Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 17, 1890, Page 8

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE, IMONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1890. RIGH MINISTRESS OF CLOTHES A Fashionable London Dressmaker is an Awe-Inspiring Individual, APPROACHED BY LIVERIED LACKEYS, How the Business i Carried On in the West End—-The Tollets of Some Well Known English Women. A fashionable London dressmaker is an awe-inepiring individual. Though she be not fenced with the divinity that doth hedge a—aueen?—about, still her presence chamber is guarded by brass-buttoned and medaled uniforms quite as effectually as itcould be by lords or ladies in waiting, writes a London correspondont of the New York Commereial Advertiser. One wonders if she graciously confers the ‘“entree” for life, and if the privilege is appre- ciated asat court festivals, Her house fs an imposing one. Nothing satisfies her short of the best street in the west end with an earl for her neighbor on the one ene hand, the town house of a marquis on the other and a dowager duchess across the way., The lace hang- ings at her windows are the costliest on the block, and the great blue and yellow faience vases that adorn the balconies the brightest. When one had run the gauntlet of hier bowing lackays one finds one’s sell in a great onk-wainscoted hall and wonders at the haraihood that can speak of mis- fits ton grand dame whose feet pass habitually up and down a stairway that might have come out of a palace, if palaces were not nowadays less gorgeous than private mansions. Up staivs one is ushered into a daintily fitted galle with pale pink hangings, where etch- ings, fine old prints and water colors have been collested, qnmnlly mmll ing women’s dross for Boyond this opensa vissa of rec u[.mm and drawing rooms, with great mirrors and_ luxuriously stately In the distance one one of Du Mau- sh s a colonel, his r £8 on nhtmnu: off new gown: The trier-on is quite a |!|1h~h institu- tion. Ona brightafternoon, when the street is lined with carriages, it gives one gn odd sensation to pass through apartment after apartment where grena- dier-like customers, stifly straight against the walls, sit’ watching in stony silence, while, shut out from the world by drawn curtains and lighted candles, ball dresses and tea robes and reception gowns and even bridal fineries go bowing and courtesying and waving feather fans, the younj persons who b o for the moment their animating spirits rehears- ing to the very lifo the comedy of fash- fonable society before a select audience of fashionables, One wonders often that the caricatured do not cateh the joke of the caricature, The dressmuaker herself is not often visible except by special appointment, Bhe receives, those to whom she gives audiences ina pink and gold boudoir, where flounces of crepe and fringes of ELI{E e ! f1kskaeutas! grhvalyiaeit they were matters of state policy, and where one first appreciates t‘xe homage due the prime ministress of clothes, It was in one of these humdrously formal millinery courts that I inspected a dinner robe of lettuce-colored velvet orderea for her majesty’s fleshy cousin, the duchessof Te: who must be as atured as she isunwieldly to ha ed any costumer living to per; her that paniers of salmon pink could, by any possibility, be becoming additions to her already” ample propor- tions, Hace fabula docet that royalty 18 not apt to dress as well asother people. Much prettier and more interesting was o gown for one of the most popul of London society women, tho Lady Dorothy Nevill,, whose portrait by b Watts, the royal ncademician, has been discovered by partial friends to resem- ble Leonardo da Vinei’s famous *“Mona isa” in the Lourve, h the result that * wherever Lady Dorothy goes she invar- fably dresses herself in old-fashioned brocades, laco caps and fischus, till one is supposed to find her like, not one old @icture necessarily, but a composite pho- tograph of old world beuuties stepped from their frames. Lady Dorothy is really pretty, and the frock in question was a quaint design - in mushroom col- ored cloth, with o