Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 6, 1890, Page 5

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e | \ HE OMAHA DAILY BEE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6 1890 MEN O THE SKIRMISH LINE. A Doy of Exeeptional Pleasure st Bellevuo . Rifls Range, IN CANP WITH MILTARY MARKSMEN. Bome Remarkably Good Scores Belng Made at the Annual Rifle and Carbine Competition This Department, of Fven to a clvilian’s car there I8 something Pleasing in the tara-tara-tera of o trumpet. Did you ever live near a military post, and early iuthe morning, just a5 you were roil- ingover to tuke anothor nap, hear thebuglers of a military station play : “I can't et ‘e up, I ean’t get ‘om up, Ican’tget ‘om up this moming? In summertime, when the dew s on the grass and the birds are singing from the fTence posts, that “Can't get ‘em up’ - comes througt the windows of your quarters and tells you that a new day has been bom, It is like the horalds of old announcing the the bugles announcing the advent of a lay moming, when the r out at Belleyue rifle ran soldiers turned in th ille rang e, nincty-nine tired ir cots, yawned and in & lwinkling were in their uniforms, Breakfast was soon dispatched, and then came weel notes of first eall. 1t was a glorious moming, T 4 Missouri looked as limpid a5 a lake in the carly moming sun- xise. The spray of dow that find covercd the trees during thénight glistened and gleamed 80 dazilinyly that onestanding in officor’s row could scarely sce across the range, A gentlo breeze fanied the soldiers as they sat at breakfust, ind despite all this lovellness, the voterans of the rangesaid it would be a poor diy for shooting. But the dew drled up in the sun and Xindly clouds floated by and excellent swores were mid This wus tho first day of real interest to spectutors in the competition. 1t was a day of uncertuintios, The day previous the men had shot atknown distances, but yesterday they were upon the skivamish' line, ‘dropping and firig ot the sound of the hug: It was apretly sight, those blueand white uniformed men dashing over the range, drop- ing and fiving and aw; in Behind the skivmishers Major Benham, the fnspector, rode, with trumnpeters on either side to give the commands from the bra thros sirinstrments. Fr shade ofthe statistical oficors' tent biight ey os watched the progress of tho contaest. 1t reminded one, ina small degree, of West Point. There were the givs inwhite, the fluttering fans and the delicate applause, Among the visitors to the_amp yesterday were (fenoral Brooke, thedepartuent com- mandeb; Mrs. Wilde, Dr he and daugh- tor, Mrs., Bettens of Robinson, whose ort lusband is o range oficer at the camp; Mrs, Palmer and Mrs, Me. Andrew of Fort Sidney, whose | nds arealsoat the range. Benbam, after the shooting was itortained the visitors elegantly, and until the evening train ved the timo seemed short inde T'he marksmen are doing m year, and the average i [ it wis on the second ds the compotition last scason, and it must be remembered that the carbine tice has been united with the rifle com petition this yeu Thes| h firing is Hlero is the score of yesterday of the twelve leading men ineach class: TIFLE COMIETITION. nificently this al of ‘what ). €, 16th It ¥, 17Lh Inf. < Co. K218t Inf.. | ‘0. A, 1ithInf..| 156 Duvils SIS 8,458 1 Taal, . ¥y Jnekson, Ji , 9th Cavy, I8 Sgt., Co. G i i, Co. A, ith C: 1. Charles, Bgt,, Co. D, 18t Ciy . fht, W, L uth Cay, gt O 57 %2 pred S g sant Stearns of € -ompany, Sixteenth infant *ored thirty lits out of & possiblo forty Juceling figure in the skivmish run. Corporal Dramery made a wonderful per- nunce yesterday, On the day before, up 10 60 ¥ s, he scored o ran average of S0 percent, AtG00 yards he mado ten direct n , placing hiin amone the lwest of the competifors. Yesterday in the skirmish he scored 116 on the first run and 117 on_the second, ind juuped ap to within the haloof the first twe The chances are that he will be inthadepartment team ashe cortainly has wonderful nerve and a dear . Licutenant Henry Wright, “Light Horse Harry ' e is called at the range, is in the cempetition again this year and declares that when it comes to the revolver competition he will seoro the highest percentage, Licutenant Grote Hutcheson is the most industrious officer in the camp. Ho has to seare while the other follows shoot. Captain Duncan of the Tienty-first infan- try, who his been commissioned to take charge of the department rifle team, is lceop- inga sharp lookout over the leaders.’ Captain Duncan, by the way, is theson of that dis- tinguished ofcer, General Duncan, one of the most prominent officers in the service, Lieutenant Parke of the Twenty-rirst, talks of his rupid transit project at all times, Lieutenant Palmer of the Twenty-first and Licutenant Arrasmithof the Second tatk and talk of cushion carbms and masse shots. Major Benbam cannot do too much toen- tertain visitors from the city. Inhis quarters everyone feels at home, Mis. Palmor and Mrs, McAndrew are stop- puig at Bellevue colleg $20 St. Touis to Boston and return via the Ohio & Mississippi railway, sccount G. A. R. reunion, with choice of routes viaNew York and Sound, steamers via Poughkeepsie, Hudson river bridge via Newburg and via Troy. Tickets good August 8, 0 and 10, and’ returning until September 30, |’|~<-Hm1imm|u rates from all points west. Call onticket agents of connectinglines or address A. J. Lytle, goneral western passenger agent. S uis, Mo, TS D! "oty ke Builling Permit, Pornits were issucd as follows by Super- fntendent Whitlock yesterday V. G. Inghram, Ty-story fran Thirty-second und Ohio st VLo inl I-story frame cottuge, Gghieonthand Lewyen worth siry O, R, Ca £y framo dwellln Locust streets. Brown, Tiasion frine dweili nrle Forty- ncd and € s stroets 500 Sume . AR . 500 Thed brick “tenement Olson, ~.'»>|.'.r{ block, Twenty-nlnth and lzar strvets 2,400 Totahs o A For physical ailments, especially those in. cldent to declining years, there is 10 remody that produces such ‘satis fuctory results as DF, J H. McLean's liver and kidiey bulm. Its enial and invigorating effect om liver and ddneys is remarkable, KILLED ON THE 3 HACK. Mrs, Tholla Harrington Run Down by a Locomotive, Mrs. Thelia Harrington of Council Bluffs, & widow forty-eight years of age, wasStruck by » Rock Island freight train yesterday moming while walking on the tracks and instantly killed. The unfortunate woman emyloy of Dr. € portion of had been in the den, living in the southern the city, and had also done gomestic work at the deaf and dumb instituto, She had been inthe habit of com- inginto the city at an early hour walking on therailrad tracks, The train was in charge of M. Hib! sonductor, Fred Schultz engi- neerand G.Zennor firernan. The track is perfectly stright where the accidont curred, ind the train crew saw the woman when 6ho was a mile away walking in the middle of tho track. When the train pof within aquarter of a mileof her the engi- neor whistled for o crossing, and he supposed tho woman Leard the apprach of the train Som after whistled in, but the nscemed mot to heol it, | The train v v spoed of twelve milesan hour, we 8 neck was broken, and sho was othorwi The suppositi bruised and mangled nis that the woman thought o0 | FRAUDS I OUR DAILY FOOD. Some of the Adulteratims Practiced on an Unruspecting Public. | CINNAMON MADE FROM CIGAR . BOXES, Boston®s Favorite Bean Worked Over Into O1A Java Coffee~The Gove ernment Chemists and the Work They Perform, ‘With all due respect to politicians and [ editors, we Americans have avery de- | cont sort of a_government, state and | federal, over our heads. Itis clumsy and [ stupid, and if we belive what we hear [ and read, it does an incaleulable amount of harm, On the other hand, it doos & { world of gool. And, strange to siy. of | thisside of its and conduct we the apyroaching train was on the Milwaukee | hear much less than we ought, says the tracle, which rus piralll with the Koek | 1y ek R A 1sland, and leard its approich. She leaves a | Boston Globe, yof four childrn. The coroner held | Bread and butter are probably the jucst. The verlict was in accordance with the above facts, and was o c oneration of the railway resfousibility for the Dr. Sus ases pecu nplete ex- from ¢ lorff makes aspecialty of dis- r towomen, 1601 Farnam st. i District Court, Burke & Frazier, commission men of South Omaha, havecommenced siit torecoyer 1,600 from Lillie May Sigmore, who is in the cattle business at Tho plaintifs all that some > Lillie wrote them that, sho had shij alotof cattle, consigned to them, and that she had drawn on them for £1000. As tho plaintiffs had been inthe habit of cashing lier drafts, they cashed this one and waited for the cattle, which neyer came. Thedraftwasmade through the Ne- briska N ik of Reatrice, When correspondence was opened _up with this bank inform arded to the plain- tiffs that Lilie