAN & CO., Live Stock Commission Merchants, Oficr—Room 34, Opposite Exch * McCOY BROS., i TLive S8tock Commission Merchants. Markot farnished free onapoijcation, Stockars an fooders furnishod on goxl torn Rolorence O National Bink and South nahs Natlons fon Stock Yards, South Omaa, “M. BURKE & SONS, Live S8tock Commission. @e0. Burke, Manager Union Stosk Yards, 8. Omaba. hone 532, SAVAGE & GREEN, Live Btock Commission Merchants, lh.--nu“mn‘ tsg.a - ||(<1 ohr a;?n solioited. Millinery and Rotion I. OBERFELDER & CO., linporters and Jobbers of Millinery and Notions, 1213 e 215 Harney Btieet, Omaha, Neb. Notions. J. 1. ROBINSON NOTION €Oy ‘Wholesale Denlers In Notions and Furnishing Goods, 403 and 405 8. Tenth 8t., Omahn, 3 Overalls. CANFIELD MANUFACTURING COMPANY, . P}{Anufutureri of Overalls, joan: its, Shirts, Bte. 11 1 s Pani m.h..q'zw:gf: 1104 Dou 7las Stroet, PAPER CARPENTER PAPEE CO., Wholesale Paper Dealers. T‘"‘"’ A nlce ;lnrll oll Printing, Wrapping and Wit G :vl\'c‘;twn lon. on_ Lo rnvl load 200 oo Job Printers, Rlank Book Makers, And Book Binders. 106 and 18 Bouth Fourtesnt street. Omahn, Nob. - WESTERN NEWSPAPE] Auxiliary Publishers. Dealers in Type, Presses and Printers’ Supplies. 500 Bouth Twelfth Street. U. . WIND ENGINF, and PUMP COMPANY. DT Ry Belugiel e T atel SR namt., Ol’l- 8. K. A.L. STRANG CO,, Pumps, Pipes and Ei Wi Rallway and Iflfl_lb’lmlll L., O ~TN Manufacturers Engines, Boilers & General Machinery heet Iron work, Bteam Pumpr.Saw Mills, Aome Shafting, Dodge Woodsplit Pulleys, o%a, Allowions, arapers aads aiecied et 5] Rubber Goodi OMAHA 'R UBBER CO,, Munufacturer and Dealers in all kinds ot Rubber Goods, 01l Clothing nnd Leather Belting, 1003 Farnam St. Bole msnufagturers of Klnnuflr' el _dnunofll- Liguors. 1112 —_— e e Furnit i STONE, ‘Wholesale Dealers in Furniture, Faroam st.. Omubia, Neb. CHARLES SHIVERICK, Furniture, Bedding, Upholstery,. ‘Mirvors, etc. 1206,1308 and 1210 Farnam st, Omaha, Grocer: PAXTON, GALLAGHER & CO., Wholesale Groceries and Provisions, Noo. 70, 707, W0 and 711 8. 10th SL.Umflnn, Neb. McCORD, BRADY & CO., ‘Wholesale Grocers, 1itn and ,quvrnin'm_lw..}bmnn LEE, FRIED & Jobbers of Hardware and Nails, , 8heet Iron. Kte. Agents for Tlows Scales, Miawi Powder Co., Omnha. Neb W. J. BROATCII, Heavy Hardware, Iron and Steel, Bpricgs. Wagon Etoek, Hardwaro or, etc. 1200 1211 Harney st O EDNEY & GIBBON, Wholesale Iroh and Steel, ‘Wagon and Carringe Wood Stock, 17 Hard Hic VAT und 1210 Loavenworth st ounh Mo ™ MILTON ROGERS Stoves, Ranges, Furnaces, Tiles, Manties, GGirates, Brass l:a(-\dlL 152l and 52 Feroam “PAXTON & VIERLING Iron Works, Wrought and Cast Iron Buildiag Work Iron Stairs illn g, Beams and Girders, 8ieam Kigines, Brus ork. s "~ Safes, Etc. P.BOYER & CO., Agents for Hall's Safe & Lock Co.s’ "G. ANDREEN, Omaha Safe Works. Manufacturers of Fire and Barglar Proof Safes, Vauly Doors, Juil Work, e and Wire Work, ath M. A. DISBROW & CO., ‘Wholesale Manufacturers of Sash, Doors, Blinds and Mouldings, Draneh office, 12tk and 1zard sta., Omaks, Neb, BOIIN MANUFACTURING CO,, Manufacturers, of Sash, Doors, Blinds, Mouldings Stair Work and Interior Hard Wood Finish Just opened. N. E.cor. 5th and Leavenworth Sia. Owaba, Neb. WAL MC INTOSTL . BODWELL BODWELL & Mcl SH, * Real EstateDealers 140 South Spring Street, y, CALIFORNIA. country property of wil ral informution (o new- Instant re- lief. Worst casescured, ‘No knife, drugsor clamps used. Add. V. O Supply Co. Box 726. St. Louls, Mo,