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DEATH OF AN AGED MINISTER. Tho Rev. Willlam Cooley Passes Away at the Asylum. OPENING OF DISTRICT COURT. Bome of the Suits Recently Begun— Accidents On the B, & M. During Janua State House Items— Personal Mention. BEE'S LINCOLN BUREAT.] Yesterday at the state hospital for the insane Rev. William Cooley quietly passed away «fter baving been an in- ate there for ighic months. TRev. Mr. Cooley was about seventy y of age, and o wt of his life ) been spent in the minist A stroke of puralysis rendered him nearly help- less and affected his mind that he was placed in the hospital. About two months gince another light stroke came and he has gradually failed to the day of his death. His brother, Rev. R. Cooley, is a resident of this city The distriet court openecd yesterday with Judge :1ds on the beneh and the 112 attorneys in the city in attendance. The judge handed down several ions from the previous term and the call of the docket occupied the remainder of the morning hour Theinterest to in the enses presages a long and bu trial term. The jury will be called to- day and trials procecded with. Among the cases filed was a suit for damages brought hy Mrs, Lizzie Stalc against the city of Lincoln in which she sues for #5,000 ‘damages received in a fall occasioned by a defective sidewalk, The time the accident occurred was in October last and the place on Thir- teenth street between S and T, de- fective walk there causing her to fall heavily forward, injuring her knee until she became a eripple for life and has been wholly unable to work and support her family since that time. James H. Brinkerho!f sue: Yo the grounds rtics wer in the ¢ frros T some 50 opin- married February y of New York and im the marriage his wife f6 with” her pavents for Now Jorse and | ever since failed to commun cate with him or recognize him as her husband. On these grounds the court is asked to sever the ma 1 bonds. Benjamin I, Knight has commenced asuit against W, H. H. Dunn to re- cover $330 alleged to be due and has at- tached cortain property to secure his debt. B. & M. ACCIDENTS, There were, according to the report filed with the board of transportation, lour accidents on the B, & M. railway for the month of January, thiee of which were fatal, two of those killed being train men. Of the injured the large per cent of brakemen and switch- men was maintained, ten switchmen ve- iving injuries during the month and nine brakemen. Of the other accidents two were to passengers who jumped from moving trains and were seériously injured. A large proportion of the train men iujur(-fi had their homes in Lincoln. STATE HOUSE NOTES. The Wyoming Improvement company of Geneva, Neb., filed articles of indbrporation yesterday with the se tary of state. ‘apital stock, $150,00 incorporators, V. C. Shickley, Edward K. Cobb, Charles W. Shickley. Deputy Land Commissioner Charles M. Carter is home from Nebraska City where he sold the Fulton tract of school land to Hon. J. Sterling Morton who donates the tract to Nebraska City for a public park. Commissions yesterday were issued to the following notarie Edward L. Baker, Wanneta, Chase county; Henry C. Boynton, Hastings, Adams county; J. W. Shahan, Kearney, Buffalo county John Smith, Grant, Perkins county; J. Carnahan, York, York county; E. L. 51 r4tapids, Boone county; ,Chadron, Dawesjeounty: Cagney, Lincoln, Lancaster county; S Buckmaster, York, York county; John G. Moore. Hastings, Adams county; Louis J. Kudena, Wahoo, Saunders county. The force of men employed on the central part of the capitol building has been largely in ed and the work from this on will be with the aim to have the building completed prior to the next session of the legislature. The dome will be placed in position in the early spring. Sarg Allen Edward P PERSONAL, udge Broady, of Beatrice, city yesterday, and called’ at district court. Captain Paine, deputy oil inspector, made an official visit to Weeping Water yesterday A. B. Smith, of Denver, who has in charge the surveying work of the Lin- cbln town site company, was in the city yesterday Sam D. Cox, who has been in' Chicagzo the past week securing engravings illustrative of Lincoln, veturned home Sunday evening. Deputy Marshall Ed Allen, of the United States distriet court, is in the city on official business, Maj C. Birney, of the live stock ‘rlmumisa‘\un' cume in from Crete yester- ay. ", M. Hopwood, of the Holdrege Nug- got, was a capital city visi sstevday. John M. Walters passenger through Lincoln yesterday, en route for Mount Vernon, I, the sad intelligence having been wired him of the death of his wife and child in the cyeloac at that pl oy A long controve in the district court in regard to the title to a piece of land in this county in which the heirs