Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 14, 1883, Page 5

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surths of the discases of the human race. These gymploms indicate theirexistence: Koss of petite, Bowels costive, Sick Moad= ache, fuliness after eating, aversion to | exerfion of body or mind, Eructation of food, Irritabllity of temper, Low h neglected spirits, A tu“un o ,fi‘ o ety PATION, and de of o romedy that ncts direotly X A.«nl.lvunymuuvlm-'rl"r'r'u PILLS 10 oqual. Their action on tho Kidneysand Skin 18 also prompt; removing all impuritios through theeo threo ¢ scave engers of the system," producing appe. tite, sound digoestion, Tegular 8tools, o clear skinandavigorousbody. TUTT'S ©I ©cnuse no nausea OF grping nor intcriero with daily work and are a perfect ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA Bold overyw O firriy TUTT'S HAIR DYE, GRAY HAIR OR WINSKERS changed i stantly to o GLOSEY BL. plication of this DYE. mand the on the Liv by n8inglo ap 0ld by Druggists, ptof 81. Officn, 44 Murra: ¢ Streot, Now York, TUTT’'S MANUAL DF‘USEFUI, RCCEIPTS FRES. e, Only Perfoct substitute for Milk. The most 1 hiny ers. Con Motlier's alids an The Pullic 1 requested carefully to notice the new and enlarged Scheme to be dyaon Monthly, #4 CAPITAL PRIZE, $75,000. Tickets Only | 85, shares in Proportion. | Lonisiana State Lottery Company | “We do herehy certify that e sipervise the ar- gements for all the Monthly and Semi-Annuat Drawings of the Louisiana State Lottery Company, | add in peréon_manage and control the Drawings | themselves, and that the same are conducted with honesty, fairness. and in good faith toward all par ties, and we athorize the company te use this cer- tificate, with fac-vimiles of our signatures attached. in its ddvertisements.” CouminsioNmma, Incorporated in 1803 for 25 yoars by tho legislature for educational and charitablé_purposes—with a cap: ital of 31,000,000—t0 which o reserve fund of over 650,000 has since been added, By an overwhelming popular vote its franchise was'mada & part of the presont state constifution adopted December 2d, A. D. 1870, The only Lottery ever voted on and endorsed by people of any state b 1t never Scales or Postpone Its grand singlo number drawings take place monthly. A_SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY TO WIN A FOR- “TUNE Eighth Grand Drawing, Class H, at New Or. foans, TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1883—150th Monthly Drawing. CAPITAL PRIZE, §75,000. 100,000 TICKETS at FIVE DOLLARS EACH. tions, in Fifths in Proportion. LIST OF RIS, srae: 1 CAPITAL PRIZE 75,000 1 do do 26,000 10,000 12,000 | 10,000 | 10,000 10,000 20,000 0,000 ROXIMATI 9 Approximation prizes of §750 6,750 9 do do 500, 4,500 9 do do 20! 320 | 71907 Prizos, amounting to. .. 205,600 | Application for rates to clubs should only be made | 4o ths office of the Company In New Orlaans. For further information_write olearly giving full addross. Send orders by Expross, Registered Lettor -or Money Order, addrossed only to M. A. DAUPHIN, New Orleans, or M. A. DAUPHIN, 607 Soventh St., Washington, D, C. LODISIANA STATE LOTTERY (0 B. Frank Moore. 127 La Salle Street. Chicago, (Formorly 819 and 213 Broadway, N. Y.) Now Manager of Chicago Office. To whom apply fes infortaation and tickets, 169th Monsbly Drawin, ‘Tuesday, August 14. First Capltal Prise, 975,000 Tickets $6. Skl In Fifths at $1 each. Seo full schome elsowhere. d weddsat-w-6w e al medical philos- y which at pre prevails. It is cetly p vitalizes the to stomach by sand Dealors 1l mifinge-sodkw The Ploncer and only Vapor Cook Stove that has atood the test of years ven entire and perfect satisfaction. | Over 100,000 Now in Use l: New Patent Hull Oven. Patont removable and interchangeable Jod Orifice, rendering our burners indesbructiblo. New One Valve Burner on #wo New Stoves. New Safely Reservolr. | For Summer use Ahese stoves are indispensible. | For toris 1o agents, price lish and eatalogue, ross HULL YAPOR BTOVE O, Jo 26.d e tm-wion Qlovoland, 0 | { Mosquito il el - |ently as white ! of Omaha (everyb UP THE NIOBRARA. LA Trip Throngh 11|;- Sand Hills of Ne- braska and Beyond, The Home fthe Cow Pune The Hush vor in the Neighborhood of Valentine, Clorre lonce of the Varestivg, Neb,, Ve July 11— When 1 awoke yesterday morning after an all night ride from O'Neill on a Sioux City | and Pacific train, six hundred and thirty four mosquitoes were tugging away at me, T woman behind me, who made remarks about cverything she saw and saw everything, was mashing mosquitoes The B was e vigorously on the window pane &M clerk on a vacation, who ited to find somebody going to Valen tine, had smoked cigars all night to keep off mosquitoes and was still smoking These car held, s We hills five were all the we some Indians and cowboys the were passing through sand miles from Valentine and the morning sun shone on them with a blood-red glare. We crossed the Niobrara on o high tre work and then things began to look better, We were , and off to the right, with rocky bluffs for a back ground, we saw the low adobe houses of the vison, Further