Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 29, 1890, Page 8

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEEz MONDAY. DECEMBER 29, 1890. THE CITY. Assistant .\hmnm r I(. L. Buchanan of the Moline, Milburn & Stoddard com- any was not forgotten on ay. The members and employes of the Omaha house presented him with an el- egant upholstered chair, The post-mortem over the remains of John Gordon, the old rag-picker, was held yesterday. According to the testi- mony of the physician who made the examination heart failure was the im- mediate cause ot the death. The three outlets of disease are the bowels, the skin and the kidneys. Regulate their ac- tion with the best purifying tonic, Burdock Blood Bitters. —_—— Dr.Birney, nose andthroat. Bee bldg. ol i A Charming Memory. No llnprm'l-lur‘n' have been so marked, so signally perfect in attainment, in vhu 3 g, as the numerous luxuries which have been introduced intranscon- tinental travel, Instead of harrowing recollections the tourist now has left to him when his journey is completed, a charming memory of perfect train ser- vice and palace dining cars. The ar- rangements this winter for dining cars on the Union and Southern Pacific roads 18 something far in advance of anything in that hitherto attempted. st o Pin This in Your Hat. And you will then know that the largest iuction salo of city lotsever held in the southwest, and the great oppor- tunity for investments takes place at Aransas Hurbor, Texas, Junuary 7 and 8, ——— At the Y. O A Yesterday at 4 p. m, 175 young men gath- ered in concert hall to engage in a praise service, each one giving a reason why ho wis happy at the return of Chiristmas, view- Ing the day as the niversary of the birth of Christ. Short addresses were made by Mr. Hollander, who had charge of the service, Dr. Henry, C. A. Mitchell, S, P. Bostwick, F G. Davies, Dr. Aikin and several others The Owl club, an organization ot male v in the north part of the of Prof, Lee G which w of the meeting, by idering > fine sclections, all of h were well sung and greatly appre- clated, At the close of the servico the secretary in- eir friends in 40 p. v ption will last An_interesting programme anged and will be announced to- Remarked by R, C. Joiner of Allen Hillsdale Co., Mich.: **Nothing rheumatism such quick relief as Dr. Electric Oil—believe it infallible for matics, rheu- Dr.Birney, nose and throat. Beebldg. The American ldea {5 that **nothing is too good for me when Itravel,” and in consequence we have become noted z|.~*l||~, most luxurious trav- elers in the wol That which the peo- {.h-, demand, the ronds must supply, and hus we have also the most perfectly ap- Jumuhu rail service in the world. The traveler now dines ina Pullman pal- ace dining car clear through in his jour- ney, from Council Bluffs and Omaha to Ban I'rancisco, on the Union and South- ern Pacific roads. e Will Make a Great City. All the different forces and interests essential to the building of the largest city on the gulf coast, after months of negotintions “have combined to make Avansas Harbor, the largest city in_the whole -munn t. Great auction sale of lots January 7 and 8. el it Tickets at lowesy rates and su perior sccommodations via the great Rock Island route Ticket office, 1602—Six- teenth and Farnam streets Omaha. rabinkiibdad Alexander Oberg's Funeral, The funeral of Alexander Oberg, the penter who was killed by falling from a_scaf- fold at Swift's packing houso in South Omaha on Friday last, took place at 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon from his late residence, Nineteenth and Paul streets. The deceased was a member of Harlan lodge, No. 16, A & A, M., of Alma, this state, and tho fur was i charge of Nebraska lodge, No. this city, Joseph A. Stafford, maste pall bea nderson, R. B. Chapman, C. W. I s P ihor aud e - Wik, Th remaind were laid to rest in Forest Lawn. cor- e Dr.Birney, noseand throat, ————— Backed by Powertul Influences, The City of Aransas Harbor, Tex., is