Nebraska advertiser. (Brownville, Nemaha County, N.T. [Neb.]) 1856-1882, February 10, 1881, Image 3

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K
rHE BUGLE.
. r am the French of Iaul Drroulede.
The air is keen, the line Is long,
The quick advance rings clear and strong,
The Zouave column chants the prayer;
The solemn -wood that crowns the hill
Looks down and listens, silent, still
And Prussians wait us there.
Our bugle is a battle-bird,
That din of many a. fight has heard
Midst 6bot, and smoke, and fire, and flame.
He flits and wheels with cheerful call,
Xo rally round when comrades fall
Brave bird no foe can tame 1
Another order! bark the tonel
'Oh, never bolder bird was known !
'Ti6 "death or glory" once again;
Your nreath of passion stire the soul,
-ind courage rises to thecal,
Where foes too long have lain.
We charge at double, Ehout, and climb
To where the bullets bide their time. '
Ah! now the Prussian sniders speak;
Wc close in ranks and now the cry
-Advance with bayonet, do or diel"
Tfie wood Is gaincdby Zouave shriek.
rush, a pause our bugle struck!
moment only Zouave pluck
Gives pluck to aught but death,
Then, counding high 'mid strife and cheer,
Oncottquered notes, aad always near,
The bugle breathes its passion-breath.
And tbough with breath the red blood flows,
ifct blast on blast the bugle blows'1,
Ills band clinched round with iron will;
So rmts off death some paceb yet,
nd pressing back each foeman met,
The brave old bugle leads us still.
Ah ! there upon the turf at last
lie lies, but still the bugle-blast
Rings shrill from blood-stained lips that
press
Disdaining, stretched on gory ground,
Guarding bis bugle still the sound
Wells forth, and urges none the less.
And now, upon bis elbow leant,
He sees the Zouave backward bent
On ground where all his blood has ran,
Then not till then the bugle stops;
His task is done he bends he drops;
Defeat in death death noblv won.
JtOMAXCE OF A POCKET BOOK.
I was just 25 when I met Alice Thome,
the daughter and heiress of George
Thome, the great banker.
I fell desperately in love with the
charming girl, knowing well that such
love was utter madness.
Her father was reported to be a very
jroud, ambitious man, who would look
nigh for a son-in-law. I felt that he
vould not.so much as give a hearing to
-.ivy suit; and as to winning her without
his consent, what would that bring to
her but misery? I had nothing with
which to compensate her for the sacri
fice of a marriage with ny poverty.
So we bade good-by without a word
of explanation, though I knew she read
the anguish in my heart, and tears were
in the soft eyes "averted from me. I
kissed the trembling hand she placed in
inine, and turned away and bade fare
well to her and hope together.
Scarcely had I got back to town and
was striving earnestly to drown vain re
gret in the bustle and interest of busi
ness, when a terrible misfortune fell
upon me. Mr. Overton had given me
a check for $20,000, desiring me to go
to the bank and get it cashed. Hariri"
executed the commission and returned
imagine my horror on discovering that
the pocket-book containing the money
was gone.
Whether stolen by -villains or lost by
ni- own carelessness, what mattered it?
It w:is gone, and I was utterly ruined.
"What I suffered during the next few
liours God only knows; and when, after
being ilismissed, I returned to my own
room I was very nearly desperate; not
only had I lost a lucrative position, but
1113' future appeared to be irretrievably
blasted; for there are suspicions which
are as fatal to a man morally as would
be physically the wound of a rifle ball.
Hut I was young and of a hopeful na
ture, ai d I began to realize that I had
oecn leniently dealt with. On recalling
all that had happened after my leaving
the bank, and the utter impossibility of
the pocket-book beiug taken from the
breast-pocket of my coat, I came to the
conclusion that I must have dropped it,
and thereupon I resolved to have re
course to all means in my power to re
cover the money.
I had saved up during the last few
years a considerable portion of my sal
ary, and determined now to devote it
to the purpose I had in veiw. I ad
vertised daily in all the prominent jour
nals, not offering the customary reward,
1 .in. viuviijuiii-; my uuiuriuiiaie posi
tion, my honor lost, and my fortune
blighted.
For two weeks I kept my loss before
the public, and had almost begun to
despair of any favorable result, when,
one morning, a stranger came to me a
tall dark stern-looking man, who re
garded me with a pair of kindly brown
eyes, that had something familiar about
them.
The stranger declined the seat I of
fered to him, and began at once speak
ing brusquely and to the point. "I
have heard of your loss," said he. "I
have read your advertisement in the pa
pers, and I feel deeply interested in and
oryou. I have just left your late em
jloyers, and, after the satisfactory man
ler in which all my inquiries were an
iwered, 1 became your surety for the
120,000."
"What?"
I sprung towards him in the wildest
excitement.
"Oh, sir!" I began, but he stopped
me.
"Let me finish," said he. "I've done
this because I am convinced that you are
an upright, honest man, and the great
est proof of ny confidence lean give you
is that I am about to offer you the posi
tion of cashier in rny banking house.
My name, sir, is George Thome."
George Thome, the father of Alice,
he girl that I loved! Ah, the mystery
vas solved! It was of her his eyes re-
ninded me; it was to her I was indebted
or this help.
Fifteen 3-ears had flown since the day
l lot the pocket book. I had now be
jonie a prosperous man, surrounded by
all the luxuries which wealth affords. I
had found in Mr. Thome more than a
patron; I found a friend; under a brusque
manner lie had a heart of gold. From
the first day of our acquaintance he had
evinced towards me the liveliest interest
and affection.
I was foon nuu'e partner, and when,
on a ccrt.."n billed day, I became the
husband f Alice, and his son-in-law,he
presented me with a receipt for the
$20,000 that he had paid to the Messrs.
Overton for my loss.
So time went on. The banking-house
known af the firm of Thome & Wallace
was in a thriving condition.
I had a beautiful wife and two lovely
children, and yet. with all these sources
of happiness, I was not quite contented
there was a crease in the rose leaf.
For some time past I had been vainly
trying to account for the extraordinary
interest which my father-in-law had first
taken in me, because I discovered, as I
orew older, and saw more of this self
ish, egotistical world, that very few
such Onerous actions were performed
without a motive, and the solution of
this, to me, difficult problem frequently
occupied my thoughts.
At first I had attributed it all to
Alice's influence, but I knew now that
it had been as great a surprise to her as
to inyself.
