t THE DAILY BEE OMAHA THURSDAY , JANUARY 4 no longer from Dyspop- siaj Indigestion , want of Appctitolos3Of Strength lack of Energy , Malaria , Intermittent Fevers , &c. BROWN'S IRON BIT TERS never falls to euro nil these diseases. IJo ton , N'oember 36 , > 88i. Gentlemen ! For > ear I have I eenaftreaUuflererfrom Dyspepsia , and could get no relief ( haIng tried oerylhlng which was recommend ed ) until , actinic on the advice of a friend , who had been benefitted by HHORN'S IKON HITTER * , I tried a t tile , with most urtirl lnB result * . Previous to taking ItiicmN'A IRON JJmim , everything I ale distressed me , and I uncred greatly from a burning icnutlon In the ttomacn , . which waa unbearable. Since tak ing IlROWN'xInoN lltTTrns , atlmy Iroublet nre at nn end , Canc.it any time without any disagreeable re mits. I am practically another person. Sire. W. J , FLVNN , 30 Maverick St. , U. Boilon. BROWN'S IRON BIT TERS acts like a charm on the digestive organs , removing all dyspeptic symptoms , such ns tast ing the food , Belching , Heat in the Stomach , Heartburn , etc. The only Iroji Preparation that will not blacken the teeth or give headache. Sold by nil Druggists. . Brown Chemical Co. r. t > ' Baltimore , Md , ' See that alt Iron Bitter * are made by llrown/Chcmlcat Co. , Ualtlmore , and liiVc crossed red lines and trade- f mark on wrapper. ' OF IMITATIONS. BALL'S ' 11 CORSETS Every Coroot Is warranted satisfactory - factory to Hawearer In every way , or the tnonoy Trill bo rolundod by tbo poruou from whom it was bouubt. rnioE8j r M II.PO Health Pretcrvlna ; . 1.00 , Hdf.AdJmtlnB , (1.00 Abdominal ( extra heavy ) 99.00. Kun\ag \ , 1.CO ealtlt I'retervlnB ( floe coultl ) te.OU. l'ruaon HUlrt-Hupparllne. 41.6U. ' JT r calo l > r leading Jlctull Dealer * ever/where * CHICAGO COltSKX CO , , Clilcuso , HI. WESTERN CORNICE > WQRKS ! 0. SPEOU.T , Proprietor. ( 1 12 Harnoy St. - Omrlia , Neb , JJANUKAOTUnKUa.OF GalTanized Jro'i ' , CORNICES , ' DORMER WINDOWS , FlNlJ1 Tin , Iron and Slate Koofing j Bpeoht'a Patent Motalio Skyligbl Patent Adjusted Ratchet Bar1 * and Bracket Khelving. I am the general agent for the above line of goods , IRON FENCING. OrMtlngt , Dtluitr dMV rndatlOfnMi Bank Ratlings , Window arid O ll r | Qucrdi ; alio GENERAL AOEN Heliraska Loan & Trust Company HABT1N03 , NED. Capital Stock , - - $100,000. JAS.B. IIEAUTWELL. FroalJcot , A. L. CLAKKE. Vlce-Prodiaent. K , 0 , WEU3TEJI , Tr MUter DIBEOTOnS. Firet Mortgage Loans a Specialty ThU Company furnUhw InBtltutlon ihereBchool Uou ane oer iHUaU Municipal wxwltlc. of NcbrwU an be be negotUt * ! on the moit ' 0.r wl' J an.Tnaelo on lmpro e-l - lariru la " * " , coantlcaol tliesUie , IhrounU rcapoiuibJe corrtgpondenU. SaiuelC.Davis&Co. DRYLGOODS JOBBER IMPORTERS. I Wanhington : Ave. and Fifth St. IT. LOUIS MO * ALL ABOUT A BONNET. How Several Mammoth Trunk Caused Unpleasant Foreign Complications. A. Milliner Uota the Beat of the OtiBtom HOUSP , with the Aid of a Society Lady. How His Excellency' * BtvggtiKO WUB Lnndocl. Nc Vork .Journnl. llo wM standing on a steamboat piur near the foot of Canal street , loaning ngalnat a pile nf boxes nnd lot king nt the Omtom IIouso ofllccrs Retting ready to examine the baggage of a steamboat about stringing into the dock. lie had hla hands in hit pock- eta , and Ms coat collar waa turned up over his oars. Ilia face was oh'adcd by a huge sombrero , pulled down over his nose , and In his mouth the only part of his face visible was a fat olgnr that ho puflod vigorously , en veloping the upper part of his body in a cloud of smoke. Now and again ho would look up the street as If waiting for some one. but waiting without the slightest anxiety. Asa Journal re porter was making his usual round of the docks , ho casually asked him what steamer was getting docked. This led to a conversation during which the reporter Baked about smuggling I ain't good at ghost stories , and I guets 1 won't toll yon how n bonnet came mighty near breaking