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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 1, 1890)
TRINIDAD Sheet Asphalt PAVEMENT , r = _ m CD O 4. Q cn > o ( o pitnrf Q 3 "P C "V f - - - - - - - : - - ; = = H--3r . sr ssag ; s tIDX 13CIJ , Jt > > iLv vJ CJ ? CLJL ± LL UP . . .c . CD Jt Vl5 r VD rrtt - _ ir t5 X CL 1 Cl JT - rIgf : w I V'T - - l - > : - 3 The attention of those contemplating the paving of their streets and avenues during the present year , is invited to the following exhibit of our bid of May 9 , for ag- phalt pavement that may be ordered in this city during 1890. These greatly reduced prices put a genuine Trinidad Asphalt Pavement within the reach of all. Asphalt is cheap , because it is moderate in its first cost , the company caring for it the first five years free of cost to the property owner or the city ; cheap , because the company had a contract with the city to repair and keep in good condition the asphalt pavements for ten additional years , making fifteen years of assured comfort and luxury without : additional cost to the property holder , repairs being paid from the general fund ; cheap , because an asphalt pavement is repairs forever , wood or brick means an entire new pavement in a very few years , thus entailing a second paving lien against your property before the first one is more than half discharged. Asphalt is desirable , because it is clean and noiseless , is a luxury to drive upon , a perfectly sanitary pavement and is easily , quickly and perfectly repaired ; desirable , because in the near future the city , will cease to vote bonds for intersections , at a time when the wood and brick streets will demand repaving , this will leave you with a wrecked and impassable street , as was the case for five and six years in Washington , and Washington's experience is to be repeated in this city very soon. Asphalt is the recognized standard pavement of America todayover two hundred and sixty miles of it now in use and growing in popular favor ; New York City , Newark , AlbanySchencctady , Milwaukee , Altoona , Dun kirk , Fort Wayne , Kansas City , Wyandotte and Wichita having adopted it during 1889 ; Buffalo has one million two hundred thousand yards , and takes an additional half million yards this year wholly on the petition of the property owners. Not a Yard of Genuine Asphalt Pavement laid by the Barber Company has ever been Replaced by other Material While on the other hand over one million yards of wood , Medina sand stone and granite have been taken up and replaced with asphalt by this company. Following \ § our bid , arranged according to severity of traffic the street will be subject to , you haye thiry days in which to petition for choice of material for your street , blank petitions ! may be had upon application to this office [ 428 Ramge Block ] where diagram of streets may beseen and information cheerfully given. Following is our bid for 1890 : SHEET ASPHALTUM. 1'lvo Yt'iirs' Guarantee. Streets. Form Form Form 6th . $ . $2 68 7th . 2 68 ; th Ave . 2 68 8th . 2 98 pth . 298 loth 2 68 SHEET ASPHALTUM. Flvo Years' Guarantee- . Streets. Form Form "B > } "C" ith Ave $ $2 48 i8th 2 48 igth 2 48 20th 2 68 2ISt 2 48 22nd ; 2 48 23rd 2 48 24th 2 48 24th Ave 2 48 25th 2 48 25th Ave. 2 48 26th 2 48 26th Ave 2 48 2th 2 48 2th Ave 2 48 SHEET ASPHALTUM. Klvo Years' Guarantee. Streets. Form Form "B" "C" Binney $ $248 Burdette 2 48 Burt 2 48 Butler 2 48 California 2 68 Capitol Ave 2 48 Cass 2 48 Center 2 48 Chicago 2 48 Charles 2 48 Cumings , _ 2 68 2 48 Davenport 2 48 Dodge 2 48 Douglas 2 48 Dorcas 2 68 2 48 _ ! m . . . I The Barber Asphalt Paving Co. Office 428 , .Ramge Block. C. E. Squires , Agent. IYORT11Y 10 SUCCEED BECK. Studious Habits of Kentucky's New Senator and His Great Ability. AN ACQUISITION TO THE SENATE. Pew Sfcn In tJic Upper House " \Vlio Arc Known to the General Public Denver's Goilftithcr AVon- tlcrfiil Memories. tCojj/r7it ( ( ; JSflO Jii ; J'mnk O , "U'AHiiiXfiTox , May iM. [ Special to Tuc OKI : . ] Ex-SpcnUer Carlisle has jumped lute the thick of the work of the senate and it is something of n question as to whether his constitution will stnnd the strain of his new position. Ho has ono of the hardest commit tees of the tipper house , and