Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 9, 1881, Page 3

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AFFAIRS IN M}:xlco Opening of a Now Railrond--0fl oial Assassination Correspondonce of the N. Y, Fost Crry oF MEXICO, October 16, 1881, During the past week one could re mark groups of Mexicans standing around the street corners eagerly reading the advertisements, in which the Mexicane Central Raiirord Com pany offered to the public of the capi tal the first pleasure trip on the re- cently finished line to Tula. The train started at 7:30 A. M., and was pretty well crowded. The station at Bnena Vista, the starting point. includes several very noat buildings, the prin- cipal of which are the store by 65 feet, the engine hall, D feet, and the blacksmith’s shop, ( by 34 feet. The roofs of these build- ings are constructed of ties and old rails, bought from the Vera Cruz-Mex ico RailroadCompany for one cent a pound. The line is constracted of steel rails, weighing 45 vounds a yard, Tno «u is 4 feet 8inches. The ains run first, second and third ciass es, built in Wilmirgton, Delaware. The six engines were constructed in Philadelphin, The r runs tor about twenty miles through Hat, swampy country, At Huehnetoea it runs tor a few miles parallel to the Sullivan line, the lines being bub six met apart at_several places. Upon enter- | ing the Tuacho de Notchistongo th is an immense wall of unsettled ea at its right and a deep precipice at the left. Mo avoid accidents strong walls have been constructed to prevent the sliding of the carth, and one-thousand | wmen are yet constantly at work to lower the wall and fill the precipice. El Tacho de Notchistungo is the plas where the \pmu.\nh constructed an immense tunnel for turning off the water of the Valley of Mexico into Tula River. Ten thousand men have constantly been at work for year over night the working Indians were imprisoned in an immense yard espec- ially constructed for the purpose. After five thousand Indians, by the falling in of the tunnel, had been killed, the work was abandoned to be taken up again in our day. After having passad the Tache de Notchist- ongo the tramn runs a few miles through a picturesque country and ar- T at Toula, The length of the line is sixty-three miles, We avrived at Toula at 10 a. m. The passengers, numbering about three-hundred, well provided with Am rlunch baskets, had to make the best of their time, though Toulay offers little of interest to the stranger, except to those who care to visit the ruins of an ancient Spanish church discovered by Char- nier. The travelers seemed to be well pleased with the excursion, for the train was run with great care by American machinists, assisted by Mexicans, and everything had been done to make the travelers comfort- able. My nnpression of the road was that it had been most carefully con- structed, and I did not feel the least uneasiness with regard to accidents, though the dreadful Moulos accldent is yet remembered. I was surprised to hear, after having arrived in the City of Mexico, that the very train on which I had travelled had been precipitated into the abyss of Notch- 1stongo. The conductors of the train areall Americans who receive from $80to $120 a month. The engine drivers have a monthly salary of $120. The brakemen and firemen, who are Mex- icans, receive $30 to &G0 a month. First-class passengers pay three cents a mile, second and third-class passen— gers two cents and one cent for the same distance. Quite a sensation has been created, not only in the capital but in the country as well, by the publication ot the official documents relating to the assasination of citizens in Atzalan, Jal- acingo county, Vera Cruz. Thecrime was committed toward the end of May by the District Governor, Au- gustin Romo. Seven peaceful citizens were arrésted at midnight without any warrant whatever, conducted to a neighboring wood and shot there in the presence of Romo, who fired himn- self two shots upon a victim that not yet expired. The soldiers con- ducting the escort, refusing to fire, were threatened with punishment if they would not obey the order. One of the victims lamented his ill fate not to be born in the centre of Africn, where he had at least given up his life according to the orders of some sav- ago King.