THE OMAHA. DAILY BEE : AYEDNESDAY. .TUIjY 20. 1887. 5 ' , .BESPOBSIBLEFORTDEW8ECK Bo the Coroner's Jury Declare Ooncerning Engineer Bowser. "I . r , AN ASTONISHING VERDICT. ' The D , & SIi However , Succeeds In Shifting the lllninc on Its Hcrvnnt Kxpcrlcncod ItallroaUcra I'd Ink Dowser Innocent > , A ' fFHOM THE TIKK'8 LINCOLN BUHEAU.I * i The coroner's jury Jnvcsligatlng thor r B. & M. wreck nt Havolock examined n number of witnesses of minor Import ance yesterday evening and afterward visited the scone of the wreck at Have lock accompanied by the railroad officials with two locomotives to illustrate the scene. At 3 o'clock yesterday morning they agreed to fasten the blame upon Engineer Bowser , and in the morning drew up Iho following verdict , which they left with the coroner. The verdict ii as follows : LINCOLN , Jinn. , July 18,18S7. BTATE OF NEltHASKA , I - , County of Lancaster)03 ) At an Inquisition holden in the city of Lincoln , county of Lancaster , state of Ne braska , on the 17th , 18th and llllh day of July , A. D. , 1887 , before ona T. U. Kotors , coroner of said county , upon the body of Dr. Max Uandall , lying dead , by the jurors whoso names are hereunto subscribed , the said Jurors upon tholr oath do say that he , the Bald Dr. Max llanaallcarao to his death at ! t o'clock p. in. , Saturday , July 10 , lbS7. from the effects of burns on his body and congestion of the lungs , the latter being caused , as shown by the evidence of attend ing physicians , by bronthluchot air In ahuin- lei ; car on the Burlington nud Missouri Klvcr railroad , near Hnvelock station on said rail road , on the morning of July 15 , 1887 , the burning of said car being caused by a col lision of two freight trains on said railroad nt the time and place aforesaid. That the said jurors further lind that the aforesaid collision was the result of criminal careless ness on the part of one J. Bowser , lirst name unknown , nt the time engineer on engine Ho. 420 , train JS'o. 231 west bound. [ Signed ! AUSTIN UUMPIIIIEY , C. C. UF.IIOME , W. O. HOHANNON , AV. 0. LANK , C. C. TACK , ' C. B. BEACIL In tbo light of the testimony this ver dict is fairly astonishing , but in the light of the fact that It places the blame where the company sought to attach it , it need not b at all astonishing. In their effort * to shirk responsibility and save a few dollars damages it was bettor to make it a personal responsibility on an engineer than to bring their system of tram di - patohlng and $35-a-montU operators to tally without experience into disrepute. The testimony remains that the engineer , fireman and head brakeman testified un equivocally that there was no red light displayed when the front of the train pawed llavolbck. The operator and a young man staying with him Bald the light was turned on nnd the con ductor and brakeman on the way car Bald the light was turned when they passed the depot. On this testimony Engineer Bowser is hold , excepting some of the jury have Raid in their opinion Bowser ought to have had his train under control regardless of signals so as to stop before colliding with the other train. One fact that is very promising is that no trainmen of experience or engineers am pskud concerning it who do not express the belief that the engineer , liroman and brakeman , all who were separated from each other , wore testifying to tlio truth when they said there was no red signal out when the front end of the tram passed the depot. And those who list- pnoil to the testimony believe the light was changed by the inexperienced operator when the train was passing. It Js understood Bowser is to be arrested , and he has secured Billingsly & Woodard for his defense. In the meantime the company has got the blame pretty well fixed upon the engineer and the dead man , Dr. Uandall. himself , so that the