ho is of course umbitious to distinguish himself. I took a ( jood look at him , as ho sat on his sntno in ono of the red leather scats of the chamber today. Ills desk was covered with letters and docu ments and his tall thin frame seemed moro Btoopcd than ever. As ho raised his face to vote upon u measure I noted that it was palo mid sallow and his eyes seemed to have sunk en deeper under his high broad forehead. Senator Carlisle- fully six feet tall hut docs not welsh more than 150 pounds. Ills com plexion marks him as a man with a liver mid ho walks about packed full of the malarial secretions which 1111 the air of the Ohio river bottoms added to these which 11 oat up from the miasmatic Potomac. IIo has the student's stoop and ho has never been a dlsciplo of physical culture. He pays no attention to his diet and plods away day and night at his studies. Ho gets up on hour before the rising tlmo of the average- senator , which Is at 8 o'clock or later , and ho works in his room until ho goes to the capltol. IIo eats his lunch In loss than ten minutes and ho often works whllo ho Is eating it. When ho was speulter ho lunched In his prlvnto room and It is said that ho never took a lunch while the house was In session. Ho is not fond of so ciety mid ho goes about Just as llttlo as bo can. Ho Is u man with no recreations what ever and his great brain Only lU'HlN When He Sleeps. Still , Speaker Carlisle ) does not look much older now than ho did when he came to Washington twelve years ago. Ho was then forty-three years old , the same tall , palo , thin , black-haired , gray-eyed , smooth-shaven , ( tlgnilled man. Ho lived for years in boarding - ing houses and hotels , and It has only been a short tlmo since ho bought n placa and went to housekeeping. Ho paid , I think , $31,000 for his homo. It Is located within three squares of the whlto house on K street and Is In the most fa.ililonablu part of the city. Mrs , Carlisle presides over It. She Is n tall , well-formed blonde- lady , possessed of line so cial qualities , bright and well educated. Slio takes good euro of Speaker Carlisle ami it Is duo to her that ho stands the strain of his work as well as ho does. Senator Carlisle will bo n stronger man In his present position than ho was in the house. IIo Is moro of u logician than an or ator , and His speeches are noted moro for their thought than for their brilliancy of dic tion. Snivadcnglcisin has practically died out In the senate. The great speeches Uovo become llko these of the Kngllsh parliament , talks between the senators uttered In a con- Yenmtloual tone , and It Is Ideas rather than words thaTtc I Carlisle will bo at the head of the southern men of the senate. Ho will rank with Uutlcr , Vest and Mor gan and will bo the peer of miy man On his bldo of the chamucr. IIo Is in character moro llko .Too Brown of Georgia than any of these men , and ho will not have to wait like the average new senator for two years to make himself felt. The change from Beck to Carlisle has been no loss to the strength of the senate , and Car lisle is undoubtedly Tlio K < | iial of Ills Predecessor. The same can hardly bo said of some of the other changes which have taken place- within the past few years. Neither of the senators from Arkansas uiivctucsainoprominence that was held by ex-Attorney General Garland , and Senator Gray does not flpruro as a national character as did Thomas F. Bayard.Vnl - thall is undoubtedly nn able man , but ho has not as yet reached the proportions of Lucius Qulntus Cincinnatus Lamar , and the million aire , Farwellthough ho is n good man in LUIU- mittco , has no such place in the public eye as was held by John A. Logan , In the whole United States senate there is not moro than a dozen men who have national prominence and whoso minds affect public legislation. The average visitor to the capital has to usk when told the names of the sixty other odd senators us to whether they belong to the senate or the house , and their personality is unknown. A number of the senators are sup posed to possess great ability , but they sel dom appear on the floor , and an instance of this Is Senator Payne of Ohio , who Is known in Cleveland as a lawyer , who has been talked of as a possible president , and during the