of the original holder of the titles came on from Ireland and contested the disposition that the courts had made of the case. R. B. aham, the present holder of the title, shuking hands yesterday over the thet the court at its opening handad down a decision in his To-duy the county comimnis open the new plans submitted for the proposed Lancaster county court house and the wish is very gencrally prossed thet hoveaftor the e havo clear sailing and that allow the building to be built within the amount 1 by the county, The erowded condition of the present county building shows the necessity for speedy worl t the county have a per- manent home for business as soon us ble. he Martha Waskington branch of the Irish National League in America, whose mborship 15 composed of ladies, rranged, at the Sunday after- noon mneting, to give an entertainmont the 15t of Maveh, the proceeds to be do- voted to eity charities. he ladfes hav- ing the entevminment in ¢harge hope for the cordial co-operation of the dif- fevent roligious denominations in the city iu cartying out the moeting. seerc of the state board of 3 y has called the attention of druggists to the faet that the examin- ing voard wiil hold a been gging on sssion at the | T [73 capitol building in this eity, on the 6th Lof March, to. examine applicants: for registration. ———ie Don't Gee Caught This spring with your blood full of im- purities, your digestion impared, your appetite poor, kidneys and liver torpid, and whole system liable tobe prosteated by difease—~but get yourself into good condition, and ready for the changing and warmer weather, by king Hood's Savsaparilla, It stands unequalled for purifying the blood, giving an appetite, und for a general spring medicine, - - THE RULE OF THE REVOLVER. A Man From Nevada Has Something to Say in Its Favor. “When I went over to London first to place a mine,” said Major Biles of N rocking himself in one of th rustic chairs of the Palace bar room, says the San Francisco Examiner, ‘it made me mad the way I was taken earve of. It was a policeman here to tell 3 not to go there, and a policeman ther to tell you not to go here, a guard to loek you up in the car for fear you'd fall out and get killed, and so on. Then the bars were closed on Sunday and you found the museums and every place but the churches padlocked. law, law e ywhere till I was sick the law, and I'd have turned anarchist if th narchists had been invented then. T tell you [ was mighty glad to get baclk to the Comstock, where every: body uearly caries his own law in his hip-poct “That must have been adreadful state of society,” suggested a gentlemau from New Haven. “it wasnt of socic L you look out for your- ful of stepping on oth Somebody was shot eve sid the major out the know of. It mad self and be car fellows’ toes night almost “Good g ousl” “And the man for breakfast generally deserved to be served up,” added the major, “I tell you it's o good thing to live in a community where n who ought to be killed get killed. But.” objected the gentleman from New Haven, “were you ot constantly in danger of your life ot at all. There’s no place on earth where o man is so safe from harm as u pistol-ruled mining camp. 5o Jong as he minds bis own business and does the square thing. The fighting you read so much about is confined pret strictly to the toughs. They don't hother respectable people. The chaite of a vigilan mumittee keeps them straight in th on. The principal danger to men who are not toughs is from flying bullets, and there’s a remedy for that., I remember I was standing in front of the Delta, on C street, one ovening talk- ing to Captain Lord, theinland revenne collector, when two fellows got to punching cach other ght near us, and one pulled what all hands thought was a gun. There was a unanimous scatter, I hopped into a doorway and peeped out. Captain Lovd was standing in the middle of the street with his si looter in his hand, h- ing the two men who had clinched and wore struggling. In a minute they went rolling over a peanut stand into the gutter. The one on top, who was known as Red Mike, jubbed away at the face and body of the under chap with tho supposed pistol. It was really a knife, and he hacked his subject all to We tore him off. I helped to aise the cut chap to his feet. He walked with us a fow stepsand then ised his hand to his bleeding head vas fished outof the gutterand he put it on. He went astep or two further and stopped. “Boys,” he said, Mike's meat.’ mured faintly He died next day ““What were you doing out there in the street with your gun?’ I asked Cap- tain Lord. **Well’ he said, ‘I've come near be- ing hit half a dozen times when fellows were engaged in fights in which T had no concorn, and I've made up my mind that hereafter I'm going to have my shave of the shooting as well as of the danger. I'm going to take a hand from this out, and these fellows, when they begin a muss, will look around and en- quire where Iam.” *And a good plan, too,” declared the major. **If good citizens on the frontier would follow Captain Lord’s plan, the hs would be even more careful than about wild shooting. Yet, after all, there’s not as much danger from this source as theve is of being run over here by your cable cars,” **And this Red Mike, this murderer, he was hanged?” inquired the gentle- man from New Haven. “Lord, no,” laughed the major. “Mike, when he wasn't drunk. S bricklayer, and he assisted in building the county jail. Having an eye to the future, he thoughtfully left a weak spot low down in the wall, and one night shortly after his avvest, he opened itand walked off, generously taking all the other prisoners with him. The last I heard of Mike was that he'd had an arm shot off by a gambler down in Tombstone.” i e The Man Up a Trec. Atlanta Constitution: No mere nest, but five or six large rooms up a tall oak, is the way quiet John Haywood, the one- armed veteran soldier, clerk in the treasury department, credited f: mont, hit a new thing and m: sell famous. There is no mistak it, that his name is forever linked in the galaxy of distingnished people of history, and, too, quite as accidental as they. He has two houses up in the one he first built consi large rooms and a bulcony room. and in another climp of trecs a new and larger house higher up in the troes, contain three stc a dancing pavillion, a well furnished kitchen, bed- room, baleony, library, all well fu nished, and cven an upright piano. These houses are not built upon or at- tached to the treoes; they stand on high trestles, so that the topmost branches of the tall trees pieree in their natural di- rections through all the rooms, giving, in all the different seasons within th compartments, the exact tlora of nature. Canvasis elosely fitted avound the limbs of these trecs where they pierce the roof and floors and walls of the room to make them water-tight and prevent the sounds of abrasion. One can sit in his library or kitchen and pluck green leaves or acorns where i s have left them, 1n while the limbs are bare without and the snows are flying, wood ean sit in his carpeted roomn I'm mur- nted. ‘it no Then he sigl ‘—him!" and go. d the tree: ing of thrc us large and rest his head and arms upon u limb uting with verdure, whiie without same troe is dennded in the coma of winter. These houses ara approached an inelined plane of plank i portions of the hLill up to the y, where there i3 a door ) 1and bolted and whence he mounts by regular enclosed stairwvays There we saveral 1 gentlemen, who had come into the inclosure to see the “*mon- ster,” und they vegarded him distantly, with curiosity and awe. He politely waved t ing he wus not DMAHA DAI LIBERALITY OF THE PEOPLE. The “Bee's” Heroine Fund Reaches Over 810,400, AND THE GOOD WORK GOES ON HE The Roll of Honor Steadily Increas- ing—The Latest Contributors to the Heroines From Various Parts of Nebraska. The Roll of Honor. LOIE ROYCE FUND, Amount pre Ladics' after Citizens of Shelton, M Edna Hoban and Minnic I Leap-year party, Bla Citizens Norfolk, Neb A Fremont pu Foster, Foster, Neb. Neb,, list . oo North Bend fire department. J. S. Robison, Humphr County school teacher. . NA WOEBBECKE orted. . . oon coffec. ... and Minnie Hans Previou lies afte “dna Hoban lst...... ¢ Citizens of Shelton, Nel s of Norfolk 00 80 3 00 [ b 00 b0 636 81 00 Amount previously North Bend fire dépt Total 691 81 Previously reported #0100 8% North Bend fire dept : 2 50 Lo$ 102 88 The Etta Shattuck Fund. The present condition of the Etta Shat- tuck fund is as follows: Previously reported... £4,708 11 Hoban and Minnie Hanson's e 483 265 peon . 5 00 ool teacticr. The “Bee" Fund. The prosent condition of the funds opened Minnio Freeman.. ... p Westphalen monument fund Etta Shattuck. . and tota Lists of Contributors, The Bee will acknowledge all contribu- tions th th these columns, All lists re- ceived, unless otherw directed, will be published in full with the name of every con- tributor, These lists will be published as soon after tueir receipt as space will per- mit. « NS OF OAKLAND; NED. # 1 001 Samson. 1 00/ Fd Baugl... 1 lira Tho 100 0tto Swanson 1090, ¢, Catkins 3 100 Mrs, Ruth Smith. . C. Moore A ) 3 Mefnhart Benard. .. Rudolph Klaiber’. A. G, Sears, W. 1. Conn.. M. Shanson A Lundrall Gus Sallandar Lanenia Nelsor He, Pater Yoimng, 1.8, Harin Dal Lillie AT Withy co. Swengee 1 0| Earl Grign, 50 Mrs. €, C. ( 50| Fred Wiz S/H.A. Obey.. 100/ A, Tousellor. 50(C.A. Mogol 10l R e Tolniquist Hilda Carlson. H. Steen . 1 Wi Peter Anderson.. 1 00EQ Wallustead... 50 (. L. 8tockman... 1 00D, . M. Leaper I Lundstrom. . Harding. E. Cull*... 