- , ' * T $ * * < * X tff 4 -12 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE.- SUNDAY , SEPTEMBER 30. 1888.-SIXTEEN PAGES. Binlinglon Burlington ' * * . , . - Route ' A Route CBSQRR. | C.B.8Q.RR. * I * * " > , , .j v | The Burlington takes the Uad. It was in advance of all lines in developing Nebraska * ' 'T IIt was in advance of all lines in establishing dining-car service between Missouri river points and Chicago. i It was in advance of all lines in giving the people of Omaha and the West a fast mail service. It was in advance of all lines in running its trains from the East into Omaha propar. It was in advance of all lines in reducing the time of passenger trains between Omaha and Chicago. It was in advance , and is the only line by which you can feave Omaha in the morning and arrive in Denver the evening of the same day. It has been progressive in the past. It will lead in the future. Travel and ship via the Burlington. Ticket Office , 1223 Farnarn Street. Telephone 250. Depot on Tenth Street. Burlington , Route Route * C.B.8"Q.R.R. C.B.&Q.R.R. II PAID UP CAPITAL , $30OOOOSURPLUS $40.000. AMERICAN LOAN AND TRUST COMPANY , * S AVINCS BANK "I > EI'AUTMKflT- UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK BUILDING. V B | 0 Interest on deposits , compounded soml-annually * 5 " Savings Certificates with Interest coupons attached. DEBENTURE BONDS In Denominations of 32OO , 830O , S5OO , ol and SIOOO , based upon First Mortgaeo Real Estate Securities 6 deposited with , and bonds certified by the Union Trust Company 1 of Now York. Drafts drawn on the principal cities of Europe. A. C. POWELL. , CASHIER. DIRECTORS ; = 0. M. CARTER , Pros. D. D. COOLEY , V.-Prcs. PHILIP POTTER , Sec. J. J. BROWN. ALV1N SAUNDERS. C. S. MONTGOMERY.I. . FRED ROGERS. : " DEWEY & STONE , FURNITURE. A magnificent display of everything useful and ornamental in the furniture maker's art , at reasonable prices. BANK OFOMAHA. _ Capital , . . . $100,000 OOl South Thirteenth Street. General Banking jndjayings Business , CIIAHLER lliiKASTED , President. C. 1 > . NF.KDHAM , Vice President. FUANK V. WAsscitMAN , Cashier. For the benefit of Depositors the Savings De partment will bo open on Saturday nights from etoSo'clocK. 6-Per - Cent on Savings and Time Deposits. LOMBARD INVESTMENT CO. Boston. Mass. ; Kansas City , Mo. Capital & So plus , $1,500,000 $ , , This company has opened an Omahn olllco nnd Js prepared to furnish money promptly on 1m- proveu city and farm property. No applications sent away for approval. Loans closed nnd paid for without delay. JOHN \V. (11SII , Manager. 809 South 13th Street First National Hunk. W. D. SlKMi. I've * . W.D.Mc u > , Jr..V-I'res , W.N.MeUANin.isn.Sec INVESTMENT CO. INCORPORATED. Capital , - $100,000 Loans Made on Real Estate. No commlsslous. Money on hand. 314 : South 15th Street , Omaha , Xeb. ; UUANCII OFFICE. JOHN M. SHAW & CO , COMMISSION , drain , Provisions , Stocks and Bonds , Maraln Transactions a Specialty. JOHNSON It CHRISTIAN , Managers. ' 15 BOA.KD OK THA.UE , - OMAHA. Members of the Chlcaeo Hoard of Trade. 1'rlv- ate Wires to Chicago and New York. PROF. BYRON FIELD. TOPEKA , KANSAS. Wehtren poHlTOcarn for ITCHING , III.INU or IlLEiDiNn I'n.ES. lly Itt uiothouMncUof cainnf lone itund- I i InuhmvB ttcn curoJ. Ho ilrunii li our Jaltb In III curatlte powon that we will mall OD taiapla box niEl to ny I i uff rer. N. 1J. 'I'nU IJ no bumbugt I ruu actually tccolie a box frte by re * turn mnU , ( nut a lot of clrculard , and one nppMrulInn will < xJD lrci you of III worth. AddruM Tlia W. Ulllard Co. , llullalu , M. V , " the Oaialja lit o. J' . K j * " a F. F. F. Fochtor's Famous FAIR.CON. tVThla IB a perfectly barmlcu herb remedy and doti not ton-\ \ tain anu luparo/fetid , nfi ( ate oA illitr or other polionout tub- t'.awe. $ | , OOO REWARD if thli la untrue. Unlen the root * of the hair be entirely dried up , which occur * rery rarely and probably not over ftvo time * in a hundred It urclj producenewgrowtli ! Just Think of This ! Mr. r chur M p rfKU HIJ I. 1W M 