narrow rufilo running about the bodice at the height of the shoulders, increasing thefr width ina manner possible only to a trim, slender woman, Loose folds of beaver colored velvet filled in the neck, and the accom- panying hat was a lavge peke felt heavy with plumes, Lady Colin Camphell dresses well, though usually in a way to be marked as an exclamation point periods and semicolons, and Crafts exhibition o evening she was in dark smoke gray, with three- quarter length cont cut out in scallops and embroidered in gold over a brilliant vest of flame colored silk; orange and flame colored pompons blazing in her groy felt hat with its Lroad eaves com- ng down on both sides. The gray cloth skirt of her costume was scalloped like the coat, over ruffles of flame colored velyet. The Misses Hepwgrth Dixon are no- ticeable figures drofed alike, always in uiet colors, yet always richly, I noted em at the Somerville club in brown tweeds flecked with terra cotta. For neIghhurs they had a daughter of the late Canon Kingsley, who holds ad- vanced views on the woman question, but wears a yellow cloth cape with great box-plaited fiills of black velvet about the throat as becomingly as if she didn't and the Baroness Burdett-Coutts done up in a long cloak of gray green and salmon, There wasa chrysanthemum show a fow days ugo, at which the hats and muffs of thesmart visitors were more more noticeable than the chrysanthe- mums. Miss Mary Morris, a daughter of Willlam Morris, the poet-artist- socialist, had perhaps the most chic hat and muft wu\b&mumn. Her hat was white velvet, with one of the pecullarly audacious birds of the present season pecking ner fore- head, while his tail was stuck up in the air, ’lhu bird, I may say, was black, and his mate was perched at a short dis- tance, looking off into space behind. The mufl was of white velvet, with bands of sable, a knot of black ostrich feath- ers, a bird and a neck sling of black rib- bon, Rivalling Miss Morris' muff was another made of cloth of the color of wash-leather. A knot of black astrak- han on the side of it was thrust through with two lcu& jet daggers. The muff went wit ick Whittington hat of the same wlur. The hat, like the muff, was edged with astrakhan and a dagger protruded from a knot of ostrich feath- ers, though fortunately for the mind’s peace of the onlookerit threatened back- ward and not forwardy Thave secn a number of evening deof tri amid quieter At the Arts dresses withina day or two, a fow of which may be worth description. A rose-colored crepe for a brunette of stately carriago, pretty face and pictur- esque locks is laid in front in accordion plaits and embroidered in straggling flower sprays in gold. At the bottom of the skirt 18 a deep ruche fastened here and there with antique pins of precious stones, There is a train ot gold-colored silk caught together at the back with bunches of pink roses. Roses are worn at the bosom and the sleeves are crepe with ove sves, As usual, some of the finest dresses are for Americans, For Mrs. Anson Phelps Stokes is a dinner dress of crimson slk ornamented with white satin bands flowered with gold. The corsage is cut in a V, edged with a wide chenille fringe in whito and gold. The sleeves reach the elbows and are _ supple mented by fringe deep enough to hido the rings on the woearer's hands. A daneing dress of pale blue gauze de soio is simple and very tasteful with long sleoves of white crope embroidered with | white on white most daintily, and deep falling neck rufle of the same filmy ma- terial, Ribbons of dark blue velvet drop from the waist to the hem of the skirt, and are caught at the bottom sotte ho One of Mrs. est achievements is a poarl-colored silk, with rose colored silk train, The low cut corsage is filled in partially on one side with white lace and on the other shoulder nodg n bunch of rose colored ostrich feathers, The skirt {8 edged with a deep lace flounce, looped with pink ostrich feath ers. - 4100 doses for one dollar." “Peculiar to itself.” Hood's Sarsapar Economy : Merit Purity: ——————— A CHESS-IFLAYING VILLAGE. A Little Town Whose Population is Devoted to