[The prisoners were arrested without any reason whatever, and without having scen a judge or a law- yer they were executed, Some of the soldiers, who intended to make the known, were summoned before the Tribunal and threatentd with ten years confinement if they dared to open their mouths, Furthermore, the soldiers were forced to signa paper, whose contents they never read, in which they declared having fired at the prisoners because these wretches tried to make their escape, though all seven were heavily loaded with chains. The mothers and sisters of the prison- ers, who followed the mournful escort, were forced by Romo, revolver in hand, to retreat nto the village. All endeavors made by the relatives of those murdered to obtain justice at the different courts have been useless 80 far, and Romo occupies. yet, his official position just as if nothing had happened, The facts ot this apd other crimes are undoubtedly established, and Romo has scarcely tried to justify himself. There 18 no doubt that the Federal Government and its iberal members do not approve of such an abuse of authority, and this case presents an opportunity not only to apply strict justice, but as well toset an example for the real enemies ot the country’s happiness. Romo belongs to that set of desperadoes who formerly devas- tated the country withrevolutions, and who by the intervention of his politi- cal friends has obtained some oftice. The Government will strengthen its well-deserved credit abroad by acting most severely against criminals of Romo’s kind, and it willat the same time free itself fromw the sworn ene- ies of its prosperity. 1 have ample proofs, for instance, that an individu- al who is known as a al, and who is constantly committing frauds of a mean nature, occupies the office of instructor at one of the Government's schools, and draws his high salary withont doing any good to those who should be instructed by him. It is not only ot importance that the chiefs of fthe Government be honest and en- lightenen men, but those in inferior poisitions ought to bear the samechar- acter. A plan projected at various times by the Aztecsand the Spanish con querors, the draining and the canali zation of the valley of Mexico, seems to be on the point of execution On the 3d of October a contract was signed by General Pacheco, represcut- ing the Government, and Senor A Micry Colis, representing the Drain- agoand Canalization Company,limitel, ot the valley and city of Mexico. The publication of the contract has pro duced an_ oxcellent effect in this city, as property will rapidly increase in value and the city of Mexico will be be provided with proper water accom- modatiors, not to m ntion the benefits derived from the enterprise as to the sanitary improvement of the valley and the city. Two sailors of the Spanish Man-of- war have lost their lives in Vera Cruz, yellow fever having been the eause of death. A certain Dr. Licht has ar- rived from New Orleans to claim the £100,000 promised by the City Coun- el for an efficient antidote against the terrible plague. Dr. Licht is the sixth applicant this season. The Am‘\- on importations in Vera Cruz has produced during the last fortnight in September 8624,990, the largest amount ever produced that 1 The Mexican treasury seems to bein a flourishing state, for it had in its vaults the first of this month $1,200,000 in cash. The total subvention hitherto granted to railway companies by‘the Government is reported to be $87,- 000,000 A new colonization contract has been signed by General Pacheco and Senor Rizzo, who binds himself to import Italian tamilies to Mexico; he is to receive 860 for cach emigrant, male or female, over twelve. years, and $30 for each child under twelve years. Beside, a premium of $151s promised on every imported Italian. The concessions made to the immi- grants by the Government are not to excelled, 1t is a pity that the Gov- ernment, theuch animated by the very best intentions, limits its gener- osity to Italian lazzarom, while there thousands of industrious Germans and Englishmen who would readily