Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 28, 1882, Page 9

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g |\ Deere & Comp y. MARUFACTORERS OF PLOWS, MOLINE, ILL. Wholesale Dealers in AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS, Council Bluffs, W ESTRRN AGENTS ¥EOX lowa. Moline Wagon Co,----Farm & Deere & Mansur Co,----Cor Moline,Lumyp Co,~---Woo Wheel & Seeder Co,- Mechanicsburg Ma Shawnee Agric 1l Spring Wagons, 'n Planters, Stalk Cutters, &o., d and Iron Pumps, ---Fountain City Drills and Seeders, 6h, Co,----Baker Grain Drills, ultural Co,----Advance Hay Rakes, | Tt had a porch over its N " doo v 1 h arge cot- i Joliet Manufacturing Go,----tureka Powor and Hand Shellers, |GGy il Mi S ¢ fhees oot Whitman Agricultural Oo.----Shellors, Road Scrapers, &, |itunts € Dey-un s+ urocery, e b Moline Scale Co.----Victor Standard Scales, u.‘....',,.. .nultmlx ..;r.-...tfwl\ h'..u in whic h . : ' was transacted all public business o A, 0, Fish----Racine Buggies, whatwever i 3 g G e 3efore 1ts door stood its owner, Tip AND DEALERS IN | Finnigan, a small Fou/FAsBa AN A § $ |a cunnin » and a consequental All Articles Required to Make a Complete 8t0ck. | it v hotind hn won nie it SEND FOR CATALOGURS. drawn from her kitchen by the clatter of the conch,and evidently disappoint Address All Communications to ed at its spare deposit i “Tip, dear,” she said, a8 she dnml 1 her arms on her apron, *‘why l»ut q ’ 1]|.- lsoke as {F hie was dend bate wid i 5 the jolting he's had, and sorra a wor Council Bluffs, lowa. | T TR stone in the road. Sure, T thought 3 T'd be churned to .lu-.nh the day he druv me up here.” P. BOYER & VO, Sho had nppronched the door as ——DEALERS IN— sho spoke, and her kind, motherly voice was meant to reach the stranc- L) Y er's ear. Tt went further, it touched | his_ young heart, and he drew near; t and his air, though full of timidity, 4 . had nothing of cowardico as he said Fire and Burglar Proof “Icame all tho way from New By T stopped here hoping to find s a -E- E s : Do you think there is any- 1 - can get to do!” VA U lilS, LOCKS, &C. 1020 Farnham Street, OMAI—IA I\TEB. THE JELM MOUNTAIN GOLD SIL'V’EB of " Mining and Mllllng Oompany .'/’;Worki ,“”"l iy e -. o R o e -“:'imj)m; Par Value of Sharcs, . STOCs FULLY PAID UP AND NON ASSESSABLE Mines Located in BRAMEL MINING DISTRICT. OFEFICERS: DR. J. L THOMAS, President, Cumming, Wyoming. WM. E. TILTON, Vice-President, Cummins, Wyoming E. N. HARWOOD, Scerctary, Cumming, Wyoming, A TRUSTEBES: [ ouis Miller W. 5. Bramel. Franciy Leavens, Geo. H. Falos, Dr. J. C. Watkins, G. LUNN, Treasurer, Cummins, Wyoming, A. G. Dunn, Dp i hodat, Lowis Zolman, Harwo no"'uu Sm GEO. W. KENDALL, Author zed Agent for Sale of Stock; Bev *4° Amaha Nob, _ FOSTER &CRAY, —WHOLESALE— LUMBER, COAL & LIME, On River Bank, Bet. Farnham and Douglas Sts., ONAIXIIA NIEB. WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS. tr ISH & McMAHON, 1406 DOUGLAS STREET, OMAHA, NEB. The Only Exclusive ‘Wholesale Drug House in Nebraska SPECIAL ATTENTION PAID TO MAIL ORDERS, YOI - g | STEELE, JOHNSON & €0, v WHOLESALE GROCERS Flour, Salt, Sugars, Canned Goods, and All Grocers’' Supplies. i A Full Line of the Best Brands of ', CIGARS AND MANUFACTURED TOBACCO. Agonts for BENW0OD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER (0, THE UMA: A DAILY BEE: SATIV‘RIV)VA)VJI\NlJ\R\ AN EPISODE AT DRY-UP. The youth wh the unceremoniously stage in his hurry to be | waa a lad of sixteen, there though grown and developed for his age, again, or abouts, remarkably well | He was too dusty to be judged by his appearance at first sight; his clothes were plain working enes, and | his manuer was as confused and wan dering as if he had dropped from the | clonds. The buildine before which he had alighted was the most pretentious in [ the town. " Ho turned to Tip, and the tone of the inquiry wus 8o very carnest as to be almost tremulous, Mr. Finvigan made lofty and compreh toward the yellow ri | and serrated banks, There it is, before ye,” said he; “up wid yer pick and down wid yer long tom. Thim t 4hwn goold wins it in Californy, and thero’s plinty work for, buf not the size ov a midge to be had for axing.” ““Sure the young man _ was only ax