the Game, A rather unusual feature in rural life appears to exist in a little German vil- lage that nestles in the bosom of the fa- mous Hartz mountains, says the Leeds Moreury. Life must flow on very peace- fully in Strobeck, for the principal busi- ness of the whole population, from the children at scliool to the august digni- taries of the district, is the playing of the ancient and royal game of "chess. This has been the case for centuries, As soon as they are old enough to un- derstand the moves, the boys and girls of this idyllic \len aro taught the laws and ordinances of the game, and are initiated into the mysteries of the knight’s move and tl\n ivantages of early castling. B or the chil- dren are solemnly ;:.\lhuvml together to display their skill in the presence of the tor, the school tonchers and the vil- \ge authorities, and the three boys and three girls most proficient each a chess b d inseribed with the words, “*A Reward for Perseverance.” title of the village inn in- vites strangers to a friendly game: but woe be to the unwary tourist who ac- cepts tho challenge sure to be g ignominious defeat is commonly his portion and he rises from thi “ptional house of entertainment, but wiser man, If he has fan- cied himself, as chess-players sometimes do, he may possibly feel alittle aston- ished at having been beaten in a coun- try village, but a glance at the weather- that ornaments the church may ost an explanation, for he will per- t ought to represent a \md Dears o nge r blance to the board with many squards on which he has just suffered defeat, and it will dawn upon him that he isin aland sac- red to his favorite game, in which it is no disgrace to be beaten, e A Card. From this date Omaha’s growth will be unprecedented. Capital will seek investment in real estate from all parts of the country. Omaha is the only city that went through a real estate depr sion without a crash and property had a commercial value at the end of the boom three years ago has steadily enhanced. ‘We deem it advisable at this time to caution the public against mushroom in- vestments, Sccure good property with- in your means from reliable firms and unquestionable title. Feeling satisfied that prohibition would be defeated when voted upon, we purchased a large amount of property at Albright and ave now prepared to offer it LA bargains in “Albright’s Choico” addition on easy terms. ALBRIGHT LLAND AND LoT COMPANY, 621, 522, Y. Life Bldg. -~ The Ancestry of Gladstone. Mr. Gladstone’s recent political tour in Scotland has been heralded by the publication of *‘Mr ladstone in Scot- and,” in which the editor of the Scottish Leader gives some interesting particu- lars,with illustrations, of the early homes of tho Gladstones at Arthurshiel, Lan- arkshire. The ancestral farm-house, like that of the Cecils on the Welsh border, isstill standing, *The building still used as the farmer’s dwelling house is the veritable abode of the last lord of Arthurshiel, thoe direct ancestor of the statesman, The walls were cer- tainly not built this side of - tho seven- teenth century: tho thatched roof now resting on supports so feeble that repair has become dangerous. if not fmpossible; the wrought stones in the doorway; the uneconomig layout of the buildings—all these mark the original tenements of the estate which the succeeding proprietors, for one or other reason, have permitted to ignobly survive,” Tho same writer gives the following pedigree of the Gled- stanes in times more remote than thatof the Biggar matter, who is generally re- garded as the founder of the family, The following members of the Arthurshiel branch of the Gledstanes occupied the estate in succession: William, who died previous to 1565 George, who died pre- vious to 1623; William, who witnessed a tack, dated June 9, 1641, and is supposed to have died previous to the year 1602, and John, who sold the estate to John Brown of Edmonston and died about the year 1680, Itwas William, the son of the last named laird, a landless Gled- stanee, who carried on the business of malting in Biggar, and had hisbones in- terred in the family burylog ground at