I THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : MONDAY. MAY 2. 1887. BEGINNING OF BASE BAIL. The Oomlng YTcak to Inaugurate the Season in tbo Capital City , OMAHA AND LINCOLN CONTESTS. Poor Man.iRomont by tlio Mnyor In tlio KumiltiK or tlio I'ollco Force Tlie I'tibllo Bulc ( ' Lots. IntoM runnEr.'s MSCOI.XnunrcMT. ! Tliu present week will cliro nlcle tlio Duelling lea 'u ' Chines of bull in Lincoln , commuuciiiK with Wednesday , when tlio Omalin club crossoa bats with tlio Lin- coliiH. These opening games will giro Lincoln pcoplo an opportunity of show ing just how much they appreciate tlio oll'orts to ftivo them healthy out-door ninusements , and if n generous patron- ngc is Hhown in tlio commencement of the .season the management of the homo club will feel greatly encouraged. The Lincoln base ball a'fwiation hnvo ele gant grounds for the summer. The street car comnanies will use their beat efforts to accommodate all patrons , find for n nlcasant carriage drive the ball grounds are Just the right distance from the city. Whether the homo club wins every game or not the snort will bo ex cellent , and it Is generally understood that when Lincoln and Omaha moot at any time during the season that the meeting will be for blood. It is expected thut a largo number of Oninln. parties will bo down to witness these opening league games , and it will all contribute ' to make it especially interesting. Sonio new players will also appear in the Lin coln nine for the first limo. I'OOIl MANAOKJir.NT. Nothing whatever is lacking to show the very poor management the mayor is exercising in running the police force without giving the chief any power in the promises and without giving the council committed on police an opportunity to exercise their influence in the matter. Chief Cooper could build up an efficient force if ho had the opportunity , and ho has had experience in such matters , but when the mayor holds to himself nil the powers of appointment and removal Chief Cooper can neither do himself or the public justloo. Mr. Cooper recog nizes the fuel that some of the mayor's defections its policemen are totally unfit for suoh service , and Councilman Burks , chairman of the council committee on police , recognty.es the mtmo slate of facts , but thus far their Leflorts to right mat ters have boon unavailing. Tlio night police force IB officered by a man who is an totally unlit iu crvery particular for efficient service as coulil bo fouiul , and who ought to have been removed months ngo on general principles. The spectacle of a policeman arresting a deputy sher iff in the course of duty was a fair example of some of the day force , and to cap the climax , il is stated that the mayor has given em ployment to Detective Pound , the mana ger of the stale house episode , who is to act as detective for this elegant force and point out tlio violations. All these ridi culous and farclal experiments are daily bringing the force into disrepute among the better class of clti/.eusand the crooks and toughs continue to flock to the city for a harvest time. Meanwhile , Chief Cooper will be expected , by those unao- quaintcd with the facts , to do oQicient work with the motley crowd of wliolly unexperienced men that the mayor holiU under him. him.Tire Tire FinflT PUBLIC SALE. The first auction Hale of Lincoln real c tuto took place Saturday under the inanagomentof Cludous & Ifonnoll. This is a method of soiling that has met with Huccess often in older cities and its in troductory hi Lincoln was quite success ful. A band in the circus wagon parad ed the streets and led the way to tlio different places where lots were sold , followed bv " about 200 people in carriages. The sale "as a whole must have boon satisfactory to the projectors , some of the lots Bolllnc at n handsome figure and others netted the purchasers special bargains. A few of the sales will eivo Lincoln people an idea of the sales as a whole. The lot on the southwest corner of P and Ninth streets , 30x113 , sold to O. W. Webster for $10,000 , a handsome price for n handsome piece of property. The Winger lot , on the southwest corner of Ninth and S streets- was sold to the game purchaser at $10,000 , but it is understood that Captain AVinger gave 1100 on the spot for the rclcaso ot the tale. Two lots north of the traoks that were on bottom ground sold for from 11'JOO to $1,300 each , and the next sale was a lot on O street , between Nineteenth and Twentieth , a fifty foot lot , and It was considered a great bargain at $0,825 , the figures for which it sold to Mrs. Skin ner. A lot on L and Nineteenth , with a good two story frame house , brought fr , ! 