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THE DATLY BES--OMAFA FKIDAY MARCH 30 a Oh, MyBack! That's a common expres- sion and has a world of meaning. How much suf- Davia at the time he wa oner of war, May 10, * JEFF DAVIS, made pris- | draped, or the breast crossed, or the B ‘Are you quite certain that New , and was | head hooded. This is one of the few [ York will be united in your favor?” taken from him by Ksspar Knobsl, | articles of fashionable adornment that| ‘I am not quite sure of Mr. Hew. STEELE, JJHNSON & GO, i rivate of Company A, Fourth Rogl. | the eyos of an artist oan rest on with [Itt's vote, but ho has told me that if LE GROGER s A Circumstantial Account of x‘:unt, Mlcl':igsn y()nv‘nlry,’ at Irwl:l‘ 8| pro'nl, and as for the impression- | he oannot support me_he will give ) ville, Irwin county, Ga " .E His Surprise and Oapture, Btory of the Boldier Who First Laid Hands on Him. HIS LAST COURT. Arkansas Ever Had. Arkansas Traveller, le amateur observer, the sight of a|good reason for it, but I have reason pretty girl artistical y decorated with | to think that I will yet secure Mr. , 1s apt to bring on an | Hewlitt's suppcrt.” attack of heart disease, and prostrate| ‘‘And what of Waldo Hutchina?’ A Story of the Sternest Judge that |him before her right there on the par- “‘He Is not a candidate, and never a Newport lor floor. — Red Clond, Cewler, &o AND JOBBERS IN hat been. An old Westchester friend | Flour, Salt, Sugars, Canned Cocds, and of bis told me just the other day that Hutchins would be certaln to support (S e All Grocers' 8upplies. Old Judge Grepeon, o justice of| Inviwarox, Neb, March 28 -—The m’,,‘“g‘fl'&q‘;:fi;iilh”um o Dok, Kaspar Knobel, the first man to lay the peace, was never known to smile, | Immigration, though not excoselve, helmer has also boen sp:ken of?" hands on Jefforson Davis when the [ He camo to Arkansas years ago, be-|into and throngh southwestern Ne-| ‘Yo, some of the roguish newspa- fering is summed up in it. The singular thingabout it is, that pain in th& back is occasioned by so many things. May be caused by kidney disease, liver com- plaint, consumption, cold, rheumatism,dyspepsia,over- work, nervous debility, &c. Whatever the cause, don’t neglect it. Something is wrong and needs prompt attention. No medicine has yet been discovered that will so quickly and surely cure such diseases as Brown's IroN BiTTERS, and it does this by commencing {1 at the foundation, and mak- ing the blood pure and rich. Logansport, Ind. Dec. 1, 1880, For a long time 1 have been a sufferer from stomach and kidney disease. My appetite was very poor and the very small amount 1 did eat disagreed with me, 1 was annoyed very much from non-retention of wrine, 1 tried many remedics with . no success, used Brown's Tron Bitters. Since I used that my K stomach does bother me an My appetite issimply immense, My kidney trouble / eneral health ike a new mas 0 more, and my uch, that I feel fier the use of £V Brown’s Iron Bitters for one month, 1 have, gained twenty_pounds in weight, 0. B. SARGENT, Leading physicians and clergymen use and recom- mend Brown's Iron Bir- TERS. It has cured others suffering as you are, and it will cure you. WANTED. 100,000 POUNDS OF oo G Sz DAIEIT.AN. ) ighest Cosh Pricy pald, Shipmenta from countey will be paid for by roturn mal. E. MOTZ & €0., m 1119 Dougla Lires ,‘ . FALLYLY & HOES, . Weatern Agonts, Latayette, Indlana, TEIEl PATRNT REVERSIBLE ;. HEE —FOR— i Rubber Boots and Boots and Shoes OF ALL KINDS, a0 5O PERCT. "weur” ) pleces are Intorchauguable and ro- verei provents the counter from runulng ove', requiring no heel tiffencrs. . The Agency for these goods in thia town ha beon pla( vow Others cannot procure them. | Call nd_xamine full line of Leather and ,,Candec” Rubber Boots and Shaes_with the fe orsible Heol, MRS, M _PETEVSON, 51-8m Louisvillo, Nob. | GORNIGE - WORKS | i Iron and Slate Roofing, 0. SPEOHT, - - Proprietor. 