Libberton in 1728, e 8. A. Orchard. Carpet, furniture and drapery. i e The International Railway. A man showing the proposev routes for the intercontinental railway is pub- lished in a recent number of the Engi- neering news, In South America four lines have been suggested: the interior route, the line along the eastern clope of the Andes, the central plateau routs and the coast route. The next to the last is the most leasible and opens up the most desirable country, The line from the southern terminus of Mexican railways to the Argentine system would be about 4,000 mil-\u long. ~ Of this 230 miles con- sist of roads already built. There are 1,800 miles more under construction, so that only 2,870 miles remaln to be built. —_— English Emigration. During the first nine months of the year 244, 1,456 omlgmnts left England, as of muum-d with 282,876 during the cor- responding months of last year, There have been only 94,348 Irish emigrants as }gn‘;nul 86,644 during the same period in 89, | not ANNOUNCEMENTS. The famous Dixey giels, forty In number, form one of the most important features in the performances to begin Thuesday evening at Boyd's. Another sterling feature is the Clipper quartette, whose vocal music has re- ceived marked commendation from the pres: Altogether, the company now traveling w Henry E. Dixey may justly be considered the best he has ever had with him, Fighting by Machinery. 1t is becoming more and more appar ent that the battles of the future, whether on land or sea, will be largely contests of machines with machines, snys the Amer- fean Mechanic, The development of modern weapons has gone on ut such a pace that it seems not unreasonable to predict that before long what will be re- quired of men who flght battles wiil be, more than anything else, a thorough knowledge of mechanism; inshort, there will be to a great extent mechanics and engineers, Already the modern naval vessol has become what may be called simply a fighting machine, all its space required for the men and officers being taken up with intricate and com- plicated machinery for doing things which in the old days were done by the men, or left undone, Indeed, the modern:war ship has grown so complicated and done it so rapidly that it is said many of the older officers of the navy are meeting with considerable 1l||lh'\|ll\ in Imo\um:uhn‘.wt of the improvements and that the vounger men, fresh from the study of seience, and with more ambition to spur them on to further study, are coming rapidly to the front in consequence. It geems that future naval victories are to be won, not by the side that has the strongest and bravest men necessarily, but by the side which has its men best protected from tho machines of the enemy, and is itself provided with supe- pichines, All this, of course, will sly bring more and more into v rominence the machinist and engineer, and it is beginning to be recognizeil that some additional effort must be made to secure the best of both on war vessels. g Clipped from Canada Presbyterian , unde signature of C. Blackett, Robinson, Pr op. : was cured of oft recurring bilious h eadache by Burdock blood bitters. TR ‘Worked vhe Boys. One of the policemen of the Oak street station house indulged in a rare piece of generalship on the afternoon of election day, s the New York Times. He had alot ¢ s to look after, and <o numerous were the street conflagrations that they had become a great nuisance and more or less of a men: to neigh- boring property. In some way or other the boysof the district, big and little, ptured some good-sized logs and planks for the celebration, tind in several casesit became necessary, as a matter of common precaution, t6 put out tho fires. Now this policeman managed to secure a length or two of hose and a nozzle. Hydrants were plenty enough in the neighborhood, and in o jiffy one big blaze had been dr owned out. It was after this that the officer’s gener- alship showed itself. He organized a sort of fire company among the small boys who had followed him, and recruits came pouring in. A boy could start a fire any day, but to play at being a five- man—such o chance came very rarely. In very short order the wise policeman was marching about huntifg up fives, while two or three score youths followed him, struggling for the honor of carry- ing the hoso and perhaps holding it when o fire was beinz played on. It was great fun for the hoys and a schome for the policoman. The hose leaked, but he didn’t get wet. —— All Music at Half Price. 