The Greatest Offer Yet Made! { laitmaon THE IICtB delighted thin* landi of buyer* nil ovur thn uultra State* With It*" Iloiul-tn-Foot" Boy's Outfit at f&aOO I'onslntjna of Coat, Cup, Shoos and only one pair or puats. We’ll do better yet this season I k' The Hub’s -1 “Head-to-Foot" Boy’s Outfit for tha fall seonon contains on follow*: One Double UrcMlcd Coat, One Mimics < up to Match, One Fair of Flint CUum Shott and Two PaUe of Knee Fanis, and ittn the prlao will rsmsln tha urns. $5. Romomlior, tho cloth la all wool, tho work* mntmlilp mill trimming* flrst-claas,everything Hti tolly guaranteed—und your mouuy back ithnuld you want It. Bond for samples of cloth, or bettor yot, let ttssend you ono of tho lloud-to-Koot Outfits, nil charges prepaid for 95.75 or O. O. 1>. with prtvllego of examination before pay ment, provided $1.00 on ucconut la aenfe with the order. THE HUB, Tha Utf ttl Clothing I tor* In tho World, It. W. Cor. state and Jackson Sts., CHICAGO, IU. References! Any Bank or Wholeoale Firm In Chicago. WE HIVE DO MANGO BOUSES HOTEL -JAVANS Enlarged Refurnished | f Refitted Only First-class Hotel "In the City. W. T. EVANS, Prop. PARK ENNYROYAL ILLS * tho celebrated female regulator are perfectly aafe and alwayo reliable. For all Irregular ities, painful menotruatlono, suppression, eta., they never fell to afford a speedy and certain relief. Mo experiment, but a ooleu tlBo and poalttye relief, adopted only after yearn of experience. All orders supplied direct from our ofllce. Price per paokage II Sr tlx packages for 15, by mull jpoat paid. Ivory Package guaranteed. Particulars (sealed) da. All correspondence strictly ooaadentlal, PARK REMEDY 00.. Boston, Mass. NEW YORK ... ILLUSTRATED NEWS Tli* Organ of Honaat Sport in Amarioa ALL THE SENSATIONS or THE DAT maruaca at thi FOREMOST ARTISTS OP THE COUNTRY Lift in Naw York Graphically IUuatratad. Braazy but Raapactabla. $4 FOR A YEAR, St FOR SIX MONTHS So you want to ba poated? Thao aand your aubacription to tha vsw rax mmm m 9 MARK PLACES N EW YORK CITY. ■:*- FUBLII FEMALE PILLS. % ftr ilsiDiicil bjaiUr. hrlimlNjBa •temp* for jci Bold by Horriii A Co. . Mawn.Ta ■uM £5>>atp£opi.¥ •R . ■ Wn In 1ttm mm awn ro SilsrJr a •.■i s - 'Jfip&.v %&**■'•*£*-1a v. i - Vr •>.' HE SAW HI8 ERROR. •at Then It W»« All tha Vault of Bap Bwall-DrccseA Friend. "I have just callod, Miss Blmp^on, tald tlie angry lover? "to say farewell; but before I say It 1 want you to know that I have discovered your falseness and I despise you for it!” "Why, Billy, whatever is the mat ter?” "Oh, you know well enough. May ho I didn’t pass the gate last evening and see you with your head on an other man's shoulder. Who is the happy man?” "But Billy, I haven’t seen any man but you, dearest; honest I haven’t." "No, I suppose not. Then, maybe, I am blind, deaf and dumb, and an idiot Maybe you didn’t have com pany last evening?" "No one, Billy, but my best friend, Emily. No, I didn’t and I think you are a wretch.” "And you didn’t stand at the gate?” "Oh, yes, we did. We were count ing the stars in the big dipper—mak ing wishes on them.” "Oh, yes, I suppose I was blind. Now, maybe you'll describe Emily to me?” "Why, she had on her Knox hat, her black blazer suit, a white shirt waist, with a black satin tie, and a black satin vest. You know Emily, Billy." Billy-Urn—mi I see. And what might have been a modern tragedy was averted and Billy made up at once. KNEW NEITHER. A Reporter Has an Experience With an Knfflllh Visitor. A few evenings ago there chanced to be a distinguished visitor from the British isles at one of the Washing ton hotels, and to him the reporter sent up his card, putting his name just over the paper he represented, thinking the juxtaposition would es tablish the connection between the two with sufficient clearness. It has always done so with American vic tims. The bellboy who took the eard tarried long—in fact, he stayed so long that a second boy was sent after the first, to see what caused the delay. In a little while down came both, No. 1 bringing the Information that the tourist said he didn't know either one of the gentlemen, and begged to be excused. Tnen the boy explained that the guest on being handed the card gazed at it awhile in silence, and finally went to his trunk and hauled out a book. For some minutes he hunted for the name of the reporter in his list of acquaintances, and then he began running through the P’s, thinking it possible he must have met a Mr. Post somewhere in his travels. As his search wasn't successful in either case he got a second book and wont through that with a similar re sult. That was why the bellboy tried the reporter’s patience and that was why the message came that "he didn’t know either one of the gentle* men.” ONE ON OSCAR WILDE. Why Artlat TOhtotler Couldn’t Belter* HU Cat Had Had Kittens. Everyone knows the story of Whist ler’s celebrated reply to Oscar Wilde’s envious exclamation of delight of a clever sketch of the eccentric painter —how Oscar said, “Oh, Jimmy, how I wish I had said thatl” and how Whist* lor answered, “Never mind, dear boy, you will”—but everyone does not know, says the Chap-book, how during the time that they were f rinds, a kitten was given to Whistler, and that in token of affection aud withoutjundue curiosity he had named it Oscar. Time passed a nd Whistler’s wife Invaded the studio one day with a momentous announcement “Jimmy,” said she, “did you know Oscar has kittens?’’ “Impossible," said Whistler, laying down his brushes; “Oscar can’t” “Come and see,” said his wife. Together they went to where Oscar and the kittens lay. Mrs. Whistler looked at her husband, who stood for a moment In amazement and dismay. "Never mind,” he said, “they must be plagiarized.” Sand by a Dog and a Dram. In 1770 a 8hip was wrecked on the south coast of England, not far from Portsmouth. Fortunately, owing to the sharp wits of one of the sailors, all souls were saved. He got a drum that happened to be on board, re paired its defects so as to make it quite watertight, then fastened a rope to it securely, and tied the whole round a dog. Next he let the dog into the sea, and the noble animal succeeded in reaching the land. There some on-lookers seised the drum and hauled in the rope. By now a much stronger rope had been tied to the end of the first one, and by its means passengers and crew were gradually drawn ashore. * Complimentary. A well-known professor of natural science married recently and took his young wife to a meeting of a learned society. Another eminent professor of the same branch took pity on the evident shyness of the bride, and came up to her; whereupon she, fish ing for a little compliment, said: “I feel so out of place among all these clever people!" And he answered— gallantly, as he thought: “Well, yon know, scientific men never do marry clever wives!" Oscar Wilde's Reply. A story is being told that on the death recently of the great scholar, Walter Pater, the editor of a London evening paper telegraphed to Oscar Wilde to ask him to supply some per sonal gossip about the dead man, who was known to be a friend of the ex aesthetic, whereupon Mr. Wilde wired back: “Leave the gossip to the jack als, not the lions, of literature." THE MISSIONARY MAN. B« Might liar* I'ulvl Matter Had lie Nat Been Over*Vela. A young man Mho said ho was a missionary about to start for thut part of Africa where Mteaa of happy mem ory roigned, wont Into a Brooklyn clothing store lately and presented a letter from the secretary of the Y. M. C. A. The letter introduced the missionary, asked the clothiers to let him pick out a full wardrobe and to send tho bill to the Y. M. C. A. This was all very satisfactory, and so the missionary was given tho run of tho shop. Among the things whieh lie selected were one swallow-tail coat, three shirts with rose-pink bosoms, ono pair of button patent leathers, one pair of patent leather pumps, one pair of lilac gloves, two pairs of tan glovos, one silk umbrella, one swootbrier walking stick and one silk hat. “Won’t you have some silk suspend ers?" asked tho clerk. “Yes, I will,” said the missionary.. When tho purchasos were made tho clerk, who is an old-fashioned Presby terian and knows something of mis sions, said: “Did I understand, sir, that you were going out to Uganda?” “Yos, Uganda, yes.” “And may I ask what church sends you?” “Oh, tho Presbyterian church—the board of foreign missions.” . Tho clerk felt a great hoat crawling into his head as he thought: “And havo 1 been such a chump as to give my hard-earned tithes for patent leathers and liiao kids and that sort of thing, when I thought I was assisting in the conversion of the heathen? By jinks, it’s strange." When tho young missionary had gone tho clerk had an interview with his employer. “What!” cried the clothier, “swal low-tail coats and pink shirts in equa torial Africa! I believe he’s a fraud!" And so it proved. The Y. M. C. A. had not sent tho young man, and when the clothes were delivered to him an officer was close by who arrested him. Ho was quito crestfallen and declared that he would gladly go out as a mis sionary rather than go to the peni tentiary, but he could find no one who cared to send him to the heathen lands. . “It was them patent leathers done tho job for you, young man,” said the officer who led him away to durance. “Yes,and tho pink shirt, d—n ’em,” wept tho youth. “Why couldn’t I have let well enough alone?” THE AMERICAN BEAUTY. How ThU exquisite Rot* Vu Tint Found and Cultivated. There Is an interesting story about the origin of the Amorican Beauty. It was first grown in Washington, and here it attained its renown. The late Hon. George Bancroft, besides being a historian and scholar, was one of the first amateur rose-growers in Amerioa. Every year he imported cuttings from the leading flower-growers of Europe. The king of