six years which ho Is just closing has not made ono speech of any noto. Senator Eustis of Louisiana Is undoubtedly an able man. Ho comes of a long line of statesmen , and ho has written articles for the magazine , and has delivered classic speeches which show him to bo a man of great parts. Still ho never speaks in the senate and the people of the country know but llttlo of him. Barbour of Virginia is another able states man iv ho says but little , and Pnsco of Flor ida , Wilson of Maryland and Hearst of Cali fornia are among these good little senators who are to bo seen but not heard. Speaking of Garland , I saw him walking down F street yesterday with a black slouch his smooth-shaven nut-cracker hat pulled over - - features. Ho has a law ofllco near the Kb- bltt house and Is , I am told , getting into a good practice. Ho ouco told mo that ho liked the law better than the senate , and ho has bought a house hero on Rhode Island avenue , and has evidently settled to stay. Ho stfll owns , however , his estate near Little Hock , Ark , , where ho has some hundreds of acres of forest , and In the inldst of this n log cabin whichlio called Hominy Hill. There nro no roads which lead to this cabin , and it is in It that Garland spends his summer vacations. Who ho enters It ho gives orders that no mall or telegrams are to bo brought to him , and ho has all the pleasures of solitude. Ho lias cut himself as far na possible off from the world hero at Washington , Ho does not go Into so ciety and does not take mid will not read n newspaper. Ho got so sick of seeing the dally Jourimh at the time of the Pan-IClectrio scandal that ho swore they wore all bad and ho would have none of them , and moro than this , ho sticks to his vow. Whether ho will get Into politics again It Is hard to say. Ho still holds his residence In las state b > this Hominy Hill property , and it la not an im possibility that he may again como to the senate. Ono of Garland's law partners Is General James W. Denver , n tall line looking man of over seventy , who has made as much history as any man In Washington. Ho wfts In con gress from California before the war , and though ho has always been an opponent of the code , ho hoKilled Killed n Man In a Duel In California. IIo was secretary of state of California at the time and a * such was at tacked by a man named Gilbert , who was ed itor of the Alta California. General Denver replied to the attack and Gilbert challenged him. Denver accepted the challenge , though ho knew that Gilbert was a deadly shot. The weapons were rifles and Denver received Gil bert's flro and shot off his gun into the air. Strange to say Gilbert failed to hit him and when General Denver started forward to shako hands Gilbert rcfurcd and stated that he was bound to kill Denver or be killed him self. At this Denver decided to defend him self and at the next , shot Gilbert fell , pierced through the heart. I met General Denver last night and asked him to tell mo the story of the naming of Denver city after him. He replied that it was when ho was governor of Kansas In 1S. > 8. A number of governors bad tried to control the people and had failed when Buchanan appointed Denver and ho brought order out of chaos. While ho was doing this the oftlcers who were sent west to organize the county seat of Arapahoe county failed to turn up and Governor Denver was asked to appoint men in their placed. Col orado was then a part of Kansas and when Denver found a party of men whom ho know going out to Pike's Peak ho gave them the au thority to select a county scat. These men chose the site of Denver and named it after him. In the papers organizing the town they donated him one of the original shares of it and had Denver been able to have gotten this , it would have been worth a fortune. The rascally judge , bowcvcr , who handled the papers erased General Denver's name and put in his own and the result was that the gene ral got nothing but honor. Ho is , however , rich and among his possessions is a three- thousand aero farm in the flncst part of southern Ohio , where ho has n pleasant homo and n big library. The effects of the grip nro still felt in Washington. Governor Andrew G. Curtln had three different attacks of it and was kept for u good