6,000 pleces only 10c & copy at Mein berg's, 16th st. bet. Capital ave & Dodge. e R A Poetic Burial. The sons of James S. Gordon, a jour- nalistand poht n of this city, who died in New York a year ago, have just completed a_strange charge laid upon them by their dying father, Cincinnati dispateh to the New World. His last wish was that his body should be cremated and the ashes be brought here and interred in the family lot at Milfred, a Cincinnati suburb, and that a young elm tree be taken from the yard~ of his childhood’s happy country home and transplanted to the side of the urn containing his ashes. He was passionately fond of nature, and in this way he pleased himself with thinking he would live again, his ashes nourishing the tree’s new life, This wish was fulfilled, his body being cremated and the dust buried in the family lot at Milford. During the past weel his sons Salone and Jack Gordon went out to the old Gordon homestead overlooking the Miami river at Lomland, and selecting a beautiful elm treo from the play ground of their father’s boyhood, took it to Milford and planted it on his grave: ————— How to save money is a problem that inter- ests everybody. Ouc way to do it is to in- vigorate the system with Ayer's Sarsaparilla, Being a highly concentrated blood medicine it is tho most powerful and economical. sold for a doliara bottle, but worth five, — The Oar Famine, The periodical scarcity of cars which develops nearly every year at uncertain intervals is occurring this season in rather an aggravated form. From the coke regions of Pennsylvania comes ('un\pll\lnl of an unusual rellef is offorded immediutely it is said that many mills will be compelted to bank their fires or temporarily shut downuntil the cargo is lifted. Unless averted, such a misfor- tune will also have theeffect of raising the price of iron and will work embar- rassmentin every channel of trade, e Van Houten's Cocou—*Best and goes farthest.” —_————— Silk From Paper Palp. Silk from paper pulk is made smooth and brilliant, has about the same elas- ticity as ordinavy silk, and is about two- thirds as strong. B e A capital of about £22,000,000 is said to hl\\'o been raised for carrying out lllfl lan of make ing Paris a port by cunulumil ho Scine so that ships may proceed from Havre, Anothe project is for constructing a canal to connect the Mediterranean with the Bay of Biscay [ ”Pée_fi Bakin Powde»g Used In Millions of lnm-—-mm With Wis Thumb, A boy is said tokwwe saved the Netherlands from inundations; Multitudes have been saved from the fmvasion of disease by a bottle of Ayer'samaparilia. This medicine Imparts tone to the system and strengthens every organ and fitre of thie body. “1 have taken:a great deal of medicine, but nothing has dene me so much good as Ayer's Sarsaparitian 1 experienced its bene- ficial effects before T had quite finished ono bottle, and I cait frecly testify that it Is the best blood medisine I know of.” = L. W. Ward, sr., Woodland, Texas, ““Confined to an office, as T am, from one year's end to anosher, with little or no oy door exercise, I find great help In Ayer's , which T haye used for several years, and am at present using, with e fent results, It enables me to keep always enjoying the best of health. Malden, Mass. Ayer's Sarsapatilla PREFARED DY DR.J. C. AYER & CO,, Lowell, Ma-s. Boldby Druggists. $1,six $5, Worth 854 bottle. Drs.Betts &Betts Physicians, Surgeons and Specialists. 