Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 20, 1881, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY BEE, Harness, Saddles, &c. B. WEIST 20 18¢th St. bet F & Harney, OMAHA PUBLISHING CO., PROPRIETORS, D18 Farnham, bet. Oth and 10th Streets, TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION oOpy 1 year, in advance (postpaid). onths ] W months o " Hat and Bonnet Bieachers. Ladies get your Straw, Chip and Felt Hats done up at northeast corner Seventeenth and Capitol Aventie. WM. DOVE_Provrictor Hatels. CANFIELD HOUSE, Ges. Canfield 0th & Farnham DORAN HOUS P. H. Cary, 918 Farnham St SLAVEN'S HOTEL, F. Slaven, 10th Strect. Southern Hotel Gus. Eamel, 0th & Leavenworth, PME CARD CIICAGO, ST. TAUL, MINNEATOLIS AND OMAIA RAILROAD, Leave Omaha—No. 2 through passenger, 11 & m. No. 4, Onkland passenger, 8:30a. m. Arrive Omaha—No. 1, through ' passen m. No, 3, Oakland passenger, WHST OR SOUTHWRSTS. B. & M. in Nch,, Through Express, B. & M. Lincoln Freight.—7:00 p. m, U. P Express, 19:16 b m, O. & R. V. for Lincoln, 10:20 a. m, . & R. V. for Osceoln, freight No. 6, f: 0 & A m. ) P, ARRIVING PROM TIIK WEST AND SOUTITWEST, 0. & R, V. from Lincoln—12:12 p. m. U. P. Express—3:95 p. m. B’ & M.in Neb,, Through Express—4:15 p. m B. & M. LincolnFreight—8:35 a, m. U Freight 10—-1:40 p. m, No. 0— 4:25 p. m. Emigrant. No. $-10:50 p. m. No 12-11:35 a. m. O. & R. V. mixed, ar. 4:36 p. m.| NORTH, Nebraska Division of the ls!. Paul & Sloux City Road. No. 2 leaves Omhha § a.'m. No. 4 leaves Omaha 1:60 p. m. No. 1 arrives at Omaha at 4:30 p, m No. 8 arrives at Omaha at 10:45 . m. DUMMY TRAINS BETWEKN OMAHA AND COUNCIL BLUPFS, Leave Omaha at f 00, 8:00, :00 and 6:00 p. m. Leaves , 4:25 Council Bluffs at 9:35 and 11:25 . m. p. m. Opening and Closing of Malls, ROUTE, OPE. CLOBK. . m. a.m. p. m, Chicago & N. W. 30 4:30 240 Chicago, It. 1. & Paci 00 4:30 2:40 Chicago, B. & Q. 00 4:30 2:40 Wabash 0 4 2:40 1 4:3 6:00 11: 400 11 400 840 6:30 Omaha & Northw: 430 7 Local mails for State of Towa leave but once day, viz: 4:30, A’ Lincoln Mail is also opened at 10:30 a, m, Office open Sundays from 12 m. to 1 p. m. THO! HALL P.M. Business Directary. Art Emporium. U. ROSE'S Art Emporium, 1518 Dodge Street, Steel Engravings, Oil Paintings, Chromos, Fancy Frames, Framing » Specialty. rices, BONNER 1500 Dourlas Street. Good Styles. Abstract ard Real Estate. JOHN L. McCAGUE, opposite Post Office, W. R. BARTLETT 817 South 13th Street. Architects. DUFRENE & MENDELSSOHN, ARCHITECTS, Room 14, Creighton Block, A. T. LARGE Jr., Room 2, Creighton Block. Boots and Shoes. JAMES DrVINE & CO., Fine Boots and Shoes. good assorment of ‘home work on hand, corner 12th and Harney. THOS. ERICKSON, 8. E. cor. 16th and Douglas, JOHN FORTUNATUS, ‘605 10th strect, manufactures to order good work ot fair pricos. 'Ropairing done. Bed 8prings. J. F. LARRDMER Manufacturer. 1517 Douclas st. Books, News and Statlonery. J. I. FRUEHAUF 1015 Farnham Stroet. Butter and Eggs. MoSHANE & SCHROEDER, the oldest B. and E. house in Nebraska established 1875 Omaha. ron Fencing. The Western Cornice Works, Agents for the Champion Iron Fonce &c., havo on hand all kinds of Fancy Iron Fences, Crostings, Fineals, Railings, ete, 1810 Dodge stree. ap1d Intelligence Office. MRS, LIZZIE DENT 217 16th Street, " ewelle JOHN BAUMER 1814 Farnham Street, Junk, H. BERTHOLD, Rags and Metal, Lumber, Lime and Cement. FOSTER & GRAY corner tth and Dov Lamps and Glassware. J. BONNER 1809 Doug S Good Variety, G. A, LINDQU One of our most popular Merchant Taflors fs ro- ceiving the latest designs for Spring and Summor Goods for gentlemen's wear. = Stylieh, durablo, and vrices low as ever 215 13th bet. Doug. & Farn, Millinery. MRS, C. A. RINGER, Wholesale and Retail, Fan. ¥ Goods in great variety, Zephyrs, Card Boards, iery, Gloves, Corscts, &c. ~Cheapest House in save 80 per cont. Order Stroot. ost. Pur by Mail. 115 Fifteenth Physicians an 1 Surgeons, W. 8. GIBBS, M. D,, Ryom No 4, Creighton Block, 15th Street. P. 