backed by the railroad influences, also the company to whom the congress of the United States granted the exclusive right of obtaining deep water over the bar at Aransas Pass. Bee bldg. Holiday Excursions. On Decomber 24, 25 and 31, 1890, and January 1, 1801, the Union Pacific will soll tickets to all points in Kansas and Nebraska at one and one-third fare for the round trip, good returning until Jan- vary 5, 1891, Remember the dates, -— Mortuary. George Garneau, aged twenty-four years, dicd at the home of his father, Joseph Gar- neau, sr., in St. Lows Saturday night. The brothers, Joseph and Plerre Garneau of this city, wereat the young man’s bedside when he passed aw: Contir The favorable impression préduced on the firstappearanceof. the agrecable liquid fruit remedy Syrup of B! been more than cor lie pleasant ex perience of all who have used it, and the suc- cess of the proprietors and manufacturers the California Fig Syrup company. Lol 01d Folks at Home. They will be there and expoeting a visit from you at Christmas time, and the Union Pacific will sell tickets on De- cember 24, 25 and 81, 1890, and Januar, 1. 1891, to all Kansas and Nebras a points at ono and one-third fare for the round trip, good returning until Janu ary 5, 1801, —_— Thinks Women Should Rule. The duchess of Marlborough has some ery excellent idens on the subject of irl culture, says the New York Sun, Sho believes thoroughly in the ot tyranny of woman; believes that it ie her vrcrmrumu to reign queen of the world, the home und the hearts of men She would have a girl know only one thing thoroughly and publicly—dependence. Arithmetic, the sciences, the arts, are all subordinate to the vast remuncrative force that comes from knowing just how to be help- 1ess, how toappeal and how to bear on the strong right arms of the warriors of the world. To the woman who single-handed the struggle must ever be an unequal one. *“Hud I daughter or a little sister,” she says, *'I should teach her uduptnbllily and that learned I should have no further anxiety for her future. Succeed? My dear girl, she could not fail; it would be impossible not to please, not men alone, but people and the race is hers.,” It would be «m)y amazing to ‘“‘the sweet lazy zies” 1o see l‘inn woman walk, not nlt ) the seminary stylo or the psychic cul- ‘-\ml fashion, but in accordince with ke, four wiles ax ey s an hour and two hours Christmas | | had on hand. DISEASES MADE TO ORDER. A Choloe Collection of Horrible Com- plamnts Bottled in Tubes, In the army medical museum there is at present a bottled stock most admir- ably complete of nearly all the disenses which are apt to be fatal to human life, says the Washington Star. If one cares to indulge in any of these luxuries there are on hand in qunantities to suit, con- sumption, pneumonia, typhoid feve diphtheria, Asiatic cholera, blood poi- soning, ipelas, carbuncle, and nu- merous other similarly cheerful com- laints, The army medical museum Lu-)m these morbid affections in tubesso constantly ready forimamediate communi- cation to the healthy individual that the curator in charge of the laboratory was kind enough to say jesterday thatif de- sired he could give them all to the writer in a few moments, The curator added that he really would be able to do this at no serious loss or expense, inasmuch as there was enough consumption in the consumption bottle to communicate the complaint to many thousands of people,and it was the samé way with all the other diseases ho In administering pneu- monia to ¢ 1t, 80 he said, ho would select by preference the method of put- ting d solutionof the germs in water in aspraying vessel and_have the vietim breatlie the spray. The subject operat- ed upon would ¢ the affection with absolute ce every time, Pneumonia, by the is contracted not from a cold or i mmation of the lungs, as people ovdinarily suppose, but from the breathing in of pneumonia germs, which are given encouragement in growing and multiplying by an un- healthy