2 THE DAILY BEE-UMAHA , TIlUllSDA , DECEMBER 27 , 1883. . Koynl , Kicli , iced In this country \yc arc nil kings , and \vc nrc all entitled to have 03 blood as that which courses Seed irough the veins of emperors. . i There are princes and million * aircs languishing in feebleness and broken-down bodily health who would be glad to have the strength of the humblest laboring man. And there arc many people who arct neither kings , emperors , nor millionaires , whose blood is thin , vhose circulation is poor , who arc suffering from lassitude and dcoility , and who know not the pleasure of a hearty meal , ' nor the enjoyment of being .able to do a good day's work. Ifsfich people will put some iron into their blood , they will vitalize and enrich it. They can do this by the use of Brown's Iron Bitters , the purest and most excellent iron med icine ever made. Thousands who were weak , languid , pale , and pros trated , arc now happy to say that Brown's Iron Bitters brought them up and jjavc them new life. 5 U/lAUi Dr. IM C.WraT'i Nrnvi : AND Hnu.v WENT , n iiunmntood pociflo for lljptnnn , Dizsl. iiois , OmvulnioiiH , J''in ' ! , Ntnni.o Nonrnlirin , HemhchnNervous rrciHlritlon cnmt < l nylhoiioo nfnlcnhol or tolncpo , WnLi'tulncsn , JtlMitil Jo- liroHsioii , BofteniMKof tl o Jlrnm roniilllm ; in in. oinity mill InndlnR to misery , ilocny nnd ( Until , I'remnturo Old ABO , Jlnrrcnnciw , J.i < n nf jiowor in oitlinr nnx , Inrolittitnry Ixxi pn inn' Upornmt. orrliccn cnuswl byiivpr xortlon of lliolirain.iclf. rtbimn or oTpr-indulRoricn. liicli box conlium onomniitirHln'.ilniniit , $ l.niu liiisliri > lx IHIIO forS.'i.OO.dontliymnil jirepaUloii roccipt of price. \VK OUAHAX'I'IU : MIX ISOXEIS To euro nnjr cnso. With oncli order rrcrlvod liyue lor six IHIXPH. nccompnnipd willi $ WO , wu will eond the purcliOKPr o.irvrllli'il ( innrmiloo to refund - fund thu money it tlm troatmoiailoos not effect acufo. OnnmntcwH inHticdcilvhy C. F. OOODifAN. BoIo'A OR , FELIX LE BRUN'S Th rcmrdy being Injected directly to the scat he ciEif , roiulroq ( no change of diet or nauiooin , Dcrcnnal or polionouo modlclno ] to bo taken Intern. lyV'hcn uot ] aa a preventive by either aax , It Is Impo3 < it > lo to contriust any private UUOABO ; but In the c JH ) ol these already unlortuiiatoly ainictod n o cuar. antco thico boxes to euro , or wo will reluiid the money. Prloo by mall , poBtago paid , 92 par b x , or three boxoa ! dr $0. . \VUTrTEM GOARANTEKS un j by all autUorlcodJagenta. Br.FelixLeBruu Co C. F. Goodman , Drujslflt , Sole Agent , for Omahk Rah m&o wly CBTORi. Airrim , TjlLTXTTUO VOLTAIO IIKI.T , nnd otlirr Kuornio ft AmiANCM. Wo will wnd nn Thirty Dart * Trial , TO MKN , YOUNO Oil OLD , who are nufTcrlnir from NKRYOPS ImiiUTr , Lost ViTALrrr. nnd these ctlKaici u ( a 1'sasnXAb KiTunx ri'niiltlni : from REUSES anil OTIIKU CAUIU , 8p ly rrllnf nnd coin- ; > lota rci-ionuion to UKALTII , Viooti nnd MAHUOOD Tendatonowr Irra. VOLTAIC BELT Go ! JARSHALL , Mica DE. WHITTIER , 617 St. Charles St. , St , Louis , Mo. A REQULAK OHADUATE o ( two mpilloal oolloKCi .zLtiAibooii enintffcd longer In the treatmout ol CIIKONIO , NKIIVOU8 , HKIN AND BLOOD UltoaaM thin other plijsldau In Ht. LouisBjcltaicr9 | ] liow ml all old roaldontl know. OonsulUtlou ( rro Im IU'1. When It Ii Inconvenient to visit the city troatnieut , meillclnoa can bo eent by mall or oxjircj overywhoro. Curablocnson Kuarantoixlwhi ; > redou exhU It Is frankly ttatod. Call or write. Norvom 1'fOBtratlon , Doblllty , itcntal and I'hyMoa Weaknoga , Mercur&l and otlier uflocllonsot Thrott Ing , Skin AIToctlnni , Old Korea mul Uloora , linpodl- menu to niarrlago , IthuumatUm , > 'llo . H | > cdil at tontlonto vaea Irom ovorworkcd brain. BUUUIOAt- OA8KH receive ) > oclal uttontlun. Dlouuso arUlng Irom Imprudence , Kxcoaei , Indiilgonom. 