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. | Deere & Comp'y. MANUFACTURERS OF PLOWS, MOLINE, ILL. ‘ Wholesale Dealers in | ACRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS, — | street yesterday afternoon, by which IN(,J the position of local editor on | Counci! Bluffs, lowa. WWESTEIRN AGENTS EO:- Médne Wagon Co.----Farm and Spring Wagons, Deere & Mansur Co.----Corn Planters, Stalk Cuters, &o., [ Moline Pump Co.----Wood and Iron Pumps, Wheel & Seeder Co,----Fountain 0ity Drills and Seoders, Mechanicsburg Mach, Co.----Baker Grain Drills, Shawnee Agricultural Co.----Advance Hay Rakes, Joliet Manufacturing Oo.----Eureka Power and Hand Shellers, Whitman Aericultural Co,----Shellers, Road Scrapers, &¢., Lt UL i i Moline Scale Co.----Victor Standard Scales, A, (. Figh----Racine Buggies, AND DEALERS IN here it was prepared for burial v Ly NS e All Articles Required to Make a Complete Stock. | “!iif il i i ma na | beon shot by ai allead bk SEND FOX CATALOGUERS. Address All Communications to DEERE & COMPANY, Council Bluffs, lowa. ‘W. B. MILLARD. F. B. JOHNSON MILLARD & JOHNSON, COMMISSION AND STORAGE! 1111 FARNHAM STREET, NEB. OMAHA, - . - REFERENGES : OMAHA NATIONAL BANK, STEELE, JOHNSON & CO., TOOTLE, MAUL & CO. STEELE, JOHNSON & 60, ™ WHOLESALE GROCERS AND JOBBERS IN Flcur, Sait, Sugars, Canned Coods, and All Grocers' Supplies. A Full Line of the Best Brancs of CIGARS AND MANUFACTURED TOBACGO. Agent@ for BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND P[]Wl_)ER 00. THE JELM MOUNTAIN G-OL.D AND STTL.V BER Mining and Milling Company. Working Capit.l - & o 5 = 4 3 Capital 5:0ck, TR A = L A & = S Par Value of Shares, - = STOCK FULLY PAID UP AND NON-ASSESSAB Mines Located in BRAMEL MINING DISTRICT. OFFICERS: DR. J 1. THOMAS, President, Cumming, Wyo WM. E. TILTON, Vice-Prosidont, Camming, Wyoming E.N. HARWOOD, Sccruotary, Cumuins, Wyoming. A. G LUNN, Treasuror, Cummins, Wyoming TRUSTEHES: Louis Mill W. 5. Bramel Francis Leavens Geo, Dr. J. C. Watkin 000, LE Dr. J. 1. Thomas. E.N. Harwood. A. G. Dun Falow, Lewis Zoln n, GEO. W. KENDALL, Authorized Agent for § no22mebm FOSTER &GRAY, . —WHOLESALE— of Stock; Br 449 Omaha Neb, LUMBER, COAL & LIME, On River Bank, Bet. Farnham and Douglas 8ts,, ONMAEA - - - NEB. P. BOYER & VO, ~——DEALERS IN—— HALL'S SAFE AND LOCK GO Fire and Burglar Proof S A FEF ES!) VAULTS, LOOCKS, &C. 1020 Farnham Street, ployed by Charles Walker | from whicli they were taking the dirt | The | . [ time, died yestel THE OmauA DAILY BEE BURIED ALIVE. STIOCKNE.'S CRIME A Laborer Crushed Beneath a Falling | Avenging the Wrongs of His Wife by Embankment and Instantly Killing Hor Betrayer. Killed Many persons in Omaha will remem A fatal acerdent occurred on Willow | bor Mr. James Sticknoy, who occu a laboter known as Bill Bennott was | forald in (his city in_ the fall of | fearfully crushed and almost instantly | 14z o position which he filled with killed by the falling of a portion of the [unusual ability for & few months, bank where he was at work. Bennett, | g goverity of the winter follosi t she ther with others, was at work injured his health to such an oxtent liing and hauling dirt, being em={epa 1o was ¢ mpelled to give up th The bank position and seek a more genial elim in the east or south, facts are was widermined about six feet, the | gqied (o mind by his arrival inOmaha THURSDAD FEBKRUAKVL 9, 100 overhan, portion being froaen, |1 week some of the men had been chopping and working with the view of tumb [ whio ke o VeltiEw ¥0 ATl ling the threatening portion off. Thoy A y waited until the teams were out ot brother, Charles W., for mum the way, and had just gone to the top | which began in that city yestor of the bauk when Binnett drove up and jumped out vi his wagon. They called to him to look out, but he toid . y Lot them to wait & minute, and stood | from The Boston Journal, published | accompanicd by a party of friends | The following account of the crim | tor which he is being tried is taken thore fixing a whip. The ; at the homo of the necused ol above but the . Lo i ! not Uait fo el Several gentlemon have stared foy Denver to make an effort to save from the gallows Charles W. Stickuoy, a youny man, and s graduate of Har Vard colloge, whose brilliant attain ments and chivalrous friendship made | him & lending spirit among lis asso ciates i this, his home, A fow weoks ago the fact was brietly chroniclod that Mon ory K. Campoau, a man of prope i Denver, ( pushed over. It came thundering down of its own accord, burying the ollows began shoveling him out at onee, and soon uncovered his head [ Ho gasped hut ouce ana then ali was over. On getting his body out 1t was found to be torribly crushed, and it