About this time Dr. Ponard, one of
Mr. Thome's most intimate friends, ar
rived in New York, and one morning,
while sitting at breakfast, expressed
great surprise at the numerous adver
tisements in the papers relating to
money lost and found.
"Well," said he, I have not the least
sympathy for those who lose money.
They are generally careless, stupid peo
ple, not fit to be trusted; although I re
member having heard of a youns man
who lost a pocket book some years ago,
containing $20,000, and I declare when I
read his piteous appeals, which were in
all the papers, my heart fairly ached for
him. But," continued he addressing
my father-in-law, who had become very
pale, "you ought to remember the cir
cumstances, for it occurred just at the
time of the great failure in Philadel
phia, by which you were so heavy a
loser."
"Yes, I recollect the affair." replied
Mr. Thome, who appeared to be suffer
ing. "I never heard," continued the doc
tor, "what became of the poor devil;
and yet I should like to know."
"Should you," said I, laughing; "then
let :ne gratify you curiosity, f, Arthur
Wallace, am that poor devil, doctor;
saved from ruin and despair by my ben
efactor here." And then I related all
the events of the last fifteen years.
The doctor sprung to his feet and
grasped his old friend's hand.
"Well, and generously done!" said he;
but Mr. Thorne interrupted him. "I am
not well," he said, faintly. "I suffer
greatly let me go to my room."
The next day He sent for me to his
private office. I found him looking pale
and haggard.
"bit down, my dear Arthur, said he,
in a low voice, "and listen to me. For
a long time I have had a confession to
make to you one that weighs on me so
heavily that I must ease my conscience
of its load. I can better bear to do so
now, that I have in a measure made
some amends for the trouble I once
caused you."
"The trouble you caused me," I cried.
"You have been the most generous of
men to me. It is through your kindness
I occupy my present position: it is to
you I owe nry happiness, and more than
all, my honor."
Mr. Thorne opened his desk and took
from it a pocket book.
"Do you remember this?" said he, as
he placed it in my hand.
"Yes," I replied, "It is the one I lost;
but how "
I could not finish my 'sentence. The
truth stared me in the face. I sprang
to my feet in dismay.
"Great heavens!" I cried; "3011 found
the mone3T!"
"Aye, and kept it," he groaned, with
anguish in his voice. "But oh! do not
condemn me without hearing me. Yes
terday you heard Dr. Ponard allude to
the great losses I had sustained b3 the
failure in Philadelphia. I did not dare
to make m' embarassments known, as
that would have hastened m3' ruin m3T
ruin! God knows it was not for m3'self
that I cared, but for Alice, my darling
child. It was on the 14th of December
that you lost the money. Oh, I shall
never forget the date. It was on that
day that I meditated suicide. I was
short of $20,000 to meet my liabilities,
maturing on the 15th. 1 was over
whelmed with despair; the air of the of
fice seemed to stifle me, and I rushed in
to the street. Ihadhardlygonetenyards
when my foot struck something. It was
your pocket-book. I opened it, and the
sight turned me giddy and faint. Then
commenced within my breast one of
those moral struggles which,even to the
conqueror is fearful, but in which, alas!
I was miserably vanquished. The next
da3T I satisfied all claims upon me. To
the world I was George Thorne, an hon
est, upright man; to myself I was noth
ing better than a malefactor, You know
the rest? Through my guilt you passed
two weeks of indescribable anguish. I
have since endeavored to make repara
tion for the misery I caused; but I also
suffered. Moral atonements are the
most cruel, because they are eternal. I
have known and yet feel the bitterness
of expiation. Say, my son, can you for
give my crime?"
Could I forgive? I looked at the pal
lid face, anguished eyes. What were
my sufferings of those two terrible weeks
compared to the secret pain and shame
this man had borne for years? this
man, the victim of one solitar3' deviation
from rectitude, so upright in all else,
and whose life since had been one long
atonement. I grasped his hand, tears
filled my eyes.
"Father," I cried, "Alice's father and
mine, all is forgiven, forgotten. Do I
not owe all the happiness of my life to
that same lost pocket-book?"
A Sad Tragedy.
The first tragedy of the new 3'ear in
this county was, in other respects, a
notable one. It occurred in the town
of Otis, lnd.,at the close of New Year's
eve. Henry Augustine, a 3oung man.
went fiom Chicago to visit his relatives.
Having tried in vain to make them drink
poisoned whisky, he shot his aunt and
then his uncle with a rovolver, so that
they will (lie, then rushed down stairs
-and shot one cousin dead and wounded
another. From his fmstrated attempt
to poison, from his manner of returning
to his uncle's room and seeking admis
sion on the plea of offering assistance,
and from his untimely flying for his
life from a room in which his wounded
cousin detained him, there are grounds
for concluding that his crimes were not
so insane as they looked, and for credit
ing the theory that he sought possession
of a sum of money that he knew to be
kept in the house. This tragedy is as
manifold, as wild and horrible as the
Goulding butcher', where a dissolute
and moody son tried to slaughter a
whole family in New York city some
3-ears ago. It is not an auspicious open
ing in the criminal record for the 3'ear
eighteen-eighty-one.
ISO MORE CJOSSIP.
Indianapolis Daily Sentinel.
If we are correctly informed, St. Ja
cobs Oil is now the usual tea-party
topic in place of the former staple free
gossip. How wise and how much more
beneficial!
A Sudden Change of Opinion.
Rockland Courier.
"Ah, that's what I like! that's what
1 like!" chirpedold Mr. Whistleblossom,
as he came carefully down the hill
where the boys were exercising their
sleds. "If there's anything I really love
it's too see the boys, full of animal spir
its, enjo3ing these wintry sports." Ind
just at that instant one hundred and fif
ty pounds of animal spirits came dash
ing down the hill on a double runner,
and caught the unsuspecting Mr. Whis
tleblossom between the heels. There
was a sound of revelry bj- night, and
when they picked up the unfortunate
gentleman and had pinn d together the
ruptured back of his coat, he remarked
in a tone so gentle that it made him
black in the face, that the city govern
ment who would refuse to pass a law
making it a reform-school crime to
slide on the streets were" a set of pusil
lanimous yahoos.
Milwaukee Sentinel.
That wondeful remedy for rheumatism,
St. Jacobs Oil, has been used by a large
number of people in this city, and with
effect truly marvelous. Frequent re
ports are made where sufferers have
been afforded relief, and the sale is
growing largely. The fact that it is an
external remedy, commends it to many
who would not otherwise think of going
out of the beaten track to find a remedy.
A good man is a prince of the Al
mighty's creation.