bad received - the money and converted itto her own use, hence the suit. Henty Ostoff has filed his bond in replevin and con enced suit to gain possession of the stock of paints and ofls now held by John K. Boyd, as shieriff, taken from Hobbs & Co., who were formerly in businessat 519 North ith street, " Ostoff claims that he is of thestock, and besides w 2 dto him, he thinks he should havo nts, unty dgm the c Judge Shiclds court docketin the presence of a gathering of law- s {hat taxed the capicity of the little court, | The called embraced 155 enses, of which sixty-five were finally set for trial, Anumber of judgments were entered as follows, the plaiutiffl being winner in every instance : liamn T. Whalenvs 0. R. Cain et 5 1vs Racl Ak and lim, Charies Johnson, $270.34 ; W vs T. . Mullig la savings and exchun d A Stovens, $51178 Alexander Polack, §34,20. al company Vs liam 1, Brid Nebns Rie Vs Vs William Cohen In ‘the county court yesterday Jobn R. Harrls, trustee, brought ‘suitagainst J, L. and Althoure 'Rice, The plintift _allges that on the 16th day of February, 1880, the dofendants mado their_promissory for payable to one Charles B. Jaobs, and the e same §s due and unpaid. D. R. Edwarlds has commenced an action in replovinto recover possession of alot of personal property mortgaged o plaintiff by e Ellen McNamara, The amount in con- troversy is 8300, e P rogross. important in this age of vast ma- sthat o remody be pleasing to and to the eye, easily tal accept- able to the stomach and healthy inits naturd and effects. Possessing these qualiti yrup of Iigs is theone parfect laxative and st,gentle diuretic known. sovan OJIT‘"J NEWS, Board of Education, The board of education met Monda; with President Persons and Secretar roll_and Funston_and Richad Swif D. Robinson and WalterJ. Slate pr Tho president appoiuted Richard Swift temporary secreta Aneffort to dlect secrctary failed for lack of a quorum voting, The president appolated the following standing comittoes: Finaneo and _ Claims—Messrs, Richard Swift, John D, Robiuson and Frank J, Per- son evening chers, janitors, examinations and sala- ries—Messts. John' C, Carwll, C. T. Van Aken and Richard Swift, Buildings and grounds—Messrs. Richard Swift, C.T. Van Aken and John C. Carroll, Toxt books and course of _studics—Mossvs, John D. Robinson, Walter J. Slateand Frank J. Persons. Repairs, fumiture and_supplics—Messrs, John C. Carroll, John D, Robinson and Rich- ard Swift, Rules and regulations—Messrs, W Slate, Frank J. Persons und John D. son. nitag iter 4. Robin- s—Messrs. C. T. Van Aken, ud Johu . Robinson. Jggers & Bock, $1,500; Con- tractor Fitzgerald, $1,00: the superinten- dents and teachers’ salaries, and o few small bills were ordered paid. Messres, Richard Swift, John D. Robinson and Frank 1. Persons wero appointed a com- mittee totervice and drin the high school grounds A school will be opened in the Fourth wanl. President Persons was appointed custodian committee of the Al Adjoumed to meet Saturduy evening, Postmaster G Telographicadvices from Washington have been received that Dr. John M. Glasgow is sure to be appointed postmaster at South Omiha and that the president will send his nameto the senate today for confirma- tion, Notes About the City. A daughter has been born to Mr. Edward C. Ryan. A delegation of (ood Templars, headed by Grand Sceretary Watts, camo from Omahn and attended the installation of the offic elect of lodge 100 Monuday night. he ladies of the Baptist congregation will hold a social and icecream festivalin the chureh, Twenty-seventh street north of N, this evening. Ludvic Kratsky, an employe at the pack- ing houses of Swift & Co., accidentally cut his right hand Monda, and Mrs, Announcem nt. €. B. Moore & Co. have beon appointod wholesale agents for the celobrated waters of I2xcelsior Springs, Missour Learning to Write at Forty, James Robinson, tall, robust, witha sandy comploxion and forty years of age has spent almost his entire”life mining inthe mountains in the west, saysa Kunsas City dispatch to the Chicago Herald, Two months ago he came from Phenix, A, T. Hecould neither read nor write. During the pasteight years he has been engaged in the transaction of business involving the buying and selling of mines, through which he has been placed in com fortable circumstances financially, i **mg had been at- tached to deeds and contracts so often that he was brought to realize the ne- cossity of an education. Hence