up our friendly iclaMons with a big foreign country , and how silk was imported in barrels and marked oat meal , or how a box as big as a barn got to bo as small aa a pound-o'-candy box 'twlxt the pier and the pubito stores , and how "Y sl I ku&w what I am saying. It came near to being a foreign war about ; a bonnet , and the job was put up by a woman , too , nno of these French mil liners what comes from Ireland. This ono waa a corker , and don't you forget it. She landed barefooted at Cwtlo 'Garden , and now the country ain't good enough for her and the kids. "Right you arc I They o to school In Europe ; that is , they did , for they are gtcwn now ; but the kids got noth ing to do with the story. They are having a Hvly time working thorn- solves into Knickerbocker society. They sometimes got there , and then some old customers of the Madamo'a 'blows' on them. "No ! I Ain't a drinking hero. Tain't Wad onotcgh. I takes my liquor in the purser's room. Nothin' moan tityout a purser , you know ; ho will sfifog a bottle of the steamship com- palw's brandy at you as soon aa look at Vou. V TUB DELUEIVJC MILMNEK , " 6h , yes ! Well , you no ? , this mill ! nor is ono of the creamery kind. It won't do to walk into her shop with out cornin ? in a coupe ; and change won't do , either , ' you must have i boodle , or nixy bonnet you got out o that place , Well , this ono goes t Paris twice n year , and when she ia on the ocean she rumalr B in her cabin th entire voyage , putting np the mos infernal rackets to bo sprung on th Custom Honao. k "In the wet ! old times , when w could pick uj a stamp on the dock she wonld skip on the piers like fourteen-year-old kitten , and waltz ute to the man as had her goods in a how do-you-do my-friend sort a way , an she would Rive him moro tafiy In a minute tlUn my girl can got away with in week. Her broker an all ured sr R ono ho was would shut his lef Bye and stand picking his toothJIWolI , the end of that would ' dtty would bo paid on thor _ r and the broker would divvy o'of hundred in a friendly beer nround the corner , .lorn days are no moro , You got a tip of u oouplo of sovs. now ' 9 you got a handful of double "a then , The old woman grlovod when the old game was played and next time eho crossed she put her head in soak' and when * d reached Liverpool aho had ovory- Mug arranged , and aho worked it , too , the queen's taato. A CUNNINO THICK. "When she came back , instead of coming like a omall hurricane , ohe 'slid into her own back door , and the ilrst thing she naked was how much a certain society lady owed her. When the bookkeeper said over $1,000 she made out that she fainted , but afore she reeled over she gasped that the bill mast bo sent at once , and a letter written that she would bo brought into court next day if it wasn't paid. "Tho society woman was just the high notch , swell conneotiona all around , with ancestors 'way back to the follow a cocquered England , and with lota ot them this side what fit In ; ho revolution and made bad laws , 3ho was a screamer , and when she got that notn she went into a conniption it , beoauio she didn't have much of an Income anyway , and she owed most everybody from landlord to batcher. Wolf , when she comes to , down she goei to Madame , and uforo she comes out again the has scooped in A new bonnet and lota of other things and she is la-laughing like a baakot of chips , Now , young man , that there oonilab cost Uncle Bam many thoutand dollars , nnd to this day pretty high ollioials [ are kept awake at ninht thinking about it. Yon too the old Rlrl was right up in the rovenno laws. You couldn't fool her worth a cent. Cully , she had the thing down to the finest point , and no "trip" ever worked Its way on her. "Well , you disturb mo. A 'trip * is a triplicate invoice which the consul keeps , and which ho sends over to the custom house. A follow is kept there comparing them , and when u 'trip1 shows up without any entry having boon made , trouble