Prussia—when old Kaiser William was king—allowed the Amer ican historian to have a slip of what ever ho might fancy in the royal con servatories. Mr. Bancroft’s gardener used to cultivate sonfe of his rosos in an old house away out on F, or per haps it was G, street, above Twenty second street, in the west end of the city. Mrs. Grant had a florist named Field in charge of the White house conservatory. IIo was a rose-grower of rare merit and skill in his artistic work. One day he happened into the old building whore Mr. Bancroft’s gardener potted his plants and budded his roses. Over in a corner he observed a rose of a variety utterly unknown to him and of wonderful size and perfection in form and color. “Where did this come from?” he carelessly inquired of his rose-growing confrere. “Oh, it is an offshoot from some cuttings we imported from Germany,” the man re plied. It was evident to Mr. Field that the other did not in the least com prehend the value of the new plant. After some talk Mr. Field bought the cuttings ho had 'seen for $5. A year thereafter,' when hej had prop agated his now purchase and become convinced that ho had a new and very valuable variety of roses, which he named the American Beauty, he sold his find for $5,Q00, the most wonder ful result of the investment of $5 on record. To follow his luck a little further, Mr. Field invested his easily earned $5,000 in lands near the city, which in a little less than three years were sold for $50,COO. Truth is some times stranger than fiction. In this instance it certainly was. Electric rights la Alaska. A system of electric lighting is being put in at Juneau, one of the best known Alaska settlements—a place of 2,000 inhabitants. When completed this will be the first eloctric light plant in the territory. Electricity, however, has been used for some time in a limited way in the Alaska mines. Water power is abundant everywhere, and the current is generated on the streams and carried to the minn. by cables. J A Terrible Power. Lady, to Chinese servant_John, is it true that you Chinese servants have a trade union? John—Yessee. “Suppose I should discharge vou without paying?” J “We boycotts you.” “But suppose, instead of a China man, I should get a girl?” “Chinee union payee policeman to nottec flirtee.” A Night Watch woman. The common council of Steinhubel Silesia, have elected, for the protect tion of the village, a night watchwo man. She is said to be stalwart and resolute and takes a motherly interest in various small boys who are out o’ nights ■oftJ.V VALUABLE REMEDY. Inhaling Cologne Water Will Cheek Asthma, eo It le Said. Attacks of asthma may be brought on by tlie most varied and singular causes; different sor'.J of scents, the odor of raspberries, .s was the case of Claude Bernard; the smell of hay, the vapor of a sulphur match that has just been lighted, the dust from oats or powdered ipecacuanha. One par tient will have asthma in the North, but will be free from it in the South; another will have asthma in Paris, but will be perfectly well in Vienna; still another will have the most ter rible attacks as long as he is in Egypt, but will be relieved as soon as he gets to sea. It is generally admitted nowadays that the attack of asthma is duo to a spasm of the inspiratory muscles, and that the origin of the trouble is some stimulation of the nasal mucous mem brane. On the other hand it is also known that a vigorous stimulation of the mucous membrane of the nose may put an end to an attack of asth ma; therefore in this purely nervous phenomenon the same cause may either bring on or put an end to the attack. It is on this peculiarity that are based a certain number of methods of treatment of an attack of asthma, and the latest born of these methods consists in sniffing eau de cologne. My readers may remember that I made known to them the process whereby M. Roux of Lyons cuts short colds in the head and chest at their beginning. It consists in having the patients inhale by the mouth and nose for about two minutes and about four or five times a day about fifty drops of cologne water. It is now claimed that the same method will put an end to an attack of asthma. / BICYCLE BAND. • reucii .unsiciani Appear on toe street* Hiding? Wheels. In Paris there are merry-go-rounds with bicycles attached, where the tyro can learn all the movements of cycling without falling off. One even ing a band of forty musicians, re turning home from a wedding dinner for which they had furnished the mu sic, came upon such a merry-go-round and climbed into it. As they had all been imbibing freely of the generous wines furnished at the wedding feast, nothing seemed to them more natural than to improvise a serenade as they whirled round and round. The cornet went home with a terri ble headache, and the bassoon dream ed that he was being sucked down into the maelstrom. But a few days afterward the leader convened the musicians and informed them that he intended to found “the bicycle band.” The result was that in a few weeks the Fanfare-Cycle, forty players on wind and string instruments, mount ed on “bikes” of artistic mechanism, began to appear on the streets of Paris, and to spin merrily along the wide boulevards to the inspiring notes of the overture to “William Tell" or the martial melodies of the French military muse. At first they confined themselves to the exterior boulevards, fearing the comment^of the great throngs which gathered on the central avenues of Paris. But gradually they became bolder, and now one often sees them, formed by fours, majestically skim ming the noiseless pavements from the Madeleine to the Bastille. Nothing Wasted In Paris. liven the smallest scrap of paper, that which every one throws away here, becomes a source of profit Old provision tins, for instance, are full of money; the lead soldering is removed and melted down into cakes, while the tin goes to make children's toys. Old boots, however bad, always con tain in the arch of the foot at least one sound piece that will serve again, and generally there are two or three others in the sole,the heel, and at the' back. Scraps of paper go to the card board factory, orange peel to the marmalade maker, and so on. The most valuable refuse — that which fetches two francs the kilo—is hair; the long goes to the hair dresser, while the short is used, among other things, for clarifying oils. A Doss’ Cemetery. The Englishman’s abiding affection for his four-footed friends receives another illustration In Hyde park the holy of holies of the London park system, is to be found a dog cemetery. It adjoins the parkkeeper’s lodge at Victoria gate, and contains at present about eighty graves. The cemetery appears to be a private speculation of the keeper, who takes the fees, pro vides the tombstones and performs the duties of a sexton. The ordinary charge for an interment is five shil lings; the monuments of course, vary. The keeper shows one which is said to have cost five pounds. The duke of Cambridge has two dogs buried there, and he seems to have started this public institution. Little Practice In That Line. A Chicago man iu Lexi ngton, soon after Garfield’s death, was talking of the bungling of the surgeons, when one of the Kentuckians present re monstrated against the terrible treat ment and iu results. "Well, a Ken tucky surgeon would have done no better, said the Chicagoan. "You are right, sah,” replied the other; "Kentucky surgeons know nothin? about treating wounds in the back! sah.” , Better Time* Coming* Farmer Brown, after fourteen hours at haying—Never mind, Tommy; hayin don’t last forever. Just re member that winter’s cornin' soon, nothin’to do but saw wood an1 tend the cattle an’ go to school an study nights.”—Harper’s Bazar. ; - A A WONDERFUL MEMORY. A Chicago Railroader Who Caa Be member Car Number** “Memory is a gift that seems to 1)6 very unevenly distributed, ’ said G. I*> Blackwell, a Chicago railroad official. “We have a man in the employ of our road who is blessed with the most wonderful memory I ever heard of. It is the duty of this man to keep ac count of the different cars as they come into the yard. When a train whistles he steps out on the platform, without either hook or pencil, and takes a mental note of the cars as they go by. If any one happens to be standing near him at the time he is thus engaged he does not hesitate to enter into con versation with him, and when the train has passed he steps back into the office and makes a complete and accurate record of the train, begin ning at the first car and ending with the caboose. Sometimes, just to test his ability, the men would get him to begin at the caboose and write the numbers the other way, or else begin in the middle of the train and work both ways. In any case he never has made a mistake that I know of. Car numbers, the names of the roads to which they belong and iheir relative positions in the train would always be recorded accurately. THE BISHOP’S CIGARS. lie Smoked the Before, After and Brotherly Brands. A man in clerical garb and with a handsome face walked along a Chi cago street, looking at the show windows until he came to one which contained cigars and pipes, and such stock as a cigar dealer would display. The man in clerical garb and with a handsome face walked into the cigar store. He examined several brands and bought several. After the purchase the cigar man said to one of his loungers: “That’s Bishop-, of- church. lie thinks I don’t know what he is up to. I have a friend who knows the bishop’s home life, and he told me about him and his cigars. Now he bought three brands here. One was very light, the second very heavy and the third is a cigar that you or I wouldn’t buy unless we had to. I am told that the bishop calls them his ‘before,’ ‘after’ and ‘brotherly.’ The first he smokes just before he goes at his ecclesiastical work, whatever it may be; the second he puffs leisurely after his work is over and the third he gives to the visiting clergy who like to smoke. So you see the old yarn about carrying twe kinds of chewing tobacco has a counterpart in high life.” A Brown Paper Magnet. A very simple and interesting' elec trical experiment may be made with a sheet of brown paper, illustrating in a remarkable manner how the most astonishing effects may be produced by the simplest means. Take a sheet of coarse brown paper, and after hold ing it before the fire till it is perfectly dry, fold it up into a long strip of about two inches wide. The magnet is now complete. To exhibit its at tractive power, cut some strips of writing paper about three inches long and about as wide as these lines, then place them upon the table, three or four together. Now take the magnet and draw it briskly under the arm three or four times; its electro- mag netism is instantly developed, and be-, comes apparent when held over the small strips of writing paper, for they fly up from the table toward the paper magnet veritably “by the wings of lightning.” How Sam Was Bleached. A queer story comes from North Carolina. Sam Spence, a colored man of Union county was in the woods gathering wild grapes. He climbed a tree and slipped off. His foot became entangled in the vines and he was suspended in the air by one foot. Spence had to wait for assistance, which did not arrive for more than an hour. The blood all flowed toward his head, and after he was taken down he became very sick. Since that time all the wool on his head has pulled out and he is getting almost as white as a white man. His skin first began fading in spots, which have now spread all over his body. Gone to Pot. The origin of the phrase “Gone to pot,” has been traced to an old story about a tailor of Samarcand, who lived near the gate of the city on the road leading to the cemetery. It is said that this lcnight of the shears had outside his cottage an earthen 'var®, P0,1’ ,nto which he dropped a pebble for every corpse that passed y, and at the end of each moon counted the number. At length the tailor himself died, and his neighbors remarked, “Poor fellow, he now is gone to pot also. ” Philosophy Of a Five-Tear-Old. nhti 5'y*ar'01d Boston hoy’s ethical philosophy was brought out the other day when his father told him how glad he was that he had been such a good boy all through Sunday, when ne was left much to himself. The bov answered in a matter-of-fact wav “I Jv'Vei? i* bee,u thinkil»g about good! I think l m better when 1 don’t think about it I don’t think of anything— Sbout wh 7 any*hinITi I just thfnk about what a good time I’m having.” Tho Odor, and Color of Flowers. ^Plants with white blossoms have a larger proportion of fragrant species an any other; next comes red, then yellow and blue; aftei which, and In fume. 8tUl leBS Pec LEGAL ADVERti N°TICEKOBmS Notlce 1« hereby jriVe» , named settler has ffij? >b« to make Anal proof to J01^ and that said proof a-iifjj register and receiver ?! Nov^^^; FortheNBH.eotfeV^H, Ho names the following his continuous resident tlon of, said land, yu? > John Oolburt, of sioc.L « and Barney Kearns of a*'* 14-6 JOHn'a.hV i NOTICE. H. 8. Ballou* Co., dpi, notice that on the 27,), 1894. Henry .T. Hersl,i,‘ filed his petition In the die county, Nebraska, again? and prayer of said cancel^ and" satisfied1^ dared paid _ _ and dellrered by Patrick? you on the 21st day 0f i' ‘ h® p|rSe"* °* a note of 1893. Said mortgage bavin,1 the south-east nimrio. ...» the south-east quarter of., ship 29, range 12, In Holt i and being recorded in book on page 127. of the mortgi county. Also to have caniS of record and declared naid j.ago g'vf.n to seoure ten 2 8160. Said mortgage havi„; said McCoy an southeast quarter and the t southwest quarter, Of section 25 north of range IS, west ut Holt county, Nebraska, git Swarner, to the Globe Invest and assigned to the plaintiff, Was recorded in book 40 at pa gage records or said county, same decreed to be a tirst lien sold to satisfy the same. You are required to answ on or before the 12th day of J. Li. Moose,Trus By S. D. Thorton, his attorn THE OMAHA WEEKL BEE 13 pages a week—From no coveting tbe entire campiit THE OMAHA Sioux City, 01 Western U THE SHORT 10 CEN Sand Stamps or Sit OMAHA* NE (PACIFIC SHOKTI BETWEEN SIOUX Cl anii Jackson, Laurel, R® tnond, PlainvieviS Connects at Sioux City vM* lines, landing passeaf NEW UNION PA89EX6® Bomeseekers will find gold® ities along this line. I*' before going else**1 THE CORN BELT Of For rates, time tables, or otW b\C.,aiLLTS“to0rad‘ pensetoyourself. We stud everything needed to can? ness successfully, and g“ against fitilure if you simple, plain instruction* you are in need of ready , want to know all about tn® business before the public- _ address, and we will mail. ment giving you all the Par“ TRUE * CO •f BO) August*’