his pres- ence in Kansas City, Mr., Robinson has applied himsell assiduously under the dlrection of & private tutor and can now read and write, Hosays he will remain another month in Kunsas City and then return to Arviona and look after his mining interests, After the lapse of a fow weoks he will return to pursue his educational course, In three years’ time he expocts to have a good business education, supplemented with the em- bellishments of literature, it element in the life of food is of | most impo N dtizen, Our daily v importance than our annual aind in this fiell the govern- | ment has long been doing a quiality and quantity of work that are admirable to the highest degree. A1 this point you naturally ask, what is the work, who doit, and what is the practical result? &he workis the examination, anlysis and valuation of every kind of food and drink that comes to this country from broad,as well as of many kinds that are produced at home; the suppression, confiscation or destruction of unwhole: | some and injurious food; the punish- ment of offenders of all sorts and the publication of all the transactions in- volved in scietific and sporific form for future reference, The work, it must be confessed, is done inrather a haphazard way. In the fivst place, the national government cm- ploys ascore of skilful ¢lemists, who are attiched tothe custom hous York, Boston and such other leadin fes as aro legal ports of entry, Sec ond in importance isthe national he of health, which every one or mote ponderous volumes of proceedi The third machine e sists of the state boards of health, which of all sorts, varying from that of 5 a world-wide of Delaware, which has no name at a nd, last, the local boards of health, which are likely occasionally, todo something of value, | but seldom'indulge in the luxury. | So far as ourdaily food is concerned | the most interesting,” if not the most | valuable work has been done by the cus- | tom house chemists and a fowof the state boards of health. They are the bulwarks between our stomachs, if not our heulth and life, and the merconary merchants and menufacturers who are only too glad Lo tirn an honest penny by adulterating wnd imitating valusple oods, repairing and disguising wo sth- less goods and substituting good, snd and indifferent articles for those which are the best, The struggle hetween the two is very much like that between the safemaker and the safebreaker, or the banker and the burglar; first cuaei: slightly aliead and then the other The dishonest merchant and mauafact- urer are men of brains, and rely upon science to oblain Jweased proiits. Under various preiexts they retuin gront savants to colve chemiel and technical questins whoso solution means a new way of decelving the pub- lie. As an illustration of this, any numbe of queer trickscan be given which are now amatter of official record. In the tea trade, for instance, black tea was found to be adulterated with aloe and other leaves inover increasing propor- tions and green teato bo weighed with imprities und colored with copper salts. The wealthy British tea dealers in the east wore the guilty parties in every case. When the government_doclai d war on both frauds they dwindled away immediately. As cheap teas remained as universal for several years thereaftoras they had been before, another investigation was made, resulting in the discovery that over twenty domestic concerns were buying spent and _damiged tea leaves, recurling and recoloring them, and then selling them as a bonafide first-cluss commiercial article, More remarkapleis the story of cheap pepper. Within the memory” of muny readers pure pepper was the rule impure the exception, Our dealers began to adulterate their goods until the dition of afluirswas re- versed. The government finally took a hand in, and the bogus pepper business forthwith began to decline, at 5t, so far as the custom louse was concerned, in our own murket, on the other hand, itincrensed with even greater rpidity. A careful analysis by the Massachusetts foreign bord of health showed that two or more of our leading deuers in coca- nut were increasing their profits by pulverising broken cocoanut shells which had formerly been thrown away, und mixing the resulting powder with ground pepper. When thouttention of the authorities was called to theswindle which, strange to say, is confined to Boston, New Yol ‘hiladel phia and Baltimore, the general quality of ground pepper