will come quick , dolly , " Well , you see the law stands thai n minister plenipotentiary can got all his thing * into port free of duty. KG marked 'Personal Effects,1 and the1 secretary ot the treasury puts his name on the bill of lading and the thing ii done , Well , that olauso in the revenue laws always tickled the madame , but as she couldn't work the racket on a full-Hedged minister , representing an other power herself , she brooded on tbo voyage M io tow bo could be reached. When she struck the nam of the society woman she struck ; righ vein , for the descendant of tin blno blood was high-cockalorum wnl all the foreign embassies. After the cot ft tb with the nindnn the society woman go s to Washing- ington , and about a week after shi comes back to madame , with a smal visiting card , with n crown on it and coat of arms with quartering * cn < ro h to sink ft lino-o'-battlo ships. Well. madame just snatched on to that card and poked it down into the further depth of her pocket. When she wont away the next time I kind o' noticed she lookfci Ekocred Hkc , but when she ciimn back she was juat about aa palo an a whlto cat. By and bv I noticed two trunkn coma ashore. I have scon trunks , but I never naw the ikca o' these. A coal bin wouldn't 30 a patch to them. When I looked at the mark I couldn't help feeling iko taking off my hat. Ench ono o' hem had a coat of arms in colors and mdorncath was marked 'Ilia Excel- nncy , the Minister Potontlary and Jnvoy Extraordinary * Ac. , eto. , Ac. By and by the pupers comes down all straight and the trunks wont off , nd I didn't think anything more bout It. Well ! it weren't long baforo tve found that the trunk had qono to ho society lady , and then to ladamo'a back door. Do you need more than a block to tnmblo on youl 'hen ' trunks should have paid 30- , 00 duty. HUSHED ur. "Done ! What could bo done ? The ffivcs of the highest officials in the onntry had bonnets made of things liat came by that trunk , and bless ou the funniest thing ia that they aid for them , every mother's BO a of dom. You bettor believe there was mnas about it , acd it ain't done yet. rhoy have boon trying to put this nd that together for a long time. The ninister daresn't poach oh the society iro'man , and she has heaps of friends , nd big ones , too , willing to back hor. t was a mighty smart dodge that , nd it fooled the whole caboodle of hem , from the collector down , "Do I know how often she did it' No , I don't , and I won't toll either nrhowas the Collector , or what Bocro- ; ary signed the papers. Same day yon will hear a powerful noise about them trunks. "Maybeth'o Minister has asked , for bis passport and maybe ho hasn't. urn through with my job. " And then a carriage cominp from the pier passed close to , Jiira and stepped - pod , and m it ho jumped. As the horses started with their big load of trunks , in front and behind , ho put his head out of the window and whis pered : "It's all hunky , Cull } ! Don't glvo it nway. Arthur knows too much about the Custom House ; and what ho don't know Lydecker ia sure to bo on to. ' Maybe as how Sherman might tell you the reaU" Ta ! to ! And then the carriage whirled up West-Broad way , and the reporter was unable to find the name of the man with the sombrero. Faotn About the Oregon Pnoiflo 'ortlaml ( Oregon ) Correspondence , At n time when Oregon enterprise land so well in the money markets o .ho world , It would bestrantjo if som < unreliable ashemes should not bo devised vised here to empty the plethoric pcrso of the publo of the oast. Years > go "Bon" Halladay pursued a rook- ess course ia connection with railroad uililinfr in Oregon. Ho BOOtl for oiled the rropoct of capitalists and 'aatoncd disgrace on our state. The result waa prejudicial. It required all the financial genius of Mr. Vil- * ard , ton years later , to restore confidence - fidonce and enlist capital to proeoeutc his present successful enterprises. Wo can not ogain afford to permit