200pa ogthewhol ; * tor ) well toliLMaay reoolpts : who may . marry .wnoinaynot , ua OB , raiiMiiueuoos and cure. Mallod lor 2 o ; criUmpik ecpt ZO-dawlr I -Hj.aOT | nCM' - QO HJ tOl-IHjgQwjJB : f ? " * * " * * LJ * * * ? S I | s0QSpSggS ? { | in , K , OCCIDENTAL JOTTINGS , Thollrtdgcr mine * hnvo txion sold to Mltlil gnu parttcfl for 810,000. Jumping n tmnrdlnp lioii'o between two clays in cillod "a llombuntlcAtlon" In Choy. on ti o. Artlcloi of Incorporfttlon hnro been filed for llio Wo.irol.ho Stock company , with ft cnpl tnl of JflOO.OCO. Kiva hundred ROJ-ICM and ( ho hundred hot ( "prltiRS nro reported M In the Yellowstone Isntlntml jmrkby the government mirvoyorg. The KodnMeposlU near Pine mnuntnin have been Bold to representatives of tlio Wyoming , Ycllowfttono l'ark & I'nclfio railroad. The doposlU cover 200 acres , nnd the chnrActcr ol tha iiodn Iiintd to hn mnnowlmt different from the numcrmifl other deposit * ) In the territory , and moro \ftltinblo. The ptloo wni 81,000. Tha city council of Cheyenne Imi grnntod n chatter to n can company. It confers no ox- clnsho jithlieffos , lltnltx the prlco to $ .1,50 per 1,000 ciililo foot , and requires the compiny to conmionca the erection of Its worku by.July lot , 1881. This Hill ban ( crlous blow to the monopoly onjnycd by The Lender and Sun. ' Dnltola. Aurora county contains 400,800 acres. Huron hax rained $18,000 for n Hour mill , Wheat . \t Watertown sells for BO > only-one conU. lliirloiirh county IIM expended 820,283,8-1 ilurliif ? 1BS3. Jamestown has 123 scholar * enrolled 111 Its publlo Kchools , Buffalo county can find room for 5XX ( farmer * next year. Lumber Is on the Rnmnd for n , Methodist church at 11 Ighmuro. 1'nrRo claims building operations thin year amounting to (000,000. A ? 2."i,000 llonrluK mill is [ to bo ibullt near Frankfort next Hummer. WooiiRoclint. In Hanborn county , Is the youuKoftt wonder in Dakota cities A now railway Imi boon projcctod along the JaniCH rhcrvnlloy in Brown county. Diphtheria has linen fatally ncoiirgintf the youth of the lower Vcrmllllonalloy. . Thohooknof the Huron land olliconliuw that : ' ,000,000 acres of land have boon taken up during the pnst year. Over n thouinnd tonsof tlax straw U Htackocl In the vicinity of the Scotland tow mill , and thu dally receipts average fifty tons. Scotland will hn\o n choose factory next spring. Instead of farmers throuIng milk to tha doRH thorenftor they will chocso It. Tlio prospects of organising a stock com pnny In Sioux Falln for the CHtabllBlimont of a foundry and machine shops nro being can \assod. A choono factory "will , bo built at Marion Junction , to bo put in operation early in tha spring. Tlio Hiimo firm will alee build at Scotland. The tinman rhor In Dakota Is snld to bo the longest i i vor that Is not navigable in the coun try , if not in the world. Itn length in pivon as nearly 1,000 mllun. Upwards of 770,000 buslioln of grain have been marketed in Castlowood this fall. A ntcam flouring mill would bo acceptable to the paoplo of Castlowood. During the month of November , the ship ments of grain from the MaJlnon depot were iw followH : Wheat , 2,000,000 bushels ; flax , 300,000 bushels ; oats , S..r > 0,000 bushel * . All tlio counties of South Dakota , east of tlui Mimouri rhoraro now organized except ing I'otter and Buffalo. Nearly all tha coun ties of North Dakota arc also nrgnnbed. Judgn Kdgorton han granted an injunction reslnilnini ; the city of Sioux Falls from Inter fering with the erection of the polox of the telephone company in the streets of Sioux Falls. Aberdeen Htatulu a chance of getting n tin- vemlty. A Chlcngo gentleman pioposos to glvo that city 9100,000 as an endowment fern n university to cost 810,000 , if the Aberdeen people will build it. The Bismarck Dally Capital has suspended. The first number was issued August 15 , and the modest experiment to eutablifh a nocond dally paper in Bismarck cost The Capital man a not lo s of'2,000. Colorado. Canon City lion moro churchcx than saloons. Groeloy ha ehlpi Inif potatoes to Topeka , Kansas. The smoltomof Colorado have about 100,000 tons of oru on liand. Durango is making matter * very sultry for the hip-pocket fiend. Del Norto in Rmillng over the premise that she Is to hnvo ft sush , door and blind factory in the npring. Under the Vlalno distribution plan Cole rado's share of the whisky fund v < 111 amount to about 8300,000. Fort Colllnn' farmers are cnmilliur their wheat into the Chicago market * ) at the rate of uuveral car loadit dally. Sunday in Leadvlllais the greatest day in the week. Kvcrybody and everything cuts IOOHO and athletes and ptigllisU jiro In their element. Another Industry li to bo added