all over the country took a sad- den rise. The improvement did not continue a along time, for the the trade price-lists had hardly more than reached Furope when some enterprising French and | Italiun manufacture n to send us huge bags of "'y This de- lectable compound is_made by grinding up almond shells, olive stonos, cherry | twigs and other ligneous fibres, 1t is | utilized by flavoring it witha fow drops | of pepper extraet, or mixing it with from one-half to one-tenth its weightof genu- ine ground pepper, Amusing torelate when the wholesale grocers and spice dealers found out about, i te,” which they did a few months after its appearance in the new world, the loudest denunciations of the new odulterant came from the lips of the worthy cocoanut-shell grinder. He was »us for the health of his fellow- ‘men as tourge the passage of o law making ita crime to sell or treat “poiyretie” as pepper, under any or all circumstances, Sometimes the custom came out ahead. ‘At one time when the sugar duty depended upon the color of the article, being lowest upon the ray | dark brown and highest upon puro white, the officials noticed a sudden fal. ling off in the imports of the lntter and | an immense increase in the former, To the eye and judged by the ordinary stan- house chemists nd | down, and then it wis as pure and white asugar as can b produced. On account of this fraud the govemnment changed its system of valusiton and now uses the polariscope to determine the strength of imported raw sufrars, Equally striking was an experiencoof the Massachusotts ,~|u|--lmnr1} of health. tnexamining what was sold all through New Enghnd as powdored cinnamon, | but which lost its* sirength s rapidlyas | toexcite complaint they were amazed | to find thatit did not contain a particle | of that famouws-arimatic bark,and on the othe other hand they could not dis- | cover a traee of the substance with | which powdered cinnamon is usnally | adulterated. Finally in thoe red powder they founl smething groen, which under the mieroscope turned outto ho @ fragment of anintenal revenue st such ns is used for tobacco, T guve the clue and enabled them to show that the mysteriousstull was old elgar boses, dried and ground up and flavored with fow dropsof essentiul ofl. The im posi- | tion was so outrageous that th 1t hori- ties mot only published the discovery forthyith, but atticked the band so | vigorusly that in the next monthall that there wasin the market had heen confiscated and destroyed. The action of the ofllcinds is saidto have cost the guilty makersover £10,000. The avtifices in this field are number loss and the ingeniity ind even genius at times displayed in ‘clheating and fyingare simply wonderful, In Boston aman hasa machine which takes the favorite food of that cit plits ecach bean into twograins, channels and fin- ishes those s0 much liko cofioe that when they are rosted, they’ll decive the average grocer, | InChieigo, anothor commereiil eroolk has amachine whichi makes a ronst cof- fee bean out of coarse and damaged wheat flowr. The diet which eut outthe grains aveso well contrived that out of | 200 no twoarealike, The beancoffee is | sold chiefly inNewEngland andCanda, the wheal-paste cffee inthe west and | southwest, The govemmont, whether federal or state, does ot interfore with | these preparations, because al thot | rant fraulds upontho consuine | are wholesome fools rather than othe wise, Sophisticated win md liquors we nerly very common, butin lite yoar fo! | have bawome very rare, One hovse in | Harmburg and o in Bremen not. vory long ago did & lirge business with the | United States, They verequite honost | | in their dishonesty and spared the go }.‘r ment by announeing intheir bills of {lading that their champagno was e { bonated gooseberry,” theit old cognac, flav d "potalo spirit or “*industrial | aleohol and thelr Benedidine, | “mediciml —corial” They lofi | |the Tjing to the Ame | customers, knowing probably | | the new world is fur superior in this re- | gardto the old world. I ng brand of which two-hird frawdulmt, it 10 longer pays to_import imitations and adullerations, The fulse wines will no | longer compete with the vintages of Cali- | fornia, Ohio, Misouri and New York, Theliqueuers have gone largey out of fashion, and even the sale of imitwion cogmc and otard has fallen way down o >unt partly of the excollonee -of American brandy and partly the in- creased popularityof rye and bourbon all