wis removed to the undertaker's, or, and that a misaimed bullet from the assailaut’s pistol had Killed a Mrs, Devereaux, who happened to be near the scone of the tragedy. The story of wrong and of wmurderous revenge told by the frionds of the young man who has doue this foul deed will in a measure palliate his crime, oven if it benot proved that he was insane. His brief carcer has been a peculiarly sad one. O yraduatin ith honors from Harvard The Wife of a Boarder in the Wrong | a fow years ago, he entered business, Bed - Various Items from Corning. [and was romarkably successful. He - met a destitute but brilliant Gernan | Consing, Tn,, Fobruary 7. -This|uirl, was touched by her wad history, and married her, his triends say, from mofives of chivalric pity. He sent read dis- | er to Germany to be wfm-:m.l. aud ease, the small pox, although sore [spent much money in fitting hor for ol good society. But she proved un- faithful, and descrted him to ive with Montgomery ¥. Campeau, a wealthy citizon of Denver. Her hushand small pox at Villisea and other towns | obtained a divorce in Massachusotts around us and we are thankful we|courts, andat the suggestionof friends, instituted a suit aganse Campeau, Tt was settled by an agrecment to piy 0,000, of which $3,600 was to | paid in cish, and a note was given for the balanco. But soon after the wifc was cast out in the streets of Denver. She reached Chicago with her child, and in great distress appealed to her been in Mr. Walker's employ since last November, He has a mother liv ing somewhere in Indiang, and it is stated by those who know him that, for some reason, he had assumed the name of Bennett, but they could mot give his real name, except that his mo theral add ed him in her letters as heodore,” A LANDLORD'S PRISONER. city still remaius in a healthy condi- tion, being free from that arms arc to be found in abundance; fact they are the predominating feat- ure of some. We hear of cases of have so far escaped, and live in hopes th ve will nover be any nearer to it at the present time. One day last week a traveling mau carrying samples of jewelry and’ jow- elers’ tools and materials, sent his trunks and valise to the depot, in- tending to take the evening train | former husband forhelp. cast. When he was ready to go hel e and took her again as his wifo, discovered that his valise was gone. | oarning of this, the man who had It was found two days after whoere | wionged them stopped paymoent on the thief balleft it, after examining | tho noto he had given, aceused the the contents It contuined jowelers” | oouplo of practizing blackmail, and it is tools and materials, for which, it is | \lleged, procured the publication of supposed, he had no use. The drum- | froquent newspaperitems to that ff-ot, mer failed to give his name, and it | Sirung at last beyond endurance, and has not been discovered since. BeliBying gk it daubtory thut by a A little domestic misunderstanding | plot ghe was forced into the company occutred at one of our boarding | of this man, the young husband de houses not long since. Tho landlord | tormined to avenge the wrong both was discovered locked in a room With | had suffered. He went in scareh of the wife of a boarder. The husband | hig enemy, found him in April last was the disc He did not like | and quickly made him the target of the appeareance of - things, 8o ho ro- | hig Ly pistol. The first shot killed fused to have anything further to do| Mrs, Deveraux, who happened to be with her. Their names are withheld | gtanding ncar, but with wonderful at present as they are both members | dotcrmination the incensed husband of the Methodist church. .| pursued his work of revenge, and the T. M. Giles, who for a long timo | next shot carried instant death to has been the organ man of Twining | s victim, Stickney was ar- Bros,” music department, left this|rested, and his trial is to bogin morning for Bedford where he goes|on February 7. The defense is in- into the music business with E. A. }ganity. Thoso who has known hiw Long, who left for that place yester-| allhis lifo say that ho had a number day. Mr. G. is an energotic business | of mental peculiaritics when a boy. man and no doubt will make & succoss | Hig ideas of chivalty wero sentimoen- of 1t. tal and extrome. One of his teachers, ~R. C. Chubb, our new auditor, has | one or two of his classmates,a chum fixed up his office in good shape, hav- | in college, and certain of his relatives ing eliminated all the trash the office | jnade up the party which went from was filled with. . | this city. Some of his associates ex- The Park house under the naiage- | press great doubt as to his insanity ment of Mrs. M. E. Cummius, the | but