500 , J. L. Uyan being the puruhaier , and two vacant lots on seventeenth and K sola to C. E. Loomis for f 0,300. Two tots on N and Nineteenth brought an excellent price , soiling for $7.300. and a lot on F near Twentieth sold for the peat Rum of $265 , while the residence property of B. P. Hoggon was purchased by J. C. Mcllrldo for * U,100. AUOUTTHK CITY. The needs of a city hospital have been made manifest iu the past two days in the cu o of a colored girl who was driven r from the house in which she was being cared for , and In the case ot the man who had his skull cracked with a hatohot nnd who was cared for in the council chamber. Bomothing ought to bo done And that speedily for the sick and desti tute In Lincoln. Postmaster Watkins suggests a good policy for the city to adopt and that is lor it annually to set aside a sum of money to expend on the park in the government square. The national gov ernment will not appropriate money for decorative purposes , and if the park hero is made what It should bo the city will have to assist. Personal contributions hare been made heretofore foi the pur pose , but for permanent work the city should lend yearly assistance. County Attorney 11. D. Stearns has boon absent from tn city the past week , ostensibly on n visit eastward with no particular object in view. The last few days , however , It has bcon reported that Air. Stearns would not return home alone , but that ae would bring with him A wife , and hU friends are waiting to congratulate him. K > \ cstorday was a prohibition day in Lincoln , the pollca force being detailed in special duty , watching as well as pos sible the places whore intoxicants were retailed. There did not , however , appear to bo any more artesian well water drunks than usual. Itoal estate transfers have been more than holding their own the past few days , Saturday's values reaching nearly f I''O- 000 , with some of the most extensive auc tion sale * of that day not filed before the closing hour * at the county ogioes. The past week WAS Important in the number of sales. Fred Funke , proprietor of the opera house In this oily , accompanied by his family , start for a European tour this week that will take several months to make. Th y will rlsit France , Italy and a number of prominent places in Ger many. The annual meeting of the clam-bakers 4 is beiuis looked forward to with a great deal of anticipation by the grand army of dam-bakers , and the first bake of the teason will take place the coming month at Shogo Island , MIHonl , The of the association are iu n very flourish ing condition ! How Much or lluBala the Jews Own. London Times * A commission has been for several years past occupied in Hussin with inquires as to the number of Jew * , and especially ab to their position as landholders , with a view to contemp lated legislation on the subject. Seine results of Iho investigation have lately been published. According to the census statistics of 18S1 relating to sixteen gov ernments of the eouth and wo.st of the empire there were 3.UWWi ! ( ) Jews of both sexes in n total population of aViOO.OOfl t. c. , at the rate of 11 } par vent. The Hebrew element is most largely rcpre- ncntod in Lithuania and White Russia , and least In Little Huasla. In Mink It Is as ono in five , while in Kharkov the pro portion is one to 350. In grnoral the Jews prefer to settle in villages , or in towns which are not seats of government. A striking example of their prcpanderanco is shown in the hamlets of the Troki district ( Wilna ) where they form 92 per cent of Iho popu lation. Regarding their position as owners or occupiers of land In the above mentioned provinces , will oh contain 1:17,000,000 : acres In all , it appears that they have purchased 1.800,000 from the nobles since 1801 , and they hold 0,230,000 acres as tenant farmers. These lands they do not cultivate themselves , but lot or sublet them ; us the case may bo , in small lots to the peasants of noluliborinc villages. Their profits as middlemen have hitherto been very largo. There arc instances In Hcssarabia , Volhynia and Kherson of extensive districts hired by them at from one-third to two roubles an aero , and rclot in small lots at four to live roubles per acre. In I5c arabia they have obtained long leases of agricultural land belonging to some foreign convents which they have sublet in some cases for twenty-five rou bles per faltcha , a local measure equal to nearly three acres. In 1'odolia almost all tlio larco estates situated in the basins of the aflluonls of the Dniesncr are held by Jews at long terms. The system of agriculture pursued under these