over the land. In spile of the cheipness and whole- somenessof our native wines, the ofli- cials occwsionlly run down prople who make a scantlivelihood by compounding poor imitations. The New York board of health found a “vineyard’® in the cel- lar of anold warchouss in the heart of the business center. It consisted of n lot of old hogsheads in which the proprietor was fermenting dimaged misins and de- cayed currants. The resulting **yine,” after being filtored and forlified, w. notaltogether vile. Theofficers threw 10,000 gullons into the sewer and ¢ rested the vintner. His defense was novel if not ludicrous, He ST am entlemanand ¢ Christian. Thatwine ynotseem good, bul issplendid, And I wish itdislinetly undersiood that it is respectable because I sell it to a thou- sand churches for communion wine!” Inthemanufaciure of jellies, confec- tionery and bonbons, the soul' of the adultérator rins riot. A choap ermbay- plejellymade in New York but sold by thetrade, generlly consists of water, glucose, burned sugar, cider vinegur, o of vitroland vegetable gelatine. 1t soldas cheap as 5 centsa glass and is said to cost less than3, the tumbler in- cluled. Of the Turkish fig pste, Ara- bian delight and jujube paste, much of which was once and all of which is still believedto be imported, neawly eve ounce ismade in the great manufictul ingeitios of the country, It ischeap ~and coarse and is made from wholesome ingredients by powerful machinery, It contains notuing but glucose, starch, a little flavor and a little coloring. These ap and steam power s che reason the falsifier of the past who used sugar and terraalbalor mater- alsand hanod labor in theiv elaboration is unable to compets in this line of Zoods 1t is very diflcult with chocolate, plain_or econfectionery, whether im: ported or domestic. Of 200 bran aminedofficially not twenty were pure, St starch, glucose, torrn alh baiytes, brown ochre, clay, venetim brown and otheradullerationsare added to it wuntil in some cases, the more than 15 per cent of the genuin article in what is offered under its name. Recently, in the factory of one of the largest manufacturers in this country, the board of health found a ton of venetian brown intheworkroom,with the workmen busy mixing it in the muachines with the choeolate. The man- ufacturer, hy the way,is me whose standing and much advertised claim for patronige absolute purity and the finest workmanship,”? e mational government takes notico of these de- ceptions only when any ingrediont is poisonous of exists in largo enough amount to do harn. he bourds of heulth seldom give matter the slightest consideration. In conclwsion it is but just to state that the adultertor is ind minovity, and that our foods and drink are good, fresh and wholesome nine times out of ten. is mot the e Haseball Beats Bull Fighting. Baseball has fukona popular hold our Spanish-American neighbo tho and of Cuba. I met C(ha Royer of Brooklyn who has just turned from Havam, siys o write the New York Star, pon in sball will soon be the national | sport in Cuba,” he said, “if its popu- ¥y increwses in the sauae mqwrt’nu asit” has during three or }uur‘ s Every one is interested in it and it prom- is0s tobe as general @ pastine osit has been in New York. “Omne thing scems strange, the natives donot understind Lnglish, yet all bise bull terms arve in English, and inspeak- ing ofa game the Culans use ctly the same wordsand phrasesas are used here. How they getthem nobody knows, dards the stufl seemed the poorest and impurest raw sigar imported. The | chemists went to work with a will and in a short time demomstrated that the sugar had been refned in the West Indies and then to make the tariff as light as possible had been mixed with fine clay until it looked | more like mud than anything sweet, When bought by an Ameriean refiner it only needed to be dissolved in water, fiitered in the ordinpry way, Imilod; and to hear a Spaniard, speaking no other language, talking of me runs, errors, daisy culters and red-hot liners, sounds very fuiny. Atany rate it looks | now as if buseball would eventually tike the place of bull fighting a5 anamusc ment among our tropical cousins,” e Tickets at lowest rates and superior accommodations via the grest Rock [s- land route- Ticket office, 1602—Six- eenthand Parnam streets, Omahu. | fish bon, WHAT TEARS ARK MADE 0F. They Perform a Useful as Well as Sentimental Function. Ttis said that people sometimesweep for joy, 