damages will bo light and the company left free to put in charge of signal sta tions mou who never did anv train work on the B. & M. , or in any other place for that matter. The criminal prosecution , f f it comes , will bo watohod with inter est and especially by locomotive en gineers who are exports in such matters nnd believe Engineer Bowser to bo inno cent. CAUGHT 1IT TOE AUM. About 11 n. m. yesterday a switchman in the B. & M. yards In this city named V , E. McFarland , while coupling cars was caught between a box car and a flat Car loaded with iron , the ends of the iron rails projecting over the end of the car. The cars wore moving slowly and ho ex tracted himself so that the iron caught pnly one arm , making an ugly llesh wound , but fortunately breaking no lonos. Ho was taken to the Pcoria fcouso mid his wound dret > scd by Dr. JIart , the company's physician. I'EUSONALS. Senator J. K. Tan Domark of Sauuders county wns in Lincoln yesterday. Captain Humphrey , the wild poet of the Pawnees , who was not appointed fudito is in the city. Hon. U. B. Windraan of Plattsmouth , one of the trustees selected for the moth- pdlst building at the Chatauqua grounds , Crete , was in the olty yesterday at a com- * tnlttoo mooting looking forward to build ing. Q. W. Eggleson , one of the B. &M. falthtul representatives in the last legls- f aturo from Lancaster county , was an arrival yesterday from Bennett. , M. A. Dougherty of Crete , the ex- Y newspaper man who has waxed wealthy from cattle ranches and real estate , was in Lincoln between trains yesterday. Arthur White nnd A. S. McKay , two prominent real estate men from Saline county , were yesterday arranging for a public sale of n line addition to the flourishing town of Friend. U. S. Norval , Seward : John Collins , McCook ; J. J. Blackwell , ( irand Island ; 3. Motcalf , Nebraska City ; Henry Gibson , Omaha : F. T. Burke , Blue Springs ; J. E. llolman , F. L. StoUon , Greenwood ; A. W. Miller , Seward ; B. llasen , Central City : W. W. Warren. Auburn ; 11. T. t/larko and Hugh Murphy , Omaha , wore nmong the Nouraskant nt the Capital hotel yoatordtiy. A AVoumu'H AKP. A woman , it is said , Is no older than Bhe looks. Many women , however , look double their actual ago by reason ol those functional disorders which WOIH upon the nerves and vitality , and which , It unchecked , are liable to change the most robust woman to a weak , broken down invalid. lr. Pierco's "FavoriU Prescription" will positively cure over ] Irregularity and weakness peculiar to tin Box , and requires but a Mingle trial tc its surpassing merit. Price ru SroTO to one dollar. By druggists. ATTACKED BY A SWORD FISH. The Hea Monster's "Nose" Driven Through Vessel's Bottom. Philadelphia Record : The "nose" of i word-fish ( our feet long driven througl ixtoon inches of stout Norwegian pint find penetrating ten inches into the cargc of a sugar-laden bark , was one of tin nautical cunosties presented to a won daring throng of sailors and landsmen al the wnarvea of the K , C. Knight sugar re fluory in this city yesterday. The vesso through the bull of which the .sea mou eter's weapon had penetrated m the bar ! Ornen , which came to this port fron , Brazil , by way of the Bnrbridoqs Santos is a stailchly built Norweglat raft , and the plank * In her hull arc e\ei Carder than American oak. While ho 4 argo of sugar was being unloaded at th < rollnory wlmrl a long , blnck object , like tbo point of nu enormous bayonet , wns discovered thrust ten inches into one of ' the hogsheads ol ugiir. so firmly Impal ing it tluit some difllculty was ex perienced m celling the hogshead Irco from the vessel's bottom. The end of the sword looked like n largo raarlin spike , nnd nil at tempts to dislodge it were fruitless. A closes cxiiiniimtlon , however , proved that the object was the "sword" of a swordfish - fish which hud been driven through the planking of the bark's hull. The point of the "sword" which projected into the vessel's hold was ns hard as Hint. The only weapon which in into any impression upon it was an axe , with which the end was finally broken ofl'and taken on deck , where it was exhibited to the sailors and tlio stevedores. From the accounts of the crow and the bark's oflicers it scorns that the llsh must have struck the vessel near the region of the equatorial calm. The mate says that while the bark was morlng along very slowly , with scarcely a ripple disturbing the surface of the ocean , one calm day m May , a torrilio shock WAS experienced which almost throw the vessel aback and hurled some of the crew ofl their feet. The Incident caused considerable excitement on board , and it wns feared that a hidden rook had been struck nntil the captain looked over the starboard quarter , whence the shock ap peared to have come , and saw an enor mous lish iust disappearing beneath the waves. Until the "sword" was discov ered yesterday it was supposed that the bark had struck a dead or sleeping whale. This Instance of the force with which the sword fish can strike an object is one of the most remarkable ever reported. A specimen of planking which has been deposited in the British museum in London as a great cutiosity , shows the eword of one of these fish , three feet long , which had pierced ten inches of wood. The sword found in the Ornen had evidently been driven with almost twice the force with which the specimen in the British museum had been im pelled. Ilnrncd and Heroines. There are few people who endure bodily ily troubles without complaint. Did you over meet among the heroes or heroines of your acquaintance If any such there have been one with a yellowish cast of countenance and that jaundiced aspect generally , which the most unpractised oyn recognizes as the product of a dis ordered liver , who will not complainand peevishly too , of the soreness of the recal citrant organ , of pains beneath the right shoulder blade , of dyspeptio symptoms , constipation and headache ? Of course you never did , and of course the individ ual was not using Hostellers Stomach Bitters or he would not have looked so , HO have complained. To purify the blood when contaminated with bile , and conduct the secretion into its proper channel , to re-establish regularity of the bowels , banish bilious headache , and re move impediments to complete digestion lothing can approach to efficacy this loorlcss alterative and tonlo. Malarial lomplalnts , always involving the liver ind kidney and bladder inactivity , are 'cmcdiod by it. It is a capital appetizer. Buffalo IIlTra Letter. Now York Commercial Advertiser : olouel , the Honorable William F. ody , as our English neighbors know ilutlalo Bill , has an indiscreet friend in tfow Orleans ; but wo do not imagine hat any one will think the less of the ; ullant chief of the Wild West show , be- jauso ho honestly admits that ho is Eng- and "for dust , " and takes n natural indo in his social successes. "I have aptured this country , from the queen lovvn , " writes Mr. Cody , "and am doing hem to the tune of $10,000 a duy. " Ho _ ias captured the country , and wo are glad to know ho is "doing" it , though wean ; an hardly hope that ho will bring back nouch English gold to balance the merican dollars that the English show men have carried away from this conn- i'ut the most pleasing thing about Buffalo Bill's letter is the fact that it hews , to use his own vigorous language , hat he has "not got the big head worth i cent. " That Is just the secret of his uccess. Buffalo Bill went to London as a plain , honest showman , and ho accepts the homage that is done him , just as all Americans should , but few do. Buf falo Bill is a