ing the way e must begin, Tip, dear,’ wed Mrs, Finnigan. “If he could jist wash the dust out ov his eyes a bit and sate himself till he finds aise after the joltin’ he wint thro’ in Hank's smuc, it would be a bless’, so it would.” “Then show him !]u, well, and lend him the jack towel,” obseryed hor husband with dignit Kindly Mrs. Finnigan, who owed a good deal of her influence over her hushand to the show she made of de- ferring to him, hasteued to obey his wmnmml,.uul as she generally did, to improve on it. When the new comer appeared again in his prosence 80 great was the inprovement wrought by washing, brushing and hair trim- ming that 1mpassive as he tited to be, Mr. Finnigan was moved to compli- ment the change. “Now, ye look like a_Christian, young man,” said he smiling, “‘and a purty nate one too, if good looks was any 'count out here, which they're not. Sure Hank’s the boy to raise dust; his passengers might all be na- gurs when they veach Dry-up; if a miner expicts a friend in the coach he takes a brush wid him so as to swape the dust off before he recog- nizes him,” a somewhat westure er and its broken Then pausing suddenly in his dig- course, Mr. Finnigan ran a eritical eye over the young figure before him, “You are not used to the working clothes you wear, my young lad,” said he. “W did you come out here for, and have yo any friends in this camp /" The sharpness and severity with which he utt red these questions in vested the grocer of Dry-up with an air of authority which “the stranger did not attempt to question. He glanced at his hands reproachfully, as if accusing their smoothness or be- traying him, but said m a frauk and manly way: ST will tell you just the trath, Mr, Finnigan.” He had read the name on a strp of canvas pver the door, Its o nodded encouragement, aud DOy U:lllln wed: 1 live in York - T mean T did live there before [ went on the stean er Northern Light, four weeks ago to- da, Just three days bofore 1 started 1 found out what an expense T was to the famly, My dear, good mother is a widow; T am her only boy; but 1 have three older sisters, who were mak ing all sorts of sacrificos and working themselvos ill to keep me at a high priced academy, dressod and provided for as if I were a rich man’s sor., My father's cousin, Mr. Mark K¢ -.ml\lyn 18 & prosperous merchant and he has charge of my mother’s small fun { Lateiy he has treared uw quite coldly gh hixs daugater, my cousin N lie, is always kind und good to me, That Saturday—1I mean the one hefore the day I sailed I ventured to ask him what 1 had done to forfeit his | wod opimon. I shall never forot the shock and surprise of his answer. iy He just spoke right out and told me I had been living for three years on the daily sacri fices of my mother and sis ters; that T was an exacting, sclfish fellow, and —and—"" tor suddenly choked up i a w it seemed so out of character 1 th Spartan courage he intended to dusplay | w1 that his pride and sensitivencss had quite a conflict of it Those two el ments of his ient fought it led subs und and down the store, striving to gain the mastery over both. He soon suc- ceeded, and, without entering again hasty descent from | top he had assisted rather | on to the main road to Mokulomme | Here the narra- | coughs, while their vicrim walked up | like |nn the subject that had overcome him, | enough to be trusted with anything 1 was almost ready met a lad with the that was bogun |t give in, when 1 | off down tho hill; and out of the e amp ‘-IuHa who had had a berth as cabin [in a canv | boy on the Ocean Queen, but was too ick to go. Didn't I jump into hs [ pla though? But there was Panama and the steamer on - the Pa | citic side to manage, and T had to chanco them. I was in luck. A San | Franciseo gontloman was sick. T waited on him, and ho paid my way on the North Star, T had just money enough to bring mo here on tho stage, not a penny more, and so I had to get ofl, Mr. Finnigan laid down the pipe he had been smoking, and, going to the door, motioned his young companion | to tollow him. Pointing up the low gulch that formed the main road or opening to the town he indicated with his stubby forefinger n short pole stuck in the | carth on the river bank, on top ot