new masters is found to be no better than that of other classes of land speculators. The soil is exhausted after live or ten years' cropping , and it Is not to be wondered at that within the last dectule there has been a fall of thirty per cent , in the value of landed property. Boils , pimples , hives , ringworms , tet ter , and all other manifestations of im pure blood are cured by llood's Sarsa < parilla. ESTATE. Transfers Filed April UO , 1887. Alfred I' Hopkins et al executor and executrix to Edwin 11 Sherwood all blk IU and 11 Lowes 3d add. deed..S32,500 , Tbos J Donahoo ami wife to Tlmna Snook , Iota 0 , 7 blk 20 , Waterloo , w d 200 West Side Hid asso to 0 H Sherman. U 'JO blk 10 Hanscom place , w d 2,000 , I Anna M U McC'ormlck et al to Louise GUDK lots blk5 , Ueer 1'aik , w d. . . 1,000 Ellzn F Daniuln and husband to Kr.w- tus Young , lots 13,14 blk 5 , West End add. wd 0,500 Maurice Uartlctt and wlfo to Gee \VI1- kin' * , lot 22 blk 23. Gee 11 Boggs add , wd 7. . 200 L 1' 1'ruyn and wife to Anderson Tav- lor , wW lot 4 bit 2 , Tarkeni add , w "d 1,000 Ulias A Goss ot alto J W > Phelps , lot 30 , Windsor place , w d 2,103 Clayton W DpLamatre to Fred L Wil- kins. lot 3 Tabor place , w d 1,050 Mary E Quackenbush to Gee T Crlss- iiian. undlv K lots 38 , : > ' . , 40 , Hart's subdh'oi lots IT to24 Inclusive ot blk 2 , Park place , w d 2,500 Sam U Galloway and wifu to Mary E Qiiackenbusn lots 8S , US ) , 40 , Harfs subdlv of lots 17 to 24 Inclusive , blk 2 Park pUce , w d 5,000 Louise M Arnold to the Public , plat of Arnold park , OCOxflCO feet beslnnlne at so cor of sejjf swjf 5 15 13 , dedica'n 8 Dm Land Co to the public , plat ot nark of S Oina , dedication S Oin Land Co to the Public , plot of blks 101 to 137 inclusive In S Om , ded Mary Malouo to John M McMahon ct al n& of w } blk 15 S E Uogers add , w d 3,100 Jos S Damron and wife to Chas Impoy lots 45078. Damrons subdiv of lots 3 4 blk 84 8 Ora.w d 2,800 Gee B Christie to Edwin S Ilowloy.un dlv } i int of CCxUS it commencing CO ft not nwcorof 20th and liar- noyst , wrt 3712.50 John L McCague trustee to C A Leary et al lot G blk 2 , Park place add , need 4,400 JosWBarnsdatltoD LThoinas , lots 10 , 11,13. IS , U blk 13. Brlggs place , w d 5,000 Iheodore YnnAJst and wife to II A Nolle , lot 11 , blk 6 , Elknorn , w d. . . . 200 lians Leebens and wife to John Androson , lots 0 and 7 , blk 1 , Elkhorn - horn , wd 800 Mellna Clltf and husband to Fred K T bliinmck , w K lot 13 , blk 11 Sblnn'a add.wd 2,700 West tilde Building association to John A Waketield , lot 1. blk 10 , Ilanscom place less w H ft of said lot wd - ' 2,000 John Allorbach and wlto to Gus A Talk , n X lot 3 bin 7 , llorbach's 2nd add. wd 475 Edwin S Hood and wife to Win Meyer lot 21 , bib 3 , Albright's annex to South Oman * , wd Ill Allco K Whinnery and husband to Henry M Wier et al , MKIO-J ft of lot 14 , blk 55 , Improvo't Asso'n add , wd 1,100 City of Omaha tf. hfiirs of Plilllp Metz , deceased , UOxBS ft beKlnulng at n e oorof lotl , blkU07qo 83 Anua B Savldgo and husband to Mietmel McVsy , w 82 ft of lot 11 , blk 7 , Patrick's 2nd add , w d 2,000 Sauil E Rogers and wlto t John Tschadnasch , a % lot 8 , blk 1 , lina Asso add. wd 25 Marcaret M Sordon and husband to UowanlB Smith , all of bile B , West Omaha , wd 20,000 City of Omaha to Leavott Biirnhrm , 20 xOO It boxinuinj : at n o cor of lotl , blk48qc 500 5vonVlekman to David Jamleson et al , wH lot ao , Hickory place , wd. . . 050 First Christian church to Frank Mur- Dtiv and Jos Barker , o 2-&ls lot 3 , bite 148 , qc 6 WilRon T Graham to U 1 , Thomas , lots 1 nnd 3 blk 3 Fred Uellone's add. w d 1,000 D L Thomas and wife to Frank Holler , lot 10. blk 13 , BrlgKS1 place , w d. . . . 1,700 D L Thomas and wife to WiUnn T Graham , lot 15 , bile 8 , Urdus' place , vrd 2,000 Jessie 1) Bradley ct al to Jenny M Wlodousall , lot IU , Arlington add , vr d 1,000 Gee E Barker ot al to Frank W Heed , trustee , lots 7 , 8 , 15 and 10 , blk 'J , Mayne place add , wd 8,200 A Word About Catarrh. "It is the mncoua membrane , thnt wonderful somi-Hulil envelope surrounding the delicate Us- uei of the sir and food passages , that Catarrh mukot its stronghold. Once established , it oats into the vnrjr Ylult , and renders life but a Ion * drawn broatb of misery and disease , dullinir the nte of h * rlnir , trammelling the power of neeoh , destroying the faculty ot smell , tulntltitr the breath and killing the refined pleasures of taste. Idsldloatljr. by creoplntr on trom a sun- pie cold In the head.lt * * aults tlio membranous ilnlnjr and envelops the bones , eating through the delicate costs and causing Inflammation. sloughln * and death. Nothing short of total eradication will secure health to tbo patient , and all alloviatives are simply procrastinated suf- ferhurs.leadlusr to a fatal termination. BAN- rom/H HAIIICAI. Ctnut , by Inhalation and by In ternal administration , has never failed ; or en when the dlseaae has made frlfftuful Inroads on delicate constitutions , hearing , smell and taste bavo bean recovered , and t be disease thor oughly driven out" HANroiWi tUDiOAt , CURB rang tot * of one bot- Ue of tb * lUDiOAi , CBBm.one box OATHAIHIUAI. Bof.Ywrr.an4 ooe IMFKOVBO IHHALBR. neatly wrapped in one package , with full directions- price , 11.00. Port-am Dago > Camion. Co. , Bottos. HOW Worn out with pain , but ttllloompeU- p < ! by stern necessity to stand up to the I work before us and bear the pain. K ' .4 * * i * ° il ? ttwvru A CtmooM -PAtinaannfor tbeaobla * tide * - and back , the weak and painful muscles tbe sere oboet and hacking ooucb , aod every pain and aok * of daily toJlTKIo.7nt.Sew , orUi foal. M d > an4 Infallible. At druirrlstsJ&Si f 'W 'PS11 * * * " . of Foturhrtif THE AWFUL DEPTHS OF SPACE , A Tolcecopo Wbicli Will Penetrate tbo Voll of Many Mystrles. JAMES LICK'S GENEROSITY * the Moon Within Slvtr-Slx Miles of the Enrtli Mount Hamil ton's HUKO Dome-Groat During the coming summer there will be erected upon the summit of Mount Hamilton , in California , In the huge dome already prepared for It , the great est refracting tolc'-eopo the world ever saw or Is over likely to sou unless the art of the glass-maker and of the lens- grinder should take some marvelous leap in advance. Itisqulto natural that uni versal curiosity snould bo awakened as to the probable extent of the yet untried powers of this monster telescope. Tlio eyes not only of all astronomers , but of the intelligent reading public all over the world , are turning impatiently to ward Mount Hamilton , and ono of tlio firat questions that an astronomer hears In a miscellaneous assemblage la : "What do you think the Lick telescope will show ? " If Mr. Janios Lick , who charged his executors to construct tlio most pow erful telescope in existence , could hear the bu/.r. of expectation thai the near ac complishment of bin behest has awakened ho would probably already feel repaid for his generosity. 'lilt : UDSKHVATOUr. In view , then , of this widespread and laudable curiosity about an inslrumont that represents the crowning achieve ment of tlio telescope-maker , it is well worth while to inquire what the Lick telescope will really bo able to do , Jn answering that question thorn are three principal points to be kept in view. First , Ihe size of the telescope ; second , the quality of ils workmanship , and third , its location. In all of the.se respects the Lick telescope stands in the front rank The true measure of the si/.o of a telescope - scope retlectin telescopes like Lord Kongo's are hero lott out of consideration , Although a similar rule would apply to them is Iho diamelor ot Iho object- glass , that is , the large glass In the end of the tube furthest from the eye. The object gluss of the Lick telescope is three feet across , ten inches broader Ihan the lirobdlntiginn eye of the great tclcscopo of the Naval Observatory at Washington. Hut ilioso ten iuchcs represent a far mightier increase of power than the un initiated would suppose. They enable the Lick glass to grasp Iwico as much li ht as the Washington glass can do. More accurately speaking , while the Washington telescope collects 10,000 limes as many rays of lighl as Iho un aided human ( \yo can do , the Lick tele scope will collect Uv'-100 , limes as many rays as tlio eye is able to grasp. Tlio ; reat telescope recently sot "up at Pul- town , Russia , has an object-glass thirty .nchcs in diameter , giving it a light- grasping about two-thirds as great as ; hat of the Lick telescope. As to workmanship , tlio same master- land that .shaped the lenses of the Wash- ngton and Pulkowa instruments made : ho obji'ot-glass for the Lir-k telescope , : he hand ot the veteran Alvin Clark , who s everywhere acknowledged to bo the world's ' greatest tolescopc-makor. That Ihe Lick glass will compare modi favor- ibly with the previous masterpieces of winch it was subjected at Cambridge be- [ ore it was sent to California. JIOUN'l'KI ) FOH USL. Finally as to the location. In this re spect the Lick telescope will have an ad vantage of which those who are not familiar with the workings of aslronom- ical instruments can form but a faint idea. The astronomer's worst enemy is the atmosphere. Kvcu the calmest weather it is a source of annoyance and a stumbling-block to