Actibns of the last age are like alma
nacs of the last year.
RaihraT Construction in 1880.
An important article on railway con
struction in 1880, the result of careful
and extensive inquiry, appears in the
Railway Age. It is learned that much
of the information has been obtained di
rectly fiom railway companies and rail
way commissioners and other state offi
cials. The footings, incomplete as they
may be, are sufficiently astonishing,
showing as they do, that not less than
7,207 miles of new track were laid dur
ing the past twelve months, on at least
234 different lines. These figures are
far greater than those for any year since
1871, and the mileage is more than 54
per cent greater than that built in
1879. No doubt the final figures will in
crease it to at least 7,500 miles, which
is a greater mileage than has been con
structed in any previous year in the
United States, or, of course, in any other
country.
The table shows that the work of con
struction has been "prosecuted in forty
two of the states and territories, the
only state not included in the list beiDg
Mississippi, and the only territories not
given being Idaho, Wyoming, Indian
territory from which railways, eager
to enter, ore still forcibly kept out and
ice-bound Alaska, which is at present
beyond the reach even of the enterpris
ing railway-builder. Work is now ac
tively in progress in Idaho and Wyo
ming, and another year will see large
additions in these territories also, while
the Indian country will doubtless be
opened to several new enterprises.
Referring to the summary it will be
seen that Dakota leads the country with
over 680 miles of new track, Texas com
injr next with 659; Ohio with 525; the
new territory of New Mexico with 519
miles; Iowa with 445; young Colorado
with 401; Nebraska with 385; Illinois
and Kansas with over 340 each, and so
on, the new west beyond the Mississippi
river contributing the greatest share of
the additions for the year. It should
also be borne in mind that the figures
show only the track reported laid, and
do not include the vast mileage upon
which grading has been in progress.and
which will be ironed in the comingyear.
It is not unlikely that ten thousand
miles of road will be added in 1881.
Assuming the costof building and equip
ping 7,207 miles here reported, it is
found that the enormous sum of $72,
000,000 has been expended on these com
pleted roads How much more has been
spent in surveys and construction on
other new lines it is impossible to say:
The figures here given considerably ex
ceed any estimate hitherto made, and
are an astonishing exhibition of enter
prise and faith on the part of the capi
talists of the country. As a general
thing, the roads have been built by mon
ey furnished by non-residents of the
states and territories whose facilities of
transportation have been thus increas
ed. The detailed statement of this con
struction is
SUMMARIZED AS FOLLOWS:
Number of
States and territories. lines. Mileage.
Arkansas 4 70.00
Alabama 1 20.00
Arizona 1 20000
California 1 &00
Colorado 13 401.50
Connecticut 1 35.70
Dakota 13 6S0.S5
Delaware 1 1.00
Florida 2 26.00
Illinois. .... . l o4.uo
Indiana 8 161.09
Iowa 19 445.30
Kansas 10 344.56
Kentucky 1 17.00
Louisiana 2 97.20
Maryland 2 41.11
Massachusetts 5 46.44
Michigan 10 2SS.75
Minnesota 6 119.66
Missouri 8 257.75
Montana territory 1 65 50
Nebraska 10 3S5.40
Nevada 2 6000
New Jersey 4 56.90
New Mexico 5 519.65
New York 3 41.34
North Carolina 3 42 00
Ohio 13 525.00
Oregon 4 206.50
Punnsylvania 16 205.75
Rhode Island 1 7.00
South Carolina 3 31.00
Tennessee 3 24.00
Texas 13 65S.80
Uvati .... o w.mv
Vermont j 1 36.00
Virginia 4 247.00
Washinston territory 2 S1.00
West Virginia 2 2600
Wisconsin 15 235.84
Total 234 7,207.31
Origin of "Counter-Irritation."
But few people now living are ac
quainted with the theoretical idea of
counter-irritation, which has been so
much admired in the practice of medi
cine. It had its origin in the following
manner: A shoemaker living in Barns
le3T, in Yorkshire, England, called in
Dr. Fellows for advice. He gave a his
tory of his case, summing it all up in
these words: "In short, doctor, I can't
stand sitting." "Then," replied the
doctor, who was somewhat famous as a
wit, "3'ou fool, WI13 don'tyou sit stand
ing?" This so enraged the cobbler
that he left the physician and sent in
his bill for a pair of boots. The doctor
paid the bill, gave a fresh order for
another pair, anu soon gaine I the con
fidence of his patient. Xearning that
the cobbler lad vilified him, he deter
mined to make him suffer. He pre
pared a machine which by means of a
fly-wheel threw forward and backward
a board like a weaver's shuttle. Be
neath this board were placed large peb
bles. When the cobbler applied again
for treatment for the nervous prostra
tion with which he was suffering, he
was strapped by the doctor to this board
and the machine put in motion. The
poor cobbler groaned in agony and suf
fered as if upon the rack, but the doc
tor put on all the power until the cob
bler yelled for help. The next day the
patient had so much improved that he
applied for another trial of the machine.
It effected a complete cure, and the doc
tor became famous throughout York
shire as a curer of nervous debility by
his "counter-irritation machine," which
was invented as a joke.
London Fogs.
Chambers1 Journal.
Fifty years ago, when we first became
acquainted with them, London fogs
were bad enough; but they were on a
comparatively limited scale. They have
since attained marvelously grand di
mensions and intensity, according to
the increase of houses and population.
What we ordinarily call London, but is
more directly styled the metropolis, has
spread and spread till it covers a space
of about 120 square miles. In the win
ter months every house has a coal fire,
some of them two, three, or four, and
there are numerous manufactories and
public works with furnaces and tall
chimneys, all of which less or more
emit quantities of smoke. This smoke
mingles with what fog there happens to
be, and produces a curious mixture,
that is now only beginning to be rightly
understood. Like every other mist, the
fog which rises and is wafted along the
valle3' of the Thames is composed of
small particles of water that ought
properly to be dissipated by the sun's
heat. Only with difficulty is the sun
able to undertake the duty. The smoke
poured out from hundreds of thousands
of chimneys, does not merely mix with
the fog; it coats each watery particle
with a tarry, oily film, giving it an un
natural character, and preserving it, so
to speak, from immediate dispersion.