25 maquist 100 Peter Wangerg.. Total nders & Sons A. Wallustead stor..... W. Hopkit ehling Noumann. . hool teachers. CHILDREN'S LIST, Clay Mussenwhite . § Bert Willlams, X P & .Jas. 1. Hayes Irenc A. Templ 2 otal CITIZENS OF WAVARLY, win M. Butler...8 1 00/ Willis Ty V. Hoa 100,C. D, Je T, A. 8. Peuning- ton,... . E H. Tove A, Helmer. J.A. Fisher. ... 10! Lansing, ¥ England. . 220 30 TORT OMAMA LIST Inclosed please find postal note for §1.63 (one doliar and sixty-cight cents) to be ap- plicd as follow. Cash . 0 Total To the Westphalen little girls ¢ eorgeinc Florence M By cash monument fund four ntribute as follows: Mageo Li{Isabella Magee, e, 10 Maggie Magee lul Forwarded by A “Friend RISING CITY, NED. 8.8 and J. A 3. Grubb. .. Reichenbach....$ 5 00 . Jouvenat P, Retnheiner. /" 3 00 Bion Shepard’ 1001, L. Wolf 10 Helwig. 1 00 0. C.Rtatford 100.John Kugon . Brunning & Hart~ 10, son P 1 00'Sam Poo] 80 Chas, Lang. 1000, A. Crane. 100.1. T Taylor. 50.J. H. Rising 50 Geo. C, Buck 13 Howes Ande N. k. Welel! 1.1 Russell.. Oall & Ware', Steel Hising Risiug Wilson AL Martin: 50 George A. IS, 8t el 8 mer, . 1t Neville 0 John K John McEvenny.. 3 Combs & Leard, L. A, Warren. .. A Cash . B F. B 50 W. 15, Miur 50 D.P. Kilzore IS Ladd. B H. P, Gibson WoA. Baldwin E._Jennings. L A Roberts a, M AL R.Quick i Whitinan & Lad Georg H. Reinhe Hum- augh L. D, Lemon, WM. Eagun 1J. D, Wallace 1 00lJohn Pani 80 George Nycum Len O, J. B F Gittord. Lunby. LLIVAN'S LIST, Cash s Mable Sexton Tuttia) 50/Cash Katio Sulliyvan Cash BOUND OVER FOR BURGLARY, “Smith" and “Hawkins" Change Their Plea to Not Guiity, The arrest and accumulation of evidende against Fred Smith and Peto Hawlkius, the bur d Husse's hardware 810 lay night, was so skillfully woikad up by Obleer Burr aud Captain DT D IL L : ‘1‘131551311\(’.’ FEBRUARY 21, 1888, Green as to éxtort a confession froin the cul- prits. The thicves had disposed of part of their booty at three different pawnshops, and the rest had been sakl or given away to a number of private . parti Carpentors, waiters and - other peaple had bought the stolen goods. For being allowed to sleep in the KRepublican press room one night, Smith gave Ben Flood, the foreman, a fine safoty razor, besides distrfbuting @ number of pocket knives among the other employes. At the time of thelr arrests 0 both Smith and Hawkins had some of the stolen knives and olvers on their persons When some hours later Captain Green con fronted them with the string of evidence he had accumulated against them, they were astonished and admitted their guilt. "On be ing arraigned they frst plead guilty, but next waived examination, and were put under $1.000 to appear before the district court, Smith was greatly overcome and shed tears, 1t is hinted by the police, however, that this is not their first offense. ' Although both boys are from respectable familics in this city. they have cut toose from home and have been leading lives of vice and sin under as- sumed names, Smith's correct name is Fred Nelson and his_parents live on hteenth street, below Vinton. Hawkins' real name said to be Hokanson, and his father is said 0 be John Hokanson, the constable, a most affable and estimable man. Both boys are in their twentieth year. Some of the stolen goods had been sold at sidicuously low fig- ures, At John Nestnor's, a Tenth strect pawnbroker, they sold some Smith & Wesson olvers that usually retail on an average at $10 each for only 55 cents, The o have reason to believe from the price offered that the pawnbroker knew the goods were stolen, and Nestor was arrested yesterday for re- ceiving stolen goods, Warrants are also out for thearrest of Schlank and Sonunenberg, the proprietors of tyo other pawnshops where the thieves had been robbed of their booty o -— The Ice Bridge at Ningara has formed and many people have al- ready crossed the river upon it below the falls. The scene from Falls View. where the Michigan Central train stop is one of remarkable beauty and grand- eur, The eme of the falls, with the ang wd the rain bow tinted spray below, with gigantic icicles hanging from the cliffs and the trees and shrubs on the shores and Goat sland covered with curious ice forma- tions, with the wild mass of icebergs stretching ov the turbulent wat where the Maid of the Mist sails in summer, all combine to form a spectacle seldom to be seen and worthy of a leugthy journe — TURNER DID) TURN UP. Action on the Omaha, Yankton & Northwestern Railway Postponed. Two o'clock yesterday ufternoon was the lour appointed by the county commissioners for hearing from the committee on judi in reference to the calling of o special clec- tion to vote $300,000 in county bonds in aid of the proposed Omaha, Yankton & Northwest- ern railway, in accord with the provosition submitted by the