8. LEISENRING, o, D. Masonic Block. C. L. HART, M. D, Eye and Ear, opp. postoftice DR, L. B. GRADDY, Oculist and Aurist, §. W 15th and’ Farnham Sta. Photographers. GEO. HEYN, PROP., Grand Central Galle R 212 Sixteenth Street, near Masonic Hall, First-ciass Work and Prompt- hoss guarantoen, P. W. TARPY & CC., 216 12th 8t., bet. Farnham and Douglas. Work promptly attended to. D. FITZPATRICK, 1409 Douglas Strect. Painting and Paper Hanging. HENRY A. VOSTERS, 1412 Dodge Street, Planing Mill. A. MOYER, manufacturer of sash, doors, blinds, moldings, riewels, alusters, hand rails, furnishing scroll sawing, &e., cor. Dodge and 9th strects. Pawnbrokers, J. ROSENFELD, 322 10th St., bet. Far. & Har, Refrigerators, Canfield’s Patent. C. F. GOODMAN 11th St. bet. Farn, & Harney. 8how Case Manufactory.; 0. J. WILDE, Manufacturer and Dealer” in all kinds of Show Cases, Upright Cases, & ., 1317 Cass St. FRANK L. GERHAKD, proprictor” Omaha Show Case manufactory, 818 South 16th street, between Leavenworth and Marcy. All goods warranted first-class, Stoves ana inware. A. BURMESTER, Dealer In Stoves and Tinware, and Manufacturer of Tin Roofs and all kinds'of Building Work, Oild Fellows' Block. J. BONNER, 1300 Douglas St. Good and Cheap. Beeds. J. EVANS, Wholesale and Retail Seed Drills and Cultivators, Odd Fellows' Hall, g 8hoe Stores. Phillip Lang, 1820 Farnham st., bet. 18th & 14th, 8econd Hand Store. PERKINS & LEAR, 1416 Douglas St., New and Second Hand Furniture, House Furnishing Goods, &c., beurht and sold on narrow marvins, Baloons. HENRY KAUFMANN, In the new brick block ‘on Douglas Stroct, has Just opened a most elegant Bees Hall, ‘Hot Lunch from 10 to 12 every day. FLANNERY, ° On Farnham, next to the B, & M. headquartors, has re-opened a neat and complets establishment which, barring FIRE.and Mother Shipton’s Proph- ecy, will be opened or the boys with Hot Lunch on and after present date. *Caledonia " J, FALCONER, 679 10th Strect. CENTRAL RESTAURANT, MRS, A. RYAN, “southwest corner 16thand Dodge. Best Board for the Money. tistaction Guaranteed. Meals at all Hours, Board by the Day, Week or Month. Good Terms for Cash. polied. Carriages and Road Wagons. W)L SNYDER, No, 131h 14th and Harney Streots] Furnished Roo Clvil Engineers and Surveyors. ANDREW ROSEWATER, Creighton Block, Town Surveys, Grade and Sewerage Systems & Speclalty. Commission Merchants, JOHN G. WIL LIS, 1414 Dodge Street. D B. BEEMER. For details see large advertise- ment in Daily and Weekly. Cigars and Tobacco. WEST & FRITSCE ER, manufacturers of Cigas and Wholesale Dealers in Tovaccos, 1305 Dougl W. ¥. LORENZEN manufacturer 514 10th stroct. Cornice Works, Westarn Cornice Works, Manufacturers Iron ‘Cornice, Tin, Iron and Blate Roofling. Orders trom avy locality promptly executed, in the best manner. Factory and Oftice 1810 Dodge Street, Galvanized Iron Cornices, Window Caps, ectc., wanufactured and put up in any part of the country. T. SINHOLD 416 Thirteenth strect Grockery, J. BONNER 1500 Dougias stroet. Clothing and Furnishing Goods, GEO. H. PETERSON. Also Hats, Caps, Doots, Shoes, Notions and Cutlery, 804 S, 10th street. Clothing Bought. €. SHAW will pay highest Cash band clothing.© Corner 10th and Good line, Dentists, DR. PAUL, Williams' Plock, Cor. 16th & Dodge. Drugs, Paints ana Oils, KUBN & CO, Pharmacists, Fine ¥anc Ginols, Cor, 15th and Do e, Lr W. J. WHITEHOUS £, Wholesale & Retail, 16th €. C. FIELD, 2022 N eth Side Cuming St M. PARR, Druggist, 10th and Howard Streets. Dry Goods Nations, Etc. . JOHN H. F. LEAMANN & CO,, New York Dry Gbods §:ore, 1810 and 1312 Farn- ham street. L. €. Enewold also boots and shoes 7th & Pacific. Furuiture, A F. GROSS, New and Second Hand Furniture and Stoves, 1114 Douews. Highest cash price paid for second hana goous, J. BONNER 1300 Dougta st. Fine goods, &e. CE €O, GUST, FRIES & CO., 1213 Harney 8t., Improve- ed Ice Boxes, Iron and Wood Fences, Office Railings, Counters of Pine and Walnut. Florist. A Donaghue, plants, cut v, seeds, boguets