1111 Douglas §, - Omaha, Neb MANUFACTURER OF GALVANIZED : Iron Cornices | | DORMER WINDOWS, FINIALS, Tin, Iron and Slate Boofing, Specht’s Patent Motallic Skylight Adjusted Ra‘chet B Sholving, I am the veneral sgent 1R Crestings, Balustrade Bank Kailings, Window Biinds, Cel- K 5 1-, Iar Guards; alao g GENERAL AGENT FOR | | SIDE BLIN e John Q. Jacops, (Formerly Glsh & Jacobs. U N D ERTAKER- ?571.1. collar was worn by Jefferson I:::L ma'fi?&T;'&.fl?m:fi Trop | 8rd and his compantons to the ecene, PEERSON & HILL PATENT IN- |fire we, of course, answered. By this fall of tho confederate government, now lives in Philadelphta. At the time of the captore Mr. Knobel was a privatein the Fourth Mlchigan cavalry. His narrative, contributed to The Philadelphta Weokly Times, 1s as fol. lown: Ou the evening of the Tth «f My, 1876, tho Fourth Michigaa regiment, to which I belor gud, was ordered to start inmediatistely, without know- ing whither or why. Wo rode on the whole night, making a short pause to take & lunch. We did likewlse the following day, but had in the evening to take refuge from a thunder storm in eomo wocds, where we sought to shield ourselves In the best possible manner agalnat the inclemency of the weather. The next morning, some- where between 9 and 10 o'clock, we met a vehiclo with only threo wheels, driven by a colored man. Col. Pritch- ard bade him halt and aoswer our questions, Hoe told us he had fallen in with a troop ¢f ‘Yankees'—it be- came evident he did not know the dif- teronce between Union and Coufeder- ate soldiers—who had taken a wheel from his wagon, probably to prevent bim from reveallng thelr flight too qalokly, for, as he sald, it was a sure thing that thoy were trylug to escape, Such was the story of the negro, and now the reason for our being engaged 1u thia exclting chase flashed in upon us—that wo wore hunting for no less noble a prey than the beaten leader of the confederacy, on whose head the government had set a large prize, Oar commander, as & matter of covree, took notes of thisstatement and ascer- talned the exuct placo where the meet- log had teken place, Then wo were ordored to hold ourselves in readiness, A harder work than we had yet done was impending. Those who had ocn fidence in.thomselyes and their horses for o further rido of forty or fifiy miles were told to announce them- selves. Ono Lundred and twenty- elght men did a0, I among them, and we started, Twelve o'clock at night between the 9 h aud 10th of May, we arrived at Irwlnvllle, lewin county, Ga., where Davls, acoording o il probability, was to be fvund, THE CAMP DISCOVERED, In whispered tones wo were ordered to distiibnte ourselves In groups of thirteen In oll directions, and bs on the lookout for all suspiclous persons in the place, The group to which 1 belonged, after having ridden on for nearly a mile, discovered a camp.fire in & southwestern direotion, which was .| please dispateh them to the beat, latter was a fugitive, after the down.|fore ‘‘oarpet-baggers” began their recklers sway, and year after year, by the will of the voters, ho held his place as maglatrato. The lawyers who practiced In hts court never evgaged In levity., Every wmorning, no matter how the weather mlight bs, the old man took his place behind the bar, which, with his own hauda, he had meade, and every eveniug, jost at a ocertain time, ho clozed his beoks and went home, No one cver engaged him In private converzation, because he wouid talk ‘o no one No one ever wont to hls home, a littlo cottage among the trees In the clty's oatskirts, because he had ncver shown a disposi- tlon to