A genuine London fog, therefore, is
something more than a fog. It is a pro
digiously large volume of mist, held in
a kind of thralldom by oleaginous in
gredients floated from the tops of chim
neys. When we say oleaginous, we, for
convenience, take trie readiest word to
express a condition that would involve
some chemical explanations which need
not be gone into. Every one will un
derstand that the smoke from the coal
fires somewhat unites inextricably with
the particles of mist, and keeps the
whole thing hovering in a dense cloud
over the metropolis. Not only so; the
dinsjy cloud darkens and pollutes the
air, fills the streets, and to a certain ex
tent the houses and lungs of the inhab
itants. On such occasions the dark
ness, even at noon, is so great that
dwellings and places of business have
to be lit with gas as at night. As the
London gas is more remarkable for- its
volume than its purity, it aids in deteri
orating the atmosphere during fogs, al
ready sufficiently tainted with the ex
halations of domestic sewage. At times
it is as difficult to get a breath of fresh
air as it is to procure a good drink of
palatable water.
TWO SENATORIAL HUSBANDS.
Tlie Moral Warning In the Spragneand
Chrlstlancy Cases.
St. Louts Globe-Democrat.
It was once the boast of the American
that his superiority over the minions of
the effete despotisms of Europe was
shown in the more tender regard for
woman, and his better treatment of her
in all the relations of life, public and
private. There can be no doubt that the
claim was at one time well supported,
and that respect for woman was an in
stinct of American character and a
feature in American life. Of late years,
however, there has been reason to sus
pect that the boast was rather a tradi
tion of the past than a reality of the
present, and two incidents of the past
week are calculated to make us doubt
that we are any better than our neigh
bors. The telegraph has informed us that
the detectives of Columbus, O., have
recently been engaged in looking up the
record of Mrs. Sprague during the
period before her marriage when she
reigned in social circles of Columbus as
the daughter of Ohio's governor. It is
no secret that the tongue of scandal
had not spared Miss Chase's maiden
reputation, but slanders which require
the aid of detectives to exhume them
after slumbering unremembered for
twenty 3ears, might very well be
allowed to slumber on. The other inci
dent is the still more remarkable at
tempt of ex-Senator and ex-Minister
Christiancy to criminate his wife by the
employment of an informer who has
successfully reached the lowest depth of
social and personal degradation.
Mr. Sprague was once thought
enough of a man to make a senator of,
or a major general, or a governor. He
is American by race as well as by his
tory, and he is conscious of standing be
fore the world conspicuously, not only
by his greatness, but by his misfortunes.
Yet his manhood is not shocked at all,
nor does he feel that there is anything
wrong in an attempt to degrade his
wife, and the mother of his children, by
raking the sewers of scandal for prof
that she was an adul cress in the years
before he married her. As it is a, part
of the legal proceedings in which he is
involved, we must infer that his law'ers
approve of this line of defense, and the
American detective goe3 into the work
with an alacrity which protects him
from any imputation of over tenderness
for woman. There can hardly be two
opinions about the manhood of people
who would do this dirty work for hire,
nor of those at whose bidding the dirty
work is done. Yet it ma3T be doubted
whether public opinion will give more
than a passing thought to their busi
ness. Base and incredible as this transac
tion of Mr. Sprague's appears, it rises
to a high moral level in comparison with
the conduct of Mr. Christiancy in his
attempt to defame his wife. He has
found and used in his dirty proceedings
a creature who, thank heaven, is not an
American, compared to whom Pandarus
of Troy was an honest gentleman a
wretch whose like has hitherto been
known to us 011I3 through the satires of
Lucretius or the records of the lower
empire. The use which was made of
this convenient witness ia too degrading
to describe to decent people, but it
seems to have been accepted as a mat
ter of course, and as quite an ordinary
incident in the management of a divorce
case. It is the most conspicuous in
stance, but it is, unfortunately, not the
only instance, in which accommodating
law3ers have undertaken to manufac
ture the evidence on which a divorce is
to be obtained, but the prominence of
the case brings us face to face with
the question as to what is the standard
of manhood in a country in which men
easily commit such crimes.
Instead of the proud boast that we
honor and respect women, we hear the
warning voices of those who tell us
that we are a nation of hypocrites, and
that the infection of immorality is as
widely diffused in this free republic to
day as it was in the Roman empire be
fore its corruptions undermined its
strength and invited its ruin. The truth
perhaps will be found to lie between the
two extremes, but such incidents as
those which we have noticed, and such
warnings as those we hear, prove that
we are on the downward path, and that
our material growth is accompanied b3'
a moral deca3 If this is reall3' the sad
truth, it is well that the truth should be
known. If there is an ulcer eating out
the social and moral life of the nation
it can not be cured b3 painting over the
sore and affecting not to notice it. If the
lrypocrisy with which we are charged
b3T our censors lies at the bottom of it,
the hypocrisy which ignores it and re
fuses to deal with it is niereby an aggra
vation of the disease, and it would be
well for all who have am care for this
country to take warning by the signs of
the times, and ask if that is not a false
security which lulls us into the belief
that we are better than our neighbors in
our morals and our manhood.
How They Cured Him.
David Suing, in the Alliance, tells
how a bride reformed her profane hus
band. She invited her bridesmaids,
four in number, to a quiet dinner. As
they knew of the profane habits of the
groom, and also knew of his good
qualities that he was a man worth
saving the3T entered gladly into the
proposed comedy. The plan was that
all these beautiful women should use
profane words at the table, as the hot
coffee or hot weather or slow servants
might afford opportunit3. It was a
bold plan, but it is said to have cured
the wicked husband; for when his ele-
fant wife applied a profane term to the
iscuit, and a fair guest made a like
remark of the coffee, and still another
applied a profane expletive to the move
ments of a servant, the husband abso
lutely cried with remorse that he had
ever himself used such an outrageous
form of speech. Professor Swing thinks
that "while such a cure cannot be justi
fied, bacause it might kill th2 ladies
without curing the masculine offender,
yet the story itself may serve to show
that man as an animal that swear is a
mournful curiositv."'
The first stage-coach in America com
menced running between Boston and
Providence in the year 1772, taking two
days for the journey. Now we go over
the same distance in an hour!
Mrs. Partington Says
Don't take any of the quack rostrums, as they
are regimental to the hu nan cistern ; put your
trust in Hop Bitters, which will cure general
dilapidation, costive habits and all comic dis
eases. Thev saved rsaac from a severe attack
of typhoid fever. They are the tie plus vmtm
of medicines. Boston Globe.
NATIONAL FINANCES.
Comparative Statement of Receipts in
1879 and 18S0. '
COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF RECEIPTS.