ete. N. W, cor. 16th and Douglas streets. Foundry. JOHN WEARNE & SONS, cor, 14th & Jackson sts Flour and Feed, GHAHA CITY MILLS, 8th and Farnham Sts., Welshans Bros., roprietors. Grocers. Z. STEVENS, 21st between Cuming and Izard, T. A. McSHANE, Oorn. 28d and Cuming Streets, T e S (O Hatters. W. L. PARROTTE & CO., 1806 Douglas Street, Wholsale Exclusively. Hardw. iron and Steel. DOLAN & LANGWORTHY, Wholesale, 110 and Undertakers. CHAS. RIEWE, 1012 Farnham bet. 10th & 11td. P. PEMNER, SOSLT&MI: street, hetween Farn- ham and Harney. Does wood and’ cheap work. 99 Uent Stores. HENRY POHLMAN, toys, notions, pletutes jewelry, &c., 618 14th bet. Farnham ouglas C. BACKUS. 1205 Farnk oy Go PROPOSALS For Furnishing Horses, Wagons, and Harness for the Indian service, Sealed proposals for furnishing elghty (80) work horses, two (2) bugyy horses, fifty (50) wag- ons, one (1) light spring wagon, fifty (50) sets double harness for the Indian service at Otoo agency, Neb,, will be received by the undersign- edat his effice until five (5) o'clock p. m. Tues- day, July 26, 1881, at which time bids will be opened and contracts awarded. The following specifications and conditions will be obscrved, namely: The work horses must e between the ages of four (4) and seven (7) years, not loss than fourteen (14) hands high and to weigh not less than nine hundred and fifty (959) pounds, broke to double oss, true to work' and perfectly sound. Thobuggy team will be sub- Joct t0-tho. ahove. condiians, and n. adaltion imust be good travelers .All Horses will be sub- fested to'a thorough trial and inspection beforo being received. They must be weighed at the agency in the presence of the agent, Wagons to be narrow track, three (3) inch thimblos, spring seat, top, iox, bows und covers—covers,te be of twelve (12) ounce duek Light wagon, three (3) springs, with top. Ha- ness to be piain, back straps and collars, full leather tugs, coniplete, All theaboveto be delivered at the agency at the expense of the contractor, not Iater than September 1, 1881, unless there should be delay in the approval of the contract, ATl blds mivet bo. accompanied. by . certified check or equivalent on ‘some United States de- ository, payableto the order of the agent for at cast five (5) per cent of the amount of the bid which check shall be forfeited to the United States in case any bidder receiving award shll fail to execute promptly & contract with good, and sufficient sureties, according to the terms of his bid, otherwise to be returned to the bidder Paynient will be made through the Indian of- e, Washinglon, , 43 %00n s practicable after the delivery of She goods. v and all bids is reserved, eived for all or part of the L orsed, “Proposals for and harnass, etc., 8, Otoe Agency, Neb., June 34, 1851 NOTICE J. M, Stanton (full name unknown) Har- © 23-d3w. rict Henn and Mary Shillack, non-resident defendants will take notice’ that Milton Hendrix, of the of Douglas las, in the State of Nel a, did on the 1 y, 1881, file h# petition in rt of the S ka’ within and for the said county of las, against the said J, M. Stanton, Ha Henn and Mary Shillock, implea with George Mills, Magyzi eCorm Josiah 8. McCormick, Matthew T ck and John N, Patrick "defendants, setting forth that by virtue of a deed issued by the treasurer of said county, he has an absor lute title to the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section nine, (9) L-r\\‘nnhiy fifteen (15), range thirteen (13) e, in said Douglas coun- ty; that you and each of said defendants clati ta have some. iitarest in sald land, and praying that he may be adjudged to have an’indefeasible title to said premises; but that if his title should be held invalid, he may be decreed to have a lien on said land, that it may be sold to satisfy the same, and that you and each of you be for- everbedebarred from settingup or asserting any right or claim thereto, nd the said J. M Stanton, Harriet Henn and Mary Shillock are hereby notified that they