our peed [ name to auiFor opprobrium. When at Seattle n few days ugo , on Puget Sound , I mot a lady of high standing , lately returned from Now York , who questioned mo concerning the Oregon Pacific railroad. She in formed mo that her friends at the eaat wore investing in the securities of that corporation. One paroon had invested $50,000 , slip said , and other friends , who could ill-nflbrd to lose wore intending - tending to purcharo of the name. My opinion of the corporation WAS plainly expressed , and elicited such aatouish- meut that it may bo well for all east ern Investors to know. THE FACTS IlEIIAIiniNO. TUB COlll'ANY. The Oregon Pacific scheme or en terprise proposes to connect the In- tenor cities of this valley with tide water on Yaqulna Bay , CO to 75 miles distant , promising to develop there an important seaport and create another outlet than the Columbia river for the commerce of the Willamette valley , so giving the farmers of the upper coun ties a nearer , cheaper and moro con venient shipping point and resulting competition. Of courto , this scheme was hailed with enthusiasm by valley producers Flattering promises have been made and broken year after year. Even the people most directly interested are disgusted with this falsehood , though some work is con stantly done and small progress made. Not knowing where the money comes from , wo had a belief that great rail road capitalists had the matter In hand and would puih it through. Fresh inspiration is given it by the hot that a loading journal , for some occult reason , lately sent a brilliant correspondent to the spot. He do ; plated its progress and possibilities in glowiticr terms , and the case with which Yrqulna bay could become a afo entrance and capacious harbor for the navita of commerce. The schema of the Oregon Pacific railroad is , after reaching the Willamette rlVer and connecting with valley townr , to push eastward over the Cascade mountains , through Middle Oregon to Boice City , In Idaho , to meet there a trans continental road , with which to form a connected Hue from ocean to ocean. In the near future a great seaport is to bloom on Yaqulna Bay the western terminus of this new system of conti nental roadr whence good steamora shall ply the ocean coastwiao and to ABB ! , and gather in the "wealth of Ormui and of Ind. " I have merely sketched here , without hyperbole , the magnficonoo of promieo hold out by these projectors ? This enterprise , if feasible , posses ses unusual attractions. Jut the success of this enterprise , as muit be apparent , depends upon the poasibil' ity of developing A GOOD liAHPOlt AT YAQUIXA BAY. If ships cannot enter there no rail road c n create commerce there ot which to pay interest and make divl donds. The most favorable report , wore published , and they called ou the suggestion that a simple test o the whole question would bo to com pare the figures given by oorrespon donla of the capacity of Yaqnina Bay with official data procured from the olllco of the United States ongincois In this city , who have in char o im * provimonta making by the govern ment at that point. Gapt. Powell , the cfllior in charge , though a strang er , furniehed ma the information mation desired from reports of his predecessors , and from tnapi and charts made DV the Coast Survey and United States ISnuinocrs between the years 18(18 ( and 1881 , inclusive. It WAB lately pub- ishod and meet probably the istno n question In used largely te in tin- onot ) thoan who have money to invest n Now York that the entrance to Ynquina Bay Is n otraighfc channel 2,000 feet long ; but Government sur. vnys for those years say the bar is 2 700 foot scrota and the channel Is very crooked ; it in claimed tint the nner bay is six miles long , with a depth of from 4 td 8 fathoms (21 ( to18 eot ) , when the fact , as shown by sur- nya and ooiindlnRB , Is that it is but I miles long , with only 18 feet depth ; no width of the inner bay for ( ! miles s said