The following comparative statement
of receipts from customs, internal rev
enue, and miscellaneous sources, during
the years 1879 and 1880, has been pre
pared at the treasury department:
CUSTOMS.
Six months ending June 30, 1S79. .$ 6S,5iS,439
She months ending June 30, 1SS0.. 101,621,659
Six months endinc Dec. 31, 1879.. 84,400,404
Six months ending Dec 31, 1SS0.. 9S,517,473
IXTERSAI. REVEXXJE.
Six months ending June 30, 1879..$ 55,990,940
Six months ending June 30, 1SS0. . 63,312,718
Six months ending Die. 31, 1S79.. 60, 96,655
Six months ending Dec 31. 1SS0.. 67,927,747
MISCKT.T.AXEOPS."
Six months ending June 30, 1879..$ 12,893,940
Six months ending June 30, 1SS0. . 12,406,631
Six months ending Dec 31, 1S79.. 10,5S8,541
Six months ending Dec 31, 1SS0.. 15,710,509
TOTAL.
Six months ending June 30, 1S79. .$137,36S,399
Six months ending June 30, 1SS0.. 177,311,009
Six months ending Dec 31, 1879.. 156,185,601
Six months ending Dec 31, 1SS0.. 1S2,155,730
DADDT DOLLARS
The distribution of standard silver
dollars from United States mints during
the month of December, amounted to
Si, 807,491, while for the corresponding
mouth in 1879 it reached $1,935,921.
THE PUBLIC DEBT.
Following is a statement of the public
debt, Jan. 1, 1881.
Six per cent bonds $202,266,550
Five oer cent bonds... 469,651,050
Four and one-half per
cent bonds 250,000,000
Four per cent bonds... 738l0,400
Refunding certificates 927,400
Navy pension fund 14,000,000
Total coin bonds $1,672,265,400
Matured debt $ 11,4S4,395
Legal tenders 346,741,761
Certificates of deposit 7,005,000
Fractional currency
($1,552,346 lessam't
estimated as lost or
destroyed $3,375,934) 7,147,530
Gold and silver certifi
cates 52,241,010
Total without inte
rest $ 431,135,301
Total debt $2,099,8S5,096
Total interest 21,590,379
Cash in treasury 222,299,739
Debt less catfi in
treasury 1,899,181,735
Decrease during De
cember 5,699,430
Decrease since June
30, 1SS0 42,990,559
Current liabilities
Interest due and un
paid $ 2,20S,833
Debt on which interest
has ceased 11,4S4,395
Interest thereon 856,8S5
Gold and silver certifi
cates 52,241,010
United States notes
held for redemption
of certificates of de
posit 7,005,000
Cash balance available
Jan. 1, 1SS1 148,503,615
Total 222,299,739
Available Assets
Cash in treasury $222,299,739
Bonds issued to Pacific Railwa3' com
panies, interest pa3able in 'lawful
money:
Principal outstanding $64,623,312
Interest accrued an'fnot yet paid. . 1,938,705
Interest paid by United States 47,5S9,S61
Interest repaid b3 the companies:
By transportation service $14,052,447
By cash payments, 5 per cent earn
ings 655,193
Balance of interest paid by United
States 32,8S2,214
Adventures With a Water Spout.
Toward the close of the war, says
Major Everson, it became necessar3 on
account of the lack of capacity in the
general hospital for confederates
which was located on the extremit3 of
the point to place man3r of the sick
prisoners in seven large frame buildings
erected for that purpose within the pen.
A startling event connected with those
buildings is in order of record here. It
was just after the dawn of da3' when I
strolled out of m3r quarters on the mar
gin of the ba3r to find relief in the sea
air from the oppressiveness of an unus
ually sultiy night. It was at oncejjevi
dent from the peculiar atmosphere and
death-like, indescribable stillness that
something out of the usual routine was
near at hand. Soon there was heard a
rumbling, roaring and hissing sound.
Looking across the Potomac about
eight miles distant, the cause, in' an
alarming shape, was discovered in a
huge water spout attached to a large,
angr3' cyclone, in form like the placing
of the nozzles of two funnels together.
It was making its wa3 from the Virgin
ia shore diagonally toward the prison
enclosure.
About a mile out was anchored the
three turreted monitor Roanoke, one of
the largest in the service the frigate
of that name razeed and canying an
armament of one fifteen-inch and two
eleven-inch guns. On came the mon
ster of wind and water, presenting an
appearance never to be forge tten, the
hideous seething increasing as it ad
vanced. The destruction of the Roan
oke appeared to be inevitable; lier fate
hung, as it were, in the balance, when
a curl of smoke was seen to puff out
from the centre and largest turret. The
fiiteen-inch shell shattered the water
spout, and the huge water spout, like a
liberated baloon, shot upward, with
lightning rapidity high into the heav
ens. Then, with equal velocit3', it
plunged downward, striking and wreck
ing tne large commissary building near
the river, and canying everything be
fore it at the dock as if it were as much
chaff in a September gale, including
sentry boxes, in which one soldier was
killed and two others mangled by being
buried man3' rods distant. Mounting
in the air again in less time than it
takes to record it, the c3'clone descend
ed, to all appearances, squareby down
among the hospital buildings in the
prison camp. B3 a singular freak, and
fortunateby, it struck the only building
of the seven which was not occupied by
the sick, and which was used for the
storing of clothing and other materials.
This the C3clone carried out in the ba3'
in the twinkling of an eye, so to speak,
taking it as clean to the ground, sills
and flooring, as if the boards and tim
bers had been sawed off. Neither were
there seen of it afterward board or
other article.
This escape from a frightful disaster
was almost miraculous, and the degree
of readiness with which the closely and
long-confined prisoners viewed their es
cape as an interposition of divine provi
dence, may readily be excused.
Nearest Approach to the Angelic.
New York Ledger.
"Girl" is a word that suggests ideas
of elegance and grace, joiqedto simplic
ity, innocence ar.d truth, all embodied
in that class of human beings which
make the nearest approach to the an
gelic. The pure young girl knows no evil,
and therefore she does none. Untouched
by earty experiences she is perfectly
happy and the truly happy are always
good.
Affection remains in 'her as a treas
ure 3et to brought into full use. As yet,
she onby spends a small share of her
heart's wealth upon all the objects
around her. She loves as a daughter
and sister may do. Every morning and
evening she comes to her parents and
sisters with a pure iss; nor, when some
cheerful brother returns from college or
fronx counting house to enliven home
for a'Jirief space, is the same salutation
wanting to assure him of the continu
ance cwher most sweet regards.