to the ro- tioiirccH of ( iiiniiirton county. A nilno of Rait has Just boon illncmorod within two hours' i Ida of that city. Sterling Is rapidly becoming headquarters for cattlu and sheep owners of that region. The merchants say tint business with them In exceptionally good , Colorado ( lour U now competing in thu omit- orn murketu with that produced by tha states im.st of them. This in the ronult of tha recent reduction in freight rates on flour between Colorado polntH and the oast. Denver Journal of Commerce t The great est and fprandostcattlo show of the world will bo Imld ut Denver tha coming summer. Bo- \\nei \ from Scotland , Franco and the Nether lands \\lll bo prou'iit. The completion of the San Juan flouring mill iimkcs Durango imo af the best wheat market * In C'olor.ulo. The fanner * of La Tluta county are preparing to put in humlrmli of acres of ulm.it next no ison , Homo follow stuinbloil out of > Biiloon In Denver tha other day , on to the sidewalk , striking his head on an iron railing close ut hand. Ho WON ipilto badly Htunned , but HOOII recovered , and mi they picked hint up Bald : " "iSi-usn inn , gommmi. didn't 'tend tcr utrlko anybody * ncu o me thU tlnio. " The editor of tha Denver Tribune morrlod a Chicago lady lust spring. Now the Tribune MIVH editorially : No Olitcaso lady should at tempt to do "lolwithe. " The itlrls of that city are not falrieis. and never will bo. They may do very well "from the hip up , " but Ilko Croi > huii'H , thtir nether bxtramiticH am fright fully mortal. The modes of killing In San Juan \ar w Uh each town. In Sih orton they pull thei gunn nnd elioot until one drops ; in Our ay the clioKO the \lctlm into the hills nnd hire u IIIAI tn go and kill him ; inDuranuo men are fount deailMn the \lclnlty of Hlco men uro nho tbrou h their doors nt night : In L ika Clt , they drop from u bridge ; in Dot Norto the ; lynch 'oni , tlmrik you. C'utllUruln. Btociton In forming a Cremation tocloty , A 400.Kiuiul | cinnamon hoar wan trapped o < tlm outskirts of Noi.vda City lut week. Sarah Gallagher died In Sacrament 01 Tlii'mday last , at tlio ngo of 100 years , bh u robtho of i'otur DonoUuo of Hun At Lo Angeles , Col. , a man a nrroitoc ono morning for thult , be ( ere noon ho woa tried , comic to J ami uontoncod to tun yi'ttin linpritomiieiit. The Ban Joaqtiln nnd Blerra Nevada rat road Ii the drat road In the UU > that him pal 1U Uxcn under tba now Jaw. The amoun wan 81,287.15 ! . In iomo urftnRO onhardi at I'aeadonn ca nu\v 1m aoeii trees in bloom , tiei'n with eat. bio urauKot of lait crop mid ripenlui ; nr. ui-i of tLU ytar'a crop , It U nut mi uucotiimou thing to find tl neuoudiropuf pruj)0 ( o ( the teaiou ) a prett fidrono In Oallfoma , but a thlid crop lift 4iniual thing. A Nona \ lueynrdUt , howe > e UU that thli third CTO ] ) ylolilod well , an that' tha grapes ounUlued o\er twenty pc cent of fcaoclurlne. 'ilio catch of Pacific codfUh h > > been unprv cock-ntodJy large UiU yenr. Th catcli 1.211,000 fish. In lr3thti cotchv about 2,181 * tons over ld.it year. Tha average izoof the iish is larger this > oivr than lant , and In every rcspocta superior fisl . The Lexington company , of Butte , lost month , produced over $115,000 in bullion. Holnna capltallitd are considering tha rirac- Icabllltyof erecting oxponnlvo and oxtontive eduction works at that point. The Union Pacific depot at Gunnlion , tha unction of the Utah & Northern and North ern Pacific has hcon completed. Huntnrs say that snow llei five feet deep In ho Cra y niontitiln , and that oik and other game must bo driven downward to the plaini ind fall prey to their rlllos , IJen llotran liai opened what Is denomi nated tha IScform club of Butto. It Is locitod cated just acrons tha Ktrcot from the olliciw of the ilally now pnpnrs , which U certainly ery appropriate. Northern Pacific ntatistlci show thai from Jctobcr 1 to November " 0 , the number of 1m- nlgrantu leaving St. Paul for Spokane Falls ind i mints westward , averaged , Including Sunday , forty-four adulti per day. The talk at Benton of raiding tha rcserva- Ion continues. The oxtitomont It not loud nit deep. 1'artlo.i nro forming , and before onglholy reports may bo nx pec ted of Roizuroi ipon the arable lands and rich quart/ lodes