promoters on Saturday and printed in full in the Be of Sunday. At the stipulated time a large delegation of citizens and taxpayers, generated by Hon. James Creighton on onc side, and N. Shelton and D. C. Patterson on_the cther, put in_appear- ance and jumped on the commissioners, 50 to speak, with hands and feet. Loud talk was indulged in by the respective factions, and when individuals could not succeed in being hear tiey wildly waved their arms in space and stamped their foet upon the floor in a noisy and vigorous fashion. This kind of amusen:ent lasted untik long after 3 o'clock, and ealm being restored Cairman O'neiffe condescended to cail the board to order. Commissioner Mount, of the judiciar * mittoe, reported that owing to the absence of one of 'the members, Mr. Turner, they were not ready to make their report and asked for further time until next Thursday at 2 p. m. The request was granted. The chairman, Mr, O'Keeffe, then invited the respective factions to talk as much as they pleased. ~Hon, James Creighton said that it would be foolish for any one to discuss the railroad proposition until it was known what the com- mittee on judiciary was to report. He didn't propose to exhaust his ammunition on a blank, and begged of his_adherents to spare their tall until the committee made their report. Mr. Patterson asked if any amendments had been made to the proposition sent in by the incorporators last Saturday. Comiissioner Mount replied that there had been o few changes made. Mr. Creighton asked Mr. Mount if he, as one of fthe. judiciary committee, was willing to submit their report to the citizens before formally turning it over to the full board. Mr. Mount replied that he was. Chairman_O'Keefe informed the gentle- men present that the board would be huppy to receive any suggestions thoy might be prepared to make in reference to the building of the road, and there being no one willing to the board adjourned. The judiciary commiitee propose to make amendments to the proposition of Saturday as follows “The said railway company shall, within nmety days after’ said clection, commence the construction of said road, and continue such construction with reasonable expedition, and have graded and ready for running af least fifty miles within twelye months after suid time of commencement, and shall have graded and ready for running 100 miles cighteen months after said time of commence- ment. “The said roadbed from the point of begin- ning to be the property of the said Yankton & Northwestern railway y, acquired by purchase or condemnation proceedings, and not by any inferior title.” Colgate's Sas Holiotrope, Jock ey Club, Bouquet retain ¢ heir delics longer than others. —_————— Run the Train too Fast. Considerable complaint has been expressed of late by residents of South Omaha at the rate of speed at which the Union Pacific “fiyer” is run through the city limits. No reduction whatever is made and the train tears through at the rate of thirty-five or forty miles an hour. In view of the fact that there are several crossings in the city it has been suggested that the council take the matter n hand and by ordinance fix the rate of spced at not more than ‘ten miles per hour. - Charles Woodworth and his bride have re- turned after a two months’ tour in Califoruia and Old Mexico. shmer te fragranc Itssuperior excellenco proven in homes for more than 1s used by the United dorsed by the heads millions of a quarter of a century, 'states Governmen . Rn® £ the Great Universities ns the Strongest, Purest i The, Price’ m Baking Powde) not contain Ammonia, or Alum. Sold only in cans, Viuck BAKinG PowbER (o, NEW YOREK, CHI0AGO, STARTLING STATISTICS —_—— More Men Emploved bv the Reilroad Companics in the United States. A NEW YORK NEWSPAPER WRITER. Compiling Statistios Which Will Star- tle the Best Informed Citizens. Some writer in New York cenfous than ambitions—is timates on the number of railre in the United <. His work Dy the rem 1 banguet ot loc fiy ‘that the New York Cent lind more than ten regi- ments of 1 According to the r to the rajir n, or the men at work in all the dift nclies connected with “the raflroads in the United States, If guthered together, would make an army g han that of Xerkes when ho marche 1to the couguiest of Greece, According to his fizures no” Euro) hasa standing army onehalf the numerica strength of the American railroad men, and, i he i right, t ilroad men in this coun taken together, exceed in nimber the rolls of both the unfon'and_contedearta troops of our late war added together, It thisis true it is indeed wonderful. But when one stops to think that there 15 nota city of any size in the countiy that does not eni- fts host of ruiiroaders, these figures do ot range 1 il Bluffs, with their net- treteli cut liko innum- e