make welcome the visits of those who lived even in the immodiate vicinity. His cfize was not glven him through the tufluerice of “‘elec tloneering,” because he ncver asked auy man for his vote. He was first eleoted because, having been once summoned in a cace of arbitration, he exhibited the executive sido of such s legal mivd that the people nominated and elected bim. Ho soon gained the vame of the ‘“hard justico,” and every lasyer In Arkansas referred to his declslons. His ralings were never reversed by the higher courts. He showed no sentiment in decision, which he made a study, and no man disputed him. Several days ago a woman charged with mlademeaner wss arraigned be- fore him, ‘'The old man seems more than ever unsteady,” remarked a lawyer as the magistrate tock his seat. ‘I don’c see how a man 80 old can stand the vexations of a court much longer.” “T am not wellto.day,” maid the judge, turning to the lawyers, ‘and any cases that you may have you will and, let mo add, quickestof your Every one saw that tho old man wes unusuaily feeble, and no ono thought of a tchom to prolong a discussion, for all the lawyers had lesrned to rov- erenc) him, ‘“Who fa this woman!" atked the judge. ““Who is defending her?” “I bave no defeuce, your honor,” the woman replied, *In fact, I da not thiok thas I need any, for 1 am here to confess my goilt, No mau can defend me,” and she looked at the magistrato with a curious gize, “I have been arrested on a charge of dle- turbing the peace, and I'm willing to submit my csse. Iam dyiog of con- sumption, judge, and I know that any rullug made by the law can have but uear extinction—a very suspiofous olr cumstance—that made our hearte beat quicker with joyous anticipation. It being, however, yet dark, we could do nothing else for the present than im- %n.l-nqy wait for the dawn of day. 'he eastern aky had scarcely reddened before we ndvanced as noiselessly as possible, and almost stumbled over two tents, whose inmates evidently were yet slumbering, and who thus could be easlly surprised. 1 was fore- most in entering one of these teats, and, sure nnongh. found the fugitive and his family lying there in profound aleep. Jiff rson Davis rested in a gray coatume on the left side «f the tent. As noon a8 he was awake and had com- rehended the situation he tried, evi- ently for the purpose of concealment, to cover himself witl something, Ican not at this time tell exactly what, but of resistance he offered none at all. I then hurried to the other tent, where I found a part of the staff of the Con- federate leader. Here, also, perfeci quistude relgned, easlly explainable by the exertions and exottement inol- dent to their fi'ight. They were prisod to the extent that I tore away saddle from under the head of one of the sleeping officers and they all surrendered unconditionally, without offering the least resistance. FIRED UPON BY FRIENDS Not antll the capture of Davis and his associate had been thus accom- plished was the signal shot that had been agreed upon the previous day fired, which soon brought Col. Pritoh- however, was, to great astonishment, at onoe responded to by a heavy fire from the nelghboring woods, which eklrmish we had one yourg man killed, his heart belng pierced oy a bullet, atd one wounded, Our astonishment . | years old when I'fell In love with a little effact on me,"” and she conghed a hollow, around her an o/d black thawl that the wore. The expression on the face of the magistrate remained unchanged, but his eyelide dropped and he did not ralse them when the woman ocon tinned: ‘‘As I say, no man can de- fend me. Iam too near that awfol aporoach, to pass which we xnow is everlsstivg death to soul and body. Years ago I was a child of brightest promise, Ilived with my parents in Konmcki. Wayward and light. hearted, I was admired by all the gay soclety known in the neighborhood. A man cams and professed his love for me, Idou't say this,judgs, to exclte your sympathy. I have many aud many a time been drawn before courts, but ,I, never bafore spoke of my past She coughed aguin, and caught a flow of blood on her handkerchief wkich she pressed to her lips. “'I speak ot it now becavse I know that is the last court on earth before which I will be arraigned. 