sovereign in his own right , and when the prince of Wales and four or live kings came around to look at the show behind the scenes , their combined and concentrated majesty did not im press him in the least , and they found that there was a citizen of the great anti- monarchy who know ho was just as much a sovereign as they , nnd that tholr blood was just as human as his. Buffalo Bill brags modestly. "No man not even Grant was received better than your humble servant , " he says. "i have dined with every one of the roy alty , from Albert , prfnco of Wales , down. " And , though he is not unduly elated , still ho does "sometimes wonder if it is the same old Bill Cody , the bull- wahckor , " Jt is a strange metamor phosis from whacking the Texas bull to ' 'do the elegant" among the proudest and most exclusive aristocrals iu the world ; but it is a test of character and manhood to adapt one's self to now con litions. Buffalo Bill has proved his right to the position he h lds iu the affections and re speot of the English people , and wo sincerely corely trust that his expectalion of doing tremendous business upon his ' 'European reputation" when he returns to the country of his birth may bo reali/ed. He writes to his friend : "I still wear the same sized hat , and when I make my I am coming back to visit all the old Eilo . " Wo congratulate the old boys. KEALj KKTATK. Transfers Filed July 18. 1887. C. K. Mayno and wife to Jeuy Adams lot I'J blk 5 , O E Ma } ne's flrst add to Valley , w U 535 O K Mayne and wife to Jerry Adams lot 14 blk 5 , U K Mayno's lirst add to Valley , w d S3 Francis 1 AIcKrnna and wlto to 11 O I'aUcrsnn. lots 15 and 10 , blk 1 , Tat- terson's subillv , w d. . . . . 100 PatrlcK Mclluu'li and wlfo to John FoR - R rty , s 151K tt of blk'JW Omaha , w d 700 Thomas \V Hobineon nnd wito to Oinatialte.il Estate and Trust com pany , lot oO , bikH , Saundeis & llliue- bauch add , n c d t South Oinnhaljintl company to John Burke , lot 10 , blk SO , South Oiimha. dewl. . . 223 Joseph Kolur and wlfo to Fanny Karan , e 50 ft lots 7 nnd 8 , Shlelit's add.wil . - 2.COO John T Monroe and wife to r rank V Wassermnn , lot 8 blk 11 , Omaha View , wd COO Douelns county to Ucorpo W Doanu , ot al , lots 1C , 17 , anil 18 , block 1 , Domrlas , udd , deed 4,050 0 K Mayne and wlfa to Duster L Thomas , lots 1 to 10 and 31 to 40 , blk 14 , Orchard Hill , wd 9,000 Lena Quick and httsDand to Charles Lareu , lot 10 blk 464 , Uraudvlow.wd 150 Untlics Jotter et al to school district No. 3 , a frame building at south west corner blk 11 , Jetter's add 1,500 Frank liloschenberg and wife to haiue , 10 blk 71 , South ave , wd 1,800 J \V Campbell to Kmma Campbell , middle K. ' > . 10 nnd 11 , blk 10 , Hans- corn place , wd 8,500 John A MeShano to William A Tern- plnton , lot U , blk 0 , Ut add to South Oinahn , wd 800 Edwin S Hood and wife to Herman lleclflcld , lot 12 , blk lii , Albrlfiht'4 annex , wd 1,050 , Lewis T Hammond ft al to Hmiry S Chamberlain. n > 'lot \YAKod- - Ick'sadd , wd , 1,050 City of Omaha to Union Paailia Kail- ro.vl , a strli ) beginning at nw cor lot 31. blk 203. qc 105 Anton llerKirren to Joseph Lovl , wK of lot 11 blk 1 , Imimnumunt asso- elation , w d. . ; : 3,200 Mnrtln T Murphy and wife to Uottleib. . Stor7 , lots 37 and 85 , Murphy's add , , ' wd ; . . . . . . t 600 TH PRINTS And the crowd will lead you to The Misfit Clothing Parlors , 1119 Farnam Street.where all Summer Clothing has been reduced 35 Per Cent in order to secure room for Fall Goods soon to arrive. 