center of a circle towards A small army of 1, presumably mora preparing e s prompted ow, At a Tecent living within their rmore impressed al importance as a compo- population of both cities thun course of _conversation recently Mr, William Connor, who wa: i itle " for _nir A machinist by trad been taking lite oo ar. He is well and i Omaha for tho conversation v bounds with th for years with . malarial fever. an with a_cold, and [ had a hign ntinued un? abated for about three weeks, which was at- tended with more or less of @ congh and the rising of mucus of a tough kind, and which seemed to hold on with the tenacity of a fight- ing bulldog. T called in to assist nature a_lead- ing physician, took lis medicine, but got no re lief. Wanting help I consulted another and still another, among them being the so-called best doctors in the city, They doped me with QUININE COD LIVER O1L ARSENIC and other drugs, and in place of getting better T grew worse, 1 actually believe 1have bottles and boxes enough at home to start two apothe- cary shops, 1amnot exaggerating a particle when Lsay I had at least thirty-five or forty fly blisters on me. 1 had patn in the front part of my head,and through my chest and in my shoul- ders. My nose would stop up and mide my breathing diflicult You were certainly in a bad way but that was not all my trouble. While Iyiug down at night the mucons or phleghm would gather in my throat and 1 would swallow it, which, 1 think, pofsoned my stomach and formed a gas, and after a while nothing that 1 ato would want to remain on my stomach, cfans termed b \\ - which, in_addition to my live always out of order, inflammed, and e times. ing and roaring nose in my Tead and ears, which put me in mind of u train of cars passing through a covered bridge, I would hawk and spit almost continually, and in the morning after rising would have to gag_and vomit for sometimes an hour before I would get my throat clear.” “But you scem all right now?' Doyou feel as well a8 you look?” queried the scribe. “Well, T should say. 1 am all right now, and think I feel even beiter than I look.” “Iiy what method or treatment did you obtain the much needed relief?’ “I have been a reader of the daily papers ever since they were published in Omaha, and read the notices of the cures people had_received by using Dr. McCoy's treatment. 1 concluded to try him, the result is I feel well again and am thankful there is located in Omaha such_ a spe- cialist us the doctor. 1 find both the doctor and his nssoclates men of “ability and belleve them to be thoroughly rellable gentlemen, Mr.Conner resides at 1616 Webster street,where he will be glad to corroborate the above state- ment. —— A LEADIG PHYSIOLOGIST Advances His Theory of Catarrh and Consumption—His Advice on the Subject. One of the best learned physicians of modern times, in an_article on catarrh and_consump- tlon, says: “The treatment of consumption has made great advances by the introduction of new and has enabled the close student and specialist to establish indieations for remedies long in use, so that by their methodical appiica- tlon better results are attained than were for- gained at a time when consumption and cancer were regarded as edually incurable, and we ated, *The treatment of consumy careful avoidance of all age cause hyperemia of the lungs and b tarrh- “Persons in_whom @ tendency on- sumption is suspected should be treated with the greatest care and attention, “Finally, whenever there is the slightost sus- pleton of a predisposition to consumption, every catarrah, no matter how slight, should be treat- ed with the utmost cure, whicn' must not be ra- laxed until the catarrh 'is_entirely well, This rule, 50 obvious from our point of view, is very trequently violated. Many patients fall a_vietim to the deeply rooted prejudice that a neglected catarrh never leads to consumption. IN SIMPLE FORM. Popular Explanalion of a Matter Usually Veiled in Technicalities, In this connection there can hardly be a more interesting subjeet than the ulti h upon the heariug. The proces e in poisoning the breath, rotting away cate machinery of smell ind taste, pc oning the lungs und the blood, and passing ‘into the stomach, enfeebling the digestion, vitiating the sceretions and polluting the very fountains of life. Al this has, perbaps, been' very gen erally , but the very frequent effect of catarrh of the nose and throat upon the hearing has not been touched upon as often as the sub- Jeet warrants, A very little study of anatomy will show the reader that the junction of the back passige of the nose and the upper part of the throat is con- nected with the ear by aminute and delicate pas- sage known as the Eustachian tube. Along this tube the catarrhal process extends, producing cougestion and umation, By the