It isyaot for her external accomplishments-chough
these are considerable
that 3-1 value this fair specimen of
humanity. You appreciate her for her
beauty, which nature could never have
conferred if it had not been intended as
a reverence compelling gift for her
gentle and artless nature so well en
shrined in that form of native and win
ning grace and because, by dwelling
on the contemplation of such a being
your estimation of your kind is elevated;
a gratification of itself, and one of the
highest order.
Only a Dog.
Detroit Free Press.
We were all crying, every one of us.
Father declared that it was smoke thai
fot into his eyes and made them smart;
ut mother threw her apron over her
head and sat rocking and sobbing for
ten minutes. Phoebe and I just threw
ourselves down on the floor by poor Leo,
and I took his dear old shagg3' head in
my lap and the hot tears dropped one
by one; and Phoebe petted his poor old
stiff ears and smoothed his thin gray
hairs; and then we took off the old brass
collar that was marked all over with
hieroglyphics that we scratched with
pins in the proud da3s when first he
wore it; then we cried again, and just
then in walked 'Squire Toots, and he
didn't seem to know what to do when
he saw us all so distressed; he looked
at us then at Leo; then he took out his
handkerchief and gave his nose a real
Sunday-school blowing, and said kind of
huskily
"Why, it's wicked to feel s' bad. Any
body'd spose it wasapusson; 'taint only
a dog I"
That just made us feel worse! There
wasn't any heaven for him to go to, and
we knew we never would see him again,
and we couldn't remember any life
without Leo, we were such little tots
when he came to us, and he had been
one of the faniuy all the time. Father
used to lecture him just as he did us
children. "Where did I see you to-day,
sir?" he would sa3; "over at Mr. Mason's
associating with that dog that steals?
Shame?" And then Leo would whine,
and pretty soon father would say, "Go
to bed, sir!" and he'd sneak off to his
box in the back shed and lie awake all
night to protect us while we slept, and
he never once in over fourteen years
was forgetful of his trust and he was
"only a dog."
Only a dog! Why, was there ever a
time that we went racing home from
school that Leo hadn't met us half-way
to race with us and do all sorts of fun
n3' tricks at our bidding? And how
proud we had always been of him with
his handsome, stateby presence and su
perior manners, and how safe we felt
to hear his deep chested bark as we went
to sleep! Well, death had found him, sure
enough, and'we buried him out in the
grove in a little hollow, where he loved
to lie on hot summer days, and there
will be no resurrection for him, though
there will be for the vilest thief he kept
from our door; but none the less, in
looking oVer his honest, blameless life,
in which he was never faithless to anj-,
even the smallest trust, I dare appby to
him the Master's meed of praise, "Well
done, thou good and faithful servant;"
though, as 'Squire Toots said, "he was
onby a dog."
An Odd Test of Ownership.
Hawklnsvllle (Ga.) Dispatch.
Two young men at Hawkinsville set
tled the ownership of a double barrel
gun in a novel wa3, the other night.
The gun was Avon at a raffle the two
3oung men being joint owners in the
chance that won it. One of the men
proposed that the3" should go down to
the river at a shallow point and wade
into it, and the one that waded the
farthest or held out the longest should
take the gun. The water was freezing
cold, and the margin of the stream was
lined with ice and the icicles were pen
dant from every limb, from every bush.
Partly divesting themselves of their
clothing the3" entered the water and
waded out. One of them went until
the water reached his armpits, but his
companion went a little further, and
was allowed to come out and take the
sun.
When you visit or leave New York City,
save Baggage Expressace and Carriage Hire,
and stop at Grand Union Hotel, near
ly opposite Grand Central Depot. 350 elegant
rooms, reduced to $1 and upwards per day.
Elev Uor. Restaurant t uppliett with the best.
Horse Cars, Stages and Elevated Railroad to
all Depots.
Lyon's neel Stiffeners keep boots and shoes
straight. Sold bv shoe and hardware dealers.
BMlHHIIBHHBaHHBl
I
D STOMACH
8ITTEBS
Xo Time Should be Xioat
If the Btomacb. liver and bowels are affected, to
adopt thesure rem dy, no9tetter's Stomach Bitters.
Diseases of the organs named beget others far more
serious, and a delay is therefore hazardous. Dyspep
sia, liver complaint, chills an., fever, early rheum
atic twlnsres. t Idney weakness, brine serious bodily
trouble if trifled with. Lose no time in usln- this
effective, safe and lonp known m dlclne.
For sile by all Druggists and Dealers generally.
PERMANENTLY CURES
KIDNEY DISEASES.
LIVER COMPLAINTS,
Constipation and Piles.
Dr. H. H. Clark, South Hero. Vt, sayr, "To eases
of Kidney Troubles it has acted like a br . It
has cured many Tery bad casea of Piits- uhas
nerer'faUed to act efficiently."
Kelson Falrchlld, of St. Albans, Tt, says, "It Is
mfte-riTMr fmm Pfl find CrtiTenS9 it com
Hr.-o-v. .
age, has done wondenLf or main completely cur
ing a severe liver and Kidney Complaint.0
IT HAS WBfVQ
WONDERFUL Will I
POWER. mh
Because it acts on the LIVES, BOWELS
and KJD5ETS at the same time.
Xecause it cleanses the system of the polsoa.
oca n-umois that develope in. Kidney and TJrl
nary Diseases, Bfllcrasaeaa, Jaundice, Consti
pation.Klea, or In Rheumatism, Neuralgia
Nervous Disorders and Female Complaints.
rarltlswitupln Drr VecetaWe Form. In
tin cans, one package of which makes six quarts
of medicine. Also In Liquid Form very Con
centrated for those that cannot readily pre
pare it.
t3-It acta with equal efficiency In either form.
GET IT AT THE DRUGGISTS. PRICE, $1.00
TTELLS, KICHAKDSOX & CO., Prop's,
krwm send the dry post-paid.) BCTtUXGTO, TT.
H " CELEBRATED f
More People Die
from diseased Kidneys than of consumption,
but not one fatal case in a thousand would oc
cur if "Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure
was taken in time. By all means ay it.
An Esormoc3 Traffic. Pittsburgh boasts
that 849,746 bottles of Carboiixe have been
sold within the last six months. Thi3 shows
that there-it army of bald heads ill soon be
reduced to a corporal's guard.
Terrible JLoss oi'JLlle.
Millions of nits, mice, cats, bed-buss, roach
es lose their lives by collision with "Rough on
Rats." Sold by drnggist3. 15c boxes.