him. One can form some notion of what the trouble is by looking over a heated roach of sands in the summer or over the top of n flat stove in which a lively fire is burning and noticing Ihe waving and trembling mo tion of the heated air , which twists tlio rays of light traversing it into a con fused blur. Similar motions and cur rents prevailing in the atmosphere near ly all the time are magnified by tlio tele scope until their effect is lo deslroy lliat sharpness of vision winch is needed in aslronomical observations. There are two ways of getting rid to some o.xtenl al leasl of Ihis annoyance. One way isle lo plant your telescope in some part of the world where an equable climate gives unusual steadiness lo Ihe atmosphere. Another way is to climb up into a high mountain and set your telescope above the denser and more troublesome layers of air. Thirty years ago Piazzi Smyth , the astronomer royal for Scotland , made n famous experiment which dcmonslrateil the effectiveness of the last named expe dient. Ho went to the Canary Islands , and dragging a powerful telescope to the top of Iho lofty peak of Tenerillo , set it up there a in id the pumice stone and lava blocks of that giant volcano. The astro nomical world was delighted witli Iho en- tbitsiaslic dcseriplion that he broughl back of the clearness and distinctness ol the lolescopio vision upon the moun tain lop. Yet it was not easy to find a mountain on which an observatory couk bo built.and so astronomersfor the raosl part , continued to do the besl they could at the bottom of the aerial ocean , only aspiring in their hearts lo bo inhabitants of the limpid upper air. Now the Lick telescope has all the ad vantages that come from both a high elevation and an equable climate. The observatory slands on Iho summit of e mountain 400 feel above thn sou level The climate of Ibal region is delicious to Iho astronomer exquisite. Mr. Hum ham , the eaglo-cycd discoverer of double stars , wont there lo lesi Iho seeing quali- llos of Iho Mount Hamilton air and was both charmed and astonished. New double stars fell into his catalogue like ripe apples in an autumn night. So we see that in every way the great telescope will possess an advantage over most of those now in existence , and in the matter of size it is , of course , unri valed. .Next lot us inquire what it will proba bly show. When talking of the powers of telescopes , people naturally think first of the moon. It is the nearest of the heavenly bodies , and in some respects Iho most interesting , The first celestial ob ject that Galileo turned his telescope upon was the moon , and the delight that he expressed at the sight of its plains and mountains has been felt increasingly by all observers since bis time. Every increase of the power of telescopes has brought to light new details in these wonderful lunar landscapes. There is a simple ratio between the magnifying power of a teloicope and the apparent distance of the object looked at , which renders it easy to itale that power in a popular and easily-understood form. It a telescope maxnlUes 100 diameters it will bring its object apparently 100 time as near as it really is. The mean dis lance of tbo moon is about 210,000 miles With a telescope maftnifylng 100 diamo ten it would , therefore , appear to bo brought within 9,400 miles of the earth- Now the Lick telescope , under the most favorable conditions , may bear a magni. lying power ol 8,600 diameters. That would bring the moon within an apparent distance of between sixty-aixand sixty , seven miles. At such a distance it would be very difficult to detect any but the coarsest featvres of the landscape. Arti ficial works , if any existed would hare to ie of great size to bo seem A slructure ike the pyramid .of Cheeps would be visible ns a spot , nnd possibly its shni > 9 might be made out by clo. o study of tlio sundown It cast audits varying apponranco under different Illuminations. In fact , it Is by the shadows of objects upon it that \vo lunrn more of the moon's surface tlmn in any other way. Owing to tlio absence of any Appreciable atmosphere shadows upon the moon nre as blr ck an Ink. A building like the Washington inoiuinient standing on the lunar surface would bo Invisible to us when the sun shone per pendicular upon it. lint with the rising or setting sun it would cast a long spire of shadow thai thu Lick telescope might bo able to show. A I.U.VAK VOLCANIC HF.C.ION . Of courao a city on the moon would be visible , nnil would probably bo rooognlz- able us such. Cut a piece of paper an Inch long and n quarter of an inch broad and hold It six or seven inches from the oyo. It