condition, such as a cold may give rise to. The moutis of altogether healthy people very commonly huve lots of pneumoni; @ in them, The disease significs simuly that the aiv cells in the lungs ure ruptured and blood flows into them, thus rendering them useless for breg ting and commonly fatal complaint, carbuncle, the curator said he could produce it atany time in the most healthy individual t simple inoculation with a solution of the germs. Once inoculated, you have about an even chance with death, This is commonly because men who sort wool ar to contract it. Sheep are frequently afflicted with earbunc nd the slight- est abrasion on the hand of one who touches the fleece of an animal so dis- eased is likely to communicate it. Spraying the throat with a solution of the proper germs is the proper method also for conveying diphtheria, which can be given in this way with absolute certainty, Then it is a question of pr venting the patient by artificial means from being strangled by the false mem- brane that rapidly grows and tries to fill up the breathiag passage. There is no great difficulty in contract ing Asiatic choiera if you want it. Take afew of the germs from the appropriate bottle at the museum and drink them in water or beef t 1f your stomach is in a particul; healthy condition you may not take the disease, but otherwise you are pretty sure ve it. An as- sistant_1n the laboratory of the famous Prof. Koch once swallowed by accident alotof gorms of Asiatic cholera, with which experimems were being made, and developed what the professor de- lightedly called a typical cuse. He re- covered by a narrow scrape. The diseases which the government keeps thus bottled in convenient form are all obtained—the germs, that is to say—from actual diseased tissues of P.l- tionts afilicted with tho complaints. propagate the germ in any q\mnmy from these tissues is easy enough, Veg- etable gelatine, from a Japanese plant called ‘‘agar-agar,” is boiled and mixed with beef tea, so as to form a soft, trans- parent solid. A small quantity of thi is put into a tube that is tightly corked with cotton at the open end. The tube is then placed in an oven and heated un- til all the germs in it, of whatever sorty are killed. Next the tube s briefly un- corked and a long ste been heated also to st in the germs of the di which it is desived to cultivate, and scraped across the surface of the gelatine, The tube is now recorked and permitted to stand for a few hours, at the end of which the bacteria of the disease, having found the gelatine to their taste for feeding upon, will have multiplied enormousty, so as to fairly cover the surfaco of the gela- tine, Iach kind of bacteria or germs that has its own form of growing in col- onies, 0 that one disease can bo readily stinguished from another in the tubes without a microscope. All disea you see, are caused by poisonous b teria, but most bacteria are of the most important usefulness in the world, pe forming an essentinl part in the opo tions whereby human tissues are re- newed and kept healthy, The mouth and throat are always full of bacteria, and the skin is covered with them; they are in the air and everywhere. iyon, is dipped B liat Aidoiy Van Houtew's Cocoa—Uelicious, made in stautly. Wanted. Renewals and subscriptions for the Ladies' Home Journal that Imay win the four years’ course at Vassar. This I can do if Nebraska ladies intending to renew or subscribe will send their re- newals or subscriptions to me us soon us possible. #1 per year, Every one counts B your it neks will ba & iated"by Elizabeth C. Moy am street, Omaha, N Among the many exigencies of modern travel there is one requirement which is always popular andulways in demand, and that a through se Y is too short to * dmn«'u cars| hundred miles, and the travelling pub- lic have very properly rebelled ag all such old-fashioned rail; di through equipment of the *the original overland route,” prov for a through car service for all poirts west from the