1 was fifteen man, My father aald he was bad, but I loved him. He camo agaln and again, and when my father said that he should come no mora I ran awa and married him, My father said I sh:.uld coms home sgain, I had al- ways been his pride, and had loved him ro dearly, but ho said that I must never agaln come to his home—my home, the home of my youth and hap- placss. How I longed to see him. | How I yearned to put my head on his breast. My husband became addicted todrink, Ho abused me. I wrote to my father, asking him to let me come homo, but the anewer that came was, ‘I do not know you!' My husband dled—yos, cursed God and dled! Homelees and wretched, and with my Increased greatly whon we took one of our assailants a prisoner and discov- ered that he belonged, like ourselves, to the Union army. They formed, in a part of the First Wisconsla cavalry regiment, and had, like our- selves, arrived the evening before in the neighborhood of Iewlosville with- out knowing or having the slightest idea of the presence of Davis, still less of our own. The victims of this fatal encounter were buried with military honors, We had a breakfast, to us, as & matter of course, a very joyous one, in which Jefferson Davis and our other prisoners participated, and then we roSQ back to husanu- tere. THE COMMON STORY, Such is the true bistory of the cap- ture of JefTorson Davis, and, as every one can vee, it suffers materially from the commonly accepted story, not slone in respect to the feminine sp- parel and the bowle knife, but aleo in regard to the short encounter between Unlon soldiers, which furnished, so of the ambition of the Confederate leader. 1 have a very Interesting relic of ‘this affair in my possession. them among themselves, to speak, the last victims on the altar | tures h little boy, I went out Into the world, My child died, and I bowed down and wopt over a pauper's grave. to my fother agsin, but he ‘I know not those who bey my commandments!' I tarnsd away from that lettar hardened. I spurned my teachings. Now I am here.” Beveral lawyers rushed forward. A orimson tlde flowed from her lipe. They leaned her lifeless head back sgainst the chair, The old magistrate had not ralsed his eyes. ‘‘Great God!" said & lawyer, ‘‘he Is dead!” The wo was his davghter, WVenotice the Marrisge Fund, Mutual rust Awoclation, of Cedar Rapids, Lows, highly spken of in many of the leading rv of the state, “Money for tho Un. arried” heads their sdvertirement in snother column of this vaper, 3w The Latest Wrinkle in Shoulders. Now York Lotterr Tho shoulders of our belles look as though lifted by a chronic shrug. Tam trustworthily informed that this effect s produced by padding, and that the artful crea. fmply changed their spots of falsity, in order to produce that lithe, lank length which fashion just now prescribes for their bodles. Cer- After having entered the tent of Davis | taln corset devices, too, give an ap- and sccomplished his capture, a trav- | pearance.of no corsets at all. The alm eling bag was found among what little | of all this is to make the young wo- bus(qu there was, containing a shirt | man seem to be in a state of unlaced and three ocollars, besides children's | naturalness. Sucocess Is achleved about ::lld linen. '521“ n‘:tnnllwl boon:w or;:. uin:. llxlz . hl:neilll‘odd Jhon- of spoils for the lors, who | what ove o ewport dh\rlbua soarf Is more generally attended by One of these collars is still in my pos- | satiafactory results, A heavy, soft seasion. The collar which, for good | fringed and brooaded strip of stuff, and sufficlent reasons, at thls time has | three to five yards long, mpp-J no very olean look, bears this insorlp: | around the fizures in ways that are He | and seem determined on ultimate suc. | slckness Nervousness, you will find a stcod upon the platform of a law | ops, fal and hopoful pace. A $9,000school| . If youarea frequenter or a reel- Tt I8 of brick and of rather beautiful | countries—malaria, epidemic, bilious architecture, and was bullt cheap and intermittent fovers—by the use Ono of the banking firms 1s soon to | of Hop Bitters. erect & new mammoth building A | If you have rongh, pimple or eal- new brick store room for general|low skin, bad broath, pains and aches, merchandise, 100 feet in depth, isalso |and feel miserable generally, Hop in course of erection; also onv or two | Bitters will give you fair ekin, rich smaller houses for similar purposes. il him ltving ‘‘rlght at home.” A neat, | tho stomeh, Bowels; Blood, Liver, painted barn and stable, wits eighy | $500 will be paid for a case they wil contain’ I b and around the promises mavy other | i3ter mother, or dsughter, can be crops as Jaxt yesr will give this por- trifle. Will yon | tion of the repubitcan valley & new 3 Dacheato do Gerolatetn,” is now, not Lt ot iate e oghe of which thors|many months 1for her warriage, | All Qur Gonds are Made 10 huve fecently aorma several it alaes | eokIE 8 divoros frum tho Counte de farmera and purohusod lands and are | Bionue., Yeara sg0, as Boulotte ln opening farms. Many have Jearned | the lesson of more thordngh ocnitiva. | F1e% “v""d‘:’:-‘h 'g"yh'""hm"‘ of tion of & smaller aren rather than e [®e2¢on aud bad to be brought from partial cultivation of great tracts, ‘| the time. About slx mouths ago she| sug 7-me fim OMABA. braska, is such as to make a return | per men here last winter suggested trip from that reglon esstward much Dorsheimer was a candidate, and that county is suffislent to convince one|a-d that ho and Slocam now are work- that the nnmber of incomers 1n larger 'flu.‘ nnéh‘.vnrlrv o sccare the nolry this spring than last, of the delegation. There are alsoin thin county un- | poking some prooresi?’ . ristakable eigns cf & new loase of life | ‘I hear that Carlisle and Blackburn and prosporlty. Crops wero btter |are both in the field, aud un{ln‘nn . " saye that there is no prospect of any last year thaa the hu; before. There udjutmont betworn thom, ao that ot e aro some, however, who are uot eatls- | yijl withdraw fu favor of another. fisd If 810 land does not produce as much per acre as $30 land. Oane man sald o mo i Red Cloud last week REMEMBER THIS. that he had lived nesr that town for| If you are sick Hop Bittern will twelve years, and that he had raised | surely aid Nature i» making yon well a8 good crops there as anywhore, Sald | when all else fuils, bought one pound cf pork nor one|ous diseases of the stomach or bowels, bushel of potatoes nor a bushel of | it is your own fault if you remain ill, corn since I came here, and I always | for Hop Bitters are a sovereign have all these products to sell, The|remedy in all such complaints. only need is,” sald he, ‘‘that farmers| If youare wasting away with any thoroughly tend their orops. form of Kidney disease, stop tempting As a class, however, 1 believe the Death this moment, and turn fora farmers of Webster county have pluck | cure to Hop Bitters. and energy. They have come tostay, | If you are sick with that_terrible ONMIAELA., - A Full Line of the Best Brands of 5 I was