111. .lot. iu ( ukfa from \Hn\ttn\tb \ , .tavi. II. tboreuftjj ftu m < l tb. rtuif fowaluK til. sw. Ill cf Ltli t&d Uirlwa 11 Ib. rtnlb FAIKICON No. 1 and 8 , pilco 1. per bottle each , 1. for bead , entirely or partially bald. FAIUH'O.V Jfo. B , price 7B oenU per battle is Invaluable oa a HAIRDUESSEB. Itwlllio- new the growth of hair that la falling out , keep it imooth and fflooay and remove alldandruiT. FA1IUCON Is for ialo by all drucflBta or will bo aent by the { manufacturers on receipt , of price. Bend for hiitory of the Mr.rKtu.rfwi > remedy and testimonials from IwT. ml b. ipp .mi .fur those who have used It. C , . Uldoo.il , voaJrful w.tk. IVCut this out and lend to soroo bald headed friend. FEOHTEE HEMEDY CO. , NEW HAVEN , CT. Trade ( uppllod by E. Ilowltt It Co. , New Haven , CUTer Tor Sale by J. A. VULU3U , Omaha. THE COMMERCIAL HOTEL Corner Dearborn and Lake Streets , CHICAGO. This house has Just been thoroughly refitted nt a cost of over * lftxX ( ) , making It fnr better thnn any hotel of the. Kama jirlco In the west Elevator , ulvrtrlo lights , bath roauid , and ull modern luiprorcmunts. Rates , $2 and $2.BO Per Day. Including meals. Centrally located ; accessible to all railway utatluns. theaters and business liousuj. Street < urn to all points of the city. Special rates to lirofcssloual people. State Line. r , Belfast , Dublin anil Liverpool From New York Every Tuesdav , Cabin passage fJ. > and KO , according to location of state room. ixcitrtloii : * & > to tw. Steerage to and from Kuroi o at Lowest Itatcs. AUSTIN IJALDWIN 4 : CO. . Oen'l Agents. 6.1 . llroauway , New York. JOHN IlLKQEN , Oen'l Western Agent , 101 nandolph St. , Chicago. HAUUY E. MOOHK8. Agent , Omaha. Reduced Cabin Rates to Glasgow Ex- hibitlon. The Only Pormnnont Ouro For Dyspepsia , Sick Headache Etc. , ZS Price OOo Uur t all Druggist * . Who is WEAK , NERVOUS. DKBILITA- TED.wholnhlsFOLLYondlGNURANCC bos TRIFLED away his VIGOK ofllOOY , dralni upon the FOUNTAINS of LIFE. HEAI A4111E. BAOKACIIE , Drcndfu ! Draimn. WEAHMENN of Memory , IIANII- rUI.lWr.KS In SOCIETY. PIMPI.ES upon the FACE , and all the EFFECT ! * lending to KAHI.Y OECAY and perhaps CONNVMP- SZOIf or INNANIT Y. Should consult at once the CELEBRATED Dr. Clarke , Eotabllshed ' 061. r.r. Clarke ha.i made NERVOUS HE- JjILITT. CHRONIC and all Diseases of the UEITITO URINARY Orftnni a I.lfo SMldy. It make * NO dlCerence WHAT you tare taken or WHO has failed to cure you. WFEW ALEN suffering from diseases pecu. liar to their i&c can consult with the asiuranco of speedy reliat and cure. Bend 2 cents postage for works on your dlsCwtcs. 490cnd 4 cent ! postage for Celebrated Worbn on Cbrodle , NerToua and Hell- ea"e Diseases. Consultation , pereonul.'y or by Vttter , free. Consult the old octor. Vbonsianda enrod. ORtcea and pnrlora prlTato. * S-Thoso contemplating Marriage oend for Dr. Clnrke'si celebrated guide Hale and Female , each lie. , both 26c. ( stamps ) . Before confiding your case , consult Dr. CLARKE. A friendly letter or call may tare future sufferingand shame , and add golden yean to life. 9-Book Life' * ( Secret ) Er. rorj , " 50c. ( stamps ) . Medicine and writings Bent everywhere , secure from exposure. Hour * , 8 to 8 : Sundays , 9 to 12. Addreii , P. D. GLABJSE , M. D. 186 60. Olarfe 8& CHICAGO. ILt. O M AH A MEDICAL I SURGICAL INSTITUTE , N. W. Cor. 13th A Dodge Sts BR..A.OH2S , APPLIANCES FOR DEFORMITIES AND TRUSSES. Jlest racllltles , apparatus and remedies for sut iessful treatment of every form of disease r'iuii ing Medical or Surgical Treatment. FIFTY ROOMS FOR PATIENTS. Doard and attendance ; bet hospital nccoiniu. . nations in the west. WRITE FOR CIXCCIARS on Deformities nut' Ilrncej , Trusses , Club Feet , Curvature of tin Surgical Operations. Diseases of Woman a Speolahy. IloOK OH DIBBAGES or WOMEN FnrE. ONLY EELIADLE HEDIOAL IN3S1TU1K HAUINQ A SPECIALTY Or PR5VATE DflSEASES , All Dlood DisecScs successfully treated. Syph ilitic 1'olson removed from the system without mercury. New restorative treatment for loss u ! Vital 