will occupy nearly the exact angular diminsious that the city of New York would have If it stood upon the moon and was viewed from the oaith with n telescope magnifying 8,000 , diam eters. Then try H mark upon this bit ot paper in their true relative proportions the streets nnil principal buildings of the city , nnd you will have a queer notion of the umount of detail that might bo ex pected to bo seen. Uut objects would not appear ns clear as they would to the nuked eye tit a similar real distance , owing to the loss of light in the telescope and the necessary imperfections of the imago. And , while the power mentioned could doubtless bo ust'd upon the Lick telescope , yet In prac tice it hardly ever would bo used , and bettor results could probably be attained with powers of 2,000 or 1,000 , or in many cases of only 1,000 , with which powers the apparent dis-tancc of the moon would be respectively 120 , IfiO and a 10 miles. Hut astronomers worn long ago con vinced that there are no cities upon the moon and no inhabitants to build them. Some , believing that the Creator would not have formed so complete a world merely to shod a Mttlo rellectcd light upon the earth , may think there must been inhabitants there in the long-past ages of lunar history vho may have left some traces of their presence. However this may be , the discovery of artilicial works is not needed to nmko the moon interesting , Tossed and torn as it has been by the most torrilic volcanic lorcos , the face of our satellite presents to us as strange a world as the most grotesque imagination could picture. Craters forty and fifty miles across ; circular plains completely ringed and shut In by giant mountain peaks ; strange shining moun tains , whoso mighty Hanks fairly blaze when the sunshine .strikes them , so that oven the clear-eyed William llorschcl thought ho saw them actually vomiting lire ; empty bottoms of long dried-up seas , chasms a mile wide , 100 miles or more long and of frightful depth with all these features to excite the wonder and oven the admiration of the beholder , for the moon is very beautiful in the telescope , there Is no danger that the lunar revelations of the great Lick glass will lack interest , oven if they only servo to strengthen the evidence that our bril liant satellite is often all but the skeleton of a world. Then conies the planet Mars , which in terests us in a very different way , for Mars is not improbably an inhabited world. The question of tls actual condi tion as to habitablcncss is still under de bate ; and here the great California ! ! tele scope may bo able to lurnish decisive ev idence " ono way or the other if properly used. We already know that Mars has an atmosphere , and wo can hardly bo mistaken in Raying that it possesses water , and that differently colored re gions wo see upon it arc lands and seas. Around its poles wo perceive white patches that wax and wane with the seasons. What can they bo but snow fields ? Obscuring largo portions of its surface at timesmisty patches are visible , which nre seen to slowly ch nge their position , and some times to giadually melt awiiy. What are these but clouds iloatiug in the atmosphors of the planet ? Within the past ten years curious streaks , called canals , have boon soon at times upon Alars. They certainly are not canals in the ordinary moaning of that term ; just what they are wo do not know. There is some evidence that their appear ance nnd disappearance depend upon the changes of the seasons of Mars. Into the mysteries of the most interesting world and the reader will at once per- ceiTe that it is full of the greatest inter est the Liok telescope should enable as tronomers to penetrate much further than they have yet been able to do. The planets Jupiter and Saturn have also assumed fresh interest of late , es pecially the former , on account of the puzzling appearances that they have pre sented. The liugo red snot on Jupiter , which was lirst seen in 1878 , is still visi ble , having in the past three or four years undergone ) very singular lluctuations of form and visibility. It is not likely , as has been Miugoaled , that this hlraugo spot is a portion of the red-hot surface of the great planet mudo visible to us by the withdrawal of a concealing envelope of clouds ; yet it can hardly be doubted that it has something to do with the planetary development of that distant world , which is now evidently passing through the earlier stages of what migh. bo called tta prc-goological history , In dealing wilh snoh phenomena as Ihta the Lick telescope will possess an enor mous advantage , If its powers are prop erly directed , with a magnifying powcrof of 3,000 time ? , Jupiter , when ncaropposl tion , would appear ns if only about one hundred and thirty-throe thousand miles away , or something more than half the distance of the moon , If Jupiter really were only as far mvay ns that , It would seem to fill half the heaven * . It would have nn apparent diameter of over seventy degrees , covering about twenty thousand tlmos ae largo a space us the full moon docs. Kvon with a power of lfiOO Jupiter would be brought within an apparent dlstanco of about two hundred and sixty- six thousand miles , or only three timed its own diameter away. Our presenl tclcscopo will not bear such a power sat isfactonly , but it ought to be available under the best conditions , on Mount Hamilton , for the study of the features of Jupiter's surface. The same remarks ap ply to Saturn Iho wondeaful world with rings suspended around it. With the great new telescope such views should be obtained of it as have never boon ob tained before. A gigantic photographic lens is to bo applied to the Lielc telescope. Herein the monster will probably bo able lo ac complish enormous resulU. It has re cently been found practicable to photo graph stars and ncbulic which the human eye cannot sec at all , oven when aided by the most powerful telescopes. Hut tlio photographic plates make thorn visible , showing that the heavens are oven more full of wonders than men had dreamed. What now marvels of this kind the Liok telescope will reveal in tlio awful depths of space , where suns and worlds nro strewn like sands upon llio shore can ouly be guessed. Ono of Now Mexico's Iliirlod Towns. Socorro Bullion : A few days ago two prospectors , while waudoiing over the foothills cast of the city , accidently stumbled on signs of previous habitation buried under heaps of sand which had boon drifted by tlio winds of years. Hav ing selected a poinl at which lo make an excavation , Ihey went lo woik with a will , and in a few hours had reached the lloor of a small chamber in the form of a parallelogram. They found the re mains of several human beings , several handsome vases carved wilh gcomelrical figures iu different colors , stone axes , hammers , pieces of cloth apparently manufactured from the libro of the yucca ; several strings of beads , sea shells , arrow heads and an abundance of fragmenls of obsidian quartz , and an in credible quantity of pieces of broken pottery , including several with a blue glazing. Only in one other instance have wo ever heard of this color and quality of ware having been discovered in this ter ritory , and that was nt the ancient pueblo near the Sanla Kila in Ihis conn- Iry. and it indicates that the Spaniards had lived in New Mexico before tlio ox- linclion of tlio race who inhabited this ruined nnd buried village. DR5.S.&D.DAYIESOH . . . 1707 Olive St. , St. Louis Mo. 1742 Lawrence St. , Denver , Colorado , Of the Missouri Stale Museum of Anatomy , St. Lotm , Mo. , University College Hospi tal , London , Giesun , Germany and New York. Having devoted their attention SPECIALLY TO THE TREATMENT OK i Clinic and DISEASES , More especially those arising from impru dence , unite all so suffering to correspond without delay. Diseases of infection and contagion cured safely and speedily with out detention from business , and without the use of dangerous drugs. Pa tients whose cases have been neglected , badly treated or pronounced incurable , should not fail to write us concerning their symptoms. All letttrs receive immediate attention. attention.JT7ST JT7ST PUBLISHED. And will be mailed FREE to ar.y address on receipt of one 2 cent stamp. "Practical Observations on Nervous Debility and Physical Exhaustion , " to which is added an ' Essay on Marriage , " with important chap ters on Diseases of the Reproductive Or gans , the whole forming a valuable medical treatise which should be read by all young men. Address , DUS. S. & D. DAVIESON , 1742 Lawrence St. , Denver , Colorado. 