are required to appear and answer said peti- tion“on or before the first day of August, 1g81. MILTON HENDRIX, L6th street. A. HOLMES corner 16th and Californis. By Cranksox & Huxt, his attorneys. Dated Omaha, June 23 1081 wldtd NORTHWESTERN NEW MEXICO. Rioh and Extensive Fields of Ale most Pure Coppor--The Jemes Monntains -- Magnificent Soenery, 014 Ruins and Hot Sprins Albuquerque Journal Within the boundaries of Bernalillo county, and lying about sixty miles north of Albuquerque are the Jemes mountains, whose summits are for half the year covered with snow, and down whose sides flow some of the most beautiful mountain streams to be found in all the Rocky mountain rango About twenty miles above Albuquoerque the Jemes river, which rises in the mountains of the same name, empties into the Rio Grande. By following up this river the little Mexican village called San Ysidro is reached, at a point where two moun- tain etreams unite, forming the Jemes river proper. These streams are call- ed respectively the right and left fork of the Jemes, Up the left fork the road leads off to the northeast, to where the famous Jomes hot springs are situated in a deepcanon whose tow- ering walls present some of the grand- est scenery within the boundaries of New Mexico. These sorings bubble up all through the canon, and have been resorted to for years by the Mex- ican inhabitants of this territory, as a cure for all ailments that yearly draw thousands of people to the hot springs of Arkansas. The locality is des- tined within =~ a short time to be one of the most popular health resorts of the south- west, and hundreds of the tourists will visit it to view the magnificent scenery of the canon and to examine the old ruins that are scattered all through the valley and along the mountain sides. Up the right fork of the Jemes river the road leads off to the north- west, in the di ion ot the little town of Nacimiento, which is situated in the valley of the Rio Puerco, be- yond a low divide that separates the waters of the latter stream from those of the Jemes. Nacimiento is near the northern end of the Jemes moun- tains, and about eighty-five milcs uorth bynorthwest from Albuquerque It is situated within the lately formed Senorita copper mining district, which includes within 1ts boundaries some of the richest and most extensive cop- per leads in the world. The Senorita copper mining district embraces with- in its area a large portion of the Jemes range, which is thickly covered with a fine growth of pine, cedar and spruce,. and watered with innumerable springs of pure cold water, that feed the streams that constitute the headwaters of the Puerco and Jemes rivers. For many years it has been known that the Jemes mountains were rich in copper, but owing to poor facilities for mining and a lack of railroad com- munication wfth eastern markets but little was done toward the develop- ment of the veins or even in prospect- ing. But last summer, Mr. William Borchert and several other praminent citizens of Albuquerque, sent out some prospectors to the northern end of the mountains, in the vicinity of Naci- miento, who soon discovered a very large copper lode upon which they located three claims, known as the Copper Queen, the Eureka and the Eureka No. 2. Out of this venture grew the Nacimiento Copper Mining company, which has secured, since the first locations, several very valuable claims, The main chain of the Jemes moun- tains extends from mnorth to south, and near the northern end anda little to the west of the range, thereisa mountain spur that extends in a di- rection almost at right angles to the main range. The spur is known as the Eureka mountain. Lying at the eastern end of this mountain and sep- arating it from the Jemes mountains proper.there is a beautifulvalley about one mile wide, spreading out toward the southwest, through which windsa little stream that empties, about six miles further down, into the Puerco river. Within this valley a town site