come to this country if proper inducements were offered by the Government. One of the improvements intro- duced into this capital 18 the founda- tion of a large hospital constructed on the best modern plans; Governor Fernandez would merit the thanks of the healthy if he would put the thor- oughfares in a_better condition, as he might otherwise be obliged to con- struct a special edifice for those whose pe: | limbs have been injured. On the 25th of this,month the wed- ding of General Porficio Diaz will take place. He is promised to Miss Car- men Rubio, a charming young lady of the capital. Among other gifts the General has bought for his bride a diamond set worth $25,000. Diaz will spend the hnneymuun at Oaxaca, the seat of State Governor of the Province of Oaxac: MURDERERS' MOTIVES. Some Strange Causes Assigned by Killers for Theirs Aocts. New York Dispatch. There is probably no civilized coun- try in which life is held so lightly and murder committed as wantonly as in the United States. In this connection itis interesting toinvestigate the causes which inspire our red handed malefac- tors to the crime they commit. The fantastic fancy of the romancist could create no stronger reasons for murder than those some of our mur- derers aflord. The theory held by many that a madness comes over some men, whose fury can be only quench- ed in blood, receives ample indorse- ment in such cases as we give below. Take the one, for instance, reported from Wyandotte, Kas., recently, A notorious young scamp of that place—- a negro—Grant Green by name. One afternoon Green started to go hunting, A little boy 8 or 10 years of age fol- iowed him, and would not go back when ordered to do so by Green. As they came to a creek, Green said he would shoot the first thing he could find across the creek. The little boy ran ahead and climbed up the bank playfully saymg: “Shoot me.” Green did shoot, and shattered the boy's legs 80 that he died. When arrested, the murderer remarked, coolly: *‘It was his own fault. T gave him fair warn- ing.” Another colored assassin has just been sentenced to deathat Little Rock, Ark. Heshot a stranger dead, by mistake for a man against whom he had a grudge, and at his trial pleaded not guilty, on the groundthat ‘‘he had no hard feelings against the deceased.” + In Pittsburg, a year ago, a work- man in a foundry had three fingers of Ius right hand crushed under a steam hammer. He gave up foundrying in consequence, and became waiter in a saloon. While mixing a drink for a stranger, the customer happened to remark . that he was & master mechanic, and set up the machinery in several) foundries in the city. The waiter asked him if he had Bet up the machinery in the foundry he had been crippled in, Upon the man relying that he had, the waiter stabbed him to the heart with the knife he used to cut lemons. ‘The murderer then finished mixing the cocktail, and drauk it off in the presence 'of the horrified by-standers. A somewhat eimilar tragedy is re- ported from Las Vegas, Tex. An idle hanger on of the local bar rooms got on a "dronk and went to sléep on the railroad track. A train came along and did what trains generally do to a man nulur on the track. He was taken to the hospital and one of his legs amputated. ~ When he recov- ered he resumed his old courses, and ended by shooting the conductor and brakeman of a train to avenge him- self for the injury to his anatomy These two avengers had something to inspire them, in a general way, with hatred of their vietims, Bur what cause bad the man in Georgia, who, having just purchased a revol ver in an Augusta store, tried it by shoot- | ing a tel lu aph lineman down' from a pole at the door! His reasons for his crime were about a8 cogent as those of the fisherman ut Palatka, Fla., who sailed his tough old boat into the fancy skiff’ of a tourist visitor, *‘just tosee thedarned concern collapse,” and sailedaway from thecrushed boat leav- ing THE MAN AND WOMAN IN IT TO DKOWN, It is comforting to read in connec THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: WE der motive, and the wife of an | farmer brained her five children, and tion with this gentleman that ho was hunted down the st by a