1408 DOUGLAS 8TREET OMAHA, NEB The moss. wldMy ana favorably knows speo- faliats in Inited Stat helr long ex perionce, reuiarkable sicill and universal suc cess In the treatment and cure of Nervous, Chronlo and Surgical Diseases, enticle theso eminent physicians to the full conddence of the aficted e vory . They guarantee: A Ul.ln‘u\ AND POSITIVE OURE for the awful effects of early vice and the numer- ous orlla that follow in fts traty VATE, BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES w. ‘m(g tely and permancatly oured. NE B ND SEXUAL DIS. RS ylold mmmy Yo thotr siilital troat- "BILES, FISTULA AND RECTAL ULOERS parinteed cured without pain or detontion u From business. HYDROUELE AND VARICOOELE perma- s cured in every case. NORRHEA, GLEET. Spor: patorrhen, Seminal \\mnkl\z ¢ Manhood, lons, Docayed Facultios, TV aiinoes and uil Qelt2ato disordors toelther tex positively cured as well u tunctional disorders that resilt from youth- ful folligs or the exvess of matiro ye STRICTURE TLEAT rod, renoval " Complete without outting, caustic or dilatation, Cures affected at b by pa mn. without & mo- ment's paln or ann TO YOUNG AND MIDDLE AGED MEN. A SURE CURE The awful effects of early vico which brings o anlo weakness, destroying both mind and body; with'all ita dreaded ills, pormauenty DRS. BET'TS Address thoso who have im- puired {homselves by im- pmpanmxum"ce and solitary habits, which ruln both raind and body, unfitting them for business, study or marridge MARRIED MEN or those entering on that happy life, awareof physioal debility, quickly asslated OUR 8UCOH3S Ts based upon facts. First—Practioal experi- en nmnd—Evor{cnnallnpnunllyltuglad. us starting righ —Medicines are megund in our laboratory exactly to sult eac! case, thus effecting tureuwlllmut injury, Drs. Betts & Betts, 1409 DOUGLAS STREET, = - OMAHA. NEB. MANHOOD RESTORED. “#SANATIVO,” th ‘Wonderful Spanish Remedy, cores all Nervous D) ite Buch as Wed ory, Loss of At Power, Headache Wakefulnees, Lost Manhood, Nervoue: nees, Tassit draits avd powernr \ho Generative Orgaus, In eithe caused by over-exertion, youthful indiscreti tho excearive ute of tobacca opium, or stimulaats, which ultimately lead to Infirmity, Consumption and Ineanity. Putup in convenient form to carry in the vest pocket, Price 81u package, or 6 for 85 Sent by mall to any addrees, Circular free, Men tion thia paper, Addrcss o cuy " m cago, MADRID CUENICALCO (17 Dasrbor B Clleago, L. Kubn & Co. Cor. 15th & mu I Str 4 A, Buller' Cou Cor. 1th . D, Foster & C Thl l-mtn Establishment in the treatment o Hair cinte Molea, Wart Hair, Ihrl.m;nrkp, uckh mmm Vowder u.ru Facial De' 7" velopment, Sunken Checka, etc. Con: sultation fre at oMo or by leiter. 126 page book on ull skin and ""l’ aotions and thcir treutment sent gealed to any silrons for 100 JOHN 0D Y, Ilermnloln‘ll. 2 deek At Nevs York 60D lmmm-mm—srrm or n.q Skin and Seaip. at Drugoitis or by mail, BO contsy LYON & HEALY STars & MopneE Sps. CHichso. Caualopun oF Band Imirsmeaty Unifora and_Egutpmenta 403 Flne lllusrations descrling every wilclarequired by Bands o Dramm (.wp-\_lnzlu.lll\l paking Mlster eloms for ‘Seal o, etk By 1am, wad et L ef fan Mudicr FEMALE BEANS Absolutel: m\hme. rfect]: -le lvln!l powerful female cleut. Add puftalo, N.Y. uuumun Iml) r:uuuoo‘ i 1y Decay.and Abuso, i x.’ 'y d OPERA HOUSE Nights, u%m.‘mgSnn(luy, November 16 Mr. Barnes —OFR—— New York. B e v oy Under the management of MR. FRANK W. SANGER, of the Broadway Theater, N. Y. Box shect opens Saturday mornng, at regular prices. 4 Production {n Omahi of ARCHIBALD OLOVERING | GUNTERS Great Comedy-Drama, WE TOLD YO case after case every day, fine enough for the best dre —and you never will have An Elegant All Wool Made with lap seams, Farmer satin 1ining, satin sleeve lining, fine velvet collar, they come in gray, tan and brown mixtures, and are vworth twelve dollars of any man’s money. ENGLISH BOX COATS. all sorts of goods, and all sorts of shades, as handsome a line as any house in the conntry ries, Prices $11. 