all agree that he received terri new landlady, is taking its place in |ble provocation. His wife is now hiv- the front rank as the best hotel on |ing near this city. the road. M-, Stickney’s clussmates in Har Wncle Tom Carter, an old colored | yard have raised a fund $4,000 to be man who has lived here for some employed in Lis defense, and have He was prob- | anployed Leonard Swett, the famoeus ably the oldest man in - the state, be- | Chicago lawyer, to conduct the de ing at the timo of his death nearly | fonse. The trial attracts o groat deal 100 years of uge. He could remem- | of attontion, because of the prom ber things that happened over ninety | inenco of the accused and the mur years ago, and was acquainted with | dered man. the marshals of Kentucky and other prominent men of the long ago. g Nexr, He forcave| 5 ik - Incredible. You Can't Begin Too Soon. K. A. Scratch, druggist, Ruthven, Qlanwood donsog) Ont, writes: ‘1 have the greatest Glenwood has now reached a posi- | confidence in your Burnock Broon tion where better streets and road- [ Brrrers. In one case with which Tam ways are imperatively demanded. The | personally acquainted their suce.s: scarcity of rock and gravel mn this| was almost incredible. One lady told vicinity and the acknowledged worth- [ me that half a bottle did her “more liness of plunk or block pavements | good than hundreds of dollars’ worth renders the problem a_diflicult one. [ of medicine she had previously Still it must be met and solved. The | taken.” Price §L.00, trial size 10 public square and the mamn thorough- | conts, Tw-ood, fures of the city are in & wrotched con- —_— dition and alwiys will be until some FARMEBRYRET thing in the way of permanent im t 18 done. More money has ‘o 8 boen spent on the public | ifé Sketch of & Very Notorious Des perado, square in grading and other simila work than it would cost to mize the i Ban Francisco Stock Report, 0 masada-| Taon g Bull, noted as the man Mige W l“‘“"_'},"','y orait| who killed “Farmer” Peel in Mon et e bt AT | tana, was recontly killed utDenvor expense to the city. This would not | Lavgford Pecl was in his day con- be objected 4o af the money sidered the tn:mg deaperate fighting wan ‘onponded to any puspore ek [man on the Pucific coast. Ho' was & vinder the existing mstom 0 wut | dead shot and of wron nerve, and had i i pystow 1t in W | faced the six-shooter in the hands of $9,000 to macadamize the public an advy ry scores of times, scveral Thin i n o s of ey | times bringing down bis man. Whon T e ot kot of MORCY | drnk ho was o dangorous individual 86d 1ok he All exen | and a terror to all who werenear him baly and the bueden ol taraan, | 10 the carly duy of the Comtock ho would not be felt. This done, the | (easionally “took the town. improvements should be extended to on the warpath, he would other streets. It would take ten through the stroets with a years to accomplish this work and do | ¥1X#hooter in each hand, dniving the it well, but when done it would be « | People befor him like 8o many sheep credit to the city aud we should be | 479 defying the authorities, ~ There forever mid. of Ghems oxpomein s | Was an amplo forco of polics in the worthless dirt roads. ~ We hopo that | 0™ but whon Puol was on the ram- the propriety of some such systemn of | P¥4¢ the policemen, from tho chief goniral mpioverent mias b e | down, had business in old tunnels on Aaanal i the outskirts of town. Howas not 2 s powerful man physically, but 8o A Signal Victory reekless and such a dead shot that it The value of electricity as & remedial | Was worth o man's life to cross lus akent has gained @ signal victory over|path when he was in cups. Peel rejudice, Thomas' Kelectric Ol stand iere foremout in thia class of compounds. " Tes | 0. Bull wore friends and part- timonials from all parts tell of the wend. | "¢ While on the road to Mon- rous cares of rheumatism, neuralgis, hurgs, | 1808 in 1867, & quarrel arosa between OMAIEIA ' ~ - N'EB. and sorow, ete, effected by it agency.