1'ower. Tetsous unable to visit us may be treated at home by correspondence. All commu mentions confidential. Medicinesor instruments sent by mail or express , securely packed , no marks to indicate contents or * ender. One per- penal interview preferred. Call and consult us ot feud history of your case , and we will send iu ulain wrapper , our BOOK TO MEN , FREE ; Upon Private. Special or Nervous Diseases , Ira lotency , Syphilis. Gleet and Varicocile , uith { jiettlon list. Address Omaha iftdlcal and Hurgleal Inititutcot DR. tWcMENAMY , Cor. 13th ana Ooda * Sit. . OKAHA.NEB. The 'LUDLOW SHOE' ' Iliia.obtnlncd a reputation wherever in troduced for "CouuECi STYLK , " "Puu- FKCT FIT , " "COMFOUT AND DUIIAIJIL- ITY. " They huvo no superiors in Hand Turns , Hand Welts , Goodyear Wojts , and Machine Sewed. Liidies , ask for the "LuiH.ow" SIIOK. Try them , and you will buy no other , MODERN RHYffiS'OF THE RAIL , Interesting1 Nowa nnd Notes of Rall- rocul AfTilni. ' THOUSANDS OF YEARS SAVED. Some Vclcrnn Switchmen More Than a Mile n M lntttc A Historic Ioco- motive Kallroad Hupcrlntcntl- cnts Conscience Stricken. Some Veteran Switchmen. Among the veterans who gathered nt the recent Swltchmens' convention nt St. Louis , says the Globo-Domocrnt , were many notable men in the assocln- tion. Ono wits John T. Kenny , of Chicago cage , the olilcst switchman in America. Ho IH sixty years of ago , anil has been continuously employed as n switchman for forty-six years. "Undo John's" head is as bald as n billiard ball. He began switching curs at FiermontHock- land county , N. Y. , for the New York & Erie railroad , the old broad gauge , Ho 1ms never been employed any where but in Picrmont nnd Chicago. Ho has worked for many years in the Chicago yards of the Grand Trunk. Mr. Kenny is the father of nine sons nnd four daughters , nnd has eight grand children. Throe of his sons nro cm- ployed nt switching nt Chicago , nnd "Unclo John" says ho is us spry' as any of them. Air. Kenny has never boon in jured in the smallest particular. Ho has never been discharged , and bus never neon "laid olT" for oven n day. At the time that ho began switching the capacity - pacity of the freight cars was from eight to ton tons. Now they nro expected to carry from 40,000 to 80,000 pound. In those carlv days thcro were no steel rails , but instead there was n light iron rail connected with iron chairs nnd wooden straps. The heavy rail now in iibo weighs llfty-llvo pounds to the foot. In many of the yards the switching iVtis done by horse-power. There were no trntlic arrangements between the railroad companies , nnd when the end of the road was reached the freight was transferred to the next company nnd was thcnco forwarded to the end of that lino. Now cars travel from the Atlan tic to the Paciiic , and there is nobreak- ing of bulk. Mr. Kenny has boon con nected with the Switchmen's Associa tion since its organization , under Presi dent Ed. Jennings. Ho attributes his immunity from accident to the fact that ho has always led a tempornto life. "Thcro is n great deal in n man always having his wits nbout him , " said ho. Another of the old-timers is Mr. George P. Andrews , of Ottumwa , In. Ho is a tall man with long flowing beard , nearly white , nnd looks a great dcnl like the picture of John Brown , of Harper's Ferry fame. He is fifty-three years of age nnd is fUHivo nnd sinewy. Ho hns worked for1 Iho Chicago , Bur lington & Quincy railroad for twenty- nine years , and has'bdon a switchman for thirty-live years.