to bo 1,200 , feet , broadening to wico that , and -I to 8 fathoms depth , while the charts show that , with only 8 feet of water , it is from 275 to 050 oet wide , the latter only at ono single roint , and the average width Is about 00 foot , insufficient in any single spot n the whole bay to permit an ordinary norchaut ship to Ho safely at anchor , t IB asserted that the bar can bo oasi- y and cheaply deepened to any re- uircd depth , but the reports f Col. Gillespio , 1KH1 , show an stlmato of $405,000 as the cat of running out a jetty of stone 3,000 foot , with intent to confine the nrrent , so as to provo what effect it san have toward deepening the on- ranco. Those .reports and common observation of any ono on the spot show that there Is a wide reef of rocks visible on the north and south shore cor responding with the bar across the en trance. The natural supposition is that this rocky ledge underlies the en trance and la the permanent cause of the bar. At the rate of progrets making thin stone wall will bo finished about 18'JO , and not sooner. By its aid it is possible that engineers may bo able to decide the character- and degree - groo of underlyipg rock lodge , and de termine the best means for its re moval. No [ < improvement of consequence quence CHn bo expected at Vaquina before 1890 , and by that time it will likely bo shown thatmillions of money will bo required to remove the rock "edge and enable vessels of deop-s.'a 'raught to enter thnro. Got Rich When Hopj are § 1.26 per Ib. as ow , an aero will yield $1,000 profit , md yet the best family Medicine on iarth , Hop Bitters , contain the same quantity of Hops and are sold at the sumo price fixed years ago , although Hops now ore twenty times higher than then. Raise Hops , get rich in pocket ; use Hop Bittern and net rich n health. Byebrpwa alade to Order. Now Or.carAl'fca > unc. At clvln " ' " a "professor's" artificial eg , armJNoao , and eyebrow factory y esterdj , Xj pnjnbor of 3-onnx nvnoo were' working at small tables , each table covered with little instruments and thinjw , the likes of which I had npver soon before. At one table t\ro girla were threading needles with fine , illky hair , and sowing them in little quaros on a thin , transparent gauze. "Theoo girls , " said the professor , 'aro making aoino of those beautiful rchod eyebrows you may sometimes eo in ball rooms. These sewed on ho not are the less expensive kind , and are only used on Especial occa ions. The real brow is very oxpen ive and can only bo made by a par on of great skill. " I bogged him to ixplnin the operation of giving a por- ; on eyebrows who wao born without horn , and , loading mo into an ele antly furnished parlor' in which was a Inrgo dentist's chair , continued : The patient sits hero. In this qushion o my loft are stuck a ecoro or SD of hose ni'e'dlos yon saw being threaded , Each stlcth only leaving two strands f hair , to facilitate the operation a lumber of needles must bo at baud. Aa uach thread of hair is drawn hrough the skin over the eye it is ut BO that when the first stage of the ppratlnn is over it leaves the hairo iriatllng out an inch or so , presenting rngtjed , porcupine appearance. Now emus the artistic work. The brow must be arched and out down with .ho utmost delicacy , and a number o lours are required to do it. " "It must be very painful and to lioua. " "Thoy don't say that it is a picnic xcursion , " laughed the professor ; 'but eyebrows , small ai they are , are very important in the make-up of the * aoe. Yon have no idea how odd ono ooks when utterly denuded of hair over the eyes , The process I have described ia painful , but it makes good eyebrows and adds 100 per cent to the looks of a person who wax without them. It is , too , much - bet ter than the blackening and coimotici so many people use , especially people who have moro presence of brows , comprising only a few colorless hairs , " "Do your sowod/through-tho tkin eyebrows last ! " "For