brieglug him oat, and that I| - " i m " more comfortablo as to oar row, A | 8 TR ML OTE O e “I[}ARS f’ f"l\' MANUFABTURED ”]BA()LIU. vislt to several villages In Wobstor |{roth Is that Dorsheimer is for me, | - LU M ‘s not Coslale or Blaskburn | Azonta for BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER CC. 3 EROWEIR aid» =DEALERS INe— HALL'S SAFE AND LOCK GO. Fire and Burglar Pry» N AULTS, TL.OOXKS, 1020 Farnham Street, - = NEIE ‘‘Balm in Gilead” in the use of Hop Red Oloud 1a Improving st & health. | Bitters. house has been balt in the jast year, | dent of a minsmatio district, barricade and commands a beautiful site |your system against the scourge of all blood, and sweetest breath, health and Calling at Me, Joe Warner's, four [ comfort, 3 miles north of Red Cloud, I fuund| Inshort they cure all diseases of well-arranged framo rostderion, » large, | Norves, Kidneys, Bright's Disease. fine horses; behind the barn i | | nor cure or help. ontaining forty two-yose.cld wnales, | That poor, budridden, tovalid wife, made the pioture of health, by a few tters, costing but a they tokens of prosperiry. { One moro season «f even a8 good | botties of Hop Bi i) ted O . \iHoom A Noted Cherry Tree Cowles is a station and village about [ Horters) Sohnidcer, the *'‘Grand Barbe:Bleu, she uaed to eav real cher- afar at a great expense. Every even- Oa the waols 1hs ouilook 4s to ma-. | 108 8he would toss one of the cherry memento, Oae gentlemsn who was ks 80 lucky as to catch one of the stones, 2 = {ustead of mounting it as a ring, as Five Hours from London to Parle. | o %) fashiop, planted it tn hi IrvineToN, Neb , March éB. E ght yoars ago tho French govern- | gus tree, which in a few years began ment granted the coucessions requl- | hearing choice fruit, a basket of which site to the construction of the southern half of the channel tunnel, but the|donna every year by her horticultaral | 310 South Twalfth Street, o D project still havgs upon the prejudice | pdmirer. In time Bou'otte became | or7-mon-wed-fri-me. of the Britlsh people, and the cable | the Countess de Bioune, and mirabile ANHEUSER-BUSCH i Brewing Association, CELEBRATED KE[} & BOTTLED BEER., THIS EXCBLLENT BEER SPEAKS FOR ITSELF. saffert Orders from any part of the 8tate or the Entire West will be promptly shipped. andard of sur Guarantee, GEORGE HENNING, Sole Agent for Omaha acd the West. hacking cough and drew | teryal Jraeperity throogh the 200 mile stones among the audience whera it Office Oorner 18th and Hflmey region southwest of O.uaba ia hopefal, [ Would be cagerly soutohcd up by some admirer and preserved ss a precious O i A H A G w R NIOC E W U R K S' RUEMPING & BOLTE, Proprietors Bt loviodeiy | oo fsbion, antea it bior | Tim, Iron and Slate Roofers MANUFACTURERS OF wan thonocforth asnt - th prima| OrIAMENtAl Balvanized Iton Oornices, Iron 8ky L'ghte, Etc. OMAHA, NEB. brings a roport that the Oabinet s | djotu, the tree, which for some weeks divided upon the qnestion a8 to|had been languishing, died, and its whetber Eagland aud Fronce shall be | Jast withered leavea dropped to the united by a rallway beneath the Eag- | gr ound cn the very day of her wed- lish channel. Mr. Gladstone s both | djng, g sagacious and brave, and it is not im- probable that when be thivks the right Satisfactory Evidence. time has come he will u-;t h;- power- | ‘-‘7‘;‘&7 h‘i:'b:“?;v"lnl?::leh}:?hgf‘m'. :‘: ful influense in favor cf the great 3 O scheme. The Britlsh micd works E{;&xg‘,fiffigz?fi{‘sfm Sz‘:a’l‘lg slowly, but it is gradually approaching | it cne of the most salable medicines I have the conclusion that it is absurd to op- [ ever had in wmy house for Couzhs, Colds poee the gigantio enterprise, Nature|and even consumption, always giving seems to have especially provided for "fiffi“h“‘»{i'.?.