vigilance committee till his craft capsized ina gale and left him to enjoy the same fato his two vietims had experienced. Down in the same country, at Indian river, an alligntor hunter walked into a store and bargained for an iron stew pot. There were two kinds, one for $1.50 and the other for 82, The aligator annihilator craved for a 82 one, but refused to pay more than $1.50 for it. The storekeoper refusing this offer, the saurian slayer laid the money he offered on the counter, shot the obdurate tradesman through the lungs and carried off’ his pot in triumph to his forest home, In a bar room in Paxagoula, Miss,, two lumber cutters got into a nllspnl. over the length of a tree one of them had felled. They differed one foot in their estimates of its measurement. Aftera time and numerous drinksa fresh topic of discuss on displayed this one. pxt morning one of the tim. ber men met the other in the street, He walked up to him and said, with- out any preliminary “A hundred and fifteer ‘A hundred and fourtecn,” the other. And he blow the first speakor's brains out before he could use the knife he had stealthily drawn when he opened the conversatio Scores of murders arise ont of just such trivial disputes. In Galveston two negroes sat on the cotton dock last month, eating watermelon and counting the bales being loaded on a steamer at the wharf, They counted aloud. One tallied forty and the other forty-one, and they fell into a wrangle over who was right. Tt ended with one whipping out a disemboweling the other in his tracks. That night the brother of the murder- ed man went to the house of a brother of the murderer, and in the fracas which ensued both men were slashed to ribbons by the vigorously applied favorite weapons of their race, At Texarkana a bully of the Jim Currie type stopped at a store and pointed to a red flannel shirt in the window, asked the proprietor, who was standing in the doorway: “*How much do you want for~that blue shirt there?” “That red shirt you mean, I sup- pose,” responded the storekeeper. T'll teach you what I mean, you —— *replied the ruffian, And seizing the poor Israelite by the breast the miscreant drew his bowie knife across his neck. CUTTING HIS THROAT FROM EAR TO EAR. Charles Bolles, in Minneapolis, missed five in trying to kill a dog, and his wife’s laughter so enraged him that he aimed at her. The weapon still refusing to go off he tried it on himself in his ungovernable fury, and it sent him where he will trouble the dogs no more. A colored woman at Dyke's Mill, Ark , ordered her 10 and 12-year-old children to go into the house. They lingered, and their disobedience ren- dered her so frantic that she beat their brains out with a.pine knot. Her bors roasted her alive for the crime. At Whitemill, Va., a farmer named Williams had a quarrel with his wife last month. The wife sued out a war, roplied | — made sure of being revenged upon him by chopping his head off before he could be arrested. “‘He had no right to treat mother so,” they are reported to have eaid. At Louisville, in a quarrel between two brothers, Louis and Henry Basset, over the loan of twenty-flve cents, the latter shot the former, killing him instantly. Before the shooting the two had fought, during which Henry was 80 badly cut that ho will die. Yhe row began inthe room of their mother, and en ed in an adjoining room. A Califorma jury will soon have a (ueer case to puss on. E. R. Sproul, of Oroville, lay in wait with ashot gun for J. H. Espy, who had invaded his domestic preserves. In the darkness he shot James Andrews instead. The intended victim had learncd of his de- sign and sent Andrews to, the rendez- vous in his place. Tt will strike the reader, doubtless, that the intended victim ought to be indicted as an accessory to the murder. Wm. Smith, a prospector, visited Silverton, Col. ~ He signalized his com- ing to town by shooting the first man he met, and went on popping at every one heencounteredtill hisseven-shoot- er was emptied. He then stepped into a store, purchased some car- tridges, and wasloading for a new deal when he was arrested. Ong man kill- ed and four wounded attest his prow- ess as a shot. His only excuse for his wholesale