1707 Olive St..St. Louis. Mo. PENNYROYAL PILLS "CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH. " The Original and Only Genuine. tfofi u4 ! ; j K J bi . n in or worihlM * Iiulutlont. to luunublc to LADIES. Auk jour l > rimnt > t for "CkUhctlor * * EB U | I * ind U t in cll.tr , or Kikxe ie. ( UaM ) Id ul f r pwli iiUri < IttUf bj ret m raul. . CkltbcUorCb.mlc.ICn- . NAME PAPER. - jflTUB4aoM > ViuMi > hlU4m , ! ' . * ld hj nntntlfta everywhere , ill fcr "GUrbtt * Mi' * RoflUS" HeUTroral IMllfc UNDER OATH. Tne Asthma , REMEDY Bronchitis , Catnrrhal That Deafness , Never Membrane Fnils to ous Croup , Cure Snorinar , Catarrb Ulcerated Sore Throat Granulated riiarineritia Eyelids , and Neuralgia , Lariiitfitis A GREAT FAMILY MEDICINE. Whooping Coughs , Colds , Etc , CARBOLIC BMOKE HALL Co. i Omnln , Neb. . April W. vet. Gentlemen : Sometime npo you Induced mo to trrone of your Bmoko Balls. At the time I had a cbild urtorlua with Terr bid wnoopliiucouuli. He could hirJIr II * down.st It bronihton tlrmsuU- tlon from lh phloxm.iuid In til" efforts to throw nir"trlnsr ] p&lium" be w n connUntlr vomiilne til * food ( ait u tnkun In I ra 'lo ' bltu Inlialo tlic ' : moko" front Iho Ball n few minutes st a time , tlireo tlraoi for a dar , und INSIDB OF wlfuims HltoKB TUB COUUU Ul * . Ifrom Iha itart lie imoko al tered Hie character of the MOretlon ; Uioy boroino loose and casllr thrown off la the form of "matwr. " and la ( few dny the eh I Id bad full ; rocovorod. Hlnce that I nae Hmoke nail In mj faintly forordlnarr coldt. forwhlehlt tTe lmmc < li to rollofanil H p 9Jreaw. Ueipeetfull. U II. UKKMKIt.ComnilMlonMerchanl.nil , ) i , a06 and 807Howurd slraot. TSSSy * ta ' " " " " W iwora W " tot < "Be thls darof * ' " ' % . KEVBOILNotarr Public. Our "Debellatojr'Package ' ! , " unequalled as a blood purifier and should be T ed in connection with the smoke ball in all chronic diseases. TEST. Given to all eallerq at oar ladles' and grouts' parlors , room 11 CrelgrhtoB Block. Carbolic Hmoko Ball sent by mail. 12 , and 4 cents for postage. Debollator , f L OAIiliOLlC SMOKR BALL cT ) . , Boom 11 Croighton Block , 16th St. , near P. O. Omaha , Neb. % AAC W. CARPKNTER. Pros. a FRANK CAKl'KNTKH. Bee JAS. A. CAUfKOTKJl. Vice-PrM. C. L. CAUPKNTKK. Treas < Carfinter Papir GomMny | , Wholesale Paper Dealers Carry a nice nevritock of Printing , Wrapping and Writing Paper. Special attention given to car load orders , which will bo shipped direct from uillla. All orders will receive personal attention. We guarantee good goods and low prices. CARPENTKB PAPESt COMPANY 1114 and IUO Douglas St. . Omnb" , SPECIAL MOST PERFECT MADE Dr. Price's Extracts , Vanilla , lemon , Orancro , Eta * _ prepared from the true fruits , ' Sctno In on of tie Department * ot ' . . . PBICB BAKING POWDBIt OOMKANX'8 JIANUlfACTOHT. TUB LABQICST IN TJIJJ WOIIUD ) ing Dr. Prlcoa Special Flayorlng E ; Lawrence Ostrom & Co. FAMOUS "BELLE OF BODRBON. " ! Death t9 Consumption , Malaria , Sleeplessness , Chills aud Fevers Or Insomnia , and Typhoid Feyer , Dissimulation , Indigestion , 01 Food , Dyspepsia , Ten Years Old , Jfcrera Ho Fusel Oil , Absolutely Par * , The GREAT APPETIZER This will certify that I have eramlned Ihe BeHe of Bourbon Whl ky , received from Lawrence Ostrurn & Co. , and found the same to be perfectly tree from Fusel Oil and other deleterious substances and striclly pure I cheerfully recommend th same for Family use and Medicinal purposes. J. P. BARNUM , M. D. , Analytical Chemist , Louisville , Ky. For sale by druggists , wine merchants and grocers everywhere. Price $1.85 p r bottle If not found at the above , half-dpz. bottles in plain boxes will be sent to wnr address in Ihe United States on Ihe receipt of six dollars. Express paid lo all places east of Missouri River , LAWRENCE OSTROM & Co. Louisville , Ky Wholesale and Distributing Agents , RICHARDSON DRUG CO. , and 1 HILEY t DILLON , Wholesale LUiuor Dealer * , f Omaha , edbu GLAVHIOliE BROS. SCO. , Omaha. RELIABLE JEWELER. Wfttchea , Diamond * , Flue Jewelry , Silv rwar The largest stock. Price * the lowest Repairing a specially. Work warranted. | Corner Douglas and 15th streets , Omaha. Licensed Watchmaker for the Union Pacific Railroad Company. The G. E. Mayne Real Estate and Trust Co. N. W. OOB. Hth AND HARNJY , OKAHA. Property of every description for salu in all parU of the city. Lnnd * for snlo in every county in Nebraska. A COMPLETE SET OF ABSTRACTS Of Titles of Douglas County kept , Maps of the city , stnto or counly , or any other information desired furnished free of charge upon Application. Display at their warerooms , 13O6 and 13O7 Farnarn Street , the largest assortment of Pianos and Organs to be round at any establishment west of Chicago. The stock embraces the highest class and medium grades , Including STEIN WAY , FISCHER LYON&HEALY , PIANOS Xrx % it * . * * BURDETT , ORGANS STANDARD ; -1 > * * i < * . v , . . L.-.W Prices , quality and durability considered , are placed at the lowest living rates for cash or time payments , while the long established reputation of the house , coupled with their most liberal Interpretation of the guarantee on their goods , affords the purchaser an absolute safeguard against loss by possible defects In materials and workmanship. LYON & HEALY , IMS 4. (307 ( FARNAM