‘}'.q"."v‘-.. jiEleatelsond ms ono the work by depositing a bed of chalky g = clay, impervious to water, and mnot much harder than cheosze, underneath the channel, and the tunnel can' be completed within a faw years if only Johu Bull will give bis consent. The STABLISHKD 1868, PERFECTION HEATING AND BAKiAG is only attained by ueing _GHARTER 0AK B 8toves and Rangoes.! WIRR AUZE OVER DOORS. MILTON ROGERS & SON S ODIAET A time between London and Paris will bo but five or tix hours wheu railway traius run under the Eoglish chaanel, avd British prejudice will uot ba like- ly to delay the first trip i that time beyond the year 1900, —_— ‘What it Did For an Old Lady CosnocroN Starion, N, Y., Dacember 26, 1878, GeNts—A number of people had been using your Bitters here, and A.- J. Sll\lPSON. ;l;h marked effact, Inh ?in: ouu,; LEADING ty years, had been sicl 9 for yoars, and for tho past ten yesrs| CARRIAGE FACTORY | Near Union Pacific Depot. has not been able to be around half 1400 and 1411 Dodge Streed, /D 8PRING ATTACHMENT—NOT PATENT ED, J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN 30T TR0 5 JER RS Lath, Shingles, Pickets, 8A8H, DOORS, BLINDS, MOLDINGS, PLASTER, ArSTATE AGENS FOR MILWAUKKE CEMENT COMPANY LIME, CEMEW OMAHA NB ot 80 feeble she was helpless. ~ Her OOl i e Wb stoluas, belug of | N6braska Loan & Trust Company no avail, I sent to Depost, forty-five HASTINGS, NEB. miles away, and got a_bottle of Hop JAS, B. HEARTWELL, President, the house, When she had taken the b g “‘“{a,"“"‘"“' e Treasurer second bottle she was able to take care T. SINHOILD, MANUFACTURER OF EEEETEL T o "ounio GALVANIZED TRON_CORNIGES, Window Caps, Finials, Skylights, &c. B G WEBST! THIRTEENTH STREET, OMABA, NEB of her own room and walk out to her e ————————————————————————————————————————————————— R T HENRY LEHMANN time since, My wife and children ald= also have derlved great benefit from !A‘.mLu.:CIM“.:,n ud :K’.“:J‘.:WE&E. N . ’ . ] cartwo L e i oy D. M. Mok] Hinney., JOBBER OF Agt U. §: Ex. Oo, : s A 'W‘ DELEVAN, Win, Sept. 24, 1878, | First Mortgage Loanaa Specialty .A.. L L P_A. P E R.. Gents —I have not taken quite one AND bottle of the Hop Bittors, 1 was a foeblo old man of 78 when T gob 1t | yuriagon hers ool Hen sand ouner logaly W I N D 0 'W s H A D E S To-day Tam as activg and foel as well | fsued Municipal soctritty to Nebraska can b EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED. OMAHA 9 be negotiated on ti 0st favorable terms asIdidat 30. I oeo a preat many [P0 AT, (Mibroved farm in all woll settica that need such a mediclne, countles of the state thrcugh reponsible; local D. BOYOE, corresvon lente J. E. HOUSE, — Sunset Cix. 118 FAR N Consulting and Civil Engineer AND SURVEYOR. “You can say,” sasid Sunsot Cox cial attention to Surveyirg Town Addi- of New York, i that there are very ot -mlulfl-;.' .::;;..um:g E-timates cf Exca- aotive movements in connectlon with | oppicr OVER FIRST the speakership contest, ‘::d that I am a candidate for s er expeet | — ~ to start In with the united vote of the MBIXOVAX=. New York delegation. 1 have received KE'TH letters from lhmllln:huum. New Jer- . y , Delaware, ols, Wisconsin, tne HIS SUN 1S JUST RISING, Washiogt:n Special. Fifteenth 8t., opppsite Postoffice. of the th, indioal that I shall , a fin of hare strong voppont L all thos s | oninae TR e 2 TR sions. T am seroualy 1n the fled, and | oot g s g Ml oo’y Sampriat 24 there 1s no joke about it. light miliinery store in Omaba. lot Also lsrge addi- at Uall and Bet My Prices Befors Buying Elsewhers, YARDS COR. NINTH AND DOUGLAS, ALSO 7TH AND DOUGLAS. LOUIS BRADFORD, DEALER IN o = | UMBER, SASH, DOORS, BLINDS Shingles, Lath, &c. sy Do, Lzl, Wikrnty 3oL g v raramar won 2| LOW PRICES AND GOOD GRADES,