2 , PAIRS OF PANTALOONS To select from. This is more than we care to have at this season of the year , and in order to force off as many as possible , we are selling goods at 65c on the dollar of our original prices. We mean business and will sell you clothing at your own price , at the * MISFIT PARLORS , o n j : 1119 Farnam Street , Omaha , NebD ( I ! / / fl IV ( Jlittras Did you clean all the paint In this kitchen with that little l > a ln T Girl CorUlnly. Ma'am , for I uee Sapolto , and you must admit that U U clean. Jfufrcii Indeed , I da ; tut I wan vrond.tlng whether uch a thing was possible. " GOOD SERVICE IS A GREAT ENCHANTMENT. " Those who have used SAPOLIO In house-cleaning know that Its service la like mnglo. Common soap falla to accomplish satisfactory results In scouring and cleaning , and necessitates a creat outlay of time and labor , which more than balances any eavlng In cost. Practical people will find Sapollo the best and cheapest soap for house-cleaning und ecouiing. Try a cake of U nt once. NO. is , [ Copyright , M rch. IBS ? j She Sewed on Her Husband's Sculp. KANSAS Cnr , Mo. , July 15. Andrew Meyer , a farmer living near Mexico , Mo. , was attacked by a vicious horse and nearly scalped. His loft cheek and n portion of the upper lip were also torn away by the animal's teeth. A physician was sent for , but was slow in coming , nnd Mrs. Meyer , using a common needle and black thread , replaced the larcornted chock and lip and sowed them in place. She then began on the scalp , which she euwcd to the flesh on the head , and had nearly finished the work when the physi cian arrived. Hnr work was pronounced excellent by the doctor. liotter from n Conductor. OwF.no. Tioga Co. . N.Y. , Dec. 17. ' 85. In 187 ! ) I was taken suddenly with lum bago , while running my train through to Buffalo. 1 was completely floored , and utterly incapacitated from attending to my duties as conductor. Shortly after I was taken , every passenger know of it , and one gentleman , 1 can't remember his name now , came up with n box of ALLCOCK'S Poitus PLASTERS and told mo ho would put two of them on. They had hardly been put on before I was relieved fcomewhat , and iu iifteen or twenty min utes at most 1 was able to sit up straight , and in an hour was enough bettor to at tend to my olliclal work , and I just kept on gaining and feeling bettor until I was entirely well. From that time to the pres ent I have time nnd again used these Plasters , and have yet to lind thorn fail in relieving cough , or pain , or ache. My wife says iho has not known what it is to " have a "backache for more than a few hours since AU.COCK'S Pouus PLASTEIIS were kept in the house. M. MUHIENE , Conductor Erie Railroad , An Old Story. St. Paul Pioneer-l'ross : In a rent estate office the other day 1 heard n gentleman relating the experience of an eastern friend of his who , many years ago , for a had debt ( ? ) of 120,000 was compelled to accept western land of the estimated value of | 15,000. Ho paid constantly in creasing taxes upon the loncl for a num ber of years without'going to aoo it. Uno day his agent tclegiaphed him. asking him what no would take for the land , which had flnnly cpme to bo far within the corporate limirs of Chicago. The owner figured that , taxes and interest , the laud had cost him 130,000 , and more in a joke than anything else , not dreamIng - Ing that the oiler would bo accepted , wrote a telegram saying that he would take < 50,000 cash for the property. lie sent a message by 'ais ofllco boy , whore the clerk insisted that the sum Do spelled out in the message. 