Read the "Weekly Death List of Consump
tion, and leam how manv die of neglected
coughs and colds that Hale's Honey of Hore
hocnd and Tar would have cured.
Pike's Toothache drops core in one minute.
Ltdia E. Pixkham'3 Vegetable Compound
has done thousands of women more good than
the medicine of many doctors. It Is a positive
cure for all female complaints. Send to Mrs.
Lydia E. Pinkham.
Keep on hand Reddiug's Russia Salve.
Don't Yon Forget It.
The grand premium distribution of
the Omaha Bee, consisting of $20,000
worth of agricultural implements,
household goods, jewelry, watches,
musical instruments, sewing machines,
and other valuable and useful articles,
takes place on February 22d, 1881. Xo
postponement. The Weekly Bee, a
56 column, 8 page sheet, contains more
far western news, including every state
and territory between the Mississippi
and the Pacific. Sample copies with
full premium list mailed free. All pre
mium subscriptions must be in by the
20th of February. Direct letters to the
Daily Bee, Omaha, Nebraska.
Foolislily JFrislitened.
'Tis folly to be frightened as many
are because afflicted with Piles, when
Bucklin's Arnica Salve will certainly
cure the worst cases and only costs 2nc.
Sold everywhere.
For Sale. "
A six horse power portable steam en
gine and boiler, in first-class order: only
six months in use. Price low and terms
easy. Reason for selling, more power
wanted. Address
Western Newspapek Union,
Geo. A. Joslin, Mgr.,
Omaha, Nebraska.
GASKELL'S COMPENDIUM
of Social and Business forms, and self
instructor in Penmanship and Book
keeping, is larger, cheaper, and vastly
superior to any similar work published.
Be sure the work you buy is Gaskell's
Compendium, containing500 pages. In
ferior works, one-third smaller, are be
ing sold at the same price. For an
agency, address R. S. Peale,
Council Bluffs, Iowa.
Do You Wish To Know?
1. DO YOU WISH TO KNOW about Kan
sas her people, her homes, her lands, her products, her
towns, her counties and her public Institutions?
2. DO YOU WISH TO KNOW about tha
irondernu climate, the no less wonderful scenery, the
charming summer resorts, the magnificent mines and
the marvelous ero-orth generally of Colorado.
3. DO YOU WISH TO KNOW aoout New
Mexico, which Is Just developing a climate and a mineral
Wealth surpassing eren that of Colorado?
4. DO YOU WISH TO KNOW out Ari
zona, without doubt the richest mineral country In tha
United States, with other advantages of climate and soil ?
6. DO YOU WISH TO KNOW about Cau
fomla and the section of the Golden Mope, both nortS
and south? .
6. DO YOU WISH TO KNOW about Old
Mexico and Its prospects I
7. DO YOU WISH TO KNOW now to reack
these State and Territories easily and quickly?
If these are the thing yem tefcA to know, tcrUe to
Care Q. P. T. A. C. S. OLEED.
A,l8.?.a.B. Topoba. Kitmsii
wall wa
PAPER.
WINDOW SHADES.
METALLIC CENTER PECES.
STORE CUKTAW8-with ;or without plalr
nd artistic lettering a specialty.
Chicago Prices Dnjlicated
Samples of Wall Papers sent on application.
IIEXItY UEIITIAIVrV.
Window Shade Man ifucturer,
OHIAHA. NEB.
Qlx n or our
OS Celebrated
UN-SUN CHOP TEA
sent by mail on receipt
of 82.SO ; or a
SAMl?L.ui or same
on receipt of G cents.
It U the FINrSTTEA
I Imnnrfnl Wnrmnted
tosult all tastes. Postage stamps taken. Tctsifceo.
The Great American lea uo., importer.,
f. O. BOX 4235. 31&33YeseySt.,N.Y
IK0EEASE
IN VALUE!
iRelncMin Price.
Hit) Complete Domestic I!Hli over 2000 lllus
raf ons iiy Dor an-1 other crlebrnted artl'U. The best
BlUe In m-Tira, p ntalnins the most attractive
i-'ure Fcr the most 11 era. terms ever oflered call
in or addiess HI .SIIAKD I1KOS., Book Pub.whers,
16 East 6th street. Kani City, Missouri.
THOMPSON'S EYE f ATEE
This well-known and thoroughly efficient remedj
for diseases of the Eve, has acquired a world-wid"
reputation during the past eighty-five years, and it it
a remarkable fact that this reputation has been sus
tained simply by the Merits or the Medlclm
Itself and not by puffing or extensive advertising. Th
many thousands who have used It will bear testlmon)
to the truth of this statement. Manufactured onlj
by JOHN L. THOMPSON. SONS CO., Troy, Ne
York. Price 25 cents. Sold by all druggists.
THIS NEW
ELASTIC TRUSS
Hat a Fid dlCtrlaz from all othr, t
eap-thip, with SoltAdjUfUti; Bill
in center, wupu iucu 10 ail pouuonj
of til bod?, whIU ti, gill n til
toe Hernia Is hld Mcurtly dir and night, and a radical en re cer
tain. It 1 easy, durable and cheap, gent or mail. CireoUtn
trtfc Eggleston Truss Co., Chlcaflo, III.,
I'l'PCil'f niyai,ijfcW?Mibty"iTltllFit J' i
Pure Water!
WELL BORING & DRILLING.
Tha Latest Improved and Best Machine in tha
World for BORING AND DRILLING WELLS by
HORSE, or STEAM POWER. Catalogua Free
Address LOOMIS 4 NYMAN. TIFFIN. OHIO.
JOHN BAUMER;
JEWELER.
Omaha. Nebraska
AH T? VT C wanted for 1JOROER OUTLAWS.
IXXjjJ X 07-ru-history TocsoKEft JaxmBros,
thenotedoutIaws,tol88l,byJ.W BueL Interviews
n Letters Jrom Cole Younger SlartlingRezeUi.Um
Ov K nitrations. 12 Colored PlaUt Beats every-th-4
11-50. Omfl-JOc B'gPay. DAN. IINA1IAN.
4t)i w tl nt in Avk St liinls. Mo
Send L t I, 4 et
5 dollars for a
box of Joe A
Sam's famoms
candles, strictly
pure and freih.
Finest In Amirt
ca Address Jo
A Sam, 15th St.,
Omaha. Nebr.
A. B. Hubermann,
OMAHA, NEB.
Wholesale Jeweler
Scud yonr orders and save freight.
Pure Water .