years. " _ * Dn. B. 8. BKITTAN , says : 'As a rule physicians do not , by tlioir pro fessional methods , build up the female constitution , while they seldom cure the disaaacs to which it is always lia ble in our variable climate and under our imperfect ivilizitlon. Special remedies are often required to restore organic harmony and strengthen the enfeebled powers of womanhood ; and for most of these wo are iudobtad to persons ontsldo of the medical pro fession. Among the very best oj these remedies I assign a prominent plaoo to Mrs. Lydia E , Plnkham's Vegetable Compound. " BuokUn'e jft-rmea Halve. The BKST BALVI In the world ( or Outi , Brulsca , Bores , Ulcert , bait Rheum , Fe ver Borm , Tetter , Obtpped Handr , Cbll blaius , Oorn , and all ikui eruptlouo , and positively curai piUi , It ii guttMiteed tc give tatUfooUon axney re handed I'rioo , 25 oe&U pet exor uU by 0 v Qoodiu n PROF. SUMS , OPTICIAN . OF QUINOY , ILLINOIS , Has returned to Omnha ( for a abort time ) , where only ho can bo con- suited at parlor ii , PAXTON HOUSE. Prof. Sa'muola cflora to nil ihoao thit are suffering from Weakness and Dofectivn sight hlo .IMPROVED CRYSTAL SPECTACLES ! Superior to any other iu nae , aa tbo following homo evidence of well- known people of this city nnd vicinity will toatify. TESTIMONIALS. Cotvcit. BiUfs , IOWA , ) December 21 , 1 S2. f Prof. II. Samuels : Dear Sir Some two jcnrs nmlnlialf slnctijou \ Isltcd this city , nnd at that time 1 uiis troubled with inyocf , cauacd bj cxccsshc proof-reading and other offlco \ \ ork to buph an extent that ! could nt times hardly rend , study or decipher pUln print without trtiuentlj | resting them. You adjusted a pair of glassi 3 for mo that are ntxt 10 Indispensable , and I hate nohcsltancv In rcconv mending persons to jcu who maj to troubled uithniak tjis. Yours triilj , J. C. MOHOAN , Editor and 1'iiljlisher Globe. Coiscil. UM.VH , Februarj Hi lt > 80. I'rof. Samuels : , Dear .Sir I fec Uiat I would bo unem'eftil In deed it I ilidnot.ln seine manner express my gratitude teuyou for Uui wonderful bencfltade- rhcd from the uso'of Aour glasses adjusted to niyejcsbyj-ou.'ilhat trled other tfiisatsniid mcnis , butnllf.toTnoJparpose , ami 1 had concluded - cluded niyscltidoonicd to yo ifirtugh the world nearly" nghtle'fS ; but \ihorcos Iws nearly blind , now I sec , ftt.il am nblc to read as I neer could before. 1 rcRrtt that I had no inut Prof , bam- uela sooner , to that I mljpit ha\o been cnjojlnz this blessing of seeing. Hoping that manj others ma > hae the benefits of jour help , Iain , gratefullj yours.JIISS JIISS ABBY WALTON , Nnree. While on the I'ad Re coast jcara nn'0 I bscaniu partial ! ) blind , and mj rlc'ht cjo his ncir re- io\crcd. 1 bate trio nunibcra of tlmiM to get glas c8to lulp mo , also othir rcnudlci. but It was of no use , as no one tould bclp me. When I rot. n rou i cunttiiaiitiu. . . V vi-Aniiii thought that it w.uld do no lann In tr > inj ; hln7 and tie what he would fcij. He examined my ccn and told me that ho lould ual.o me s.e , not withonc , but with liotli ouy. I told him to go on and make mo sec , as Iliad gl > cn up the Idea of eter belli ? ablu to sco well again. To 111 } Wrpri ( > o ho made mo a pair of glasses that en- nb'isino to eeo with m > right cjv as well as with the other , I will eheeifu'l ' } reiommend him to all thosu that hate g\\en \ up hopcu. Voura , with yoou sight , 01:0. : K. oriisoN , Heiald Olilco. Om h , Nib. , I ) e mberSO , 1882. I used to h o % ir.w . oak ej 13 and tried a great nnn > things for reliefbut It was all In vain. \Sheii Prof. Samuels was In thuiit ) a few jcara a0'n I wasad\l > e1 bj one of mj frieii BMbo waa hetitlltul b.