of the Dear's Paw and Llttla Ilocklos. Iilnlio. Silver 1'lutno and Idaho Springs nro the fu uro towns of Clear Crook county , 1 { alloy rejoices over the completion of her now waterworks which have a pressure snlli- : iont to throw water over any structnro in town. Cii'Ur d'Alono mean * the iron or steel heart- cd , and the name u OH first given to the sav- igcs of that region because of their linplaca illlty. Citlzonn of Spokane subscribed $1,000 for ho purpose of opening n wagon road from the icnd of navigation on the Caur d'Alona river 4) tha mines. Such Is the location of Jingle City , in the yonir d'Alono mountains , that the sun does lot shlno upon It until 11 a. m.and then only or an hour , disappearing behind the moun. alns at noon. Tiio Caldwell town company has decided ipon extending the great Irrigating canal to .he rich farming country called Doer Flat. This vv111 bring into cultivation about 30,000 .croi of land which Is paid to bo the richest in dalio. Utah. Ogden If full of sneak thieves. One of the eights in Ogden recently WIIH tha ntranco of hixty.sovon wagons loaded with 'ruin at Logan , and hauled to the Junction Aty totdilp via the Denver & Itlo Grande , Governor Afurray vvnx appointed about ' 'obruary8th , 1880and tils confirmation took > lace about tan days thereafter , so that his crm of office does not oxplro till gomo time in farch , 188-1. The recaintfi of bullion and ere in Salt Lake Ity for the week ending December 10 , inclu- Ivo , amounted to 8167,320.31 , of which 813(5 ( , . 10.31 wo. ? bullion , and SL'1 , ' 10 oro. The ag- Dogate for the week previous wasSli2,301.83 , f which SHO , < ir > 2.83 was bullion. The load mine at Jlngham Is sending out omo fine oro. A big Htrlko was made In the test drift n short timo' ago , of n largo body of rou mlllinp oro. A Hhipmout of 00 tons made ant wcok , sampled 57 ounces silver and no oad. Tha mine ia shipping 15 tons first-closn ro per day. After the payment of thirty micccssivo nonthly dividondx , aggrcgatngliriO,000tbo ! Northern licllosuijpoiidaa dividends from Oo- obor 15th , 1877 , to May 15th , 1880 its pro- net up to the last quarter of 1883 was.3OGO- , M)7. ) The dividends fur thin period have loon thirtjthroe , anil have footed upto'J3r > , - 000. Depend Upon It. Mother Shlpton'a prophesies and Louisiana lections are very uncertain thingH , but J'ltomitf' J'cltctric Oil can ho depended upon Iwaya. It euros aches and pains of every do- criptiona. SUPPOSE WE SWAP WIVES. i A Novel Proposition "Which WnB Iin- incillatcly Acted Upon by u Pair of Missouri Husbands. O \LKXAMo.Docomber 21. For aomo imo Nutlmii Masaongalo and Hiram joomis , of White river , have boon the lout intiniato of neighbors , and scarcely night passed that they with their liarming young sfiousus vroro not in each thor'n company. They exchanged ovun- igs with ouch other at games of vrhiat nd cliesi and exclmngod wives for part- era. When they wont to the theater no had the othor'a wife , and the moat ll'uctionato caresses seemingly could not tifllo the conjugal serenity. Loomis , eupposo wo swap wives , " aid Mr. Masaen ale ono evening recent- while returning from a church soci- blo. blo."That's "That's a bargain , oldruan , and I'm in or it if the girls don't object , " and as ho opliod Mr. Looinis drew Mrs. Masacn- alo's arm closer into his and looked uestioningly into her oycs that Hashed aok a confirmation of the low "yea" that scaped her lipa. Yesterday thu proposition was agreed ipen by all Imnda , and Nathan gave over -Irs. - Mimengalo and n few months' old laby to boot In tradp for Mrs. Luomis. But Mra. Lnomica tried to take with her i homo nnd buguy which she claimed is ler personal property. Loomis objoctcdr \nd Mrs. Massongalo murmured at his nturforonce , alleging that at least thu mby moro than counterbalanced the vnlu f the turnout. "Take your b.vby back , " said the now lira , loomis to her former husband. Mr. MoBscngalo drovv a shotgun from bo folds of his breakfast coat and blazed avvav , narrowly making a widow of his original wife , nnd Mr. Loomis , drawing a [ lomington from hia eniokitig-jackot , alao narrowly escaped making au oiphan of Uio disputed child. Matters , however , were finally amicably aottlod , and thu arr.inuod