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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1886)
THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : SATURDAY 01TNB 20 , 1880. lillard Hotel Block , Omaliajeb. Do a Strictly Commission Businesi 'Residence ' and business property in all parts of Omaha. Vacant lots in all the most desirable suburban additions , on the most favorabl terms. Head a partial list of some of our bargains. HUSINHSS PUOl'KHTV. Full lot on Howard hi. , $15,000. 2 business lots on Dodge st , at a bar gain. 2 business lots on Douglas St. , u rare bargain. Lot OfKlDi on Htirnoy , $13,000. Several stocks of goods to u\clinngo Jor Omaha properly or Nebraska lands , Lots nnd Houses nnd Lots. 8 lots S. 8th st. , near Market , $1,000. 3 lots Patrick's 3d add. , $3,000. 8 lots Foster's add. , $3,300. Lot : ) , block , Heed's -1th add. , on ear line ; spluiulid tor business , $1,500. House nnd lot in Walnut Hill , very de- Hirablc , $2,500. Hesidcnco and lot , corner Hamilton unit Iroiio sis. , ? a,5'JO. 10 lots in Kilby Place , $1,000 each. 81otsin Wilcox's 1st , add. , $500 cncli. Slots , 1 a corner , Kilby Place , $ I , ' , > CO , 2 lots in Kirkwood , SC/iO / each. 3 lots lliiuebangli & Sounders' ' add. , fitoO each. EJ lot 0 Howe's add. , $700. Lot with small house , S. E. Uoge'r add , f2GOO. House and lot , Clarendon add. $3,000. 3 lots. Clarendon add , $1,000 each. Corner , Virginia and I'oppleton ave , very desirable , $3,000. Sileudid | resilience corner 13th and Dodge , favorable terms , $ , ' 5,030. Two lots in Lowe's add , $1,435. First class residence lot on Ilarney , near 20th , $ l.r)00. Splendid residence with two lots , 1 a corner , on Park ave. and Woohvorth , $5,000. N. K. corner 53d and Douglas , large ground , and houscs.payjug good income , a bargain , $12.500. Newhousoand lot in Ilansuom Place , $5,000. 7 room residence and good lollludick's 2d add , $1,500. Hotel la\ter ! , in Ilarlan , Iowa , good condition and doing a ( laying business ; hotel and furniture , $0,500. House and lot in Red Cloud , Neb$4,000 LANDS. Section in Gasper Co. , $15.00 per acre ; nosy terms. Section in Gasper Co. , $7.00 per acre ; easy terms. 100 acres (120 ( under cultivation , Furnas Co , , Improvements , 3 miles from belt road , easy terms , $3,000. 100 acres , improved , Burt Co. , well watered and timbered , $27 per acre. 105 acres in Nickola Co. , $13 per acre ; easy terms. 1020 acres in Howard Co. , $5 to $10 per acre. 100 acres , 120 under cultivation , in ( Jreloy Co. . $2,700. 180 acres in Greclcy Co , $7 per acre ; will exchange. 8 sections in Howard Co. , good for stock ranch and cheap. 000 acres in Webster Co. , 800 acres un der cultivation , will sell or exchange for Omaha property ; worth $20 per acre. Splendid steam roller mill at St. Paul , Howard Co. , Neb. , very complete , on easy terms , $25,000. Steam roller mill at Scotio , ( } rcoloy Co. , Neb. , $10,000 ; all modern improve ments , $10,000. No 1 water mill , Schuyler , Neb ; olllato improvement , with 100 acres improved land ; a great bargain. $10,000. List your property with Hatcher , Gadd & Co. , and secure quick sales. CINCINNATI STORE , KANSAS CITY STORE , 2Ol > , till . . . and 2ij : Went r.lli Street. 125 Mnin Street. 1317 and 1319 Douglas St. Special attention given to furnishing houses and hotels complete. BARKE 82 : Real Estate and Loan Boom 21 Paxton Building , Oor. ISthand Far nam st. " I ' ' , Very desirable lots on monthly payments of from $10 to $60 in the 'following additions. West Omaha Bark alow Place. Omaha View , Leavenworth Terrace , Orchard Hill , Bedford Place , Sharen Place and "Walnut Hill Also some choice houses and lots on Farnam st , Burt st , , Leaven- pwort st , Phil Sheridan and Owning st. , \ We have "bargains in property in all parts of the cityeasy ; payments , l&ow rates of interest. FARM LANDS FOR SALE , Rents Collected Taxes , - - Paid. A Vigorous Attack on ttfc Tco System and Judicial Salary Grabbers. VENTILATING POOLING PLANS. The Tclournph Monopoly nnil Uio New Orleans t I'nclllc luillil < riil > Sumntnry ol' Jllfl Work Iti IlioIHtli VI1. THE AI.AUKS ! OK DlstUKT JftJir. . Mr. Van Wyek opposed the advance of s-alaries In all cases to if.'i.WJ. In the course of his remarus ho saidMy friend from Delaware ( Mr. llavard ) could see