will soon be located, where smelters will be built, and a thriving mining community grow up. There is an abundance of water for all mining and smelting purposes, and the mountain sides are covered with timber. Tmmediately upon the summit of the Eureka mountain and extending throughout its entire length, from east to west, is one of the finest cop- per lodes in the world. It is in a peculiar formation; the wall rock is sandstone, and the gangue of the vein a conglomerate of sandstone and gravel, carrying grey copper and silver assays from which show twenty-five to sixty per cent of copper, and fif- teen to twenty ouncesof silver., This lode 18 two and a half miles long, and twelve or fifteen feet wide. In some place it crops out fifteen to twenty feet above the surface. The Nanci- miento company, in developing the ureka, on this vein, went down the mountain side a short distance and ran their tunnel, or rather open drift, into the mountains, striking the vein at a distance of forty fee ‘I'he Copper Queen 1s located at the western end of the lode, and the Eu- reka and Eureka No. 2, areat the astern end, specimen of the Copper Queen ore, made by C. H, Murrry of Colorado, ran 41 por cent in copper, and in this lode there are thousands of tons of equally rich ore. Directly across the alley'on main ridge of the James mountains, there isanother lode which can be traced for four miles, and which in places crops out from forty to fifty feet. It is from fifteen to twenty feet wideand assays from 20 to 48 per cent in_copper, and from twenty-five to thirty-five ounces in silver, This lode is of the same for- mation as the one on the Eurcka mountain, and the Nacimiento Copper Mining company secured several loca- tions on it, One of these, the ( trude, is at the southern end of the vein, and has a tunnel in thirty feet. A short distance to the west of the Copper Queen mine, on Eurcka moun- tain, and beyond a small canon, 15 the location of the old Nacimiento mine, which was worked ffteen or twenty years ago, but finally abandoned be- cause there were no facilities for oper- ating it. Two tons of ore were taken from this mine fifteen years ago, one of which was shipped to New York, and the other to Swansea, in Wales, by the father of Mr. Mansanares, of Brown & Mansanares, and the result showed that the one ran from forty- five to fifty per cent in copper, A few An assay of a poor| THJEAVOMAHA’ DAILY BEE: WEDNE coal Mining company. This coal bed road from from San Ysidro to the Nacimic even to a vein of will prove a bona does not develope ade silver ore A Hot Day for a Wedding. got married on a hot day. “Speaking of boys, a pair of 8.y passed up the aisle, box, or some other thing that hap toa too fiery railroad train. | piration stood out on_her boson es short waists and wide were pretty girls, sleev Th of their glowing faces. covering all except their amount of surface. that the bridegroom, as he gaze but acqnisi that, T supposo, is the reason wiy bed at a time of the year when one bed is half big enough for one TAMING A WIFE. Mar of Justice, Cincinnati Commercial. rejoicing and with happy cong parties, When the happy with the bride's the honeymoon ha parents, liked. arrest and “‘cooler,” and true wivesought tobe locked in lodgment in took a notion she wanted a dish of out, couldn’t go, wife to a her shrill v she pleased, and started to go, carry, watch by sheer force, Sho then which opened on shed, nlni Was soon or voice, Her ravings attract of people in front of and m stal on terra on house. She was fined o “‘pin’ money in her pocket, and one coming to her rescuc, she was manded to jail, where she is ing out her fine; he refusing to go to her deliv Guct, The Blonde Broncho, whiteness of the snowy range. The general lit the refr of a Havana filler for the and then said: “Why, no, Bub. blank. {\'uver heard of 'em.” 274! came in_his blue eye, and cornered nugget of miles south of Kurelra mountains is a twelve foot vein of fine bituminoy belonging