slaughtering was: “I've been in the woods theseseven month and I came to town to have some fun. TI've Fad my fun—now you can have yours,” A considerate “nssassin was Martin Probasco, of Deadwood. He meta fat German mounted on a jackass on a lonely trail, and drew on him, The intimidated Teuton descended from his coyrser ane Probasco mounted in his place. He then asked: *‘Where are you going?” ““To Red creek,'” replied the intend- edvictim, “Good God!" exclaimed Probasco, ‘“you're too fat to walk that far!” and he saved him the weanness of the i‘luumuy by shooting him through the cart, A much more extraordinary case of the same sort comes to us from Ne. braska. At Smalley station a tramp applied for entortainment at a lonely farm. It was denied him. by the farmer's wife, who was alone in the house with her little baby. Tho vaga- bond thercupon brained her with a stick of cordwood, and procecded to entertain himself. He held the squalling baby in his lap while he ate, and when .he went away tucked it nicely up in bod. Tt was being raised on the bottle, and that receptacle being empty hu went to the cow house, milked a cow, filled the bottle, and went on his way in search of some one else to murder, leaving his victun's orphan comfortable and well provided for. Guiteau is not the only assassin who cluima to have been DIVINELY INSPINED to his crime. A miller in Maine fell upon a stranger who was passing his door and beat him vo death with an won bar. The only explanation he could give for s act was that God had whls{.ulul to him that the vietim was & bad man, and ought to die. A school teacher in Idaho strangled one of his scholars on the same slen razor and | ‘l)\l \l)AY I Towa NOVEMBER TAIKE TECE I'BIS N W’ AND Cl‘RRECI MAax* Provee seyond any reasonable questisn that ths tried to chop her hubby into mince meat, because the Lord commanded CHIGA(JO & NORT her to do so, mme— Palpitation of the Heart 8 by Allodos the best von « for you to take when traveling in efther dizection i tw ey | J. M. Might, \\rm'uw‘ N. Y., writes Chicago and alt of the Principal Points in the West, Norti and Northwest, & ““When L iirst commenced using youe Bue il 5 bicy seis ‘ fluttering and |u1pummn of the heatt felt weak and langud, with o ¥ of the lim! using, my h not tronble d_the numbi tion is all gone,” Price, $1; trial 1 conts, 10-codlw — Buokiin s arnion Salve, The best salve inthe world for euts, bruises, sores, ul fever sores, chillblains, skin eruptions. corns tetter, cors, salt cha and rhoum, d hands, I kinds of This salve is guar anteed to give perfect satisfaction in every case or monay rofunded, Prico, ser hox. For sale by Tow & MeManoys, Omaha, it forl likoa ball < five rolling up the ehost, forors from indigest “Then u: and down 19 1 COMMON GXPROSSIOI Amon suf 'OMAHA & GHICAGO, VILLE, and all points in the s | STy No On'mgmg Cars ARTWREN Where direcy connaction are tnado with Thm\mh CAR LINES for NEW \uuK ,o PHILADI PIIIA, BALTIMORE, HINGTON AND ALL EASTERN (TIES, The Short Line via. Peoria Kor INDIANAPOLIS, CINCINNATI, LOUIS. SOUTE-BAST. THE OHICAGO & NORTH WESTERN nAILWAY . 'l‘armnt' Sweltzer Aperient, Queratter its prinofpal lines, r o ro 3 4 digest vo or ans \lu he h\ e gty o e s et Fop ST, LOUIS I he lmperlal Palace Dining Cars. dlkoasce rosulting front the 1 ¥pid o I s, il the SOLD BY ALL DRUQGIS AN OPEN SECRET AMONG THE LADIES The brilliant, i 14 th TrULAAL MOLKGE of tny - s mdition of dont_varrios oft casily Santly tho cavse, and thus curcs the aily cod, fascinatin, tints of Complexion for which Indies strivo aro chicfly arti- ficial, and all who will take the Whero direct c 10 travelors and tourists aro na follows: & Q. PALACE seats in Reclining Chairs. The famous C. Q. Palace Dining Cara. rant for his arrest, but his daughters | 81.50. | W. B LooMIS, i trouble may secure them, These roseate, hewitching hues follow the use of Hagan’s Mag- nolia Balm—a delicate, harm- | S less and always reliable article, Sold by all druggists, The Magnolia Balm conceals every Blemish, removes Sal- lowness, Tan, Redness, Erup- tions, 21l cvidences of excite- ment and every imperfection, 1ts cffeets are immediate and s6 natural that no human being can