which was an old tin pan. “Duatch Jake and Squatty Bogus tuck their lave ov that claim yonder this very morning, "saidhe, *“They've gone prospectin’, and any one that strikes his pick in can claim that dig- gin’. You've comea good streteh to tind a job and the sooner you begin the better. T'I lend ye the tools till ye can buy wans ov yer own. Thereupon the onterprising Mr. Finnigan, who had taken trom Dutch Jake an old cradle, spade and pick, bocause he could not get a three- dollar liquor bill owed by that forcign bankrupt, made nentally an excellent bargain for himself in those articles to the hoy miner. “And now what's yor name, when we want to call yo to supper!” he asked after ho had helped the youth to transfer the tools to the scene of operations, and given him a first les son in digging and eradling. The boy hesitated a moment, and a bright color rose on his smooth, young cheek. “‘Och! don’t bother yer head on that score,” eried the Trishinan, observing his embarrassment, “Jack or Jill, it is all wun to us up hore. “My name is Jack,” said but T thought- plinty: Juck it is thin; and now good luck to ye, and remimbor that thim that finds gold has to look hard forit. Ye'll know it when yo come on it, after the instructions 1 gev ye."” Mrs. Finnigan was waiting for her husband. ©0, Tip, dear,” she said softly, “‘that boy hasn’t broke his fast ths day, and it scems hardlike to drive him in at the work before hes funly on his f\-vl in the place. “Tut,” retorted her husband coolly: i’ a good chance to show what he's made of, Let him wrestle a while with Jake's pick before he comes to 1..~ tor T suppose nothin’ will do - but he must board wid us till he is A T e R AT “‘Och, thin, but ye have the kind heart, Miles Finnigan,” cried his wife in tones of fervent admiration at her husband’s yielding generosity; “‘and sure ye'll uiver lose a cint by it,” she hastened to add, knowing well his fondness of gain. “Our own little Murtagh, had he lived, would have been just the morrow of this lad, and troth I fale a mother’s heart to him, so I do.” The latter part of her spee low. The tears that sprang wi were hidden; and Tip-—so called from his birthplacy, Tipperary- —resumed his pipe and received the conjuzal praise with a discriminating nod It was early in November. There had been one very heavy rain, but it had rather beaten down than loosencd the soil of the abandoned claim, and in Jack’s untutored grasp the pick swerved as it struck the clayey bed, without dislodging much soil dnring the firet hour’s hard labor Then the boy stopped to rest, ould work no more; the perspira- | tion streamed down his every nerve in his body thrilled from his | unwonted exercise, and- though he tried to hide this last fact even from himself—from his lack of food. Away up the river as far as he could sce miners were busy plying their picks or washing their dirt, some of them | wore standing up to ' their middle i | the swift-running stream and roaring snatches of sonws as they rocked their the boy long-toms, while others on higher ground contended with the bed rock that sometimes flew off in splinters and threatened the lives of their comrades. But they didn't seem to mind danger, It wade Jack's flesh creep to wateh their reckless movements, to see them mount a high, unsteady water tlume in their tumense mining boots and run half way ucross the river on its top to empty their waste dirt in ity noted their exhaustle vigor he seemed to f himself grow stronger again; he recalled Mr, Fin nigan’s words, and seizing the pick renewed the stroggle. The soil maat have grown softer; it sank in the sido | ombankmont at the third stroke, aud down came a crashing, lullh'u, tor. rent-like fall of earth, which gave him | barely time 30 spring aside to save himself from being buried under it. “Looken here, y bawled | out his nearest neighbor trom the | |other side of a broken and disused | ‘flnmu that divided the **Duatchman’s bed. As he mng 'un, " trausforring | for |i | i great an 8 82 bright, yellow tlakos all through the | . | jumped at once to a practieal point, i "“‘;“13 wl‘rlu{ shone and sparkl; | . “ tarted | a8 clearly as he liad ey Whe o 8t coaol oty Stock: | As soon as 1 saw my duty I8 er snen the