Missouri river. —_— Union Veterans' Union. There was o meeting of the Union Veters ans' union in Green's hall yesterday aftor noon. Several new members were enrolled, T'he attendance was so small thut a perman- ent organization was not effected. Bakin Powdeg Osed i Milliona of Homea—= o CTILL NEXT YEAR™ Our Great Holiday Sale ofl Furnishing Goods---nearly double that of any previous season in our business careersas has left us with a great many broken lines. Some lines are broken in sizes, some things we > have only a few of at each price, some other things may be all sold but one color and again some lines are all sold but the higher priced goods, None of these lines will be filled in, and in order to close them all out “this year”, we have made speci: N prices on them alls From Now T/l New Neckwear 65 dozen fancy bordered kerchiefs at 10 cents China Silk Handkerchiefs, with COLLILAENS sfd. GO s buys all wool 20c buys or heavy 15¢ worth 25c. merino socks, natural knit wool socks. Handkerchiefs at 5 cents each. zen fancy bordered Handkerchiefs at 15 cents each. pure China Silk Hankerchiefs in white, at 25 cents each. 39 woven borders, at 6o cents. gain, charge 20c. fast wool 100 dozen very fast buy black socks. socks, or 25¢c fifty cent cashmere socks or fifty cent heavy wool socks. Mufflers In our Underwear Department ther We don't want 'em, re worth, at 65c each. Drawers at 43¢, at 65c. all small sizes in the One lot Fancy Mis next, and so on. for next year, if he's got enough for this. one, Do you? All Wool Scar! ed Shirts [no drawers] at g4oc. One lot random mixed Shirts and Drawers at 6oc. These are all broken lines—by that we mean, that there may be lots of large sizes in one lot and nearly The prices we've made on them are low enough to tempt a man to buy 30c buys excellent camel's That's one thing y got quite a number of them left yet, s quite a number of broken lines which 46 dozen fancy bordered Han 3 dozen beautifully ¢ best pure linen cuffs at 25c. colored fancy s fine camel’s cotton hair socks, hair socks. ou can give to anybody let Shirts and Drawers at 35c. \V«‘ shall put in our 25 cent line a pile of 35 cent ties, line and add lots of 65 cent and 7 windows and put them on sale (nt I\l DUCED PRICES, and will sell a lot of dark Four-in-H: md> at a quarter, Handkerchiefs If there's a lady in Omaha who wants to ‘‘collar” her husband and *‘cuff” him into the barg 200 dozen pure linen collars, standing or turn down, s¢ each. 500 dozen best all linen collars, 8 styles, at 15¢ each, or a quarter for tivo, 5 cent ties to our d- dozen embroidered socks, fine 35¢ buys 2w Year's Present, and be sure of it being in cashmere ’md silk, from 15¢ for a quarter one, up to $2.50 for a pure jersey sil We've got a few fine dark ones left yet and you'll find them very scarce, ) cent line. . take up more room than he! All Wool Scarlet Shirts, [no drawers left] at s50c each. One lot of heavy camel’s hair Shirts and Drawers [shirts double breasted One lot very heavy brown Merino Shirts an One lot fancy striped Shirts and Drawers Years We shall add a lot of 50 cent ties to our 35 cent We shall take out all the fine goods left in the in, we'll furnish the bar 200 dozen pure linen collars, five sl)lu., at 1oc each, 100 dozen linen cuffs at 1oc pair, we'd ought to They’re most always 4oc a pair. acceptable. Wc'v; such oaes range from 70c to $2.50 cacly Underwear FROM NOW TILL 1891 THERE'LL BE FUN IN FURNISHINGS. NEBRASKA CLOTHING CO." Fourteenth and Douglas. Drs.Betts 2Beits Physicians, Surgeons and Spectalists. 1409 DOUGL.AS 8TREET OMAHA, NEB © mos$ widely ana favorably knows spoo- falists in $he United States. Tholr long ex- porlenoe, Femarkabio kill and universsl suc- cess in treatment and cure of 5 Chronlo and Burgical Diseases, entitle these eminent physicians to the fall onSdence of tho aflicted evorywhere, Thoy OERTAIN AND BUSITIVE GURE. for | the awful effects of ear] e Sve has follow in PRIVA' E< otiple A pymanently sured. 8 BT Y ORBELS 1010 rondily to tholr sERIP tronts ‘l‘lLl‘S. FWTULA AND RECTAL ULCERS uarant red without pain or detention Y DROOELE AND VARICOCKLE perma- nently and -uccen!ull{ cured in every oas BYPHTLIS, GONORRHEA, GLEET, Sper- aatorrhen, Bom inal Wenlkness, Lost Manhood, i Docayed Facuitios, Fomals and all delicate disorders pecullar Githior sex positively curod, ns well au all fonational disorders that renilt from youtl- hll full\nl orthe excess of muture years. l URL Guaranteed permanently oured, removal . completd, mnon autting, caustlo or dilatation. Ouros acted at homo by patient withoud @ mo- aln or annoya OUNG AND MIDDLE AGED MEN. A SURE CURE Ths, autul _effects ~of early vice which brings organio weakness, destroying both mind and \mrrlyd with all its dreaded llls, permanenty DRS. BETTS Addres thoso who nave tm paired themselves by prover Indulgence and lnlunrg A\bita. which min body, tiing them for study or m:mlu AR N or HIUIG entering on that huppy iife, awaroof Toyaicel debiys qutonty OUR BUOOISS l-b..u upon fucts. First—Pract r lecond—Ever: case lay mlv studied, sarting right. edioines are :ug red in our mmnwr xuuy o suly osse, uu- eTectiug cutes WItIOUS injury, Drs. Betts &. Betts, 1409 DOUGLAS STREET, + - OMAHA NEB vico and the numer- e tral speedily, oo ment's TO un AND SICIN DISEASES | | 150 THE OPPORTUNITY== = —(F THE SZASON! 0 facilitate matters, | we have divided {our immense stock of /fine custom made SUITS AND OVERCOATS into four [4] lots and | marked them at prlces that will insure a speedy | sale \ | g [ 1$16.00 | \ \ | ; E want to call your \ attention to the |SUITS AND OVERCOATS | \we are offering at the |abovenamed price. Look | in our window; come in| land we will show them | /to you. Remember the | |price, $15.00. DR. BAILEY GRADUATE DENTIST A Fyll Set of Teeth on Rubber, for Five DoLuARs. A pertect fit_guarantoed. Teeth extracted without pain_or danger, and witlout anues theties Gold and silver filllngs at lowest rates Bridgo aud Orown Worle, “Teoth with- outplates. Al work warrante OFFICE PAXTON BLOCK, |bTI| AND FARNAM Entranoe, 10th street elevator Open oven &s untdl 8 o'clock No other preparation 18 the “same as” Pond's Extract. JOSEPH GILLOTT'S STEEL PENS. GOLD MEDA! , PARI3 EXPOSITION, 1889, . THE MO8 v.RFECT OF PENS. OMAHA Medieal and Sureieal Isitte Corner 9th andiHarusy’ Streets, Oumu. FOR THE TREATMENT OF ALL Chronic Diseases and Deformities, DR. A. T. McLAUGHLIN, Presideat Founded by Dr.J. W. MoMenamy. BYRTURE or gl rellv(llhn“ r. v.. m.. .nw:wnno witL TAIN A RYETURE Trus: 1t has cured thousan 140 in stamps <o oiroe Baphive NG, Lo SAneS {fyon want BERT, send Magnetie Klasde Truss Co., Bau Vranclsco, ¢ o 7.} 3o cun Coraared Tonmeaiah. Eviiyt MEN Buffering from the effects of youthful ¢ © 14 be read m.uu man who is 1 K i debilitated, A Frof, ¥. ¢, ¥o WL K, Moodus,Conn. i ICE TOOLS THE BEST ARE MADE BY THE 1204 and 1206 Harney Street. RUBBER BOOTS & MOES IENFTFHEE VW ORI, Woonsocket % Rhode Island Rubber Co And we are their western agents and always carry a large stock. Address, American Hand Sewed Shog Go ICE TOOLS. ~ NO CURE! DrDOWNS FISCHER ICE TOOL. Plows and Markers, WITH LIFUING CAMS. DOU ISIAIA A full line of Evc-rythiuu used by lce Gnthe'era S:nd for Cataloguo and Prices. HIMEBAUGH & TAYLOR, 1405 DOUGLAS STREET, OMAHA., MAR K BRS NO PAY. 1818 Douglas Street, Omaha, Neb. o i 1, 8kin und Urinary Organs. Book (Mysteries of Life) sent froe. cure. w0 sultation {r or Hysteria, DI AR REC.W HERVE AND BRAIN TREITMENT " | pypoise A rogular graduato In med s, Chranic and Private Dise r . b o ntaes issubd Al EBU00 s0ld GOy LY GOODMAN DRUG CO., W0 Furnam Streok Qaatla Neb ns dipiomas shiow. ermanent eure Syph ] Gunranteod 10F Chtarel v 1 undertako Cures in 1705 DAY S, % Mrd ouly by prescribe |t and fool ae YN![IA"GNWHVCU \r\ recom L Wrvation. C‘H)K IEAUHIIJW:: Soek it to ’Em |} ‘, 2 G 13 the acknowred; 4 & Temneay for a1l natural dischirgos an Private discuses of men

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