detect its application, Mary J. Holmes. Just published:—Madeline. A splendid new novel by Mrs. MARY J. HOLAES, wrose novels sell so_cnormously, and ate read and re with such interest! Beautifuliy bound; pric “,*Also handsome new cditions of Mrs, Holmes' other works—Tempest an Sunshine, Lena Rivers, Edith Lyle, Edna Browning, Murian Grey, West Lawn, Forest House, cte., ALSO0, SOLD BY ALL BOOKSELLERS: MAY AGNES FLEMING. A Changed Heart. Another intensely inter- eating novel by Mav Aaxky Fumuixo, mithor of those capiti] novels—Guy Earlscourvs Wife, Wonderful Woman, Mad Marringe, Silent o True, Lost for a Womas Leautitully bound; price, $1.60. \RLETON & c Publishers, N, Oat24deodim. y To Nervous Sufterers THE GREAT EU;D-PEAN REMEDY, Dr. J. B. Sim_pson'e Bpecific MEIDIXCINE. It 18 & posjtive cure for Spormatorrhea, Semina Weokneas, Inipotancy, and all discases resulting I Self-Abuse, as Mental A ory, Pains i1 the Back or § Loiy ArThn Consuruption Insanity and earlygrave | ) The Specific AT Medicino s A ) [being used with wonder- 'M i fi’-_'"',.:".z“::m Wiite for thora and ot fah) ot G scnt freo to all, tlculars, Tickets, maps and folders at all princ) Price, .Rroclflo. #1.00 per wkwfl orelx wl offices in the United States and m'um G ayes for Address all ordon R. R. CABLE, E. ST. JOHN, B, SIMSON Vico Pres't & Gen. Gon, Tkt and Paus'r Ay Nos, 104 and lau Mail 8old in Omaha ll?; . Goodman, J. w uall, Siuux City & Panifm RAILROAD. THE SIOUX OCITY ROUTE Runs a Solid Train ‘1hrough from Conncil Bluffs to St. Paul Without Change Time, Only 17 Hours. —I7 18- gottin ot s & poultice, gives in- A©O MILES THE SHORTEST ROUTE, | stant and painloss refict, and L-anmd only for rRoM Filos lching of tho private parts, and for uoth ing eluc COUNCIL BLUFF8 TO 8T. PAUL, MINNEAPOLIS DULUTH OR BISMARCK, and all points in Northorn lows, Minnosota and Dakota, * This liue 1s equipped with the improved Westinghouse Automatic Air- Irniu and lluul Plattorm Couplor and Buffer; BPEED, BAFETY AND mumn’r In unsurpassed. Pullman Palaco Bleeping Car run through WITHOUT CHANGE betwoen Kan sas City and 8t. Paul, via Council Blufls* and Sioux City, Traius leavo Union Pacific ‘Transfer at Coun- cil Blufls, at 7:85 p. m, daily on arrival of Konsas City, 5t. Joseph and Council Blufls train from the Bouth, Arriving at Sioux City 11:35 and at the New Union Depot at 8t. Paul at 12:30 noon, TEN HOURS IN ADVANCE OF ANY OTHER BOUTE, £ Remember I taking the Sionx City Route you get & Through 1 rain, Ehortest Line, Bho Guikest Tirn a Confortable Rido in the ‘Through « ars betwoen COUNCIL BLUFFS AND £47'Sce that yo ity and Pacitlc Jo B WATTLES PAUL, via the “Sioux J. k. BUCHANAN, oad. stead of s discomfort. at all offices in the U n tho Uslon i Car Depot with t § Linca for AL POIA SBOUITTEL. NEW LINE -+ DES MOINES THR FAVORITE ROUTE FOR Rock Island. The uneqvaled nducemonts offored by this line lobrated PULLMAN (10-wheel) l‘ALlu l! G CARS run_only on this line ~ C., B, AWING ROOM CARS, with Horton's Roclining Chaire. No oxtra chargo for B.& Gorgeous Smoking Cars Aited with ologant high-backed rttan revolying chairs, for the exclusive use of firut-class passcn: ors. Stool Track and_superlor_equipment comblra | with their gacat through car arrangoment, me hea this, above all others, the favorite routs to tao Enst, South and Southoast, Try it, and you will find traveling luxury In. Through tickets vio this celebratud line rnr salc mo Tablos, cheorhully givon by applying o PERCEVAL LOWELL, onger Agent, Chicige, J. POTTER, ~Chleawo. General A « Eraa.t Rask lslan& I{uute‘ Y West for being the ‘mostdirect, yulckest, an safest lino connecting the great Motropolls, CHI CAGO, and the EASTERN, NORTi-EASTRRN, 307 aud S8ouTH-EAsTRRN LiNgs, which u:rmlnlwl hero, with KANBAS Ciry, LRAVENWORTH, Amlulon, Couci, BLUPws and OMANA, the COMMEROIAL Caxtars from which radiate EVERY LINE OF ROAD that penetrates the Continent from the Missour) River to the Pacific Slope. The CHICAGO ROCK ISLAND & PA- CIFIC RAILWAY Ts the only lino from Chicago owning track into Kansas, or which, by it own road, reaches the pointa above named. No TRANAPERA BY CARRIAGH | 0 MsNG coNxkoTions! No huddiing in (ll- ventilatod or unclcan