much of Inirdship in Iho ca-e of the family of .Indgo Taney , who was poor. Does my friend from Delaware call up other dMitignifihed lawyers who are not on the bench , who.se families are also poor ? ( iciitlemon point to our overflow- lug treasury as an evidence of the great t it furnishes the American lo lill il. My friend does nol go down lo the thousands of families who not only die poor , but live poor ; the thousands from whose pockets are ex tracted the dollars that go into our over flowing treasury. The proposition is llrst lo fill up , and then lo ilepieto. There are various wavs of doing lliis. One is the ease with which public olllees nro filled , and the next the apparent case with which salaries are made and increased. After a colloquy with Senator Hoar , Senator Van Wyck saidIt would seem from all the hardships Unit are men tioned , as if ihere wore some sorl of draft or conscription into Iho civil ser vice of lliis country. It is very remarka ble , when any position which can be filled by llio profession lo which my friend belongs ; and also the scnalorfrom 'Arkansas , that wo hear so much of the great sacrifices which gentlemen who come from the bar make to servo their country. There is un competition , there is no draft that will take a man out of the legal profession and put htm on Iho dis trict bench or the supreme court. There is no power on earth that can take a dis tinguished lawyer from his remunerative practice and nlacc him in a scat in this chamber or in the other house. When there is a district judgosliip vacant , tlie wliolo state is torn up and every lawyer of prominent vosition is anxious to lill that chair. If there is a vacancy in n circuit juilgeship , half n dozen stales arc torn up Minnesota , Iowa , Kansas , Ne braska and Colorado. Each has dis- tiiigushed lawyers , the ablest lawyers , to lill the vacant judgcship. When gentle men accept the oilice at 53,500 iv year , i is in the nature of a contract , and why should we be asked to incroa.se their com pensation while they had the ollieo ? The bill passed the senate , but did not pass tlie house. BILL AGAINST POLYGAMY. Tliei people ot tins nation desire Hint vou should blot out polygsimy. Three fourths ot the people dcniand it. Still tlio Mormons have grown steadily in numbers and political power. Vou r coin- mission has hnd alarief ot ? 5,000 , with personal expenses paid , and have done nothing. That same evil comes hero and defies your national legislature. It mildly stalks'into the senate chamber and into i tlie house and defies the legislation of tlie American congress. You , retain this commission , when a board of army olli- eers would discharge its duties as satis factorily to the people. I say to my friend from Massachusetts , that it is a crime that is glowing and growing , be cause it is unchecked. 1'ltIVATK LAND CLAIMS. Mr. Van Wyck , having nioveii to limit the location of scrip to the state or terri tory In which the land grant is located , said : I very much prefer that the inten tions of tire act should not bo buried under a word which the supreme court inay say means one thing or the other , or is uncertain , because if congress in tended a certain thing they would have said so. Messrs. Bayard and Jngall * having subsequently entore.d into a dis cussion of the word "respectively , " Mr. Van Wyck said that the very fact that two gentlemen so eminent in the legal profession disagree upon the intcrp rot si tion of that word , makes it almost crim inal if we do not stop to make this sec tion so plain and explicit that it canno be misunderstood. The very fact that it admits of discussion here , places its where we dare not vote for this bill , unless it be made so certain and so strong that there shall be no trouble when it gets to the land department. NUW OHLKANS & PACIFIC KAILI1OAI ) COM- t'ANV. Mr. Van Wyck offered n resolution that the secretary of the interior suspend action on patents for land to this com pany until congress ohall determine the claims of the corporation. lie said ho had felt desirous that this matter should bo settled right hero and now at the portals of the question of forfeited lands. Jt became apparent that the railroad in tended to assume the position that be cause the attorney-general had decided the matter , therefore congress was ex cluded from