fninilius nru now happy. Writa Imvubccu iakonoutin the courts , BO tha' the boy will bo able to know who is his father. Nothing lillco Ii. No medlclnohaa over hcon known so etltic- tual In the euro of nil thoae dIsoa CM arising fruin an inipuro condition of the blood an BCOVILI.M aA'JS.M'AllllXA OK 1LOO1 > AM > LlVKI SYIIIT for tha cure of Scrofula , Will to Swol' llngii , Ulieuinatlsm , 1'implai , Ulotchai , Krup tlous , Venereal Sonw nnd Disoiaes.Conmiiiip. tlon , Ooltro , Uollu , Cancore , nnd all kiudrei dtsoascs. It pmitleH the HyvUim , bilngx u lor to the cheeks and restored the MilTerer to a lionmil condition of health and vigor. It in tuuortod that the nrdinury c used by ladle * r n > productlvu of great iiita- chief. Wo believe thin In to. and that a but ter means of securing a beautiful complexion In ti ) use aomo good blood niodirlno Ilko SCO- V1U/8 BLOOD AND UYKll SYUU1 which cleuimoH tha blot l and gives periimnou bwuty to the akin , rur Ji a valley in I'reinn county , U de. crlbod on deeper and IU ldeg moro precipitous than Yivomtta' , many | xlnU being from 1,000 to 0,000 feet hlyU. At ( ho hand of the valley U a solid rock wall a perpendicular | > rocipco ! of from O.GOO to 7,000 foot Ugh. It rivals ant in many roapscU oven mrpMSCrt Yojen.ito Ii altitude of turrouudlui ; clltu. HUMAN Bu > ou. Oil tlio puiity and vi iility of the blood dopuiul the vigor am health of thu wholu system. Disoasu o various kinds is often only the sign tha nuturu is trying to remove thu disturbin ; causo. A remedy thut ejvca lifo nm v igor to thu blood , eradicates scrofula and other impurities from it , iu Hood' S.irsaparillu undoubtedly docs , must b thu means of preventing nwny diaoaae that would occur without Ita uau , Soli by MANY WIVES AND MILLIONS , Only One of the Late I , M , Singer's ' Families Yet Unpaid , The Young Ohildrou by the Late Singer on'AHounnccH nnd Only Ono Ncnrly of Ago Tlio Imcntor'fl History. Mr. David Hawley , n tall , slander. hito-hnircd man , brought to Sir. W. M. Jkinnor , clerk of the Surrogate's courtol Woatchostor , in White Plains , yesterday , , bundle of what looked like legal papers. They were full of Figures , and among hem wcro sums six , seven , and eight minerals in length. They were Mr. ' 'Iruvloy's accounts and report of his work , s executor of the will of Isaac M. Singer , nvontor , millionaire , father of twenty- our children , and head of five separate 'ninilicn. Bcc.iubo lie must nwait a doci- ion of the court of appeals in a matter ol commissions nnd costs. Mr. Hawley was unable to file the panorsnndthoir contents ire not yet mndo public. Mr. Singer's estate was inventoried al ibout § 8.000,000 , but it proved to amount o about twice that sum , Mr , Singer vas n poor man when ho first intrusted lis confidential business to Mr. Hawley , ind ho continued to repose the utmost lonfidonco in him until ho died , when ho oft to him the settlement of his vast ca nto. Mr. Hawley has never given secur- ty for the faithful performance of his ask. Ho could not , and there are nol nnny persons in the country who could , ) ut there has boon no complaint that he ms not done his work faithfully and ihrowdly. All the heirs have been paid ixcopt the children of the last Mrs.- Singer. She had six children , and all ox : opt ono are living with her in Paris. Plmt ono , Adam Mortimer Singer , will soon bccoino of ago , and may reach hereon on any day in the near future to claim his haro. Mr. Singer was born in Sclmghticokc n this state , and in early manhood lived rom hand to mouth as n wood turner and ; onoral mechanic. In 1830 ho was mar- ied by n country 'squire to Miss Catha iuo N. Hnley. His first child was born n 1831. Then they lived in Waterloo , Mid ho was a shiftless follow , capable of urning his hand to any sort of work , > ut not doing well at anything. Ho was ; ivon to consorting with other women bo- ides his wife , and gave evidence of being t natural-born actor , able to imitate any iving thing ho had over hoard or soon , n 1837 a cliild was born to them in this ity , and from hero ho started out as a trolling player' From the atago on ivhich ho was performing in Baltimore no night ho saw a vary beautiful young roman , 18 years old. Ho became on- morcd of