further extension of this process to the mucus lining of the tympanum of the ear is caused, in some cases, slght forms of catarrl of the midle car, and in this way parttal or complete deafness may in like manuer result from the thickened tissue encroaching upon the mouth of the Enstachizn tube. Partial or complete deafness may also rosult from catarrhal interference with the nasal breathing, depriving the ear of a proper supply of pureair or from the effects of obstruction in the nasal passages, causing undue ra ifica- or condensation of the air in the i ddle such e areof en prescribed, prov effective. A cur only ful and selentifie local treatme said here that nothing could be attended with more disastrous results than unskilltul local treatment—combined with constitutiona! tre ment and care for the disease which brouzht about the trouble to the heariug. Permanently Located. CresapJ, McCoy, late of Dellavia New York, and Nis assoc Tniversit W Y o ington, D, C,, Liave I the K block, Omaba, Neb., wiéce all e cases aro treated skiflfully Consumption, Bright's — Discase, Dyspepsia, ‘Rheumatism, and all nervous diseases, All ses beculinr 1o sex & specuily. CATARRH CURED ! Consultation at office or by mall, ¥1. Office hours—9 to 11 a. 1., 2 to 4 p. W, Tt0 8 b, Sunday Hours From 9 a. . ¢ 1 . m, orrespondence recolves prompt attention. 0 letters answered walass accon panied by 4e in stamps. Address all Hospital, mail, to Dr. McCoy Booms 410 Loy 1 and 311, Ramge buildiag Guaks, N © H. CURTH OMAHA RUE J. HURD THOMPSON, 8t BR CO., MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS iN BOo7g ANp SHOEY COTTON LINEN & RUBBER HOSE COTTON, L EATHER 4 RUBBER BELTING, OIL, RUBBER & GOS* SAMER LOTHING, DRUG- GISTS' RUBBER SUNDRIES HARDWARE 4 SPORTSMEN'S TOY AND STATIONER'S AND EVERY KIND OF RUBBER GOODS. -y A0DS FERNAM STho CHICHESTER'S ENGLIS| ENNYROYAL SAF EALWAYS RELIABLE. TO LADIE: INDISPENSABLE.SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTSY ASK FOR DIAMOND BRAND,CHIGHESTERS ENGUSK AND TAKE NO OTHER SEE SIGNATURE ON EVERY BOX . GHICHESTER CHEMICALCO SOLE PROP MADISON SQPHIA. PA. 500 IAMAN. | WHO 1S UNACQUAINTED WITH TRE GROGRAPIY OF Trre COUNTAY WILL AER BY KXAMINING THIS MAF THAT THY CHICABO,ROCK ISLAND &PACIFIC RAILWAY By reason of {ta central position. a;ose relation to linas East of Chioago, and continu>us haos at termiu points Wosb, Northwest and S t, u middie link'in $hat tcanscontinentai Ay invitos aud factiitates travel and trafo b Atiantio and Paolde. Tho Rock Istand main line and branchés include Chi- ego, Jollet, Ottawa, La Salle, Peorta, Geneseo, Moline and Rock Island, in Liiinols; Davenport, Muscatino, Washington, Fairfield, Ottumwa, Oskaloosa, West Lib: erty, Towa Gity, Den Moines, Indianoln, Wintersot, Atlan. e, Knoxville, 'Audubon, Harlan, Guthrie Centre and Coancl Bluts in o #t. Paul, in Minnos Dakota, and hindreds of intermediate oities and towna. The Qreat Rock Island Route’’ s Quarantees speed, comfors, cortainty and safoty. Its rmanent way is distinguished for its exoellenca. Its ‘:m[o are of stone and fron, Its k {8 of solid rolling stock perfect. Its passenger equipmant Eroyiding delicion ind (between Chioago and Bt. Joseph, Atc] ansas City) rostful Roclining Ohair Cars. lts man- ative, its discipline exacting The Famous Albert L dally to attractive resorte for Minnesota, and, via Watertown and Sioux Falls, to the rich wheat and grast ands of interior Dakota. Via Beneca and Kankakee, the Rock Island offers superior inducements to travelers botween Cincinnati, Indian. Afayette and Council Bluffs, vonworth, Kansas City, 8 All'patrons (espoeiaily ladlos and chil- Gron)fecelve protoction, courtety and kindly attention, For tickets, maps, folders, copies of Westorn Trall, of any desired information, apply to principal offices i $ho United States d or address, at Chicago, R, R GABLE, . ST, JOHN, X, I Messgwe. Aes') Gen 3 THE OMAHA BEE. DELIVERED TO: ANY PART OF LINGOLN BY CARRIER FOR— 20 Cents a Week. Seven papers & week. Send your order to the office, 1029 P Street, Capital Hotel Building MPORTED STALLIONS FORSALE individual merit and ped; horses have taken first prize at the aska State Felr, 1857, ALl our horses are c- climated, and colts of their get can be sh Prices reasonable and easy terms, Ts a Dy the three leading railroads of the stat M F, B &M V. and K. C. &0, FRY & FAHRBAH, York, Neb DRUNKENNESS Or the Lignor Habit, Positively Cured by Administering Dr. Haines’ Golden Specifie. Tt can be given in & cup of coffen or toa with- out the knowledge of the person taking it; abso- lutely harmiess, and will “effect a_permant and speedy cure, whether the patient 5 & moderate arinker or an alcoholic wreck. Thousands of drunkards have been made temperate me have taken Golden Specific in their coffee with- out their