pol e isdud o 1“ I 'l“‘ [in. “Mr. Finnogan,” said he, and al- | ished motal i o jowolor's window L | ton, bound for ulomne Hill | though he addressed the grocer, he A dozen foolish fancies rushed upon | turned off at the small mining camp | kept his fine, frank eyes on the gro the boy in the exultation of the Mo of Dry-up, Arkanss Hank, the |cor's wife, having discovered from | ments he was tomped to ey out; o 1 driver, sang out in a lusty tone | large cup ot frosh milk that she had | fling up his the air with loud +Noaw, whare's st young un for|Ei¥en him that was & \nlluill!'hn huzzas; f"‘m iting to the Finri SRR UL WAL 7| momber of the firm; “‘but no fellow fgans but the tinely recolloction of | Finnigan's. Look alive, and out with | knows until he has tried it how hard [his mother e his mind and | you, my lad, for T'm going to do this | it is for a boy like mo to got employ- | sobored hin | down grade a callyhoothin’ ! [ment. T was too big to_bein any | Quietly as to vutward appearance, | thing, they d, and T wasn't old|though hie tromblod and shook with | excitement o and panned o | eled down, while, he eradlod dirt he had shov wrapping the result ¢ had found, covered with a loose sprink lay t was growing dusk, four hours & miner 3 nly o lad and when he entored Fi s store, whoere some W over the rick | Ting of comman | By this tine | and he had Jack was of ““the huys” were alroady gathored, the temptation boast of his great | Tuck was strongupon him, 1 became | still whon T'ip said, rather | sharp Vell, my fine young gen tleman, you'se como back ompty handed, Tsuppose, and T've got an- | boarder like Duteh Jako indeed, Mr. Finnigan,” ho med, proudly, *“T've got enough | He folt a touch on his arm and | turned quickly. Mes. Finnigan was thore. HCome in to supner,” ahe said, kind - | ly; “Tip will follow whon he has sarved the hoys wid their whisky." When they weroalonein the kitehen sho told him to sit down beforo a pile of elapjacks and bowl of coffoo, and tget wostart, for he must be nearly famished with hunger.” Then sho laid her motherly hand on his shoul dor —“You've met with luck; Heaven bless you: 1 see it in yer face,” she said, “hut koep it to yorself, doar; they're good boys, thim,” nodding her head in the direction of the store, “and as for Tip he's just a jewel; but kape yer luck quiot like; it will bo for significant glanco added foree to her words. Jack felt ho could safo Iy trust her and seizing the opportun ity before Tip came in, he told her | what happened in the Datohman's de- serted claim and showed her thebright Aust in his bag. Mrs. Finmgan was & pioncer “a forty-niner,” as they wore ealled—and no one in the mines better understood placer or surface iggings than herself. She hwughed delightediyat the young strangoe's wood fortune, and told him he had steuck o “pocket.” Tarce other workers of the same claim had pe¢ the same luck, and then each, after montha of unrepaid Iabor, had abandoned it to give a now worker a chance to strike on a layor of gold again, “But no o over ‘roalize’ a8 quick i, Jack,” evied Mrs. Finmigan, ¢ing him his nume with mining fa “You're in b luck, my doar; but. as T said, we'll keop it to ourselves, And here comes Tip.” Alone, Jack never could have pre gerved his sceret, but Mrs. Finnigan W ally; she kept her hus band away from the claim when the young miner was cleaning up his tail mge; she imstructed him in the easicst modes of operating, initisted him in all the signs of the rock and soil, and aided him in tracing the rich deposit till its last shining grain was sparated from tha earth. After paying for his tools, a month’s board, and providing himself with miing boots and water- proof clothing, Jack had nearly w thousand dollars worth of gold dust loft ! Mrs. Finnigan was his banker, and she told Tip that the lad was making “paying wages." I'ne claim sustained its repuation, Tho pocket oxhausted, Jack ~worked and toiled day after day without sce ing a sparkle in the loads of soil he beat down into the river. The raing had begun in furious force, and carriod away the flumes and stnkes, torn down “‘the boys” hydraulic | works, and rendered placor digging next 0 impossible. Squatty Boggs and a party of pros poctors had