-1 At the commence ment of his horvico' the portion of the road on which ho laboi'cd was known as the Northern Cross , and afterwards as the Quincy & Chicago. It was finally incorporated with the great C. , B. & Q. system. Mr. Androw&is a' striker on the "Q" and is nowjout-of employment. Like Mr. Kenny hc > has never been in jured , i Another of the qld-timers is 11. M. Shackolford , in chiuipro of the night force of the Chicago , , ' > Rock Island & Paciiic railroad n DCS Moines , In. Ho has uccn a 8W.vtcb.man siivco 1851 , oxccp nearly five years ho spent in the army. Frank Wells , n switchman in the Chicago yards of the Chicago & Atlan tic railway , in lifly-five years old and has railroaded twonty-fivo years. Colonel John B. Joyce , of Carondo- Ict a switchman natively engaged in the yards of the Iron Mountain rail way , is fifty years of ngo , and has been engaged in business nearly all his life. Colonel Joyce enjoys considerable pol itical prominence. John Downey has been employed in the Chicago yards of the Pittsburg , Fort Wayne < fc Chicago railway for twenty-five years. He was long treas urer of the order , and is universally respected by his associates. More Thnn n Mile n Minute. A Pittsburg dispatch to the Chicago Tribune , Sept. 22 , says : For some time thcro has been considerable rivalry be tween the fast trains _ on the Erie & Pittsburg nnd the Pittsburg & Lake Erie roads that arrive in the city about 1 o'clock in the afternoon , nnd numer ous trials of speed have taken place be tween them. To-day both trains loft Wampum at the same moment. At thispoint'tho two roads run side by side only the Denver river separating them. Both engineers did all they could to get the most out of their iron steeds , but the race was nock and nock. The pas sengers became imbued with the excite ment of the occasion and crowded the windows and platforms. Hero n pecu liar thintr occurred. The passengers of the Erie & Pittsburg train were waving handkerchiefs and among them were n number of Harrison nnd Mor ton emblems , while on the Pittbburg & Lake Erie train several red bandanas were floating to the breeze. Just as Beaver Falls came in sight the Erie & Pittsburg engineer lot the throttle on his engine come wide open and suc ceeded in drawing into Beaver Falls nbout a train's length ahead with the starry handkerchiefs Haunting defiantly in the faces ot the rod bandana men. The time made for the run of twelve miles was ton ana one-half minutes. A Historic Locomotive. An Atlanta , Ga. , special to the St. Louis Globe-Democrat says that the old "General , " the famous engine which was captured on Aiiujl 12 , 1802 , at Big Shanty , by a ban T of federal raiders , has been loaned to the Grand Army of the Republic. Thai General" loft this morning for Colunlms , O. Governor Brown kindly consofctad for the engine to bo carried thcro to bo run out on n track in the cmnpigg , ground to bo seen by nil of the Inds id ( mug. The capture of ( this engine by the raiders , the race she' run , her recapture - turo by Captain W C\ . Fuller , then con ductor on the Wostorn. & Atlantic rail road , is a part of thu history of the war of ' ( II. As is romoirftxlLtid by those who are familiar with Urn , thrilling and dar ing incident , the obfccr ana intentions of the expedition wSriilto destroy the many bridges on Uie-jAVestorn & At lantic railway. This was to have boon done by taking the up passenger train at the time referred to , from the train men while they were nt breakfast at Big Shanty , run on through to Chntt- anooga , burning the bridges and de stroying the telegraph in their rear. There is no doubt but that the plans of the daring raiders would have been carried out and all of the bridges burned on the old state road on that memorable - able 12th day of April.1802 , had not the raiders been pursued so vigorously by Captain William A. Fuller , who , as stated , was the conductor , and Mr. A. Murphy , who happened to bo along that morning. The story of the pursuit for miles on foot , on hand car and on engines has often been" told , but is always interest ing. Captain Fuller has been urrjed by the men in blue to be present next ASTONISHING The amountof business we have done within the last month " I We have without exaggeration the largest , finest and most complete - plete house furnishing establishment in the city. The public will please remember we do not advertise one fact and then do an other. All our promises are actual truths , and a personal call will convince you that we have the largest ; newest and best assorted stock , at