'J he office-boy re wrote it , nnd by mistake wrote $500,000 instead of $50,000. In an hour back cnmu the reply : "Offer of half a million dollars accepted. Make deed nnd come on and get certified check. " The man made his oftico boy a handsome present for his clerical .error , and gave his old- time debtor $ W,000 with which to reestablish tablish himself in business. Imperial Tips. The most magnificent visitor over known iu the annals of the English court was the Emperor Nicholas , who , when ho was here in 18s4 , left 13.000 to be dis tributed among the servants at Windsor castle , while the housekeeper there was pivon a partiroof diamondsworth 1,000. The six lords \rho were in waiting dur ing his visit ouch received n splen did gold snuft'-hox , with the emperor's portrait sot in diamoiids ; each ucjuerry nnd the grooms-in-waitfu'g got a similar snulf-box with his ' - imperial majesty's cipher in diamonds ; a bushel of ring's , watches nnd brooches \\credistributed nmong minor functionaries , ' 3,800 was given in chanty , and .16) ) } for the cup at A = cot , which wns continued annually for ten years. ' MOST PERFECT MADE Uied br the United BUtes Governmcnti br the li * die ( the Great UnheriHI 8 and I'abllc Food AnalttU uThe Btrongeat.I'urKt , and moetHtaltbtaL Dr. Jlir.e'i tlia uolrBtUes Cfiwdet that doe not contain Ammonia , Lima ot l > r. frlcft Ezlracta , Vanilla , Ix > mon. etc. , ' rjUCELAKISUrOWUEKCO. DRS.5.&D.DAYIESON. . . . . 1707 Olive St. , St. Louis , Mo. Of the Missouri State Museum of Anatomy St. Louis , Mo. , Unhcrstty College Hospi tal , London , Giesen , Germany and New York. Haing devoted their attention SPECIALLY TO THE TREATMENT OF DISEASES , More especially those arising from impur- dencc , invite all co suffering to correspond without delay. Diseases of infection and contagion cured sately and speedily with out use of dangerous druas. Patients \\hose cas's have been neglected , badly treated or paonounded incurable , should not fall to write us concerning their symp tom * . All letters receive immediate at tention. JUST PUBLISHED. And will be mailed FREE to any address on receipt of one 2 cent stamp. "Practical Observations on Ner > ous Debility and Physical Exhaustion , " to which is added an "E say on Marriage , " with important chapters on Diseases of the Reproductixe Oigans , the whole forming a valuable med ical treatise \vhich should be read by all young men. Address DRS. S. & D. DAVIESON , 1707 Olive St. , St. Louis , Mo. DR. OTTERBOURC , Corner Jllh d I > l 8U- , OMAHA , KKB. A REGULAR GRADUATE IN MEDICINE , AID SPECIAL P8AOT1T10NEH Auih jrix l ( o Iritit fit ! Chronic , Ntvvoui and ' h | * < * Ul Iiant " ( wlutbrr cui * < t lij ! < MiriiUiiPt | ( * ! * * wr eoMUgiun ) htminM Wtakiir * * fulfill Itwwt ) filial ltcl iUl > , ( ! > uf MIIIA ! lower ) fenon Ifchitit ) HI d Uimli-r , Ac. Cum Kuaranhwt or money n frit'tol. Chtrcvilnw. luai ! aiiLi of cawt cuml Ap uJ ciK > - riencp ru InijK riant All luwlUimMcUlljr | | < rernl f r fh In divuliml ca-w. No li\urti } > unor jwl mou conijiouiMll u * J Nottiutt lot from ImtturM t ntieiiti lit * lUt met trtit * " ! b ) letter ttul eipivM > ! ftjieln wnt nvrvwttnre fret fVom KM or lire U pc lor a Vf tt nampm null tltLK M * AT ONMAN , ANIHMHTAKT VLKJTioVaiulHkllHoMllMonnhichto lt full hlilnrj of diM-HH * Htmtc yuur c * * ud M > mt for tenm Order nlltd iruiujtljr bcciec ) obiervfj , ultbvrln | rr onor bmfcH , OrncK 1101 RH 9 to U a m , 3 lo 6 tuid 7 to it p. in. STEGK PIANOS Remarkable for powerful sympa thetic tone , pliable action and ab solute durability ; 5JO years' record , i .e best guarantee of the excel lence of these instruments. WOODBRIDGE BROS , OPERA 1IOVSE. SCIENTIFIC WH ? IN SON & . RTJPTURE IT 7 lUToIrcurtuIn 0il jt FVUr. lUon > ' LlMtro.Mmcn tlefatlt. TrHUoombln < d. Uuirutrwltho o Jj one Intht world ir n r lliijf fteontlnnoMS Xltrtrif tt Wagnttto u -cvrrffll. Rolintlflc , Howtrful , Durabl * , 'Comforubl * and Kffftlr . itclil lr di. " Of pH OQOcured BcnnUtADipf01 pamphlet. AI KO i i.Eoritiu MELTS rou uihi : Dl , HORNE. INVINTDI. fat WABAU AV . . Instant ro * casuHcumi. No knife. < lruir or clamps Add. V.O.SupplyCO UoxTniO. Bt.Louls.Mo HOPKINS' LargcScale Real Estate Atlas OMAHA NEB. PRICE $25 A COPY. Address , GB. . VANDEBVOOBT , 1G1G Dodge St. , Omaha , Neb. Fold up Capital . $250,000 Surplus . 