50, $14.50, $16, five]to ten big Americandollars Boys' Ow,runt ? Oy Yes solicited. in Omaha, A Splendid All Wool With handsome l\e\nvy serge lining, very fine silk sleeve lin- ing, corded edge binding. Worth in any clothing house in America fully $18.00. Here's $17.75, $18.50. $ goes with each coat. $21.50, $22'50 and a guaranty to saveyou A few days ago about the big purchase of Overcoats our resident buyer in New York made. There are more of these overcoats than we thought. They keep on coming and we open There are all kinds—ordinary grades, sed man medium grades, and goods Overcoats for small men, for big men, for” slim men, for fat men, for short men, for tall men—every shape and style is here —your size tog an opportunity to buy your overcoat as cheap as you can do now, We call nnr attention to a few st ILS—”H‘ 7 an‘ corkers— ) y $8.00%10.50912.50 As Fine a -KERSEY - (Chinchilla- KERSEY- As any man wants, colors handsome drab, seams doubl, s itched, silk velvet collar, linin of an extra guality--fancy plal serge. A beautiful garment an as gnod as any $20 coat. where we catch the ‘‘tony” folks, We've got them hundreds of 'em, and cheaper than ever. Nebraska Clothing Co.,,e Corner 14th and Douglas Streets. 500 miles nearer you than any other market. WOONSOCKET & RHODE ISLAND RUBBER GOODS, BEST MADE. We c'arry‘ the BIG STOCKof the west, quote Eastern prices and are Correspondencei American Hand Sewed Shoe Co, Try our Leather Sol OMAHA ed Rubber Boots. NEB. “Good things soon find a purchaser.” Therefore we need only call your attention to our assortment of MEN'S SUITS In Black Cheviots and Fine Casstmeres. Fabrics speak for them- selves and the excellence of| the workmanship justifies| our unqualified recommen- dation of the garments for style and finish and fair prices, from $15 to $30. “There is litle lo sew where tailors are true” TONIGHT. The Grand The Loudest Laugh of the Season. THE LATEST COMEDY SUCCESS A Barrel of Money. Popular Prices. DIME EDEN MUSER WILL LAWLEIR, Manager, Cornor 11ih and Farasm MATS ADL HORAKACHT, THK JAL, 11 feats of strength endurance and skill. - A RING ‘GF KEYS or THE HOT A burlesq: broery, sparkling songs and ey, dancos. A laughable, comic, Witty, ‘mony cogandy, sntugled with uirih And latibier AND A W LT o calite aid tastrament: A SN Dlle ADa e Fo' R0 turce coffedy tnterspersad with bright, Jolly, rollic g Temedy for all unnatural discharges and boitand feel tate mmending 110 rd orly by T presc TutEvan Ontuicat o in fimum un Deearum sold { g8 (s PRICE n o0 m r m YNt WORLD WLk Une unof!lke“ . um- If; n»’hfl'flum it s eured thousanda | 110w w ‘llfllll stamps Orfre AP'!‘UIA‘. u-.m'ni"uu. \c russ Co., San Franeisco, Cab 1 Life) NO CURAK! DrDOWNS 1816 Douglas Street, Omaha, Neb. Seventeen years® experience. A rezular gradunte tn medlicine, m diplomas shovw. ironio and Privatg disoises 1t Liosses, 3. 1 guarantée 13) for uvery c.ase | uadartake and fal NO PAY. Is silietrin g v A permanont cure guarantesd for Cabap Impotenoy, Syphills. Sirlcturs andal ent froo. Omce hours—9 a. m. to § p. m. Sundayy G.S. RHYMUND WATCHES. DIAMONDS and FINE JEWELRY Sole Agent in Omaha for Gorham Man- ufacturing Co's Sterling Silverware MANTLE CLOCKS, RICH CUT GLASS and CHINA. Our Stock of Fine Goods is the Largest and Qur Prices the Lowest. Come and see us. Cor. Douglas & 15th St DR. RICHARDS, Practice Limited to DISEASES ot LUNGS —AND— NERVOUS SYSTEM. Rooms 316 to 320 Bee Bldyg| Omaka. G. A. Lindquest IS AGALN IN THE Merchant :-; Tailoring business and Iuvlixn IIH tfll{ friends [ Aported od domestio woolens, st cluss.an ESTABLISHED 1874, « - 3158 15TH ST PRINCIPAL POINTS EAST, WEST, < NORTH and SOUTH, 1302 Farnam Stra)s. HARRY P. DEUEL, City Passenger and Ticket Agan? sevonan sevoie Y2 Yo To gure Billousnoss, 8ick Hendache rwmulmuug a, Bdver Complaiow, (sko tho sal certain romedy, SMITIH'S BILE BEANS' Tto the SMALL S1Z8(40 liitlo beaneto tho tle). They are the most convenient: sult nl Fricoot oliber aite, 26 conta per botdlo. KISSING 5. 1 ol base i ‘ents (eoppers OF slaiup: 3 FSMITH & CO lle Beans, - St Makers of DR. BAILEY GRADUATE DENTIST A Full Set of Teot ot Rubber, T I LA RS, A perfect fit gua 'm- ) oxtracte without pain_or dange witkout anaos. theties. Gold and sll e Thes e Sonas Tates Bridge and Crown Work: Teoth wit out plates Allwork warranted. OFFICE PAXTON BLOCK, 16TH AND FAR! Entrarce, 161h strect elovator Open ove ngs untils o'cloc! DRUNKENNESS INALL THE WOILD THERE IS BUT ONE C\!ll DR. HAINES' GOLDEN SPECIFIC,

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