lower prices and easier terms than any other credit housej in the city. NOTE OUR PRICES. BED ROOM SUITS 818.OO COOKING STOVES 1O.OO BEDSTEADS 2.6O HEATING STOVES 4.OO DOUBLE MATTRESSES 2.6O RATTAN ROCKER 4.OO DOUBLE SPRINGS 2.0O LACE CURTAINS l.OO KITCHEN TABLES 1.6O WINDOW SHADES , 7 foot 76o KITCHEN SAFES 3.5O INGRAIN , per yard 26o j CENTER TABLES 1.6O CHAIRS 46o NOTE OUR TERMS. o that everybody can buy whether they ha vc the ready cash or not. We will sell all these goods on Time Payments without extra charge or interest Read our Terms , $1O worth of gcods for $1 per week or $4 per month. $25 worth of goods for $1.5O per week or $6 per month. $5O worth of goods for $2 per week or $8 per month. $75 worth of goods for $2.5O per week or $10 per month , $1OO worth of goods for $3 per week or $12 per month. Peoples' Mammoth Installment House WT613-615 N. 16th St. , bet. California and Webster. Open evenings until 9 o'clock. Telephone No. 727. week in Columbus , O. , at the reunion ot the G. A. R. Ho will there meet all the survivors of the raid and the regi ments from which they were detailed. Tlioy want to see the man who outran an engine in 1802 and defeated the raid ers by recapturing the engine , the "General , " together with the entire expedition. Captain Fuller leaves At lanta by the Western & Atlantic rail way , on Sunday , September 9 , and will bo absent about one week. It is said that JolT Cain , of the old "General , " will accompany her on her visit to Ohio. Ilnilroiul Superintendents. Globe Democrat : The Association of North American Railroad Superintend ents convened at the Southern , Septem ber 2 , with J. B. Morford , superintend ent of the Canada Southern nnd Michi gan Midland divisions , in the chair. The attendance was not so largo as an ticipated , owing to the fact , as one of the visiting members expressed it , that the busy fall season was just opening , nnd the superintendents had all they could very well attend to in looking after the interests of their respective lines and systems. The summer season would bo far more convenient for the meetings of the association , and some of the members manifested a decided preference for a change , in order to se cure a larger attendance at the meet ings. The association is not restricted to any particular state or territory , but includes the United States and Canada , and , under favorable circumstances , should have an attendance of 200 mem bers at its meetings , which nro held twice a year in April and September. While the attendance was not so largo at yesterday's meeting , it included re presentatives from some very import ant systems. The object of the association is for the advancement of social relations and aiscussion of topics relating to the maintenance of railroads , machinery and transportation. Committees nro appointed at dilTorcnt meetings to take inventions and improvements in the different branches of the services and submit reports on them and these re ports are discussed at subsequent meet ings. The chairmen of several impor tant committees were absent at yester day's meeting and the session was con sequently shortened by onoday. The committee on transportation , through Robert Bice , chairman , made a report which occupied the attention of the association throughout the day , the discussion bringing out a number of points of interests. At the conclusion of the days session the association adjourned to moot in Now York in April next. In the Arctic Circle. An important engineering enterprise now in progress is a railroad in the Arc- tie circle. The Swedish and Norwegian railroad now building from Lulea , on the Gulf of Bothnia , to Loffodon , on the North Sea , is partly situated within the Arctic circle , and is some 1,200 miles further north than any railroad in Can ada. An interesting meteorological fact stated in relation to this work is that the snowfall is found to bo actually less thnn in some more southern i lati tudes , while the darkness of the long winter nights has boon partly compen sated by tlio