the power that belonged to it. When it. was assumed by the railroad company that this matter was not only res adjudicata , but that the power was taken from congress , tlmn it became necessary ; to make a tint denial of that position. It became ncccsMiry that this matter should bo cheeked here and now ; therefore J desired it should bo under stood that there should be no certificates issued , and no patents granted to this company , whoso only foundation for their claim is the opinion of the attorney- general. The resolution vns agreed to. SV&TKJI OF ll.VNKM'ITOY. The old bankruptcy law claimed to be in Eolf-sustaiiiing , when the otlicers got all the property ot the debtors and none of the cash wont into the pockets of the creditors. If this bill pasnus Into a law , it will bo worse in that ruspcot. Here it is at the discretion of the court to say what , shall bo reasonable compensation , when' it should bo the bticiunss of con gress to fix n sum in the bill , that the courts may have no opportunity by preju dice or favor to afleot the compensation of the ofllccrs. "CONSOLIIJ AT10K OF TKLKOIIAI'II COJII'A MIES , a Senator Van Wyck ottered n resolution inquiring in regard to minified negotia tions for consolidation between the West ern Union and lialtlmoroi& Ohio tele graph companies , Ho saliU The Western Union know , asdocstheoh rCiarrctt.Jhat new lines moan millions more of ficti tious stock to bo divided between their a companies. It means also greater bur dens to the people and larger dividends to bo taken from them , Tlie proposition for the government to build is tne only st theme that strikes terror to the Western Union , lioth these companies deny the power of congress , which created them , to examine tlmir contracts , and arro gantly insist that congress , having created them , has no power loft to protect the in people and build other lines , in reply to statements by Jir , Morgan , Mr. Van of Wyck sai.l that it has boon proposed that the government fehall take under its on charge to a certain extent tlm matter of postal telegraphing , and it was in order to ascertain as to lint necessities of the people ami as to the jropriuty of thegov- ern.mont ciituriug upou that caterjirle- that the whole matter was sent to the committee. The Hnltimoro A Ohio say that they propose to do Hint thine thorn- selves , and it becomes important to know what wre fiio relations oi lliat company lo the Western Union. The resolution was referred to the committee on post ofllcc1 ? . I'AY OF TRtjniTOTUAT. Senator Van Wyck offered au amend menl to the Alaska bill , that territorial olliecrs shall not receive fees , but n sal ary. The necessity for reformation in this matter is generally acknowledged. There are cases even-where in which fill/ens have been subjected to outrages by reason of the cupidity of government olllt'inl * seeking to mid to the amount of their compeiis-atiou. In the we t hnnuM homesteaders have been dragsred from their homes under the pretense of having cut a stick of timber for lirewood. in order that a marshal might have fees for serving processes , and an attorney for commencing suit. This lias become nn outrage until the attorney-general says that every dollar added to the compensa tion of an olHcer costs the government ten. When you submit the -10' ' ) whites , the 1..VKI half-breads and the , " > 0,000 In dians of Alaska into the hands of a fed eral ring of sior eight men , with uotlr ing ( o hold them in check but their own cupidity , you are doing Hint people au injustice. The amendment was adopted. AIIAT ; i\rouTAiiox. : The object of .Senator Anthony's reso lution Is to itriko at governnieutswhie.il restrict the inlrodifctlou of meats from this cotintrv. This is a matter which allcets the producers ol the soil through out all this country. While the great majority of our productions are u.ied here , their price is lixed in foreign mar kets. England , Kraneo and Uormany establish tlie price of our wheat and flour , of our pork and beef , not only in their markets but in ours not only on the seaboard but on the banks of the Mis sissippi and Missouri. I offer the. amend ment In order to recogni/.o the right of other governments to do what wi > are asserting the power to do. 1 am willing to concede to other nations the right to act in precisely the same spirit