4.2,600 H. W. Yalcs , President. A. E. Touzalin , Vico-President. W. H. S. Hughes , Cashier , niKKcrroits : W. V. Morse , John S. Collins , H. W. Yates , Lewis S. Rood. A. E. Tou/.alm. BANKING OFFICE : THE IRON BANK Cor. 12th and Farnam Sts. A General Banking Business Transacle J. B. HAYNES OFFICIAL STENOGRAPHER THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT , 87 Chamber of Commerce. [ WT2JLK JUJ XUIM I r dT mionTof M , mC laRiTKKTO " 'lupumiu tUiipeciflcpurpuie.LUXEor * CMFRATITIYKAKHK8U. . . Blr- - - . tinunui.inlld. uglhliecurrtnli of . . . . . . . It/dltfclly throuji , til eik pirt , rntor- . .u. , T tj-lo b illhmidVI crc'U Slrtngih i.lt.lrio Current " > Vf lllnittnT ] er vcfotfilt J5.UM ) In cnh. Or < tntlinpiu > initnli rrr > llolhfrbilli Wontci iper. nancnt/cured ) in thro * month * Rraleil pamptilkt4eUinp The Sandon Eleetrlo Co. 169 LaSallc | . , Chicaja OMAHA DEPOT EALDIWG BASE-BALL SUPPLIES , LAWN TENNIS AND ATHLETIC QOODS. 3PUH [ ING GOOD1 COLLINS GUN COMPANY , Agents 1312 Douglas Street. _ _ FOR SALE. An Island on tlio Southern coast of Wa saclui noils. Uood llshlnk mul liuncli Inr batlilnir. I > cnteil In tlin best Kuininrr Clluinte ID tlio world For full partlclnra Hd.lri . * * , linWAUD. U MKHltll , ! , , utual Lite KulldloR , W Natsnu St. , N. V FOUNTAIN" - BRA.NE ) S - B CUT AND PLTJQ. Incomparably the Best. INSTALMENTDEALERS \MUfluiljntt what they need A FULL LI NE OF INSTALMENT GOODS iH only to tie INSTALMENT-TRADE , br nddrt 1 bumr O The Best and Safes Vapor Stove Made. C. W. Sleeper , head of St. Maryi' AY- enne. James & Smith South , Omaha. HIOIIT'H DISKAHK Is ciiusod hy ABUSE nxcnssKs , NKHVOUS DUIIIMTV. ma- OHAHGKS , I'KVnitS. MALAItlA. OEN1TO- uitiNAitr nisnAsua , srnicruHKa.iiibKAS- l'D PIIOSTATK ( IhANl ) AND IIDADDKIt. UATIIKi'SUB AND SOUNDS , AND CANNOT IIKCUHKI ) WIII1.K 1I1KV UXIhT.OIlU IllIM- UDIKSOUKK TIIKM. ( ) H : < ONIO DlbllAHKS AND VAHICOCKI , ! ! . without dotoiitlon Horn buslnoss , uml the AHiiliol Mlnoial Hprlnv Wntor euros the KIDNIiys , DIAIHITHS. DHOl'HY , I1IADI KII , GIlAVKIi AND HTONK Over- mnlloil free by AdAHKIj MBDIOAMIUttKAU 1'HVBIOIAN , 3'Jl Uiouil- way. Now York. EDUCATIONAL- CAT , LAN' AN ColloKe , Ies ) Molnos. Iowa. A Homo School for Ulrln. Full CourfiOH of Btildy. Spoclul atlvnntiiKos In Mualo , Art , Modern - orn LunRUHRos nn < l Uloontlon. Full turra bo- Kins Supt. Bth. AUdross the prcelUout , C. K. 1'omoroy. LFW DEPARTMENT , State University of Course of Htiul.y extends through two Bchool years of nine months each. l'"x- punses reasonable. Graduation admits teState State and Federal Courts. The next nn- mirxl course commences Soptombcr 14th , 1887 , and cnd.i July 19th , 1888. FornnnouncemcntB or further infonnix- tiou , address the Vice Chancellor , KMUN McCi.Ai.v. lovru City , lowti. BEACONACADEMY ! f , X.T. SelectTome School , J. K1 { 1 > SMITH , A.M. Howard Collegiate Insttute , Tor Young I.iullos rnopuns Bopt " 1 , Cello ro I'ioinrutor | > , Clu3Bliul nnd Hcluntino flnnliinl. Int'courfns. I'm clruuhin aJ'Iross I'.MMA O. CONHO , I'rlntlpnl.or II. II. HOWAItl ) , Hncrt- turyVott Ilrldirciwiitur , Muss. SOMERVILLE SCHOOL ST. CIiAIU , MIUH. Three courici of itudr. Tnorouxtinooln erirjr de partment. Itulldliiit ( Inguntlr fiirnlibxl. llnalal wittiatjo > . lighted * llliKui. Wxlur from Si. Clulr HlTCr. Superior Jr > ntugo % In muila unJ art , Ail' dreu ( or urcular. bdllliHVIM.K aCHOOI , . St.Cl lr. tlloh. lJHIIAIKU'IllA8r.MINAIty X IUUVOUNOI < AUlisltfiKnrtii : ! HromlSt I'lillnilolplila. 17lU ye r bog-inn r-ept. Cist. IfliT. A < l'lic ' B Mlijlt. K. JUilia.MS. Principal , who lofi'rn by Spoolnl pirmiiilou to Mr. pntl MrsJohn N J welt , Mr. anil Mrs. riilllplrmour , Jlr HDCJ JIrs Horuoi P. Wulto , ALBANY LAW SCHOOL Thlrt-ot outh Tciir riCKlno Kept 6th , 163T. Fur mroulard or | tieulnl | lnormntloi ) addfci iU I ) . , Ionn ) , AllnDy.N. X.