light of the aurora. The object i'n view in constructing this line is to tap the enormous deposits of iron ore in the Gollivara mountains , the ap proximate exhaustion of the ere in the Bllboa district rendering very desirable a now Hold of non-phosphoric ere suit able for steel rail making. A Now Switch. In Oakland , Cal. , and other places , compressed nir is now successfully used for operating switches having no inter locking apparatus. The system is , in fact , very extensively used on several of our principal railways. It takes up less space than mechanical locking ma chinery , aud the labor oJ working it is very light. The ground connections can be buried out of the way , and can bo led out from the tower in any way most convenient. Conscience Htrlokon , Denver News : In the heavy mail that reached the oillco of Freight Agent Kcolor of the Union Pacific , was a modest-looking envelope bearing a special delivery stamp and containing $0.54 in currency and postage sfamps. The anonymous writer , in a typo-writer note , bogged Mr. Kooler to accept the amount as a sum duo the railway for a ride once stolen by the writer pvor the South Park division of the Union Pii- cille. Keelor scanned the brief note carefully , smiled incredulously , and di rected that the $0.51 bo credited to the ' 'conscience fund" and kept as a lasting curiosity , since this is the first and only instance upon record when anyone whoever over beat a railroad repented of the sin and made restitution. Frank Temple suggobts that it would boa pious scheme to forward the money and accompany ing note to the national mubotim as one of the rarest curiosities on earth to-day. When Mr. C' . S. Stebbins was general ticket agent of the Union Paciiic such contributions were occasionally re ceived. Something Now. A device that will enable the engi neer , from his cab , to switch his loco motive at pleasure , while the conduc tor in the caboose or rear car closes the switch again , has boon invented and seems to meet practical demands. The contrivance is operated in connection with the "central throw" switch , and consists in a "shoe" which is dropped from the forward and rear trucks. This strikes a crank which is overthrown and the switch closest or opened as the case may bo. A switch loft open care lessly may thus bo closed by the loco motive while at high speed , or a train sidetracked quickly in case of danger. Waiting For Them. Professor Thurston says that the world is awaiting the appearance of throe inventors greater than any who have gone before. The first is ho who will show us how , by the combustion of fuel , directly to produce the electric current ; the second is the man who will tench us to reproduce the beautiful light of the glow-worm and the fire- ily , n light without heat , the production of which means the utilization of ener gy without a waste still more serious than the thermodynamic waste ; while the third is the inventor who is to give us the first successful air-ship. The Nawly-Mnilo Widow. Boston Post : It is said that some of the chief railroads in the country cm- ploy special persons to inform the be reaved family when nn _ employe has been killed. Considering that every year n small army of men meet their death on the track , the statement is not incredible. An old railroad man nt Reading , who has discharged this pain ful olllco , gives the following among other experiences : "It was ojily a few days ago that I wont to n homo and found the wife chatting and laughing with a neighbor's wife while she was at work among her rosebushes and ( low ers. She hadn't boon married very long. I first asked whether her hus band was at homo. She blared at mo , became white as n piece of chalk , then shrieked nnd fell among the plants. I helped to carry her into the house. "He's dead ; my hu&band is dead. I know ho has boon killed ! ' 'Who told you ? ' I asked , when she revived. 'No one. I only thought so. Is it truoj" It was easy , then , to finish my errand. I once called on a woman to toll her her husband had been killed by striking against an overhead bridge. This was three years ago , near Philadelphia. The wife curled up her lip and replied : 'If he's boon killed , heaven has revenged n.o. Ho abused mo long enough. He'll atniso no more women now.1 That was the easiest job in my line I over had. Five minutes later the woman was in hysterics. " Six Snnko Stories. A farmer in Ash ton , Miss. , recently ran across alive-foot gopher snake which was pure white in color. A horned snake eighteen inches long , with a horn one and a quarter inches , was killed last week in Roclcwood , Tonn. Mr. Meclino of Pittsburg caught.while fishing at Atlantic City the other day , a snake of very curiousshapo , strongly ro- borabling the fabled jubborweok. Ho will preserve it in alcohol for the curi ous future generations. Mr. Jordan , the section boss , nnd his hands , while cutting the bushes from the right of woy near Oconoo , Ga. , killed sixty-seven moccasins. Mr. Jor dan struck nt the sixty-eighth and cut off his tail , remarking that it was not n good day for snakes. Mrs. M. 13. Shultls , of Readout , N. Y. , while picking some berries recently heard her little dog , which had fol lowed her , yelp and bark piteously. Rushing to the spot Mrs. Shultis was horrified to 11 ml a largo hlacksnako wound tightly around the dog's body. With great difficulty Mrs. Shultis killed the reptile , but the little dog remained prostrate with fear for several hours. The afternoon of the same day Mrs. Shultis killed another snake of tliobamo variety. A man in Oakdalo , L. I. , had an ex perience with snakes the other day which will last him the rest of his nut" urul life. While engaged in gathering wood in the woods ho heard a rattle , and discovered just in front of him , ready to spring , a largo rattlesnake. He happened to have a slick iu his hand , and ho struck the reptile , and , us ho supposed , killed it. The he heard an other ralllo , and behold at his right an other snnko ready for notion , while a y. raltlo on his left revealed still anolhor. . Ho hit each of them , and while ho wna healing them to be sure they were dead , y.I3 ho heard a rattle behind 'him. Tha -I3 fourth biiako was soon killed. Hoi put - the four snakes in his wagon and drove Hi out of the woods. As ho got oil the vehicle at the club house ho was justin time lo see Iho lirbt snake ho had hit * coiling up ready for a spring. Ho killed it. Two of thorn had nine rattles each , nud the largest one had ten. < An AbaolittciCnro. The ORIGINAL ABIETINE OINTMENT is only put up in largo two ounce tin boxes , uud is un absolute euro for old sores , burns , wounds , chapped Immls , aud nil sldn erup tions. Will positively euro nil kinds of piles. Ask for the ORIGINAL AU1ET1NE OINT MENT. Sold by Goodman Drug Co. , at 3 cents per box by mail 30 cents. It Is tiincto putthe\ \ boys into thclt- Fall Suits. We can fit them wlthfjoodstut1- , tly clothes for school anil play , ami with a haiuliotne sultfor\ \ "Sunilaji best. " Children's Stilts Iti two pieces for thc\ \ small boys , ana\ \ three pieces for the ] biygcr brother. J.OIcGrew . , One of the Most Successful SPECIALIST , In the treatment of Digr.ASU1) of the i , J.tl.NOH , II K MIT , I.IVKIt , KlDNKVH , KVE RUtl BAR. Diseases of ttio IlitAiN nnil JVKPVOUH HYHTEU , I'.I'II.KI'HV UlKl NiilVOl'H : ixiIAU8TION : , AKTIIUA , nnil CAVAIIHII , OliAVir , . Dlfeases of the llrAi > - nca ana Hhoruii , all Dlaorders of the tiEXUAti OlIUANtf , AcnruaiiAiiANTUUDln all cases of I'IUVATE ami SKIN DISEASEH. Ill * CUIIKS nro UEUAitKAnLE and rEiiUAW.Nf. The most OIISTINATE CASI-H VIKI.UIM ! rapidly under his form ot treatment. The doctor's thuory Is that no dlncnao should be regarded ns incurable until the diseased oigaiils destroyed fusterthan It can bo repaired. From his years of experience In IIOHI-ITAI , and PIUVATE I'u.umcK , tne doctor la classed among the LUAUIMI HPKCIAI.IHTB. CONSULTATION FJIUB. Treatment by correspondence. Bend stamp for reply. Office Bushman Block , 16th and Douglas Sto. , Omaha , _ ob. _ IFOR SALE * EVERYWHERE ,