cars, w ovory passonger is carried in roomy, clean and ventllated coaches upon Fast Express Trains. DAY CARS of unrivaled magnificence, PULLMAN PALACK SLERPING CARS. and ourown world-farous DiNiNG CARS, upon which meals aro sorved of un. surpassod excellence, at the low rate of SRvRNTY- FINK CaNTs mACH, with amplo time for hoalthful enjoyment. hrough Cars betwoon Chicago, Pooris, Mil waukee and Missouri River Pointd; and closo con nections at all pointa of Iutersection with other 0. "°We teket (do not forgst thin dirctly o overy of fimportance in Kansas, Nebrawka, Blac ing, Utah, Idaho, Novada, California, ‘ashinizton Torritory, Colorado, Arizona and Now Mexico, g As liboral arrangoménts rogarding baggago as any other line, and raten of faro always sl ow aw competitors, Who furnish but » titho of the com- ort. Dogs and tacklo of sportawen froo. Manager, Chicazo Onicago, PILES! PILES! PILES! A Sure Cure Found at Last! No One Need Suffer! A surocuro for Blind, Blecding, Itching and rated Pilos has been discovered by Dr. Wil- jam, (an Indian remedy,) called Dr. William's Indian Ointment. A mingle box has cured the worst chronic cases of 26 or 0ycars standing, No one need wuffer five minutes attor applying this 1 soothing medicine, Lotions, inatru- A eluctuarios do mord harm than good, Ointment absorbs tho tumors, allays nse itching, (particulaaly at night after S Read what tho Ifon. J. M. Ccflinborry of Cleve Iand sayn about Dr. William's Indian Filo Oint- ment: 1 haye used ucores of Pilos cures, and it affords mop casuro tonsy thatl d anything which gave su nent relief as Dr. Wil iam's (nd For sale by all druggists or mailed on receipt of price, §1.00. HENRY & CO. C For sale by C, F (lnodlunn. Prop'rs, WLAND, OHIO, Nrwonwly Octl 1880. SIIOBT LINE I880. KANSAS OITY, ° 8t, Joe & Council Bluffs| RAILROAD 18 THR ONLY Direct Line to 8T. LOUIS AND THE EAST From Omnha and the West, wouls, Dmaha and change of cars be it Gon'l Paw, Agont, v 1 OBINKON, Aw (11| P At Sid Tt oge batweas QMALLA s Miwsouri Val Towa, J. . O/BRYAN, Southwestorn Agont, L o s O Bl okin | Daily PassengerTralns (g 0 ALL EAST) ND 1Y, CITIES with LS) a6 lfl,m[]Il [la, 0, | EASTER R TN AV ANCE of AL J OTHER LINE J. 8, NEWELL, K0, AND THEAK , AGRNT, HARD OR SOFT COAL In car lots or in quantitics o kult purchasers rd Solicited. Yard, F‘lgzt Farnham and Doug- Omaha, sopett Sts., EDHOLM ERICKSON JEWELRY, WATCHES, CLOCKS, SILVERWARE, SOLID AND PLATED WARE Base Bumers. | Cannon Stoves. | 1t bag orth or T\nrmwne! of Chicaga, theonty road fhat runs Pullman Sleeping Cars N Or DAD, It wing Trunk Lines @ 1y 3,000 MILL: W M l|\|ln~~mL\&( ‘entral r"l‘(’\l"l Lina i L & Dubuque Lin e por ! £ s o are sold by o 3t 0y nml Coupon llLl\(‘I- A}‘NIH hl lln) |y\|l|4'(| \( limlu'l\\hw‘l 10 ask for Tickots via this rond, ho sure they read over it,and take none Olhr" MARVIN RUGHITT, Gen'l Mauager, Chieago. . W. 1. STENNETT, Gen’)l Pass, Agent, Chicagn HARRY I, DUEL, Ticket Agont €. & N. W. Rallwn, D, E. KIMBALL, Awistant Ticket Agont 0. & N. W. 3. BELL, Ticket'A RAMES . CLARK Genoral Avent. 14th and Fasnham stroots. tailway, 14th And Farnhau etreets nt C. & N. W. Railway, U, P. R. K. Depot, AL Announcement! large and varled stock of Sta- ple and Fancy DRY GOODS AT FIF1EEN PER CENT LOWEHR THAN DOWN TOWN STORES. You will Save MONEY by buying your DRY GOODS of GUILD & McINNIS, E Side. 603 N. 16th Street, 2d door north of Cal & Give the Bargains —IN ALL KINDS OF— AND DIAMONDS, At Prices that Suit Any Customer Who Really Wishes a First. Class Article, TAR TINTED SPECTACLES Are also Sold Exclusively by us. ALSO WESTERN AGENTS e FOR THE—— SMITH AMERIGAN ORCAN CO.’S ORCANS. EDHOLM & ERICKSON, THE JEWELERS, Opposite the Post Office, STOVES! On Sale At . D. A. PIERCY'’'S, CHEAP FOR CASH ! Small Heaters, i i Qo i) st | W ERTMINSTHER, | GOOD LUCK, satuty Piatlory and Coupler, 8ud the colebratod INVINOIBLF‘ BULLION, WABASH, .:iu iat your ket roada VIA nANSAS | NIIW HEOL A, RANGES, ALTO, fia aon. ik osoph, 8TO! T R A R ’ EOLIPSE Orp o dpg Tk Axk N mku“k:u, "OLD HEOLA, sl 1020 Farnham streot. A. B, Bawxarp, General Agent, OMAHA, NE Remember the 'Place, 1211 Farnham 8

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