to the Nacimicnto A stock company has already been organized to build a narrow gauge rail- | « the mouth of tho Jemes river to the Hot Springs, with a branch thongh high Clara Belle says that she will never She says old twins acted as pages to their sister at her wedding, in a fashonable Fift) avenue church, last Tuesday morning, | Kin® This wedding was in the morning, as | ctsionally the antel o would look is becoming to fashionable enstom, | Around and snort, and jump stiff-leg- but the temperature in that crowded |86 and laugh, chureh rose to ninety-nine degreos, | WOUld consumo more space, according to the thermometer that 3 hung on a post in_the end of my poy, | 44 for while all T could see was a lit: The bride was just steaming s she tlo cloud of dust and the white spot T couldn’t help expect to see her stopped l?- a ot and the white roses on her head, at |, waist and in her hand seemed wilt 3 s ing. A novel floral offect was pro- of him. His tongue hung out 80 that duced by shading the roses carried | M€ stepped on it every little while, by the four bridesmaids, from the white ones of the bride herself to the crimson ones on the maid_who stood | $tddest antelope I « furthest from her at the chancel rail, [ & The bridesmaids wore short dresses of | 1im somehow, § white surah combined with nun's|look at old Yallor kind of reproach- iling, and lace, made with putfed belts, |, . 3 . and the | him by the ears and laid him ncroas costumos, besides being -prottily pic. | the saddle ahead of mo and took him turesque, had the merit of completely heated skins brido' was & BatEy itoo, Ut Her h:l‘fi would walk around tho corral like an temperature was visible over a largo | 01 billygoat that had boen betra It seemed to me the animated. furnaco that: he. was | OF bitter disappointmont and regrot. about to take to his bosom, could not that he had posponed the on until cold weathor would | antelope to be scoopod by n $15 buck- make her comfortable and comforting, | $kin broneho." evor, it is convenient and econ- to make the annual summer trip do for a honey-moon tour, and many couples go to sleeping two in a From the Altar of Hymen to the Kokomo, Ind., July 14 —Léss than four weeks ago the nuptials of Miss Lilla Sipes and William F. Kerr were celehrated in this city amidst much tions of the friends of the contracting The bride was the young and divorced wife of Mr. J. Foster, with whom she only lived a short time. air returned from their bridal tour they took boarding Before pussed tho gay Lilla began to grow restive under her imaginary marital restraints, and soon gave her husband good grounds for jealousy by her indiscreet and promiscuous flirtations with the boys about town, her old schoolmates, The faithfnl, patient and kind husband took his wayward young wife to task, in a mild, loving way, for her unbe- coming conduct, but his chiding had just the opposite effect intended. She flew into a tantrum of ungovernable rage, and openly avowed her passion for gay society, and her, intention of enjoying herself in any manner she Last Sunday this unhappy state of affairs culminated in Lilla’s the city At an hour when all good embrace of Morpheus, Lilla suddenly cream, and put on her hat and started But her jealous husband sus- pected her intentions and told her she This enraged the young oint of desperation, and she iluclnrolr with all the emphasis of oice that she would do as Fear- ing she might make an elopement of it in her rage, the cautious benedict demanded her to give him his gold watch, which he had allowed her to This she refused to do, where- upon he forcibly despoiled her of the tempted to leave the house, but was restrained from her purpose by the timely intervention of her | clothes to wash; for be it known that mother's strong arm. Sho was | Harlom washes for most of Holland, put in o room and locked up. | The Dutch have an abundance of linen m a twinkling she had the window up | and clothes for wear and sleeping, and the