of retalia tion which wo feel it our duty to insist on for ourselves. srifellH/ING I UK PAOl'IC * .STIIAMslIIl'COM- I'ANIKS. Senator Van Wyck offered an amend ment to the postoilice appropriation bill , that no money shall bo paid to any steamship company which has been pay ing dividends. If the proposed appro priation is lo encourage the pulling on of new steamship lines , the greater purl of itti should not go to a company which for thirty years has been paying dividends. tiii I mean the Pacific Mail. After rehears ing the whole ease , he said : The object/ / isA to prevent competition between the Atlantic and 1'acilie. The railroad cor porations , reaching from the Missouri river to the 1'aeilic , are determined Hint competition shall on cheeked. They sub sidize the Pacific Mnil more liberally than your government can do , by taking n million of dollars a year from their trea nry. and Iho Pacific Mail surren dered. Hunlington said that , in order to have a hold on these men , they must have their steamships on the Pacilic , and the Occidental and the Oriental lines put them there ; and thus the Pacific Mail was forced to be one of Iheir instruments iitl fettering commerce , binding it to these three or four men who control our transcontinental trade , who seek the con trol ' of what little we have left in tlie Atlantic , and Paeilie oceans , and they come here to have iCOCOO ! ) stolen from the treasury to give to this wealthy cor poration. 1 The only object is to take still more to place in tlie pockets of those who have overburdened this people and our commerce with taxation too grievous lo Cib borne. CONTAGIOUS DISEASES OV CATI'Li ; . This measure furnishes no protection to { Iho herds of Hie west. After all that has been said about pleuro-pneumonia , if it exists at all it is confined to small localities , and if yon would give the com missioner of agriculture power to compel better ventilation Jor your cattle , and feed them better than the retusc of dis tilleries , we should . probably have . very much less of lung disease. It lias been * * said that the disease does not exist west of the Allcghomcs , and that the danger is , that by carrying cattle to the west the disease may be carried. ItAILKOAU TllKOlUHI 1 KI.LOWSTONE PAIIK. After a long discussion , Senator Van Wyck cxpre.ssc/1 the opinion that there .should bo a limitation to the rates wlnc'i ' this road should charge. He desired that there should bo some bpnelitto the people by allowing the secretary of war * to fix the price of transportation. I presume this is n branch of the Union Pacific road. The country will rejoice that light is beginning to break on the senate It would not bo so strong it some senator had no ! seen and foil the power of those grasping monopolies. Senators who have visited the Yellowstone park have seen it and felt it , and what they have neon and felt , the citizens of the republic have seen and felt in all the territories of this union. SALAItV OP MA.JOU LLEWELLYN. .Major Llewellyn was appointed to the Meseolleras agency because of his known character for bravery , judgment and dis cretion , and he has served the depart ment so well that they themselves ask that his salary bo raised to $2'JO. ( ) The coinmandin.1. ; officers have been profuse in their ( t.\prc.s.sions of admiration for the gallantry and bravery of the man who has the management of those Indians. He Inis shown his ability in the service , and ho is not only faithful and brave , but intelligent and discriminating. SI'KCIAL ATrOHXr.VS IN TUB UEI'AUIMENT OK JL'.STK'i ; . Senator Van Wyck ollercd a resolution for information as to tlu < compensation for special attorneys in the Star route eases. Senator Hoar having asked a modification of the resolution , as imply ing improper conduct , Senator Van Wyck said : The senator will readily see that by the most far-stretched construction , there can bo in the language here used no reflection on the attorney-genera ) . It has been stated that the compensation was lixed by the head ot the department. If it was too high , but beyond his power to modify , it is certainly competent for tlio attorney-goni'tal to inform this body , order that the old law may bo properly modified. Senator Van Wyck , however , accepted the suggestion and his resolu tion WIIM adopted. MISSISSIPPI 