WELL BORING AND DRILLING.
The Latest Improved and Best Machine In the
World for BORING AND DRILLING WELLS by
Horse or Steam Power. Catalogue free Addrrss,
LOOMIS & XTMAN-, TIFFIN, OHIO.
TC1Q Choicest in the worl-. Importers prices.
I E Ad iLargest Company in America staplear Icle
pleases everybody trade continually Increasing.
Agents wax ted everywhere best inducements don't
waste time send for circular.
ROB'T WELLS. 43 Verse - St.. N. T.. P. O. Boxl237.
ipgydMd
iiRIIIIWil
Auijli J 0
Mm
KIDNEY DISEASES
are quickly and surely cured by the use of KTDNET-'WOB.T. This new and wonderful remedy whlab. la
having snehaa imTr.ense sale In all parts of the country, works on. natural principles. Xtreatores strength,
and tone to the diseased orsans. and through them cleanses the system of accumulated aad poisonous
humors. Sidney diseaaeaof thirty years standing have been cured, also Pile, Constipation. Bacnm atl sm ,
&c, which have distressed the victims for years. We have volumes of testimony of lta wonderful eurattvs
power. Kb longer use Alchollo Bitters, which, do more harm than good, or drasUo pflls.but use natures
remedy. SHCTEr-WOST, and healta wni be quickly
(VtTII send post paid.)
mu
ERilHEOK.
FOR
RHEUMATISM,
Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Soreness of the Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell
ings and Sprains, Burns ani
Scalds, General Bodily
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Feet and Ears, and all other
Pains and Aches.
Ko Preparation on earth equals St. Jacobs Oil
as a safe, sure, simple and cheap External
Remedy A trial entails but the- comparaUTely
trifling outlay of 50 Cents, and every ons ruffariaf
with pain can have cheap and positive proof of it
claims.
Directions in Eleren Language.
SOLO BY ALL DRUGGISTS ASD DEALERS
IK MEDI0ETE.
A. VOGEUER & CO.,
Baltimore, Jftf., 17. 8. U.
Lay the Axe
to the Root
If yon would destroy the can
kering worm. For any exter
nal pain, sore, wonnd or lame
ness of man or beast, use only
MEXICAN MUSTANG LINI
MENT. It penetrates all mus
cle and flesn to the Tory bone,
expelling all inflammation,
soreness and pain, and healiBg
the diseased part as no other
Liniment erer did or can. So
saith the experience of two
generations of sufferers, and
so will you say when you hYe
tried the " Mustang."
If you are a man 1
nrhninesa.weak- '
Pit you axe a.
' man of let.
tim1 hr tha (train of
ten toilhur over si
your duties avoid
stimulants and use
Hop Bitters.
night work, to res
tors brain nerve aad
waste, use Hop B.
1 suffering from any In
I tlon , If you are mar
It too are Toun IT and
discretion or dusipa
Tied or single, old or
poor health or languish
ness. rely on Hop
?ountr,fBixenng irora
ng on a bed of slck-
I Bitters. . ..
Whoever you are.
whenever you feel 1
Tnousaaojaie an
nually from some
that your system
needs cleansing, ton
lng or stimulating,
without intoxtcatf ng, I
zona 01 Kidney
disease that might
hare been prat en ted
i by a wmeiy use ox
take HOP
Bitters.
nopBitters
Dave you dy.
ptpaux, jnunry
D. I. C.
Is aa absolute
and Irrealsta
bio en re for
orunnarycoij.
jiaint, disease
of the ittmach,
bmrtl. blood,
liver OTntnxti
You will be
cured Ifyou use
Hop Bitters
drunkenness,
use of opium,
tobacco. or
narcotics.
If you are sim
Bold hydro?.
gists. Bend for
Circular.
HeFBRTXU
MTO CO.,
K.Wrr,.T.
ply wen.it anu
low spirited, try
Itt It may
save your
life. It has
saved hun
dreds.
Tmul. One
X'H"F1
K.MQ0FSAWIA8MIIE3
Prlo 99J0O.
$1000
Aft Xtf CASH Is depceriUats
vv '
basic aff&iast any ednr
saw TTHJcrilna In. America. This Is tk
cheapest machina made, and warranted
to saw logs easier and faster than, any
other. We are tha oldest saw inarrilw
fins In America. Any pronitimnt sussv
chant will tell yon we are responxtbl.
Beware of Infringements. Oer circulars
are free. Address,
United SOtes Kunfseturlng Co., Csleago, m.
Onx WELL AUGERS wiU bors s
well 75 feet deep and 2 feet in diameter
in a day. This would clear yon $60 In a
day. Send for our Pictorial Catalogue.
D. S. MAirG CO., Calesge, 111.
Chicago Screw Pulveriser
Puts In Crops at Half the Cost of tis Plo.
Oyer 35,000 Acres put in y liei Ii 1880.
PAMPIILETS FBEE CUTS JL3D LETTEBS.
AiItu' Chicago Scraper & Dltchs. CV
34 Metropolitan Block, Chicago.
lui.-f.MiJ;rriTl
The Beat Cough Syrup l
Plso'a Cure for Consumption.
It acts quick and It tastes good. I
Dose small, bottle large.
Therefore the cheapest as well
as the best. Bold everywhere.
25c. and 81.00 per bottle,
in Mountain Herb Bitters Is a
U Speedy and effectual remedy
A for all diseases of the Stom
U ach. Bowels, and Kidneys
and a certain preventive of Fever and Ague.
Jfl Cough Cure positively a safe.
U certain and speedy cure for colds,
A coughs, croup, asthma, whoop
U lng cough, bronchitis, hoarse-
ne. Influenza. Incipient consumption, and an dis
eases of the throat and lungs 50c per bottle.
Jf Arnica Liniment Is the best
U external remedy that can bt
l used f or Cuts, Bruises, Sprain.
U Rheumatism, Etc
urn
FOR THE HAIR A reliable restora-
tlve and perfect halr-o.essmg'. Free
the head from dandruff, and cures all
diseases of the scalp.
Munufuctured by C. T. &0ODMJLJT, Whole-
aale Drajrglst Omaha, 3Teb., aad Bold b
all Retail Hrnarzlat.
W. N. UM Omaha.
36
When writing to advertisers please say you
saw the advertisement in this paper. .
CONSTSPATICfll
AND PILES.
regained. Get It of your Druggist, Price, II.
Drugg
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BOOB
MM
WELLS, RICHARDSON Je CO.,
stBH?liaztaa, VU