roof of a low firma, ying “‘murder” at the top of her 1 a crowd the residence, resulted in her arrest by the city | shal, who locked her up in the| the next day for disturbing the peace, and, not having a suflicient amount now | husband and parents, with Spartan severity, firmly ance, say- ing that her punishment is just and she must pay the penalty of " her con- “Did you ever see them buckskin bronchos of mine that I used to drive, named Yeller and Yaller!” asked Buck Bramel the other day of Gen, Worth, while he looked out across the green billowy divide toward the eternal ctory stump time, Blank it all to ““Well,” said Back, as a tender light a three- tin-tag tobacco was stowed away in his cheek, ‘““both of them same cayuse plugs could scoot overmore mountain road between sun | Cure, DAY. JULY 20, 1881. — 1 and sun than anything hoss T over soe. “Yollor waa pretty middlin' rapid, but Yaller wae an_imported terror, in the line of will supply an inexhaustible @mount of | You ought to seo him gather up his coal ~for the smelters that will |limbw in a wad #nd vanish. One day soon be erected in that district. | T wasout on boand of Yallor tryin’ to round up an Ametican cow that had jed away from the corral, and over west of the divide I worked np a long-leggod buek antelope. I made a littlo shassay over tow- nt copper mines. This road ean be built | ard the antelopo to see him light out, at a small cost, for there is already a [but he first pranced along kind of 1 wagon road all the way. carcless like, as much as to say, ‘1 The Jemes copper mining country fouss T won't give you no 2:12 gait is_unquestionably one of the riclest [ this morning. Lifo is too brief. T copper regions in the world. The|can't run thet away just to amaze mountaing are full of vast bodics of [ eyery snoozer that comes this way on copper, so rich that each good mine | a honde plug like that.’ § it| I touched wp old ler with the quirt and sailed over toward the anto- lope, thinkin’ ¥d stic him up a li tle. The antelopo trotted along a fow rods, and then locked back over his shoulder and smiled a sardonic swile that made old Yaller mad as a wet hen, “Then ho got up and got. Jewhifli- kins how he pawed the gravel! Ob- W Then old Yaller “The antelope turnod himself loose, that is alwa tlo animal, ns| “Aftera while, however, T could 1s. | S0 that the white pateh got bigger. Yaller was gainin’. T jabbed the Mexie can spurs into him to enconrago him, Tu loss than an hour 1 was alongside ys behind this amusin’ lit- “‘He didn’s laugh any more then. 1t was a horrible reality. ko was the er see. He seem- to think that wo had imposed on Kvery little while he'd ed ful, as if wo'd taken advantage of him. “By'n by T reached over and took home. 1 kept him for years, but he never ralliod. “Ho soomed to loso all hepe, and rod somo time. . Life for him scemedl to on | be nothing but a wide, shoreless wasto I tell you, general it takes the hope and joy and pride all out of an “Yes,” said the general, musingly ‘I should think it would. If ¥ was a broken-legged antelope with one foot done up in a gum overshoe, and couldn’t outrun any buckskin hoes 1 every saw, 1'd go away to some lonely spot and stick my head into a prairie dog's hole and die of remorse.” 80 SUNSET COX ON THE DUTCH. The Humorous Congressman on a Tramp in Harlem. New York Express. We have seen some odd symbols in the museums here, as for instance, as the sign that it is the last of a family, there is painted black a reaper and a death’s head. Tam thirsty and want a drink—of water. Outside of a wall is a heavy iron handle with an enor- mous iron bulbat its end. I seea spout only and ply the handle, on pump appearing. Some little Dutch yonkers had a laugh at my awkward- ness at handling the machine; but as the water 18 not safe here 1 desisted. The signs over the shops are unique. A barber is ‘indicated by a shining brass bowl hung up in front of his shop; an apothecary by the wry face of aman carved in wood with his