1CIVKU IMPIIOVKMKNT' Senator Van Wyok reported the joint resolution for the immediate appropria tion of $1,000,000 , in accordance with the urgent request of the Mississippi river commission , for the improvement of that river. In response to suggestions by Senator Hoar , Air. Van Wyek said that this appropriation is necessary on account - count of the fact that the work is In such position that the works and machinery already in uc are endangered , while the approaching wet boa-son would have a tendency to do more injury than the amount it is proposed to appropriate. The bill passed , 1SSUK OK UNION PACIFIC OHLIOATIONS. The senate , February 4 , Itidl. agreed to resolution ollcred by Air. Van Wyck that the secretary of tin interior inform the senate whether the Union Paeitie Hailroad company has issued any new stock , or made any new mortgage , pledge , loan , running arrangement or truflic contract since March , Iti&S OTIIKIt Sl'KKCHKS. Air. Van Wyek also made speeches on the sale of the Iowa Indian reservation Nebraska and Kansas ; on the diplo matic appropriation bill ; on the District Columbia appropriation bill ; on the bill to prohibit land entries by foreigners ; the amendment to the .Mexican pen sion bill , fixing tlie rates lor widows , and the amendment to a relief bill ; on the bill declaring a forfeiture of curtain lands granted to uid in the construction of a that bhe iUe U all. railroad la Oregon ; on a bill for flxlnsj the rate of pensions to widows nnd minor children ; on the unlawful occupancy ( by fencing ) of the public lands ; on the im provement of the Missouri river at Ne braska City ; on the Indian appropriation bill ; on the payment of Charles II. Heed ns counsel , and on clerks for senate com mittccs. St'MMATlY OP HIS OTItEH LAUGH ? , lie offered amendments totwcntv-tlirpo bills , all of great Importance , lie in troduced forty bills and joint resolutions , which were in the main of great impor tance. He offered thirty-two motions nnd resolutions. He reported ciglity-seycn cates from tint committee on pension , nnd four from the committee on public lands ; also bills from the committee on the improvement of the Missouri river. THE VALLEYl ) ? THE "NOW. " Villlen fm tlif Omaha llrr. Among the Wind river mountains in XorthweMern Wyoming , a beautiful stream travor cs n fertile and picturesque valley , and both stream and valley bear the queer name of the "Now"ami this is the way the name cami1 to bo beslowed : In the fall of 18(15 ( , at the broken gate of n broad and neglected avenue , which led up to the iluitterod maiiMonof a Mis sissippi homestead ; on one of Hiooc days of tfi it time made doublv melancholy by the season and the sot rows which hail fallen upon the region from the war , there stood a sweet-faced girl of 'JO years. She wore a look of settled and hopeless sadness , nnd her large , dark eyes bore the pleading expression of a hunted fawn. The sound of horse's hoofs startled the maiden , and in almost the same moment horse and rider were before her , and the rider had Hung himself from the .saddle , and was presenting the compliments oi the occasion in courtly manner , lie was Captain Hulsirade , lull , strong , erect , and bronzed ! < \ 1 he had been one of For rest's boldest .der.s. For years the man had loved Iho girl before him , Irene Singleton , and she had loved Arthur Dmwiddie. The lliree had been playmates in childhood and com panions in youth. Their .station in life had always been the same , but the war had separated them , and Dmwiddie , a gallant and handsome fellow was among the fallen in the trenches of Vleksbtirg. Uulslradc had never ceased his endeavors to win tlie heart of Irene Singleton and now thai Diuwiddln w-is dead ho pressed his suit with all the tenacity of his nature , but the girl's love was buried with her lover at \ icksburg blurts. Itepulsed but not beaten HuNlradestill hoped , and now came again to urge his claims. This time the answer was decisive and ISuistrade knew that Irene would never love him. Indeed she shrank from him. With rage in his heart ho rode away and shortly afterward left the country. II was said that he had gone to the west. Col. Singleton , Irene's father , deter mined also to leave the devastated south and to seek a new home toward the setting ting sun. In the spring of 18UT he started , and the latter part of lite summer lound him in camp at the old emigrant eros iuir of the Swcetwater river inuitral ( Wyoming. Himself , his wife and Irene , with several employes , composed the party. As the .shades of evening fell a horseman came across the prairie and halted at the camp. It was Hnlstrailc , lie explained that he had a cattle ranch fifty miles farther west , and traveling in the neighborhood saw the camp and rode to it. He remained with the emigrants that night , and next morning accompanied them on their way. Of course he took early occasion to renew his suit to Irene , and was re jected at once. On tlie second night from Swcetwater tlie party were sur prised and captured by 11 gang of moun tain bandits who were then numerous in striking distance of the emigrant trails and all were carried with their goods to the camp of the bandits in the mountain fastnesses of a Wind river tributary. .Mounted on a swift horse , which the rob bers had allowed him to retain on the way to their camp. Buj.stradc made a dash for liberty and easily es caped. In a little while after he fell in with a troop of United States cavalry from Fort Stambangii , and told his story - The officer in charge of the soldiers eagerly accepted Hulstrado's offer to load' the troop lo the robber den , and on the way the ollicer accepted the proposition of liulstradc lo allow himself lo bo re captured , and while in the hands of the bandits to arrange signals which he would jive to the soldiers in order that tin- rob bers might be surprised ami captured without too much loss on the part of the cavalry. Then while the camp was astir and excited ho was lo manage the-separa tion of the prisoners in a squad apart from the robbers , and his signal for firing lo begin upon the bandits should be a keen yell of the word "Xowl" . Prowling about tlie camp as jf devising a scheme for helping the prisoners to escape , Ikilstrado succeeded in his plan of being recaptured and in the night the abusoado of the soldiers was laid. During the night Hulstrado told Irene of his sehoine and how he had prearranged ranged for the recapture of her fathers party , hoping that her gratitude for de liverance would win her to him. Hut he was mistaken. She was immovable. Then in the early morning , in the very midst of the baiulns , he caught Irene in his arms his clear yell of the one word "Now" rang through Iho crisp morning air. Instantly a deadly volley from the soldiers concentrated its fearful work upon the assembled robbers and their prisoners , and at the first fire more than half of the parly fell dead , among them Hulhtrado and Irene. The father and mother were seriously wounded , and afterward died , ( hough carefully nursed at Fort Stambaugh , whence they were removed in ambulances which were sent for. Those of the robbers who were not killed or wounded were made pris oners and afterward served their country in penitentiaries. The dead were burled by the stream and their graves are seen to this day , and , this IH the legend of ' 'The Valley of the Now. " WILL Yissuu-.it. Florida Cooks. Evening Washington : The highest am bition of the colored individual of the fe male persuasion in 1'lorida is to possess the tillo of "cook , " From seamstress to washwoman , Ihoy invariably speak of each other as Mrs. So-and-.So's "cook. " My liivt ( and last ) "cook" possessed the romantic cognomen of ViololLovo , Violet - lot appeared one morning dressed in n palo blue Mother llubhard and applied for a situation. Her services were en gaged , and iho following conversation took jilaco ; "Violet , can you cook ? " "Vathiim. " "Can yon make bread ? " "No'iim. " "Can yon broil steak J" "iNo'nm. I kin done fry bacon. " "Can you make cakuf" 'Vathiim. " "What kind ? " "Hoe cake. " "Well , Violet , what else can you cookV" "Oh , n heap of things. I kin make rice , and hominy , and soliuion.s Hop-ami- John , " "And what is Hint , pray ? " "Well , Missy , yon jes dune take some rico and peas and bacon , and put 'in in a pot and cook * ni. " 1 told Violet thai bho mighl get the dinner , and hungrily awaited the result. Alter DUfllcIiiiit time to prepare an club , orate meal had olapse.d , dinner was an nounced and wu repaired to the tab ) o. Hill for a huge watermelon that nature had prepared , and tint contents of a tin can tli.'tt