her , sought liorfather's house , itroduced himself , proposed in timeand as accoptbd. This was Mnry 'Ann Sponsler , wife or ompnnion number two. Singer hurried o Now York to get wife number ono and er family out of the way , and ho and lie quarrelled and separated. Ho brought Tary Ann Sponslor to this city , nnd rhon she insisted that ho must marry or ho told her that he was in trouble fith another woman ; that ho had just rounds for a divorce , and after ho got it o would hnvo thoir. relationship legal- zed. Miss Sponsler had to share a great oal of poverty with him , oven moro , in- eed , than Mrs. Singer had endured , lias Sponslor took lessons to fit herself or the stage , and with her husband , un- ? r the names of Mr. and Mrs. Merritt , /cd temperance piocea in churches all ver the country. For thirteen years icy followed this lifo. She called him father , " nnd ho called her "wifo. " They : ere wretchedly poor. Eveoythintr they ad in the world was in the ono-horso rngon in which they wandered about , nd time and time again they had to wwii than and its contents , and their erse to got food. While they were in Jhicngo ho invented .a reaping machine , nd later on a machine for carving typo. lo began to have money in conso- uonco. ' In 1830 ho had completed the ivontions that make np _ the linger sowing machine , from which hens ; ns in time to accumulate the colossal ortune ho loft behind him. Again ho amo to Now York , and this time it wiw o sot up n stylish establishment at No. t Fifth avenue. The first and only rue Mrs. Singer seems to have boon for- etton. She was living in 'Brooklyn , lumber two was everywhere regarded as lie inventor's wife. Nice people visited do IIOUHO. tier visiting cards and invi- ntions to parties that she gave bore the amo of Mrs. I. M. Singer. She ordered oods nt the dry goods and other stores s Mrs. Singer , and Mr. Singer paid the ilia. She and her eorrpauion visited tor people in Baltimore , as man and wife , nd eo registered whenever they stopped n hotels She bore him ten children. 3athnrtno Hnley hud berne him two hildron. Ho used : to boast that .bova nnd girls came alternately with him. Ho tad a liugo nnd gaudy vehicle capable of seating twenty-five persons , nnd in this , \ itli Miss Sponslor and her ton children , 10 used to ride ia the park every day. ! u 18IJO , twenty-four years after ho had eft hi * first companion of his poverty , Mrs. Catharine Haley Singer , ho got a duorco from her. Singer led a fast lifo in thoae days , nnd won very frequently seen on the avenue in company with women whom _ Misf Sponslor'a friends were ( not acmiainted with. Savon monthsnfter ho was divorced Miss Sponslor , riding in her own carriage , stw hint ii hia carriage with Mary Ann Mcfionienl. She screamed until ho saw lior. Ho cnmo homo and boat her nnd she had him arrested , Then ho wont to Europe , nnd in the yeur that ho wiu away the fact was revealed that hu had boon living with two other women in this city who thought themselves his only companions at the same time that hu was getting his divorce from his first wife and calling Mary Ann Sponsler his second ono , Mary McGonigal , for instance , liac berne him five children. Ho nud she lived together a * Mr. and Mrs M.ithows. Miss Mary E. Walter , who Ihod with him under the name of Merritt , had audet uno other child to the list. Mary Ann Sponslor began a suit for divorce and was awarded § 8,000 alimony then the larg est amount over obtained. Singer trioi to compromise with her , She acotjptei a round sum of money and the valuable house 189 West Twenty-eighth street. But within a mouth after slio was di vorced she had secretly married John E. Foster. She hurt horsulf by a fall fron a chair , nnd bulioving herself to bo dying told ono of lior daughters of the marriage riago , Her daughter's husband , a Mr Proctor , vros an ollloer of the Siugor com pany. Mr. Singer speedily learned abou the wedding and caused thu divorce * , wife to relinquish all claims upon him and to vacate the house in Twenty ' " 1"1 street , for which ho had not given a dsed to her. She went to live vrith Foster Kumbnr five next appeared , She v a French woman whom ho had mot abroad. On Juno 13 , 1805 , aovcn weeks after number two had