part of the winter in the Arling ton Hotel by It. Justice Lamar grappled with the ilend early in the season mid ho looks twenty years older from the effects of his struggle. I saw him this afternoon riding from the supreme court to his homo on Mas sachusetts Avenue in n red herdio. His shoulders are stooped and ho has lost thirty pounds during the winter. His health Is not bettered by the gloomy views ho takes of the south and its future. IIo told mo the other day that ho thought Mississippi would event ually bo a negro state mid that the whites would bo forced to emigrate. Ho Is so confi dent of this that ho Is anxious to sell his plantation in Mississippi , consisting of about 500 acres of the finest land In that state and having on It forty-seven registered cows and a number of fine horses. Justice Lamar has n magnificent homestead there and his hinds are under the best of cultivation. IIo offers the whole for much less than It Is worth and ho says ho has no desire to have any of his friends remain in Mississippi. Said ho tome mo : "Tho influence of the present administra tion Is bound to bo altogether In favor of the blacks at the expense of the whites , and the whites will not permit the blacks to rule them. Had Blalno been elected president the result would have been different and the outlook for the south would have boon better but as It Is It seems to mo as dark as it can bo and what will bo the future God only knows 1 This conversation took place In a heretic In coming from the capltol to the treasury and as wo went down Pennsylvania avenue pas sengers came in until the vuhiclo was packed. At the transfer station opposite the whlto house a crowd of treasury clerks pushed their way In and took the remainder of the availa ble standing room. Justice Lamar was sit ting at the extreme end of the car near the door when a llttlo whlto-haircd old lady ap peared behind this crowd of clerks and begged the gentlemen to move up a llttlo so that she could got a place to stand. The car was so full thai It was perhaps thirty seconds before any of them moved and in the mean while Justice Lamar , old and enfeebled as ho is by the grip , Arose from IIIH Scat , and asked the lady to come in and take his place , saying that he intended to get out very soon at any rate. The old lady did not know who was ottering her the kindness and she accepted the scat. The justice of the supreme premo court stepped out and waited on the sidewalk for the next herdic which ho took as it came along live minutes later and rode to his home on Massachusetts avenue. This action of Justice Lamar is however a type of the politeness of the statesmen from the south who are hero at Washington. It makes no difference how old or how feeble a southern senator or general is he is always ready to rise in a street car and give his seat to a lady. I have often seen Speaker Carlisle hanging onto the strap in order that some woman might have a seat , and I have at the same time seen northern senators spread out their legs and take twice as much room as they needed. I remember ono day in a crowded F street car coming from the patent ofllco to the treasury seeing a little old woman hobble up on crutches and attempt to get in. There were a dozen prominent men in the car , including two supreme Judges , two United States senators and half a dozen congressmen. All of these men sat for twenty seconds after the cripple appeared at the door of the car and did not attempt to help her. At this moment u tall , white-whiskered , dark-eyed man sitting nt the extrino end of the ear , who had been busily engaged in con versation with his neighbor , turned his eyes towards the door. IIo saw the woman and Jumped to his feet , loft his companion and tenderly lifted her up the steps. This man was sovciity-Jlvo years old and ho was by all odds the oldest man in the car. His name was Joseph E. Johnston , and ho was the noted southern general of the lute Avar. The tailors of Washington are much ex cited over a letter which has been published In the newspapers stating that they expected to make ICO per cent off of every suit uuuto for a public man und that they are forced to do this in order to cover bad debts. The only merchant tailoring llrm In town which charges cash is ono which is noted for its three-dollar pants and the overcharging of the others has become the subject of conver sation among the statesmen. Soma of them were talking about it last night , when Ben Butterworth told'an Incident of his school ' days. "It happened , " said howhen I was studying law. Ono of my friends urged mete to get A Now Hult of Clotlio.H. I told him I could not as I had no money. 