our own bountiful And enterpris ing north had furnished , we should have fared very poorly for our dinner nil ex cept Violet Lore , to la-arty an appreeia- lioti liiul bins of the pot of llou-aud-Jolin FROM : HELENS SEECfER , 710 Lexington Avc , , N , Y , Cily , the Celebrated and Gifted Artist In Pastel wid Crayon Pcrtrailj. I nm cf n very nervous , roiiMIIro tempMA * mcnt. Pressure of orders kept Ino In n ner vous flurry , nnd In my anxiety to complete ray orders cro the ndvi'tit o ( tlio honied SMSon , I overworked mj-fplf. tvfg completely prog trntrd : hnd npnoiis Kick hoiulnclics , nerved uiistrunp : unit broken down digestion. L1K1HU CO.'S COCA BEEF TONIC worl.eil llko n clmrni. The Atnur.'cui lloimvoi > ntlilc Ol'ieiver ' snysi LIKBia CO.'S COCA BEEF TONIC l fully ilcsorvlnif of the prnlso It la rcoeirlniJ from mcdlcnl mon of nil schools. It Is vfittly superior to tlie bcoftoiilcs nuil extract ! nro so iifsliliioiifiy pulled. The LlKMir CO.'S COCA BEEF TONIC Iircp.iriUlons linvo nttnlnccl n noild-wldo ropitt tiitton.'o \ ivonM ( > 3 | > ecli\lly \ rccom * inciiiJ tlio Cocn Hoof Tonlo with Iron mul Qul- nine. TlioMltvr tiisto of tlio Quinine la COIR. ti'ly covered , nmt It iimkcs the most pnlntn ' Wo preparation or Quinine for ndnilnlstcrtnr lo dollcnlo women and elilldien flint wo nrc no qimliitc'il wltli. Wo Imvo use I It In the uaics oj children o.\tousl\cly , nnd iil\vnf > to ourcntho Bitlsrncllon.-UUNAUl'S : MIIOICAI. JOlMt. NAl , . Mnrylund IjtlnK-ln-Al > yliiin , IlllllllllOIU. We use LI K BIG CO.'S COCA BEEF TONIC wltli the most Btittllyliitf sin-cots. L. S. 1IITT1NO , M. n. . Pnyi-ldnii In ( "liter. To children ultlinmi minis I luivoRlvcnlt with Icoldtd bciutlt. . . . It l < t of Kieut utility n ilyt-pi'pshi. . . . ill-oil most ponciTnl nnil UKroenlilo stimulant to tlio liuiln inidiior- vousHjslcin. W.M. c. mcHArtnsox. M. i ) . , i.r. . i ) . , I'i evident of PI. Louli Clinle of Midwifery mid isc'UFOs of Women and I'lilldien. Her Majesty's Favorite Cosmetic GLYCERINE. Pi opiircd only liy tlio Itoynl Hi Itlsh Company of ClieinNts mid Perfumer * , the UCHIO COM- 1'ANV , fc'olo AuiurltMil Ageiitri , Now Yorle Depot , 38 Murray Stioct. 1'or tlio cotnploxlon mid toilet. OIKS Dollar Patronl/oJ by royiilty nnil the iiolilllty. "Kv- qulslto" Is the verdict of the Ijoimill'ul mid girted iietrcss.ljllllo Lnutry. wit'ioiit ' moill- POSITIYE oino. I'.ilonluJ Octo ; ber 1C , 1S7C. Ono box will euro liomost obtlimto ca o In four daw ovlo . 'Jo ' nniiBcoun < lo > es of eiiboln , cop ilbix or oil of gnniliilttooil Unit uro certain to jiroduco Uyapop- eln by do'iiarliijr the cnntliu < of the ctonmuli , rlro Sl.M. fiolil 1)Jnil ilruwlsH or nmilrcl on ccclptof price. For furtlior pirtionlu-3 : : Font far circular. P. O. liox 1VII. 3" . C. j2 .ILiXj-A.lJT CO. , CURE. . W John si. , Now Yorte. luoH-tli-miilyiu&e "London" Trouser Stretcfeer , XML ( | \ 7 \ I'alciilol In litiropo ntnl U S. / ' / rnrcolobi'iiii'il .loliu Ilniiillton & * ° Btiotclior. TuKus biivgrlne Y \ - - ' out V \ Of knCOS , K'htlU03 pllllllUMMlS to \ \ Otl llllllsllllpu. Olllj p.ll'll btllOCll- i \ crcoiiiiiliiIiiK Korcxv roil In COIKIO- \ \ tion with clump * All iitliurH In- \ I riliiKciuJIIIH. Oilumtil mid only ? } /Strrlolior / for ( lontlunioii'8 iibo. LI "y ovprcf 83 bociuoly puc'koil , price fy ja w. Willo forcliTiilai-H Ak'i'nl.- * wnntiHl In dvory city. G W. SIMMONS A ; CO. , llostou , Muss .M ; < IK si OKI ; \\IIUI.KN.U.I : nticr. 1 I'AY all f\vtfft thaiKif to all points ulihln ' " > nillrH. l.ooi r.iiilniriH lo M'ltt-t Irom hrnd two rt'iit itanipforlllusMaUiiciitalOipiu. Minttoii ItiiApnixr. L. G. SPEHfiEfl'S TOY FACTORY , 221 W. MADISON ST. . CHICAGO. TJii BEST TQKici UNEOUALEUtor CONSUMPTIO WASTING DISEASES and GENERAL UERILITY. PERFECTS DIGESTION , HII KWV I , . MAIJ.IMI , fnr giun III Clilcf , Natluiul ( JIIUH " .Ml ullilltluli Wai rullnl l ( > onr fv > ) lei ) < i .MultUil.ki - ) l > > .Mr. l/nlur , | ) | ) ; , Trillion im'l 1 | MI until u fnw Ixitllci tvllli Tar ti-ttcr affaii Ilinii iiny I junr article In my lunclkr , aim flinl 11 ury nallirjcturjr , " BEWAJE cr : u : < the * rti = ! ! o tf Dttli. on I I.I l.il.rl , EBSNEft & ( B i Aitiinfi/rihtir H ) 816 , SIS and 320 Race St. , Philadelphia , I't. For nlo by C. ! ' , ( Joodinan , ( Jniuii.i , . \rvrrEEiunr , css zssu Cl JJUVAUU'JY X. if'