renounced her claims upon him , ho was married in this city to Isabcllo Eugenie Boycr , under the name of Isabcllo E. Summorvillo , and with her wont to _ Paris to livo. Ho caused to bo built in Yonkers a palatial homo in a great park , and when it was finished returned to this city , and invited hundreds to the house warming , The public know of his complicated family af fairs , however , and but few wont to the houao. In 1873 ho resolved to live abroad , Ho bought n nobleman's fine estate in Oldtown , Paignton , Devonshire , England , and began the construction of an enormous castle , to bo called "tho fjvifl1 ! "and to contain n theatre , riding 'mil , Uuiiqupting halls , nnd all the conveniences vonionces hismonoy _ commanded. It waa not finished when , in July , 1875 , ho died in that estate. These wcro the families 10 loft behind him : By Mm. Catharine Haley Singer ( the ire chinlo's wife.1 ) William A. Sin or. Lillian C. SinRcr. By Mary Ann Sponsler ( the actor's wife ) : Isaac Augustus. Voulottlo Theresa , John Albeit. Fanny Klirabeth. , ) -wper Haiuot. Mary Olive. Julia Ann. Carolina Yircinla. Two others died. ] ) y Tilrtt. Mathoua ( the wife under an 03 sinned name ) : Florence A , Mathows. Mary A. Mathows. ChnrloH A. Mathows. Two others died , Iy Mrs. Merrltt ( the wife Under hU middle name ) : ' Miss Alice Merritt , afterward Mrs. La- rrov c. I3y Mra. Isabcllo Ihigenlo Singer ( the thtril cgal wife ) : Adam Mortimer. Wimmretta Eugenie. Washington Morritt Grant. 1'arh Lugcno. Isabella lilancho. Franklin Morse. These last are the only ones not paid. They will got thnir money as fast as they : omo of age. Their mother married a jaron in Paris , and ho has since llccomo ; ho Duke do Camposolico. By marrying she loat her lifo interest in the English cstato which was then valued at $5,000- )00 ) , nnd is now worth a great deal more. She has had to give up the castle and > ark at Paignton. She had about 5,000 iharcs of Singer stock , however , which s paying 40 per cent , and is worth about t million and a half of dollars. All nor children , except the oldest , live in Paris with her. Ho has left her , and lives in England in princely stylo. The otheis Iravv upon Mr. Hawley ns they need money. They have their own horses ind carriages , and tutors and servants. 1'lioy are worth § 1,500,000 each. Mr. Singer's will was contested by Irs. Sponslor Singerwho proved a niur- iago with Singer from the time ho was .ivorccd from Mrs. Haley Singer until ho married Forater a period of losi han one year. This made her last child , Caroline Virginia , a legitimate daughter , ill the other children by her thus became llegitiuiato. Her eight children received 1,750,000 , but sht got only a small sum or the liquidation of the costs of the uit. Mrs. Mathews'a five children ro- oived about SI , 750,000. Mrs. Meritt's hild got about § 400,000. Of the chil- iron of Mrs. Catharine Haley Singer , the irst wifo. ono got 8500 and ono $10,000. 'ho estate was largely composed of linger company stock , and , has about oubled in value. The last wife was the nly one to whom a legacy was loft. Do NotMovo Blindly. Go carefully in purchasing medicine. Many dvcrti ed remedies-can work great injury ro worse than nouo. liurdotk JSttxxt Jiilttra- ' ore purely a v egetablo preparation ; the small est child can take them. They kill dlsoaao and cure the patient in a safe and kindly way. How Old Muj iv Alan lilvoV - ) eniorodt' Monthly. In a Bossarabian province lives ono avtchuk , who at last accounts was 130 ears olo. Ho ia what is called a- little lusaian by birth. His oldest son ia87 oara old , and is fur moro decrepit than ho father. The one family hn - multi- ilied into 50 families. The ago oft this lussian is , of course , not as well nuthon- icated ns that of old Parr , the English- nan. It has been noted that reported ascs of extreme old ago always occur in hu ranks of the very poor , whose date of irth c.