1a woll s for sorrow, butsuch re at least rare; anyway thore s not probably any difereice in the ma 1 of the tears so shed, says the Brooklyn Standard, They are both made ofthe samo stuff. The principal elementin the eomposition of o tear, ns may readily be suppesed, is water, The other eloments aro salt, goda, phosphate of lime, phosphate of Soda and mucus, eaeh insmall proportions, Adrid e scen through a micro | scope of gool average pover presntsn peculiarappearance, The witer, after evaporation, leaves hehind it the saline ingredionts, which amlgumate and form themselves into lines, and look like lengthen unumberof d ¢ min The tears are secetel in what led the wehry mal grlands,™ situntad | oyer the eyeball andundoneath the 1id he contents of these glands are carried nd unde s by the inner surfaceof the +means of six orseven very scharged o little esupporting the 1id from the lach- rymal g s not ocensional and ace- dental, as is commonly supposed, but ous, 1t gaes on both diy aid | Joss abundantly atnight tconduits” and spr of tho Lids Aftersewing its purmose thel carriedaway by two little drai d inthatcoimer of cich cye newrest the nose, into whichtheyrun, andcalled mal points, ™ The usefuly surfac equailyover th of thisguiet flow of tears to both n and beust s mnnif There isan imnense qgantity of dust flating in the airand constantly getting into the eyesthat, but for it they would soon become choked. Very litlo isrequisiteto ke he ball free, and when some obno ubstance —smoke, aninscet, or the like, that affects the nerves—dos muke its way inoan in- creased flow is poured out to syeep it awuy taliman pals freovaclining ch e 1 conches dinir L Thro sloep o = s to Chicago and intervening poiuts vis the orat Roclk [sland route. Ticket xteenth and Pamamn, - The Princess of Moncao, | everybody is interested in ! women. "Their heauty is, fiest of carvd of introduction, and after it they huve alittle history, cven if it isonly a little bit of ancelote, a beautiful woman will command more in- terest than one wlo depands on he tellect or charm of man w fa | : Among the most fanous | women —in - Paris tday is the | princess of Momco, about whom | much has been wiitten, but curiously enough it never told that she is the nArerican wom. Her mother rerr of New Orleans, who ma ried the rich iker, Hein and had two children, asonand o d: Th dnughter inherited themother's oxeop- tional beauty, and ab sevenfeen years age «d the Due de Richelieu, After three years of murrid lifohe dled, and for eightyears the beautiful young wilow, ri«fi. 1ot only in mere dieats, but very fasinnting, was courted daug hier of French writer, Miltenbe by all the men whose aftention was worthconsidermtion. Her most ardent wooer wasthe princeof Monaco, ind afterlong wooing she =aid s" to his_ proposal and wis murrid lust spring. In appeirance the princess is much more like anAnerican than a woman, She has blonde hair, brown eyes and the peach-1ik isso oftenseonhere and so France, She writes and speaks English, French, German, Italian 1 Spanish and is a wonderfully fine musicimn, little son, the present due de Richeliou, isatout ten years oll. Itis mostre- markablo that one wom: should have borne two of the oldest and proudest titlesain the world, and that woman still | ¥ under thirty. Nobody protendsto doubt | © t whileshe was born in France, and was of I'rench money, that rench dirk skin that, seldom in win - of munner, her faseinating: speech and her extrme bemuty are American, o A Countess Begging Bread. Out near the Clff Houso there sits every daya weary looking womn who & dend OEinath aathe tan sco Bxaminer. A placard clls the attention of the public to hor desti- intion and thut of he tvo chitden. | & Prize 0f $60.000. . ... - $68.000 The dimesundnickelsof the chavitible [ ILrimeof I000...ocueeiieeen.. 100 pussers-by aveall that giveher and the D gow children food and sielter, Yot this oo vomin has & title that half the leireses nee OO in Culifornia world give themselvesand 7,500 theirfortinesfor. She is Comlesse Von Sechliegen, the widow of an_Austrinn | 100prizeor & 85,00 nobleman, She comesof anoblo Polish | 100Ptize ot 3000 fumily. Von Sehlawen squndered | 100rizaor 27000 her little dowe 15 ho did his| gporerminalelo$6000 Priss o0 ench. 1 fortune, amd when le died rinadsto 10,00 Prize 01310 cuch. ten years ago e was left alnost penuiless with two bibies. Sheeamo to | 124Prizs America, whitherher brother had omi- | g 3%, & grated some yearsbefore, but found him siele nd erippled and almost as poor as herself. [e lived buta short time and [ We further criiey it v then she went towork. o tench drawing, but Qid not know enough of the art. She sewed for a time, buther oyes could ot stand the steain, and flially she becmen facory operative, The poor food and other hard- ships broke her hiealth, until at last t is nothing she cando hut ask forel She is sensitive about her former life, however,and never spenks of her titie, The story only became kiown through | ¢ an application she one benevolent sy fc She first tried nade to alocal | 1 1ce, < e Dr. Sussdor cossiully all disewses of the kidnoys, bladder and rectum. 1504 I 7 Diamond Went Up a Flume, A brunswi man vho of afinediamond stul in front of the stove somo of the hystande s the owner Wis ¢ ot veeently, when attracted his at tention, says the Bungor (Me.) News, | vous DRnL1AL D, G In turning round, the divmond siipped [ Nind ‘of Erran or 6 from hisfingers ana flow in the siove, | Yount 1ANT Thestove wis inmediately elaned out, | $4red ) X butno *e of the dianondcould he found, Probably hewillclean the rest of his divmonds in front of the register rather than the ol stove. —— Nervous debility, poor menory, difillence, sexual weakness, pimple y Dr. Miles' Newine. Samplesfree it Kuhn & Co.'s 15th and Douglas. ALWAY S Cures ali disorders of the stomach, Liver, Bowel, K dneys, Blad o ous Diseases, Loss of Appeti tion, Biliousness, Fover, b diseane. s Headac e DYSE RADWA Y'S PILLS are acarefor tils conply heulth | Fesiore Mrength (o thestomics - Pric hox, Soli by sll drugghts, orwal York, ourecelpt of price, L bl palred themselves by fn propor indulsence and solitzary b bits, Whis Jruinbothmind and body, unieting busiiess, st uri MARKIED NEN or th Maxiran IfermationalPanking Co, Conerssionaries. Her | Incorporated By thoStat of Chihvahua, Mex-~ under the 5. M0s LB, boll génllemen of high staiding, Gnly60,000 Tickels! S1g10d. s faee vi ro| touwe ower FOR MEN ONLY MGIC CURE ¥ abservati Drs.Betts kBetts Physicians, Surgems and Speciilists, 1400 DOUGLA S STIREBET OMATIA, NEB. Thomost widily « falistsin the Unite perience, romarkiblg coss in Lho treeitiont. and Chronio and wical Disenses omi physiciins (0 thy full confden: the afliteted o vory whero. ©F N teo AIN AND 1" A8 of ol y vic CIVE OURE for and the numer= yw i Lts tra i, BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES S DEBLLITY AN D SEXUA L DI ORDERS yield readlly totheir skillful tront- ment PILES, MSTULA AND RECTAL ULCERS guarinteed cured without p: In or detenti from husliess. HYDROCELE AND VARICOOELE perma- cured In_overy cse. S nently anl suwessfilly SYIHTLIS, GONOR 1EA, GLEET, matorthes, Seninal Weakiess, LostManlood, Night Emissions, Doty ed Fadltios, Fenale Wenknessand all delicato disoders pe e to elther sex positively corod,ns wil asall functional disorders that resilt from youth- ful tallest thhoxess of mutiro yers, STRICTU RE Guirantced perimine nt STRICTURESHEnte biemiuemiLy Without eatting caustic ordiltntion Cures affectod ent withous amo= ment's pa TO YOUNG ANDO M E-AGED MEN, A SURE Cl'RI‘ iy o R f‘ DRS. BETT: hose whohavelm- hoppy Hifenwire of phy s ussisted. OUR SUCCH mpon facts. Fird—Unetiol experls e, Sevcond—Every euso ls specially stulied, thuas stariing right, Third-Mediines are prejured in e Liboraiory xacily to sult cachease thus effectin ithoit injury, Drs. Betlts & Betts, 1409 DOUGLAS STR L OMIHA NER 3 £, SHE BENITO JUAREZ, Underthe Nanngomentof the ico, for Charitable Purposes. GRAND MONTHLY IRAVING, willtake place fn publio at tho eityof Juares nerly Pas del Norte) Mexio, W cneday, Aug . 201), 1£90, raonal superviton_of €en. FOiiid , and Mr. CAM §LO AKG UEE.- CAPITAL PRIZE, $60,000. Only 60,000 Tickets! WHOLE TICKETS $4, HALF TICKETS $2, QUARTIR TICKETS, §1. me a0 nper Wings of s 1 ctedwith onesty, ward s al parties. JOH N S. MO SBY, Commissioner. CANIELO Atee Suprvisorfor i Itany tickotdrn, AGENTS WANTED, For €lub rates or any other informatio T e i A A nEy,Nireetina Numir, 150ry will b Tl by Jubening your tail ndais. MEXICAN INTEINATION AL BANKING (0., City of Jusrez, Mexido, NOTICE. for i Ortors write to Ay, with e losing wn envel: Iy orfinary lotter, 1y w1l X pros com . ork Kichwngo, bank drali’ of postl o Add rens 11 reiatered otives (0 DMENIC AN INTHIN ATION A1LLANKING 00, Cltyof Jusres, Mexico, via Ll 1o, ‘Pex. 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