discovered some wonder fully rich diggings higher up on the other bank of the river, and the fover for fitting had broke out among the citizens of Dry-np had boon idle two days; that wds were still, but his mind wer been bumer. “Mrs Finnigan,” he said to his friend and adviser; ‘“umber costs about #20 a hundred foet, doesn 't it/ “And what would you do with it if it could be had for anxing, J she cried, astonished. ST'd make o raft and start a forry right here,’” exclaimed the lad carn ey, ““This in a narrow, deep river, with a swift current, and T could make as a double cable forry worked with ropes and rings It cwme into my mind yostorday when I was near drowning in it. SWhin ye risked yer thim haythen Chinamen and their interrupted Mrs. Finnigan, ure the breath was a’most frighten- ed out of my body when I saw ye plunge in. - Bat yer plan - go on wia tt, Jack; its illigant, and will jist mike yor fortin’ 1f yo can carry it shrough, Thus encourased, Jack proceedad with his explanation. As he got on his comipanion grow more and moro enthusiastic; its development would inc their storo and this insured Mr, operation-—an important gain in his wifo's cyos She w fo to save « keen-sighted woman and to Jack in all his under rocognized at once the value of his new enterprise, and showed him how o make it practical at the least cost, takings; she \len‘ from what was termed the **River Digging,” “‘don't smash croa- tion right a-top of us all without sing ing outa_word of warning, Don 4o through it all at once, souny. Juck felt abaghed at his unlooked for achieyement, and knew it eou'd not have been his blows that did the work. yreat body of mould hud been ready to fall; his pick had oned a grone that h t down it came, Ae | tions, he began at on [ valud of his dirt by i | fore he had poured one | auddy river water into o a thaill of oy an eloctri He haa found d Not in the tiny, dull 1us t Tip description lod L to look Aur, Lul. m] o1 ‘\,, She bargained with a departing winer for the uprights of his cabin at atow rate, and of them Jack, with made and set the stakes s be fastened on, The + brisk business at the bon his store became a he urged forward the did not spare his own ring ts completion. ! val mechanic and his nirivat crowned os8. His raft rong ‘lh and lightness, hu.u;fiht the ropes ton the whole id nml) for ac r the idoa was for his cabl arocer for whisk f r \ rings ust four days | him hot o | tambling Deck Dick and gro | Chinamon and pack mules, two at | wo'll see ench other some day begant A time, bound for the new gold | this. diggings at Dateh City The | UTa that ‘oro pary a_coming!” hal- rana woere so incessant that the river [ loed Hank from the eonch box grew higher and higher, and soon the [ “Hore he is!” shouted Tip; “and turn of the curront at that particnlar | more fool he to lave a place that bend ot the Mokulumne was almost | would bo the makin' ov him. I'm | atrong enough to swing the raft over; | starting a big bar, and I'd have paid the only difficulty Tay i ats veturn, [ him a small fortin' to wait on it; but and though th ads wero light and [ the chap's head's turned wid the | passengers helpful on the way back, [ price he got for hus forry.” The porch | the youny forryman's avms ached so [ was full of “boys” come to see that from tugging at tho cords that at | rave sight in theao days a departure. night he could not sloep from the | Jack waved his hat as he climbed up [ pain. That wae to begin with Time | the stage, but pulled it over his eyes sonsons ovorything, and usage made [ a8 b \lln[[vl“l into place beside Hank; his muselos almost Iike ivon and - the | he had evight o glimpso of his friend task grow easy | weoping at the kitchen pane STt boy ia fairly coining wold, Some time aftor the express hold suid Monte Mack to his pard Doublo- | package dirceted to Mrs. Finnigan, ot's Ty for him t was that good woman's sur Ono night Juek came in shiver prise when apprised of the fact from the river bank. Ho had been On being opened it proved to be an ontall day, and, despite oilskin and | oxceodingly richly-monnted pioture of Tndia vabbor, was dronehod to the |8 handsome young man whom no one skin | recognized undil its rocrpient criod out ‘Give b a hot toady, here's the | in rapture liquor, ™ said T4 1,‘..1. N “.