| two_disreputable women who accom- m his way to Denver, |he lay on the sidewalk, and then quarrel and becamo enemics. They separated on the road, but met shortly after in Helena. Ono might Bull wont into the prineipal public gam bling saloon of the town, where he met Peel, who callod him up and en waged him in- conversation After a fow words Peel ealled Bull a hard name and slapped his fece. Bull sud he was unarmed, and Peel told him to go heel humself and come back fighting. Bull went to his cabin and procured his pistol and was coming down the main stroet when Peel omerged from tho door with his woman on his arm. Bull immediately fired and Peel foll| wounded on the sidewalk, his pistol | having falien from his hand betore he could shoot, Bull then walked up and tired two more shots into Peol as vall v U rave himsell up to l ishal, Ho was | . Wt son ithe ' was Known as Raileond Spocd Sixty miles | h o s to hoan vn-u\.u..lm rato of 8peed, rare y obtained, and figures above thiscon. | | tinne to bo realized by the Fontaine and other engines — on paper. Judg | it from present condition of railiond ing, and the outlook, this s atemcrt will remain a truo one for a number of years to como, Not that American workshops are unablo to improve on the rate of speed. Tt can bo done and the problem has resolved itsolf merely to a quostion of boiler, But the problom will remain unsolved un til roadbods are built for the locomo tive instead of the locomotive for the roadbed. We mean that there are very fow roads in the country which can endure the wear of a *‘sixty-mile- an-hour' train, and until such are built the drawing power will continue | o be suited to light beds. There is sme progress in this diroction but it 18 slow and tho rock-baliasted roads are still few and far between. Rail- | road econtractors continue to think | the great desideratum is to “‘rail” as wany miles as possible in a given time; not how well, but how mueh. | But i this they only reflect public | opinion, Yot we note a step in the right direction, which the year 1881, with its increased volume of trade has forced upon the railroads, as seen in tho demand for heavier, more pow orful freight en: which in turn demand as surely, if not so. speedily as the fast ongine, a more substantial bed. The building of heavy 1o comotives has, indeed, been one of the wain foatures of tho pust year with the various works, and the aver age weight of the 1,700 locomotives considerably larger than that of y other year. Those of thirty-ton ht have to o wreat extent piven way on the leading ronds to others of forty and fitty tons, and sevoral have b-en built that weigh sixty tons and have four sets of drivers. DYING BY INCHES. Very ofton wo see aperson sutforing from some form of kidney complaint, and is gradually dying Sy inches. This no longer need be so, for Electric Bitters will positively curo Bright's dised or any diseases of the kidneys or urinary organs, They are eapecially adapted to this class of diseases, acting directly on the stomach and liver at the same time, and will speedily oure where every other remedy has failed Sold at fifty cents a bottie by Ish & McMahon,” Bl (5) Clarkson & Hunt, Succossare b Richards & [Tunt, ATTORNEYS-AT- LAW Lthsiteas O ha Nah free to Hveryhody! A B;xalltiful Book for the Asking, 155 spply ik porouily at the nearost office ot THY SINGER MANUFACTUR D ot wiil b presontod with Tatod copy of & Now Book INIUS O THE STORY OF THE SEWING MAUHINK Jitaiiing & haodsomo and cotly stool engrav- iy frontispicreo; also, 24 finely engraved wood uts, and bous A bluo and gold lchgraphed ha i Singer M T turing Co. I MANUFACTURING CO., flico, 4 Unfon Bquare, Now York Jot27-dudot! &w PLAITING MACHINE! AND DRESS-MAKERS' COMPANION. wil prosses porfectly one yard per ts from 116 0f an fuch to 1 14 iuchos i e coarsest (o1t or 1 1l kinds and sty lo- of can neverout of fashion, if seen it wolls Itslf, For Muchiuew, Circulars or Agent's torms addross CONGAR & CO, 113 Adums Bt., Chicago, BOSTON MARKET, Cuming Street. .1, Nll_BfiS.,Prnpr. Fresh and Salt Meats of all Kinds, Poultry, Fish, &c., in Beason, 1w-eod panied them. The men took up the COLME AND B Ll DEWEY & STONE, | - P i = ORCHARD & BEAN, | J.B FRENGH&OO., CARPETSIGROGCERSI Special Attention I.fi Once More Called to the Fact that IME. FIER L.V AN &z CO. Rank foremost in the West in Assortment and Prices of CLOTHING, MOR MEN'S, BOYS' AND CHILDREN'S WEAR ALSO A COMPLETE LINE OF Furnishing Goods Hats and Caps Wa ure prepared to meot the domands of the trade in rogard to Latost Styles wod Patterns. Fine Merchant Tailoring in Conneetion RESPRCOTFULLY, | M. HELLMAN & CO, 1301-1303 Farnham and 300 to 312 13th 3 CARPETS HAVE DECLINED SLIGHLTY e AND e J. B. Detwiler Is the first to make the announce- ment to his customers and the general public. MATTINGS, 0IL GLOTH AKD WINDOW SHADES, Always sold at the lowest Market Prices. We carry the iargest stock and make the Lowest Prices. Orders promptly filled and every attention given to patrons. J. B. DETWILER 1813 Farnham Street. OMAHA, - - - - NEBRASKA. J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLKSALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN .0 IV IR JELR JER.. Lath, Shingles, Pickets, SASH, DOORS, BLINDSJDLDINGS, LIME, CEMENT LA S BTO. SrETATE AGENL FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANYY Near Union Pacific Depot, - - - OMAHA, NEB