'Get It on time , ' said ) m ; 'tho tailor will trust you. ' 'But , ' said I , 'supposing ' I can't pay when the account falls duel' 'Well , ' said my friend , 'if ' you wuur your old clothes everyone ono will look down on you and the chances are the tailor will bo among the crowd. If you buy a new suit of clothes you will stand all the better with nil the rest of the world and you have only the chnnco of losing the good opinion of your tailor.1 The result was I bought the suit and circumstances were for tunately such that I was ready to pay for It. " A now suit of clothes is a passport to nearly every thing In Washington , and Butterworth's irtory makes mo think of General GeorgoSher- Idan whom I sow strutting about the hotels yesterday under a sombrero us big around us a dish pun. Sheridan was n great friend of Brady , the noted star route manwhllo Brady was at the holght of his power hero Sheridan frequently called upon him for n llttlo loan. Ono day ono of Brady's clerics came in and told him that Sheridan was In town. "How Is hodiwsscdl" said Brudy. "Ho looks as though ho came out of a bandbox , " was the reply t "Ho has on a now silk hat , now suit , patent leather boots , and ho Is taking in the towit lu a lauduu. Ho wauU some SHEET ASPHALTUM. rive Years' Guarantee. Streets. Form Form " " " " "B" "C" Emmett $ $2 48 Farnam 2 68 Frances 2 48 Franklin 2 48 Grove * 2 48 - > tl * Grant > 2 48 Grace 2 48 Hamilton 2 48 Harney | 2 48 Hickory 2 48 Howard 2 48 Half-Howard 2 48 Izard 2 68 Jackson _ ' 2 48 Jones 2 48 said Brady , "and I'll bet you W that he will bo here within two hours to borrow any way from WOO and upwards. Ho never dresses up except when ho wants to make a loan , and then ho puts on all the style ho can buy. " He had hardly finished this remark before Sheridan came in , and ho departed soon aftci witli his pockctbook fattened. Senator Ingalls is still receiving letters re garding the eulogy which the Kansas City correspondent says ho plagiarized from Mas- sillon. The senators generally accept Ingalls' explanation that ho wrote the matter down in A Commonplace Hook Yo rs Afjo , and that his memory dropped it down into his mouth when ho was on the lloor. Ingalls never forgets a thing when lie once writes it , and ho has ono of the best memories of the senate. Senator Spooncr has trained his memory so that-ho now never makes a note for u speech and ho relies entirely upon it to keep track of his engagements. IIo tells me that ho can start out to do twenty things and ho will como back having forgotten none of them. His first experience at memory culti vation was when he was a young lawyer. Ho had prior to this time made notes of the evi dence as the trials progressed in order to make his speech to the Jury. At last a day came when ho was overrun with work. His wife was sick and ho was tired out. An im portant cnso at this moment came up for trial , and ho was so fatigued that ho concluded that ho would not take notes , but would ar- rnngo the matter in his head as ho went along in the examination of witnesses. ThaUiiIght ho tried to remember the testimony , but he found his head in a jumble. He. feared to lose his case and went to bed much worried. It was the same way in the morning , and ho was in despair when ho arose to make his speech to the Jury. The moment ho began to speak , however , his faculties asserted thorn- selves. The testimony came before his mind ns plainly as the handwriting on the wall in the paluco at Babylon , and ho woi his case. Ho has never taken a note since then , and ho says ho believes that any ono can train Ills memory ns ho pleases. G. Life will acquire now zest and cheerfulness return , if you will impel your liver and kid neys to the performance of their functions. Dr. .I. H. McLean's Kidney and Liver Balm wllf stimulate them to healthful action. $1 per bottle. The ntsuovory