\ him to mil on him , I done so , and am clad to etatei that ho helped me wonderfully. Ho titled mo at that timu wltb a pidrof his glaiiiica , and the } truc : me liihtant relief , and ft < r iisln/ them for n i-hort time my ti > cs Im- iro\ed ho that I had no uio for tbu glassoi at all. < Ij Blglu In perfect , although I wan adUjed not a put on glifcses , for I would lia\o to wear them II the tlino ; but Prof. .Samuels' gh-8cs work Illferent. Thej improved my ojes. and I would .dvlBo all pcibons who have trouble with their : jcs to call on him. llcapcctfiillv , A. T. .SWIOAUT , Citj 1'o.ic ; , Omaha. December 15. OMAIU , September 18 , 1STO. Somecars since , while engaged In editorial labor at night , im cjetlght becnmo Impaired , iml I found It dlllleult to find ghusos whteh would stlonl any relief. During the past two or throa jearn my e-jcc grew weaker b ] constant use- , and 1 began toboalanned lent 1 ujl ht for atliiiu bo obliged to laj addomy liookn , wh eh I BO lunch delight In. Prov Idcnee , 1 think , baa klndl ) aldttlmobv bemllii Irhaimul8 to tills Uiy. Dyu-oofbla improved crjstal ( .latjcs for several da ) I find the natural vl ion restored , lud I am now able to read and study as mm has please without tlrln ? the ejuoreauelng pain. tcccma wonderful tbatsuinaii illect can be produud In BO short a time , and I lave no doubt t will bu permanent. I am glad Prof Samuels hai visited thlaelty where BO man ) need the aid he em atlord'thcni and I hope Ida ulmses will bo introduad and c\ temlvely use-d lure. K. H. E-JASU ON , Pastor J iitt Baptist Chureh. OniiA , NeV. . Deeember 1 ? , I8t2. Prof , H. Samuels ; DtarStr I have now ueul tbo glatuoa with which jou furnished me for ooe week and can truly eay that I have derived more comfort In that short fpaco of time than In j earn prov Ions Almost from 1115 earliest recolleetions I have suffered from in Inability to sio dUtluUly even when eloso b ) , bomctlmeii filled to know or rcc oolite m ) most Intimate friends , all ofvldeh an a constant sourei ) of morlllliatlon to me. ] trlixl rimedlet und Klasscsof ililTerint kinds with butj very little benefit and until 1 con salted jfu.detmedmy ease hnptlciis Thanks to jour skill , I urn able to mo better than fie before , Trj l'iol. bamucU' treatment and In bwnflted I hue been. Vcrv truly vourH , MAUY IIUSAUD , JWU Uurotur btreet ARTIFICIAL EYES ALWAYS OK HAND. OFFICE DOUUS : 0 a , m. to V P. & > Prof. Samuels doe * not attend t buaiuou outside of bli room * , and ha no one connected with him. A. comlitnalloti of JVn , , , o" * ° * fV > c. itr , ' JL'rostratfon of vital ' JE'oicers vlOt BEV. A. I. OIOJ3U3 WrHos- : Aftnr n thorough trial of the _ _ . _ UtON TONIO , I taito plcasuro rfic U5tt ys : In atntintr that I have boon ILDOEU5tt 'I1 con"l < lor It Kiortv. . Xonontoa by Ha ILDOE ft most excellent remedy for uso. Ministers nnd JPub- > the debilitated vital forces. lie Speakers will find it of the greatest vnluo where n Tonic is nccoa- nary , I rccommoiul It aa n rollablo romodlal nrront , possessing un * tloubtoa nutritive nnd restorative rroportlcs. ' 2 , 18-2 , rsiPASEPBrT&BPR.HARTJBR MEDICINE CO. , 213 H. IIA1U W. , CT. LOB10. T. -Beo wisr : & oo Boots and Shoes. OMAHA , NEB. . A. WAKEFIELD , WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IM .ath , Shingles , Pickets , , , BLINDS , MOLDINGS , LIME , CEMEN rWLWAUKKE CKMKNT OOHPANTJ iflc DeDot. OMAHA N 8 TCDff PAINTS , OILS , and Plate G'ass. ' TAnyone conteD H bulldlng etore , b nk , or ny other flnt will Ond It to their d nUgeto corres end H'boforo purchwlng tholr Plato Glass. F , GOODMAN , NEB. & ALE AND JOBBERS IN Flourjp rwa Sugars , Cannedff Goods , and " a fr | | Grocers' Supplies. a * i of the Best Brands offer for BENWOOD NAILS AND L1FLIN & BAND POWDER CD. > POWER AND HAND Steanljlutiips , Engine Trimmings , 'clJINa , nOSE , BUABS AND IRON FIITINOS PIPE , ItSta. Jfo5lWo ! ! AT W60LUBALE AND RETAIL. HALLADAY WD1LLS GHURCHEAND.SCHOOLMLL9 , Cor. Farnfei and IQjfli Streets Omaha , Neb. -DEALERS IN- HALLS SAFE AND LOCK GO. Fire and Burglar PPJD 1020 Farnham Street , IE1. O. WHOLESALE GROCER 1213 Farnam St. . Omaha. PERFECTION HEATIHG AND BAKING ia only attained by nalng Stoves and Ranges. " WITH WIRE GAUZE ' OVER DOOBS , "For Bale byj M1LTOH ROGERS & SONS