knowledgn and today believe quit drinking of their own free Will. It never ‘ails. Thesystem once impregnated with the Specific, it becomes an_ utter impossibility for tho lauor appotite to exist, For sl by Kulin & Co., 15th and Douglas ats,, and 18th and Cu ing #ts. Omahba, Nel D. Foster & Bro,, Council Blufrs, Towa, The creatos ondon Granules. -t Eliminates last vestige of Uleers, Pimples, Chronie Sores&lmpure Blood.They 1 th UNYAry Ing i it iR pinin BN B o' o purcl uaranteo oes not E.T.Allen, M. D,, Homamopathic Speciallst, EYE il EAR Bpoctacles Accurately Prescribed. RAMGE BL K., OMAlla, (). W. Barnsdall, M. D Bomwopathic Specialie, SURGEON GQynacoiogist and Chstetridtun. I Telephona 976, RAMOE BLOCK, . OMAHA. HAITH, Surgaon and Physician, Ofce N. W Curner Mth and Dougla: Oftica, teleplone, 460; Kusidence teloplion oo, REPAIRING NEATLY DONE. «- OMA A, NER. D Sh T e LA B BEWARE OF WORTHLESTHITATIONE ASK DRUGGIST FOR (HICHESTER'S ENGLISH DIAMOND BRA NDTAKENO OTHER, RINCLOSE 4% (STAMPS) FOR PARTICULARS \ 0 LETTER BY RETURN MATL s SICMAT\RE DN EVERY ok UNSOLICITED WRITTEN TESTIMONIALS AND 0VER FROMLADIES WHo HAVE USED STUT ENGLISH.QIAMOND BRAND PENNY ROYAL PILLS WITH SUEGESS. Wlo is WEAK, NERVOUS, TED, who inhis FOLLY and IGNORANCE bas TRIFLED away his VIGOR of BODY, MIND and MANHOOD, causing exhausti dratns upon the FOUNTAINS of LIF! MEADACHE, BACKACHE, Dreadnul Drenias, WEAKNESS of Momory! BASK ¥ NS in SOCIETY, PIMBLES upon CE:. and all tho EFFECTS leading to EARLY DECAY and perhaps CONSUMP. TION or INSANITY, should consult at onca EBRATED Dr. Clarke, Established + Clarko has mado NER ILITY. CHRONIC and o the GENITO URINARY Orguns & Lifo Btudy. 1t makes NO difirence WHAT you £Have taken or WH O has failed to curo you. 20~ FEMA LES sufforing from diseases peciie liar to thelr sox can consult with the assurance of speedy relief aud cure. Send 2 cents postage for works on your discases. e for Celebrated Aw-Send 4 cents pos Works on Chronic, Nervous and B cate Diseases. Consuliation, personally or by letter, free. Consult the old Doetor. Tho nds cured. Offices and pariers private. _&FThose ('unlempllllnL nrring sond for Dr. Clarke's colebrafed guide Male and Femnale, each 15c., both 25¢. atamps). Beforo confiding your case, consult r. CLARKE. A friendly letter or call may save future sufferingand shame, and add golden years to life, &#~Book ** Life's (Secret) Ere rors,” f0c. (stamps). Medioine and writings sent everywhere, secure from Hours, 810 8; Sundays, 9 to 12. F. D. OLARKE, 186 Sa. Clark St.. guaranteed speclfic for Hysteria, Dizate 3 O ions, Fits, Nervous Neurslgia, Headache, Nervous stration, caused by the ex Pol Address, , M. D. CHICAGO, ILL. Health is Wealth! LRALH C. WERT'S NERVE AND DRAT use of alcohol or tobaceo, Wakefulness, Mental Depression, Softening of the Brafn, restiting in Tnsnity,and loading to misery,deciy and death, Premature Old Age, Barrenncss, Loss of Power in either sex, Tnvoluntary Losses and Spermas torrhoa caused by over-exertion of the bral self-abuse or over-indulgence. Each box co tains one month’s treatment, #$1.00a hox, or six boxes for §5.0, sent by mail Prepald on receip of pr WE GUARANTEE 81X BOXES To cure any case. With cach order recefved by ., secompnnied with #,00, we will purchaser our written rantee to re- fund the money if the treatme acure, Guarantees issied onl MAN. Druggist, Sole Agent, 1110 Fariiani Streoty Omalia, Neb, DRS. §. & D. DAVIESON, 1742 Lawrence t, Denver, Col Of the Missouri State Museum of Anatomy, St. Louls, Mo., University College Hospital, Lon- don, Giesen, Germany and New York, having devoted their attention SPRCALLY 10 THE TREATNENY OF Nervous, Chronic and Blood DISEASES. More especially those arising from impru. dence. invite all 5o suffering to correspond withs out delay. Diseases of infection and contagion cured sufely and speedily without use of dun= gerous drugs, Patients whose cases have been neglected, Dadly treated or pronounced incur- able, should not fail to write us concerning theie symptowms, Allletters recetve immediate attens fon. JUST PUBLISHED, And will be mailed FREE to_any address on ro- ipt of one 2-cent stamp, “Prictical Observae ns on Nervous Debility and Physical Exhaus- " to which i3 added an Mar- " with important chapters 5 0f eproductive Organs, tho whole forming a valuable medical treatise’ which should be read Dy all young men, Address DRS. S. & D. DAVIESON, 1742 anmnay St _Dfnvor. ColL send th 7. B. HAYNES, STENOGRAPHER, Third Judicial Distriet, 87 CHAMBEK OF COMMERC E. Nebraska National Bank, Pa 1.3:'5‘1 ’DEPOSI’XTO O_IAHA, NEB, $250,000 50,000 yis. JOIN R COLLING, Lrwis 8, e, Danking Office-~ THE | Co ral Bau RON BANK, T ng Husitos FOR SALE. Kearney Land Giloe of Kearicy, Neb, The 0ld healti Alse worth 2 of lots 1f wante: Kearney, Neb