| “Make | ““Arrah, sure it's Jack! Jack, in his it sweol and sty nd he'll bealt{own clothes, and jist as he looke vight in 1) \H o whole new state Y mornim wnodded; but sho gave | a foot bath and a dose | of quinine instead Niver a drop ov croms yor lipe if 1 my dear, ' sand she pointed o that sort shall e help ity Jack, and next day Tanviefoot N w lis cabin, with wore humanity in his apperrance than one ot the beasts that perish “Onee and not so long nay ther -~ hoe was young and hopoful like you, Jack,” she said; “look what liquor brings on a man, and fly from | tho sight ov it.” CLoet's have a little game vight here Vot no | Tip,” said Monte Mack, that evening: 1 pour us out your heat and plen ty of it If the awhite man in these mines it's Tip Finnigan, and he knows how to sell tirat elasn liquor, top; that's what [ allin s Dick you deal for a four handed a0l thoyoungean iigiie i, Jist fora | spree. Won't ye, honey L he wow't thin," cried the watehfal Mrs. Finnigan, bursting in wpOn thom, and for once daring to ase sert horsolf i her hushand's domaing | W v afther this dad wid yor| he come to Dry ve've be dirty eards over sinee up;and AF yo iver ax him to fake hand in thim chating gomes yor up to ain, sure Pl tache yez both a now thrick wid the ind ov iny broom, so | will — Tho gamblers shrank a ho foro the woman’s {lashin but He was in the Tip was mueh seandalized a diseiplinarian and beheved intoriority of the weaker sex: he had always oxacted from his wise and waally qaickeont wifo the strictest | ol and her wilinlness w That night | dienen, sumption T were red when little while with beto retiring he baek end of the his v eyes e toosit her, as he always did to his bunl in 1) store. CYouviver write letters nor any, as I see, Jack,” sho romark raptly. The youth's eyes tilled with sudden tears; he shook his head and bit his lips nervously, but did not reply. His questioner was a persisted one wo 1 ab- She kept her ¢ adily on him, and he could not affect unconscionsness, as he tried hard to doat first. Tt cost A gre: 3 and broko down with something like a ort, bat at last he gave in, 80D, CMrs. Finnigan, nob whero Tam, 1 ran away.’ He hung his head in shame at this oonfession, and his faco blazed into a perfect seaclet when his friend, raising her hands in surprise re peated: “Ran away! Lord pity your distracted mother, you wrong headed boy!” Iy knows shocked poor “They must have and talked complained Mr. all i L t Franklyn and to Nellie,” he buret out L great heat nnd tion. “Ho waid such dreadful things about my selfighly impoingon thom and and T just vowed I'd never K till Teonld pay up write or all T owed , Heaven be word, and news praised, ye can et home to- Juck; yo ut you shall yer mother, ty Finnmgn if my name is 1 Chen in quieter and still more reso lute terms Mrs. Finnigan explained to the lad that her guardianship over him must end. since it had already produced ill-feeling between herself and hushand, CAnd tho” next to my own hoy that the biissid saints has in their holy Kaping this day, I have o warm heart for yon, Juck,” she confessed, “‘my duty is to sarve Tip and plase him in iverything, and T can’t manage both | you'und him, ©find. This is 1o place for alad ov your breedin’ and holone- 5. 1 may kape yo out of the gan blors' hands and” away from the | whisky cup; but there’s more and Work So ye Sho backed her argument with an offer from w tall Hoosior known as Lanky, who was ready to pay down in wood hard dust an hundred ounces ($1600) for Jack’s right and title to the “Ferry,” and then added in a whisper that Juck ould pay first- cluss passage and carry §5,000 home wi'li him, A fow moments passed, during which the varying emotions of the boy’s mind were “easily road by her keen eye on his transparent faco, Suhl. uly, r the changing lights of shade and Coubt, ambition, pride and aleulation, Iu'uku- out a sweet, soft, beaming tenderness, and yielding to it infinences, Juck leaned” his curly head upon her shoulder and mur- mured, “I'll go and see my mother,” | “Aud God's blissin’ go with you " exclaimed Mrs. Finnigan solémnly. “Her s huve been about ye liko a guardian angel this far, and may the timptations that I can't rache, | must jist Jave them all behind same blissin' go wid v till life nd?” “T'll write to you, Mrs, Kinnigan, you dear, good friend,” cried Jack, giving his landlady a secret and sin core embrace behind the kitchen door, as Hank pushed his modest trunk in which the precious dust was storad into a safe place on top the Stockton umdx Nota word, dear,” said the host- oss of Dry-up, controlling heremotion d by the |"..