of Almlntlie. In the years 17)0 ! ) anil 1701 , when ovury other liouso in the lluo do SovrcH wan u hosnititl , u mass \VIIH wiiil dally in the church of St. bulpieo , suys the ytult- { jart Itoviow. It was the duty of a cer tain nun to L'loanso and reiill the sacra mental vcssola , hut as yho was a very capable mii'KO , the dunmmlH upon her titno from the wounded and dyiiif , ' were so great Unit bho was obliged at times to k'ivo but pcaut attention to her holy du ties about the altar. Ono day , immediately nflor the cole uration of the mass , the in-lost who had olllciatcd was taken ill. IIo at once summoned the nun and accused her of having poisoned the communion wino. The church oflleors were advised of what had occurred and had the sister - tor arrested. They toolc the com munion cup which contained and BUS- poctcd wino to a celebrated chemist and apothccarv named Uouilot for unnlytuH Houdot tested It and found miroabslntho , which the nun , in trying faithfully to fulllll her multifarious duties , had poured into the clialico by.mistake. Boudot experimented In various ways with the Honor to try its effect upon a healthy body , and convinced hiniKolf in the matter of the stomachic virtues of the extract. Ilia report freed the im prisoned nun at once , and Ills was the lirut opinion over advanced Unit ahsintho wim a palatable cordial. A few yotu'H later , wnen abslntho had become a'flrst or "pledging drink , " as it was called , on all good tables , Uoudot claimed that it \vus the result of his discovery. SHEET ASPHALTUM. 1'lvo Years' Guarantee , Streets. Form Form " " " " "B" "C" Lowe Ave $ $2 48 Lathrop 2 48 Locust 2 48 Lake 2 48 Landon Court 2 48 Leavenworth 2 68 Mayne 2 48 Mercer Ave 2 68 Marcy 2 48 Mason 2 48 Nicholas 2 68 Paul 2 48 Pacific 2 48 Pierce 2 48 Pine 2 48 TIIK PARABLE OF HAPPINESS. Miller tn A'cic York Independent. A rich man's goodly son did go Afur to lind true happiness. He tracked the treasures of the snow , And Indus tracked. The stormy stress Of hill-set seas , the peace of palm-set plain Ho searched and eager searched ; yet searched in vain. The hundred battered batllo gates Of Thebes , the storied temple door Of Delphi , or.ieleof fates Or sacred shrine or holy store Of healing things he saw ; yet day by day Grew care upon him like a mantle gray. Still had ho honors oft , and great , For goodly was his heart and keen His wit and generous his state , And much his eager eyes had seen. Yet happiness came not ; mid over all His ways and days there over lay a pall. And ho grew fretted ; came to feel That fate had hounded him ; ho said : "Ah , cursed of God ! " His heart grew steel And stone ; and bitter grew his bread. At last , outworn , ho turned him , with a sigh , To seek his childhood's homo and cheerless die. And there he sat him , all apart , A moody , scllish , sullen thing. Yea , God had Riven him a heart Far back. But ho had sought to bring True happiness unto himself alone ; So God instead had given him a stone. Ono dav a child passed where ho sat 'Mid his ancestral wood anil moaned The barefoot thing did start thereat , And starting , fell. Ho grudging groano-1 Some selfish word , the whtlo ho stooped and bore The bleeding waif to his own stately door. And oh , the rising sun ho knew That day , anil all his after days ! His pent .soul widened till it grew To reach , us reach the dear sun's rays , All things that lay about , before ; Nor wailed ho out for happiness once more. - . Harvard Journalism. Within the past few years , journalism lias become BO prominent as a profession and such advances have been made in it , both in the world at largo and also in amateur circles , that a consideration of its history in connection with college publications is of interest to almost anyone ono who will notice the changes made , oven within that BO limited range , and doubly interesting is its history at so well-known an institution as Harvard college , says the liostou Journalist. On July M , 1810 , appeared the flr&t number of the "Harvard Lyceum , " the oarlirst of the Harvard college journals a llttlo octavo volume , with twenty- four pages and a blue cover. In its first number it outlined its proposed course of operation. It was to bo published semimonthly and was designed "to comprehend every department of the academical studies Including especially the subject of American literature , together with such general topics as attracted the public attention. " Kdward Hvorott , then in his junior year , was ono of the prime founders of the now journal and ono of its most frequent contributors. In hia account of the magazine , published later , ho MI id that seven or eight momhors of his class ; himself among the number , hail been seized by the usual boyish desire for writing but to an uncommon rtfgren. Actuated by that dc&iro , they btarted the maga/.lnc , The style of the magazine was porious , and savored by the wisdom of a John.-on , but was unpopular. Jealousy and envy of the lower classes did their work , anil on March 4 , 1811 , Its last number appeared. Q It hud notcnimod.to portray the life of a student of the time , but wa probably intended to Imitate the greats Kngllsh reviews , and was wholly depend. out for succcfas on its literary merit. * New COIKCH HOIINC , Kim , Oily. Absolutely llro proof. Finest and largest hotel ii. Kunsas CUy. UuciccllcU lu its up- SHEF.T ASPHALTUM 1'lvo Vi'iirs' Guarantee. Streets. - Form Form * "B" "CV Park $2 68 $ . .J.t Parker. i > ( 2 4 $ Poppleton Ave 2 4 $ Pleasant 2 48 Reed 2 48 Seldon 2 48 Spring ' 2 46 Spencer 2 48 Spruce 2 43 Smith 2 48 Sherman Ave 2 4 $ Webster 2 48" * Williams 2 4 $ Woohvorth Ave 2 48 run 1'iGtmi : . " The figure 0 In our dates will make n long stay. No man or woman now living will ever ( Into 4 document without using tlm IVjuro 0. It itnnds In the third place in 1600 , whcru it will remain ten years and then move up to * ccond placa In 1000 , where it will rest for ono hundred years. There Is another " 9" which lins ulsocomo to star. It U unlike the figure 0 In our dales in tlm respect that it has already moved up to first place , where ] It will permanently remain. It Is called the "No. D" High Arm Wheeler A Wilson Sewing Machine. The "No. 9" was endorsed for first place hy tlm experts of Europe ut the Paris ix : [ > osltiun of 1 where , after a scvrrccontest with the leading ma < chines of the world , It was awarded tlio only Grand Prize Riven to family sewing machine ! ) , all others on exhibit having received lower awardl Of gold medals , etc. Tlio French Government also recognized Its superiority hy thcdecorntion oj Mr. Nathaniel Wheeler , President of the company , with the Cross of the Legion of Honor. The "No. 0" Is not an old machine Improved upon , but is an entirely new machine- , and Ihej , Grand Prize nt Paris was awarded it us the & & estadvunce In tuwmi ; machine mecliaiilsin ofux ago. These who buy it can re < .t assured , thertb tow , of having tbo very latest uud beet. WHEELER & WILSON M'FO CO. , , ISO nncl 187 WulmHh Ave. , Chicoga P. E. FLODMAN & CO , ii20 North HHli Street. NERVE AND BRAIN TREATMENT- flpeclflo for llyrtprla , niiilnnm , Kiln , Neuralgia , WaL ruliu.yii , MontM l > ivMiunhofi > [ | > liiK < > t Ihu lliuln. rv t-ultlnir In ln nnlty anil IrrullriK to inlrrrytUMnv ami dojlli , rrc'inaluro Old ARC , Ilurrcnncii , l.onvr I'owcf ( neither ftex , Involuntary LoHresiand Hprrmatorrliu * i u ec | hy ovcr iurtlaii or tlm liruln , Unlmi > < > t OUT IndnUrcnca K ci Imx roiilalii inijinontli'i. irma inrnt. llitbni , r rU ( or g > , ( rut l.y . tnuil | .ri'ialil. | llll oai Ii orilrr for nx IIOHH , will n-nil I'Ur. liu f Kuarautrii Id n-riinil money If tliu tri'iiliniit ( nils If euro. UuarunUca Utuvil uiul uunulnu eulil duly by GOODMAN DRUG CO. _ 111O Farimm Street , Omaha. For LObTorFAILIHO General and NKHVOUO i Weikueu of Body and Mind , Effect ! , of ErroriCrEiceiieiinOMor Younfr , ituorxi. llo n , . o.r.lllo , IIIIUK TIKiTHHM ll r.iBH lit d Utu Ullllj from (0 eiiKi 4 t > 'trala loynlrlti. If Fit * Ittii. U nlpll' Hoik , ipltoill lid proof. nill.J ( irilriti fr . H ERIE MEDICAL co. , BUFFALO , N. v LLLANLIHEOCEAN STEAMERS Paitagoto and from Great Grltiln and art parts ol Europn. Mondesi-Liverpool route , by th iialer olSt. Lawrence , thorlett olall. Ulu fJoiYto Iloblou , to PbtlAdiilphii , Mrt'rpool to anil frotn lUltluiora. Thirty Btoainori. ( 'Una excoliloft Accommoilatloui unvurpaaeed. Weekly sailings AMA CO. , Uon. Weti. AK'U. ' C.I , Sun Jell , UUMH , m La tiolhi at. , Ublcifi" , Ul <