tonge out! Venetian blinds are ou the inside and outside of the window, Jand before many windows on the outside are mirrors so arranged that the un- seen mmate may see all that passes in the street, Cigar shops are as com- mon as beer and schnapps shops. Every one smokes, from five years old upward—1I mean of the sterner sex— and every one of both sexes drinks, and yet we see nq one intoxicated. There are no tramps in Holland, I do not refer to niyself. We often seo warehouses in our own country with a projection from the roof from which dependsa hook to haul up by pulley- power such merchandise and things as need storage. Here many privato houses are thus accounted, This is not more outer than the mourning habiliments, where the hired under- taker and his sad people wear long black veils from their caps and white ribbons, besides being adorned on the leg to the shanks with tights and shoo- buckles, They seem to mourn over the deceased without a ‘‘dejected "havior of their visage or fruitful river of the eye.” We observe a peculiar vehicle upon the street, a large yellow wagon, It would make a sensatien m New Harlem. Whatisit! No less than the omnibus for collecting dirty - the ice at- they wash at long intervals, Harlem waghes for the kingdom. Harlem is entitled to its prominence as the capi-, tal washer, No Chinese need apply there, Everything is painfully neat, especially the strects. There are no towns, unless those gems of villages on the Isle of Wight, to compare in exquisite, dainty cleauliness with these places of “Holland, They do not burn wood or coal, but peat, which is dug out of the soil in great quanti- ties and brought by canal to the towns and cities, Eyerywhere we see altor- nating the white fleccy sheep, black and white-spotted cows and A green flelds, the durk and watery peat-beds and piles. They are as much of the Dutch feature as the wooden shoes, the melancholy stork of the ever-pres- ent windmill, -~ These are but the faint etchings of the Harlem and its envir- o8 which wo glanced at, and whose interior life we had no time to see, It is not & large city, having but 35,000 people; but it has its grand annal sung in lyric, recited in history, pi tured on canvas and even produced by panorama, Druggist's Testimony, H. ¥, McCarthy, druggist, Ottawa, Ont., states that Lo waw afficted with chronie bronchitis forsome ycars, and wascomplete- ly cured by the use of I'HoMAS' LKOTRIO 3 ylTeodlw The Best Life Preserver: Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver 17eodlw, J. B. Detwiler’s CARPET STORE. The | argest-Stock and Most Com- plete Assortment in The West. We Keep Everything in the Line of Carpets, Oil- cloths, Matting, Window-shades, Fixtures and Lace Curtains. WE HAVE GOODS TO PLEASE EVERYBODY. REMEMBEX TEE FLA XE. 1313 Farnham St., Omaha. MAX MEYER & CO. W EHOLES A X.E OBAGGONISTS. Tobacco from[25¢. per pound upwards. Pipes from 25c. per dozen upwards. Cigarsfrom $15.00 per 1,000 upwards. THE GREAT WESTERN CLOTHING HOUSE. M. HELLMAN & CO, Spring Suits ! All Styles ! IMMENSE STOCK AT_V!I_IEESAL_E Allp RETAIL. The Largest Clothing House West of Chicago A Department for Children’s Clothing. ‘We have now an’assortment of Clothing uf all kinds, Gent's Furnishing Goods in great variety,and a heavy stock of Trunks, Valises, Hats, Caps, &c. These goods are fresh, purchased from the manufacturers, and will be sold at prices lower than ever before made, We Sell for Cash and Have but One Price. TAlarge TAILORING FOROH is employed by us, and we make SUITS TO ORDER on very short notice. CALY. AND SEHE US. ISOI and I1303 Farnham St., cor. I13th O. H. BALLOU, —DEALER IN— .U INVIIEEEIER, Lath and Shingles, Yard and Office 15th and Cumings Street, two blocks north of ST. PAUL AND OMAHA DEPOT. jyl-cod-3m, Max Meyer & Co. ONMAEIA. : Guns,Ammunition,Sporting Goods FISHING TACKLE, BASE BALLS, and a FULL LINE OF NOTIONS AND FANCY GOODS. CTosBND FOR FPRIOB-LIST. MAX MEYER & CO., Omaha, Ne

Other pages from this issue: