Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
A BOOTH AT VANITY FARR. | Boue of the @ay Gew-Gaws Spread Forth by the Wits, A MOST AFFECTING CATASTROPHE. Had Been Kducated in Jersey City— Before the Angelus—A Wise Precaution — A Boy's Essay on Breathing. . Boston Times: There are » num- bers of visitors daily to sece y An- gelus” nt the Arena, and the spectator who likes to study human nature has many an opportunity to do so. Some who view the wonderful masterpiece and are awed by its religious spivit, kneel reverently before it, In the rear of such up the other afternoon there stood ent of the “interior’” with his best girl. The practical rather than the roligious impressed him, for, turning to his companion, he remarke ll Sal, is that feller poppin’ the question, A Boy's Fissay on Breathing. Old ‘Homestend: We breathe with our lungs, our lights, our kidneys and the livers. If it wasn’t for our breath we woulddie when we slept, Our breath koeps the life agoing through the nose when we are asleep, Boys who stay in a room all day should not breathe. They should walt until they get outin the fresh air. Boysin a room make bad air called carbonicide, Carbonicide isas poison as mad dugs. A lotof soldiers were once in a black hole in Calcutta and carbonicide got in there and killed them, sometimes ruin their health with corsets that squeeze the diagram. A big dingram is best for the right kind of breathing. Affecting. Smith, Gray & Co.’s Monthly: “I was at the depot this morning when the express went out, and I saw one of the saddest partings I ever witnessed in 9 a man's suspenders parted when he was running for the train,” Well Trained, Smith, Gray & Co.’ Iy: Mr. O'Toole-—Sure, Oi understan’ lookin’ for a mon, made bould ter sthep in an iro th’ sort of amon yedo bo wantin’y bein’ as Oi'm out o' a job jist at th’ pri Merchant—Well, I want a man who doesn’t know too much, and s in the habit of doing whatover he Mr, O*Toole—That’s me, sor. Merchant—Where were you working last? Mr, O"Toole—In Jersoy City, sor; in- spectin’ illections. Bad Some Feeling. Detroit Free Press: “I hope you can appreciate my position, sir,” said a stranger who had asked a citizen for five cents the other day, “What is your position?” “I have been free-lunching at a place over here all the fall without buying a single glass of beer. I want to continue all winter, but my conscience upbraids me. 1feel that Iought tosortof split the seasons in two by buying at least one glass,” His position was appreciated and he got the nickel. A Wise Precaution, Bostonian: Jamser. What a wonder- fully old man De Tanque is for a man who has always been a drunkard? Flamser. Ho is somewhat advanced in years, but the cause of it is plain. Jamser. I don’tsee it. Flamser. They're afraid toadmit him to the next world for fear he'll swallow all the spirits. The Grand B e, Chicago Times,—*Why, what's the matter, Thinpate? You look as is you had lost your last friend,” said Plumly. = “I proposed to Miss Diamondust last nsght, and never in my life was 1 so put out,” replied Thinpate. “Poor fellow! She rejected you?" “No, but old Diamondust ejected me.” Chicago Times: “Our old friend, Coio- nel Stopbottle, is dead,” said Bunker, “Colonel Stopbottle dend! W hy, when did that bhappen?’ asked l)umphv L met him in Louisville, Ky., only three days ugo, and he was ‘the picturo of health,” ““Ho drank a few bottles too many day beforo yesterday and fell asleop in a door- way aid some one, supposing ho had (u‘lnl-cd threw o bucket of water over him. **And he caught cold, I suppose, and died?” *No, the shock to his nerves and his l{cnl\’u'l(y feelings were too wmuch for him,” Up With London Timos. Chicago Times: Bertie—Aw, Chavwlie, mo boy, ah you afwaid of goblins, deah. follah, 0’ ah you ill that you keep youah gohs lighted in bwoad dayli know ¥ Chawlie—No, dear chappie, neitha, e boy. I've just reccived a cablogwam fwom Alge'non in Lunnon, and he wites that there is a Lunnon fog on, ye know; that’s all, Bertim—Ah, what clevah wit! How you do mawnage to keep up with the World, deah fellah! He Tried a Conundrum. Chicago Times: It was 11:30, but the young man could not tear himself away. TSt of the pauses in the conversation the sound of snoring insome of the upper rooms reached the cozy parlor, and his face lighted up with the joy of u sudden discovory. “Miss Chuckster,” he sald, ‘‘wh, your house like a_good line of railwi I cannet imagine, Mr. Hankinsor “Bocauso it is well equipped with sleepers.” “Ha! Very good, Mr. Hankinson. Do you know why you are like a railway from Potato Hollow to St. Loui **No. \Vh\"” “Beeause,” answered Miss Chuckster, sweetly, “you dnnm seem to have any terminal h\ullmm A Gloomy Era. Why 1s the optimist s0 glum? Wiy 18 1t the reformer frots? The girls insist In chowing gum, Lhie boys in smoking elgarettes, Receiving Him Into Society. Boy of the Neighborhood—Wot's yer name? New Boy—Jim Hodge. Wot's yourn? Tom Kadger, Gotany big brothers? “No. % “Father and mother blong to reh?”? Yes, but I don’t. I know wot yer a-driven at. If ye want to fight [ kin do ye in two minutes,’” (Adupting himself to changed condis tlon of things). *‘Let’s youan' me goan’ lick Bob Burnham." Her Feellngs Touched., Boston Traveller: She — O, aren,t ?'ou cruel, Mr. Hunt, to shoot the little irds! I think it is a shame to kill the dear sweet things, and 1don’t see what sport it can be, He—But—- “There is no ‘but’ about it! Some of THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, NO EMBER 16, 1890-TWENTY PAGES. those you'vo killed are real pretty, aren't they? Let's seel There are ten bl Ir, Hunt, can’t you shoot me two mos [ want just a dozen pairs of bluejays’ wings for an ornament I am making.’ Chatter: Bu h hor—\Y )\,ll can T send you up to day, Mvs. Styles? Mrs. Styles—Send me a leg of mutton, and be sure it is from a bluck sheep. Butcher—A black sheep! Murs. ) ; we are in mourning, you kno! Not the Cu Kansas City Time An old negro strolled up to the window in the oftice of the Kansas City, Kan., commissioner of registration the other day and made application for registration papers, “*What is your nam asked Assistant C mnun~~|m r Arnold, eorge Washington,”” was the reply. “Well George, are you the man who © nt down the cherry tree?’ ‘No, sih, boss;no, sah Tain't de man, I ain,t done nowork fo' nigh unto a yeah,” Eob Burdette's Bright Son. Bob Burdette, the humorist, has a very brigh son who is truly “‘a fehip of the old block.” | He has thie same name as his father, and he is proud of both name and parent, Young Robert is sixteen, but I a ]\I'I on relish for When his father decided it was nec y for him to have a ‘“‘den” in which to work, young Robert felt the necessity also in his case. Accordinly, there are “dens” in the pretty Bryn Mawr home the humorist, and < the future Burdette of humor and wis- dom. He has in it all the editorial im- plements avound him of a newspaper office, and each week publishes a_paper for his own amusement. “Oh, it’s com- ? Jaughingly said his father to me y, “Ho partment of dispatches, column, and ‘brevier’ in regular shape, But the part of which he is most proud is his ‘funny column’ und this he w himself. Oh cluded the genic 1@ is quit humorist, 1 tell you. IHuirly hurts him to carry all his humot around with him.” Dr. Birney, nose and throat, Bee bldg. p I TS Picturesque Hardware. 1t is a singular fact that time, no less than distance, invests objects and insti- tutions with an interest and pictureque- ness quite unsuspected in their own time, s the Age of Steel. Thus in our search for ideas about ornamental hard- ware we often find that we can do no better than copy the models of the past, since, wo have discovered that many things once thought commonplace were in reality best suited to their own gen- eration, and fitting to the times that gave them birth. American people are apt to sympathize U IA famta Yy ard aid et sarto weep over an Egyptian jarsimply because it is of ‘‘uncertain date,” for in most mat- ters our reverence dates no further back than our grandfather and his ways. Yet can not butacknowledge that for beautiful ideas our debt to antiquity is very great. Take, for instance, the *‘colonial” style of ornamentation in fine bronze hardware. Itssimplicity and its good taste can _not fail to strike every educated observer, for it is a refined pat- tern and does not commend itself to the groundlings. It wasa natural outcome of the simplicity of revolutionary life and waited a century for its appropriate- ness tobe fully recognized, Nor have we failed to be “early Lnglish” eve it was too late, and so to be in touch with the fading rage for Queen Anne cot- For the more artistic the nce period has been ked for ideas, and we have it in from the “only genuine Renaissance, through the French and so on to the Dutch school. Nor have the exquisite Moorish and the flored eastern schools escaped unnoticed, and today are entering upon a new lease of popularity. The severely Gothic, the conventional Egyptian and the over- praised Japanese had their innings, and very long ones they were, but they are remembersd now only as thmg- that were—of modern ideas the most beauti- ful are copies from nature—a spray of evergreen, or a familiar flower that dom- inates and gives character to the whole design, I a wise manufacturer of bronze hardware that marks this march of good taste and prepares himself ac- cordingly by gathering himself artists of experienee and ideas wherewith to cater to the retail men of the woolly west. bt e bl iy Dr. Birney cures catarrh, Bee bldg. Mournful Undertakers. The gentlemen who provide humanity with its last lodging require no cards to designate their calling or to indicate what they are ready to undertake for their defunct fellow beings. It is writ- ten on their faces, in their deportment, on their habiliments—all over them. They are their own ds, as a writer in the New York Ledger expresses it. If one was to meet an undertaker under the shadow of the pyramids or at Spitz- bergen there could be no difficulty in recognizing him as a member of the funereal profession. Undertakers, as a rule, are moral, os- timable men, but they certainly do differ in aspect and manners from the mass of mankind. There is an indescribable air about them, which, for a lack of a better word, we must call posthumous, Con- stant intercourse with the bereaved makes their voices mournful; for your undertaker ever assimilates his tones to those of his afilicted customers, and he thereby acquires & habit .of talking as if he had lost all his friends. In like manner the *havior of his visage” becomes woe-begone past all remedy. His very smiles are only deadly-lively. Then there isa severe plainness albiiithe‘ant of his LISk Kalk which, to say nothing of its melancholy hue, is a rebuke to worldiy vanity and a solemn hint that fashion and frivolity are as smallaccount when his duties are to be performed. Nevertheless, the craft is a highly xmpm-luhlo one, and we have not a word tu ~4|_) against it, Dr. Uu'm_y nose nnd throat, Bee bld’g. ol sk Pearl Hunting on the Mackinaw, A pearl hunting eraze has been started along the banks of the Mackinaw riv * an affluent of the Illinois, which flows through Woodford, McLean and Taze- well counties, suys a Bloomington, 111, special to the Globe-Democrat. Re- cently two boys of Kappa obtained forty earls from mussels taken from the Mackinaw, near Kappa. They took two of the gems to Peoria, where they were offered $22 for them. This river bed is full of mussels, and it is believed that they contain countless pearls of much value. ————— Dr. Birney cures umun-h. Beo bld.g Smith, Gray &Co.’s ‘\lumhlv Friend That’s an excellent picture of still life, but that loaf of bread is !mrdl) natural. Artist—No; youseeI had to eat my model to keopme alive while I painted R epict ure, e ODr. Birney cures catarrh, Bee bldg THE BOILED SHIRT FASHION. Boston Gazette. Ho was sitting on the sofa, And the gaslight's glimmering glim Half revealed the starting truth that She was sitting 'side of him. Close they sat, but none too closely— Just 80 close that *round her waist Ho had reached, and naturally There one single arm had placed. She was lusclous, swaeet as honoy; Home-made hair she had, hung down On her neck, but he, strange creature, Wore an angry, full-grown frown. “What!" he hissed; “art growing colder? Has your love turned to ice-cream { Are you giving me the shook-shook Ha, false one, 50 it would seem " “No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no!" Said the maiden; “George, I do Lovye you just as much as ever, And," she blushed, “I think more, too!" “Then," said he, and humped his forehead Like the waves mado by a tug, “Tell me, why do you refuse to Let me give you just one hug?" “George!"” she faltered. “Stop!” he thun- dered; “No excuses, fickle ore; Just the teuth, the whole trath only— That I want from you. Go on!" ‘George,” ghe said, *‘the reason that I he clutched her skirt-— ed, “you'd rumple Up my boiled whm- hm-n nhul"’ A PS\CH[L‘L MYSTERY. G. W. Weippiort in Detrolt Freo Press: One may not be a believer in any of the forms of mysticism now pres- ented to the world by societies of psy chi research and similar semi tific and semi-religious associations; yet incidents scemingly beyond human com- prehension occur every day, are re- corded by the papers and dismissed without second thought. Sometimes a particularly striking cpisode attracts unusual attention. Metaphysical quacks attempt to explain it, and forthwith the intelligent part of the public ceases to interest itself in the phenomenon. Knowing this to bo the case, I have ways felt a delicacy about giving to the publica detailed account of the ex dinary case which came under m servation several years ago and w ‘hoso truth I have no reason to doubt, as the two persons most interested in it enjoy the confidence of the entire community in which they live. On the 18th of October, one of these persons, whom, for convenicnce sake, I will call George Smith, was on his way from Salt Lake C: U. T., to Omaha, Neb. He had left his home in a pretty Chicago suburb early in September, and was working his way eastward at the time of which I am writing. He had en- joyed the best of health, Business had been potter than usual, and it is safe to say that on the evening of the day men- tioned Mr. Smith enjoyed perfect phys- ical health and his mind was free from worry and excitement. Hence his story of the strange occurrence, outlined in the following paragraphs, needs no iurther introduction, and the chronicler vetires in favor of Mr. Smith. THE SON'S STORY. *‘On the evening of October 18, 1886, I was on an overland train on my way from Salt Lake City to Omaha. I had taken some large orders in the Mormon capital and was in excellent spirits. After supper two or three of my fellow travelers proposed o game of cuchre, in which I took a hand. “We might have been playing two hours or more when I felt—or seemed 1o feel—the presence of a'friend. Ilooked around but could not see any- one I knew. I asked my friends whether yone approach me. Al ng game after game they laughed rouriously and turned my question intoa joke, “A new hand was dealt and the play progressed. The uncomfortable feeling which had possessed me a few moments before seemed to leave me. I took a new interest in the games and won two or three times in succession, I was con- versing with the gentieman oceupying the seat }:]msi!n mine and talking rather boastfully of the change in my luck when a soft hand was laid on my shoulder and I heard the voice ol my mother saying, ‘George, I want you.” “I have never been superstitious, and on that evening I was perhaps freer from fancies than at any other period of my life. Still, when upon turning I not only heard the voice of my mother but actually saw her form standing b, my side, her hand resting on my shoul- der, I dropped my cards and become so awe-struck that speech failed me for some minutes. “At length I recovered from my stupor. I asked my companion what had become of the lady who had a‘p«)kcn to mo. In veply théy smiled. They had neither seen” nor heard anything. 1 became angry, but they vowed that I must be laboring under a hallucination. “Upon reflection I was persuaded to agree with them. How could my mother, from whom I had received a letter but a fow days before which was dated at her suburban home near Chi- cago, be a passenger on the overland train? What could have induced her to leave her family to make a flying trip across the continent? “The idea seemed preposterous. Still, to make assurance doubly sure, T walked through the train, glancing at every female enger. My search was, of “By act ident T looked at my watch, whose hands pointed to 9:10: I had not it to mountain time, conse- quently the mysterious apparition had shown itself to me at 9 o’clock Chicago time. “I passed a troubled night. The vision haunted me, and sleep did not close my eyes for more than five or ten minutes at a'time, The apparition did not appear again however, *In due time we arrived at Omaha, My first task was a walk to the depot telegraph office. As m]) mother had en- joyed the best of health at the time of my departure from home, I addressed a message to her notifying her of my safe arrival at Omaha. In two hours I re- coived a repiy: ‘Mother died at9 last evening, Come home at once.’ “Died at 9! At the precise moment .when she called to me in thesleeping car of the overland express. “For a few moments my fear, or what- ever you may call the sensation, scemed even more painful than the sorrow I felt for the loss of the best of mothers. Was it her spirit which had sought me to cast a farewell glance at her son? “Of course I left for Chicago on the next train. On my arrvival at home I learned that my mother was stricken with an attack of apoplexy on the morn- ing of her last day on earth. Toward evening she partially recovered, All the family was gatliered around her bedside, excepting mys youngest sister, Annie, and myself. At 8:30 o’clock she foll into a trance-like condition, from which she recovered as the clock struck 9. She then looked at everyone present, kissed her hughand and children, and with the remufPk, ‘I have seen George and Aunule,’ expired. I have no comments to make on the connaction existing between the vision in the railroad car and my lamented mother’s trance. ¥t is one of those things which thehuman mind cannot comprohend; and the mystery will scem still more profound to you when you have heard the story of my sister, whose experience was even more startling than mine.” THE DAUGHTER'S STORY. “Every word George has told you, I beliove to be truo,” said Miss Annie Smith,who was persuaded to supplement her brother’s narraliv “*At the time of mother’s death T was visiting a friend in northern Indiana. On October 17 I received a letter from mother in which she informed me of many things of personal interest, and added, in a postscript, that I need be in no hurry to return as her health has never been bet- ter. She spoke cheerfully of domestic affairs, told about several calls she had made the day before, and teased me not a little about a certain young man who, as you all know, will soon be my hus- band. My visit had been very ploasant, and immediately after reading the letter I informed my friend that T could spend another week with he “*A local fire company was to give an outdoor concart, the last of the season, on the evening of the 18th. As ear 7 o'clock a large crowd was gathered around the music stand, in the court house park, and at half past 7 my friend suggosted that wo walk down to the ream, W the wide corri % ““The suggestion met the approy every one the house, and a few min- utes latter we had joined the throng at the court house. Several gentlemen known to my friend asked permission to join our party and we were soon enjoying ourselves to our hearts’ content ““The music was really good, the band which furnished it having won several prizes at different contetts, The wmem- bers of the fire company, ¢lad in bright red shirts, gaudy belts and flaming hel- mets, went through their ovolutions to the satisfaction of everybody, Enthusi asm grew loud on all sides and an invita- tion to buy ice cream received a hearty ponse, Among those who entered the court house was our part Woe filled one side of a long table, and as the gen‘lemen were very lileral in giving their orders it looked as though we would occupy our s fo yme time. T'he conversation was general, The gentleman sitting next to me, a l.l\\ er of some note, related some of his ex jences in the backwoods counties of Imll- ana, and drew funny pictures of the typ- ical Hoosier and his peculiar ways until laughter drowned the remarks of the other speakers. “I had a splendid time.OThe sur- roundings were o novel to one who had never spent any length of time in a coun- try community, and the conversation which brought me face to fuce with men who had lived amoung a class of people wnom I had read and heard so much af- forded me unbounded amusement. ‘Judge M——, the lawyer I mentioned afew moments ago,” wus just telling a 'y funny story, and as he” had the fac- ulty of making a ridiculous thing still more ludicrous by agsuming the facial expressions of his heroes and heroines 1 watched his face intently. “Suddenly my sight grew dim,my surroundings seemed to change and I found myself in my mother’s room at home. Isaw her lying on her bed, gasping for breath, the color of lh'd”\ on her face, her eyes dimmed by n glassy vapor. 1 walked to the siae of the bed, took her hand and bent down to kiss her lips. She suffered me to do as T pleased, O R words: ‘Good-bye, Annie, God bless you.’ “ “In the same instant my sight re- turned. I heard the words spoken by my neighbor as plainly as before, saw. the dirty walls of the court house corr idor, and unconsciously laughed as merrily as the rest. “The reaction set in, however, and as the clock in the court house tower struck nine, Ifell from my chair ina swoon. “*Kind hands cared for me and when I recovered 1 was in my room at my friend’s house. I relatéd my experi- cnce. It was considered extraordinary, but aseribed to ordinary causes. The excitement of the evening, the cool at- mosphere, the transition from tho pure air of the park tothe stufly corridor, and many other circumstances were cited to prove that my indisposition and the light of my reason, as they termed it, brought on by natural causes. ‘I did not dispute their arguments, but rather hoped against hope that they might be unanswerable, “My thoughts, however, remained concentrated on m other’s room as I had seen it in my vision, and when the door bell was rang vigorously at 11 o'clock I opened the door myself to ad- mit the impatient caller, who proved to be the telograph operator, “The message he brought was for me, It read: ‘Mother died sud«lvnl) at 9 this evening. Come at on T uttered a pierceing ery and fainted in the hall. My friends cared for me as well as they could, but did not again re- fer to my vision in the court house co dor, The next morning I left for Chicago, arriving there a day in advance of my brother George, whose story has inter- ested you so much. It was some time before we exchunged our strange exper- , and since we have done so the y has become even meore startling The writer has nothing to add to the narrative of Mr, and Miss Smith, except that both came to his knowledge in dif- of the count To pre curate uccount of the we incident, he subsequently called upon the two narrators and put their testi- mony in writing, as nearly in their own language as circumstances permitted. The only regret he 'has to express is that he is not authorized to publish the real name of the informants, i sy Of all articles uscd to grace a table non imparts more brilliancy. than Dorflinger's American cut glass, It is tho richest cut glass in the world, Enquire for it of your caler. Every pieco has Dorflinger's trade e inbel, De. Birney cures catarrh, Bee bldg S Two dashing young women these, They are the Misses Pullmap, of the world, I say of the world, because, whilo their home is in Chicago, they know hs many people in Bos- ton, New York, London, Paris and Vienna as in the Lake City, says a Chicago News New York lotter. They walk as ercctly as grena- dier guards. They are superbly dressed but their clothing is not {n any sensé loud. They are both tall, averaging pretty nearly six fect in height; have rosy cheeks, clear skin, and constitutions made strong by judicious work in tho gymnasium. They are Seen very often at the opera in this o 0 to the theatre frequently, and are known in many of the best houses on Fifth avenue. They spend theirtime at the Windsor hotel and whenever they visit this city their society is eagerly besought by young men of the best families. Dr. Birney, nose and throat, Bee bldg. - - Youshould keep Salvation Oil on head; vill cure all aches and puins, Price ouly 25 oguts. Humboldt, in his Coswos, thought he showed up the world. Supposo he bad 'ived to know Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup. But ho didn't, alas! —_——— Ur Birney; nose and throat, Bee bldg le* water of great sent exist as bicarbon tion, and one fn which with mangancse for bufldi system, for corrocting fanc and gqualified endoriement diuretic and solvent properties of Regent Waters, (nmhlm 4 with the o, and curo fnflammation and eatarrh of and for disorde h of The Elms Hotel, H. C. FISH, GEncRAL MANAGER. IFE Nl1lA RAYON PORTRAIT F 0!‘( HARG! P! 00 change in picture you wish, not interf Adiress all mail to PAGIF PORTRAIT HOUSE, 112 AND e e . PLEASE BE SURE TO MENTION THIS PAPER. PAXTON ON RUBBER FOR....... (F OUR Thin Elastic TRY ONE Tho most widely ana favoral falists in the United Stutes. perionoe, remarkablo skill and coss in the trentment und cure of Nervous, Chronie and Burgical Diseasos, entitle these sicluns 1o the full confdence of They gharantoo: A CERTAIN AND POSITIVE OURE for the aweul effects of surly vice and the numer- ts tra ATE, BLOOD "AND AN DISEASES wt‘mll;bmmr\wmy AR perma! STLITY, AN ORDERS ylold readily 2 thetr siiiiral \reu- “BiE k9, FISTULA AND REOTAL ULOERS pus muwsu cured without pain or detention HYDRDi‘ELT AND VARH‘;!!J(‘ELE perma- i versalsass All material of the best quality. S m\ ‘Wonknoss, Lows Manhbod, ecayed Facultios, Fomale to disorders peouliar ox P funef |.I<ml| Wisorders th {ho groatost auccess all (ul (()lll\m ur o xcoss of matiro years 1 purmanently W'lltflulu\lllhll caust affeoted at home by tient without & mo- InA‘H! s elln ol NG AND MIDDLE-AGED MEN, A SU RE CURE Gy Vics wiflta Uaings organic weakness, destroying both mind and BOdy. with all 1ts droaded 1i1s, Dormanenty DRS. BETTS A proper indulgence and soliiar Fuin both mind and bo business, stud Address those Tho hnvs jm- Ul ntering on that happy 1ifs SwAFe Of By siosl eIty quiokly assiated. eportof DI, Tl’Mason 1Prorcs=or “of An\\yhcl! “Chemistry, Rensselaer * Polyal member of the Revision' Commission of lh: United States Pharmacopaga, etc.) oOnN Tl-ll-: ‘““NATURE'S TONIC, DIURETIC AND URIC ACID SOLVENT, Regent. is @ *mangano-chalyb he fron and mangancse p ate, & form most suliable for Absh readily entcr the blood of the water, (a feature of rate occurrence,) i the very nrua amount of nanganees present.” persons o not ensily benr the admmnistration of iron prep- arations, but 1t 1s my experienco that 1f mangancso be assoctated with the iron, tho remedy is not ouly well bornic, bt the good effect Js Mmore apparent than with the iron will be found very eficient in all dapressed con. dltions of tha gerieral ayatem requiring tonio red menstruation, anami zual_debility, it may be properly term “Taving performed o portion of the analy! For illustrated pamphlet descripti as to the value of the waters, und detailed information, addre EXCELSIOR SPRINGS COMFANY, EXCELSIOR SPRINGS, M I-'BEE Photograph, Tin Type, Ambrotype, or Dagucrotype, of yourscltor Uy momber 0f Your funily; 1iving ordond,and we will make R provided you exhibit it to your Triends o a samplo of our ame and address on lh\‘L 0 ]]m('!lfl and it will be returned ing with the liken 14 CLARK STREET, CHICAGO, ILL. A abundant opportunlly of notingthe s of the waters rom long expe of salts i B tho wor a1 disorders of t common to anAnwmio con giving this water my hearty powers nbove descrlbed, 1 prostate gout and pacity 500 guests, open all the year,) testimonials C. B, MOORE & CO., WHOLLAALE AGENTS, OMANA, NES, FOR I5 llAYS From date of this paper. Wishing to introduce our CRAYON PORTRAITS and at tho same timo extend our business and make new customers led tomako thisspeeial offer. Send us a Cabinet Pioture tefer to any bank in Chicago, Special Sale During Next Thirty Days. REPOSITORIES, Harney and 13th Streets, Drs.Betts XBetts Physicians, Surgeons and Specialists, 1409 DOUGLAS STREET and Nintle and PacificStreet DR. BAILEY, Graduate Dentist of Years' Experience. BLOOCK, OMAHA, The Best Method for Painless Extraction of Teeth without Anaesthetics, A FULL SET OF ARTIFICIAL TEETH $5 OO A PERFECT FIT 3 GUARANTEED. AL YL NI 91¥[d ulyfy, ¥ 13 01 40V1d X180 FHL * Gold, Silver, Amalgam, Bone and other fillings at lowest rates, Roots and Broken Teeth saved by crowning with Gold or Porcelain Crowns. Office open evenings until 8 o’clock, NO GURER DrDOWNS 1818 Douglas Street, Omaha, Neb. Beventeon years® cxperionoe, A rogular gradunto ln modicing, s diplomas show. _Is ailioatiring with Drivato dlsoager, | A permanont oire ganranioad for Caiatel NO PAY. ymillls Striotaro alfl 8450 & undoriaks nnd fat | Ofce hours—9 &. . Lo § p. w. Sunday, DEWEY & STONE FURNITURE COMPANY A magnificent display of everything uscful and ornamental in the furuiture maker’s art at reasonable prices, OUR SUCCHSS 1- huod Spon facte. B! mt<l’uu'.hul o HBeo thus nmmg right red in our laboratory y thug effecting cures without injury, “Drs. Betts & Betts, 1409 DOUGLAS STREET, » OMAHA. NEB. DRE, I}.WE—LT_E HEHVE AND BRAIN TREATMENT. aingas, Pita, Kournigla, Wike promon, Boflentni 0T Uhe LT 1 Leading to infse ‘age, s ramness. 1w llw«n‘nu I;m'hml Wil ket well It he heads, ordio 1 ho lin rethods 'Kox OI.IRII!W IIK e ovaroLeriion Of the "GaTuntoes iasued Auid geeuine sol GOODMAN DRUG CO,, 0P urnwm Sireek “OMAHAE H Medical and Surgical Institute Corner 9th and Harney Streets, Omaha, FOR THE TREATMENT OF ALL Chronic Diseases and Deformities, DR. A. T. MCLAUGHLIN, Prosident, Founded by Dr, J. W, McMenamy.