|, m e u 1 Juck over just cnergotic proprietor, ruing of its complo- cuted his forry, and carried L at sunriso a whole train of by u strong effurt, “not & word, dar- among them he was born wid, Sorra a beautiful pictur r this in the of Californy, and 1 | wouldn't take its weight in goold for " So saying, she hung it beside an humblor oae of her dead child, and thore they remaimed togother as long | as Tip's store stond near Jack's Forry. Frightful Misery. My William Pomeroy, Bangor, M writes: 1 have for a long tlmx-klnlfe from continual - constipation, making life 0 mise y, and \1I|II|II)' headaches nn‘ frightful cramps. Mr Taomason, whe has been | tely visitin, Buffalo, induced me to try the SPRING |.|u\i\|“ perfect]y enved we. B centa, trial Dottles 10 conts, w GREAT EMEDY KNOWN. Dr. King's New Discovery for Con- sumnption s cortainly the greatest al remedy over placed within the of sufforing humanity, Thou- of onee helpless sufferors, now loudly proclaim their praise for this wonderful to which they T sands discovery owe their lives, Notonly does it posi- tively eure Consumption, but Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Brouchitis, Hay I , Hoavseness and all atleetions of the Throat, Chest and Lung yields wond, o as if by migic at onee to its vful curative pow- Weodo not ask you to buy alarge ottle unless you kiow what you ase getting, We' therefore curnestly request you w call on your Isie & MeManos, and got a ottle free of cost \‘-lllu)l will con- 18, trial vinee the most skoptical of its wonder- ful wmerits, L one dol silo by 1 ind show you what a regu- ttle will do. For o, (4) \Sionx (ity & Pacitie o ATLROAD. I'HE SIOUX CITY ROUTE Runs Teain Whrough from Coune s tc ~t. ' aunl Without Cha Time, Only 17 Hours. i m THE row UJOUNCIL BLUFFB 1 SE. PAUL, MINNEAPOLIS DULUTH OR BISMARCK and &1l points 1n Northorn Tows, Minnesota and Dakota. This e o equipped with the iImproved Wastingho utomatic Air-brake wnd - Mille tttonn Coulor and Buffer: and for Y AND COMFORT Dullan Palace slooping Cae HOUT ¢ hotwoon Kan Paul, and e e ST SuorresT KouTE St via meil Bluffe vo Union Pacific Transfor at Coun- 7:85 p. . dally on arrival of Kaneas <oph and Council Blufly train from < at Sloux City 11:85 p. m., Now Union Dopot at St. Paul at 12:30 T HOUE 1 ADVANCE OF ANY OVUHER bt AND ST, PAUI £ 5ce that vour City and Pacific Rall owd J. 5. WATTLES, IR suporintendent - ROBINSON, Asw't Gon Missour Valloy, lows. 1 O/BIY AN, Southwertorn Ap Counel Rl DISEASES OF THE EYE & EAR DR.L. B. GRADDY, Oculist and Aurist, LATE CLINICAL ABEISTANT IN ROYAL LONDON OPHTHALMIC HOSBPITAL Roforences all Roputable yAlciany of £ Office, Corner 16th an: Omaha, Nuh FAST TIME | In golng Fast take the Chicago & Northwest- Farnhan 3w ing loavo Ol 040 p. i aub7 40 s o For tull infors ation callon 11 P. DUE! , Ticket Rt 1t e Eomna, s 2. WL 1 ailwiy Dopot, or at JAMES T CLAKK, Gener- a1 Acui, Omnlia I 7mse it WAL N PASSENGER RATE! HOBBIE BROS Hroke ln all Ratlrood Tickots, Omahs, Neb., oftor W to the E anti! further notioe, at the 1 IIn\\lm( nnheard Low Rates: 16t claws, 24 cl NEW YORK, ¥ - BOSTON, PHILADELPHIA, #28.00. WASHINGTON, 20,00, For particulars, write or go dircct to NOBBIE BROK., Dealers in Reduced Vato Railroad sud Stoamship Tickets, 800 Tonth St., Oniaha Neb. Romouiver the ' place—Threo Loors N rth of Unfon Paciflc Rallrosd Dopot, Kast » de offeath 8tr Omaba August 1, 1281 THOROUGHBRED JERSEY COWS & HEIFERS - - ~/ - For Ealc; By GRAHAM P. BROWNE, OMAEA NEX. YHON RNED. BYRON REED & 00 OLDMST KSTABLISHND lint; for T could not read it if yedid, I ]ut trust ye to the saints as I had to do wid my own Loy, and maybe Real Estate Agency IN NEBRASKAY flaulh-umol ftle b9 Remy Imu o Dourlas counfv, mayé

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