\n rarely bo verified , while kings loblos and members of the noted amilics whoso recordH are kept , in 10 ago or country have ever lived 00 years. Oonoruli/.ing from this fact , a listingnished English writer , Mr. Lowes , ives it as his judgment that it is very oubtf ul if any human being can claim ho distinction of being a contomirian. Yet from the analogy of the animal races , very child that is well born shouldllivo century. The rule seems to bo thnt ( nimals live five times the length of their dolescenco , that is , they ought to- live , vo times longer than the period it takes o attain their full growth , Tlioro is no uostion but what the whole human race iocs not enjoy the health and vigor ivhich t is possible to attain. There is some iefcct in the constitution of oven the trongcst of our race. In the golden ago _ of humanity yet to come , every child vill bo well born. Ita lifo and habits vill conform to the scientific lows controlling oiu > uxistpnco on thin earth , and then man'n environment will help lira to achieve the highest posuiblo phys ical vitality. 1'6-day tlio grant bulk of of the human race are born with weak strains in their blood. They oat im- iroper food , use hurtful stimulants Irink. They ere poioonod F > y malarias subject to contagions- due to their sur roundings The two great objects of the i > est men and women in this lifo should DO first to improve the race itself , mor ally and physically , and secondly , to innko this oartli on which man lives a fit abode for the superior people who will 'lion occupy it. Ex-flovornor Odon Bowie , of Mary > land , praiaod St Jacobs Oil for paiim. A SPECIFIC FOB Epilepsy , Sjkima , CooTul- Blous , Falling Dance , Akcftol Ism , Opium Eat ing , S'JpMlll Scrofula , Klngi ) 1 U ED V E I Ugly Blood ' I H fc I. Diseases , 1 Nervousness , rttM ir < an , Mraln Worry , - ! UIHousuees , Cotthtrutt. Nctyous rrostratlon , A'JJu / Truubltt and Irrtrutarltitt. * 1-W. Hnmplci Te tlm uIiiU. . "Sam rtt u Kervlueln iaise o ? cri/ , , . Dr. J , O. HcLemoJn , Aloi ndcr City , Ala. i tt Uitlmoal l aid circular * Mod iUrnp. Tha Or. S. A. RteMicJul M : Co. . St Ittwph , * . fatUtij all DivpfbU. (17) CHARLES SHIVERIGK , Furnitur a Have just received a large quantity of new AND AM OFFERING AT VERY LOW PRICES PASSENCKEB ELEVATOR , 1200 , 1208 nd 1210 FanmmSt To All Floors. OMAHA. NEB WJVI. 1IANUFAOTUHEU OP OF 8TRIOTI.Y FIRST-CLASS ' 5 AND TWO WHEEL CAETS. 1819 and 1320 Hamcy Street and 4038. ISth Streetfl TIT A XT A TO1773 nlotritf * fiimUhfH fr nnnn nnnltcaHi V/JLTjLJcXJjLji * Xi JCl J > Established in 1858. J 1409 and 1411 Dodge Street , OMAHA , NEB < & CO , . Wholesale Clothiers ! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREE1 COR. 13TH , OMAHA , - " : NEBRASK Anheuser-Busch CELEBRATED and Bottled Beer This Excellent Boer speaks fcr itself. ORDERS FROM ANY PART OF STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST , Promptly Shipped. ALL OUK GOODS AEE MADE TO THE STANDAED F. SCHLIEF , Avonuo'F. Solo Agent for Omaha and the WosU Cor. ith Street and Capitol Avonuo' . - - - , „ . _ _ . _ _ _ _ -55 { ASK YOUKi OHOCEK8 FOIl THK L ± OMAHA DRY HOP YEAST g S WARRANTED NEVER TO FAIL. , S Manufactured by tae Omaha Dry Hop Yeast Co I p = 2713 DIIHT SrilEF.T. OMAHA. NEB "BURLINGTON i OUTE ( Chicago , Burlington & Qulnoy Railroad. ) QOINC EAST AND WEST. , Elegant Day Coaches , Parlor Cars , wllh Rev l.i ins Chairs ( icats fi-eo ) , Kaioklns Cara.wllti Ko ; volvlnc ChaJrs , rullnmu Palace Kieeftas ; Cars and the famous C. u. & Q. UlrJnn Cars rue daily to and rrora CbJcaco & . Kansas Ultr , Ulncogu & Council Ulurtu , CUcsgo 4 Des Jlloiues. ItilcaKO , St. Jo seph , AtchUon & Toptfca. Only tbroush line be tween Chicago , IJncol * & Denver Tbrotwh cars between IndTanapolia. Jt Council liluUu via 1'eorla. All connections wtwlu In Union Depots. It Is known an tha creat TUUOUCUl UAR UNE. GOING NORTH AND SOUTH. Solid Trains of Elegant Da ? Coacbua and PulH raan I'aUce Sieoplnjr Cars are run daily to anai from St Loub , via HanuttuU , Quiwy. Keokuk. ) Hivlincton. CeAat llopI4 ftniJ Albert t * to 8t I'aul bid filirmt-apoUa : 1'arior Cars with Kecllnlri fhalrn to and froraSt I iula and l-ooriaandCl and Iroin Ht l ouls ana Ottumwa. Only o cli r e of caw betwwo.St. . . Louis and Ci l Jlolaes. Iowa , Lincoln , Kebnuka , audDony , . ! , ] Cotorado. .u IJ FJnnst Equlppad Railroad In the World for all Olmses of Travel. | ' T , J. POTi'ICK. SJYlco-lVea'taml Qeu'K SUwunir. 3PEUUBVAT lJOVV RW * 3 w , J > AgX CbJc. * or Galvanized IronCornicesi Mow JkyUeh ila - ' Thlrte nth Street !