west was a strang hill, surmounted with i, af, which we took to be the “Freder: ick’s poak,” which appears upon any map Frederick's peak, how ever, is a mueh less conspicuous ohjeet just behind this, where.the Minnechadusa tmpties into the Niobrara, The train pulled up at a little town made of un painted frame houses. The end of the road had been reached and this was Val entine, named in honor of our North Platte congressiman ‘What a wild place! woman who talked. live here an ins shoes; oh, all eager to see the for exclaimed the “U'mosure 1 eonldn’t nt. I can’t find my , here they are. Just look at those Indians! T do’believe T left my shoe-buttoner at home. Can you tell me where the land offic I wonder if one can get anything decent to eat herel O Lord! is that the hotel? What is the matter with this shoe! Do they all carry revol here? My, how dangerous!™ And so on until the Burlington & Mis- souri clerk and myself locked arms and started for the Valentine hous el could only make you a few sketches in- stead of writing, T would draw some of the crowd of Sivux Indians that were in from the Rosebud reservation yesterday to haul supplies. Men in blue and red and green blankets, men in brown over- alls or cast-off arniy uniforms, squaws in robes of various hues standing on the cor- ners gazing absent-mindedly out into the prairies, saying mever a word to each other, and laughing very quietly when the hoys played tricks on cach other. is the home of the cow-puncher. he stands, tall, well-formed, with muscles of iron and bronzed, generally handsome, face. High boots, always, blue shirt and heavy pants, an immense white hat, at the hip a glistening revolver of the largest pattern, always loaded, and always accompanied by a belt filled with cartridges. This is the cow-boy's toy. He plays with this as children play with toy-pistols, and_ fires it off whenever he feels like it. The night is merry with its gentle fusilade, the cow-boy shoots dog; with it, shoots at stove-pipe hats if they appear on the street, shoots at the ground in front of the ‘‘tenderfoot” and scatters the dirt over his polished shoes, he flour- ishes it in the moonlight, he plays tunes on it, he serenades with it. The wind blew off a stranger's stiff hat the other night, an urchin caught it and tossed it into the air, twenty revolvers were | whipped out and the hat fell to the ground riddled with holes. I picked up a bullet last night which was fired into the hard ground two inches, just in front of the leading storo.. It was fired “‘just for fun.” This store is o great rencezvous. It belongs to Thatcher, Cornell & Co., who are also post-traders at Fort Niobrara. It contains everything imaginable in the way of general wmerchandise. The In- dians are their best customers; always going away from there with their arm loaded with bundles; for which they pay cash, or hides, buffalo robes, moccasin, pipes, bead purses and other articles. One row of shelves is filled with little tinsel ornaments which they buy; many colored beads strung ready for use, gaudy o8, shell discs, silver ear-rings and rings that cover the back of the finger finger from knucklo to knuckle; bright brass armlots and packages of paint for their faces and hair. Once in a while an influential chief is allowed credit; all the others have to pay. ““Charlie,” the store’s interpreter, is a skillful salesman, Squaws lead their hubbys in, and beg them to make purchases, quite as persist- women, and “Charlie’* presents attractive bits of cloth,, or trim- ming, or bottles of perfumery, or cakes of soap, or the latest washing machine; talks them up glibly in Sioux, and the old man comes down wnd buys, while the BquAws s dance with delight. Some of these women are very good looking, wnd some half-hreed chiildren | saw yes terday were really quite attractive Next to the store the land office is the most frequented. Hon. James Morris, ly calls him “‘judge” up here), is register and 8. Wesley Tucker is receiver. The office was opened on July 2d with 100 entries and since that time there has heen a constant rush for land. Al the territory around here is filling up and people are pushing out into all parts of Cherry county. Such a fight | for good land was never seen as may ssed in this oftice every day placard says, ““Office hours from 9 to 4, but business actually commences o the | arrival of the morning train at 5:45 and tinues up to supper time, In the last | week between 200 and 300 entries of | land have been made. Just west of town | the country is beautiful, everybody says, across the Minnechadusa. The Minniechaduss, or Minniechalusa as the eastern Sioux call it, is a beantiful stream, clear and cold and rapid, like o mountain torrent. The name means “‘the little water which runs swiftly” as the old French called it, *“L'eau qui cour”, The range of rough, we long whose base runs the Minnicchadusa lies west of town and with the bluffs on this side forms a valley in wh scenery is strikingly heautiful, Up aJong this strewn are people living in tents and temporary structures, on the land which they have just sccured, but many will not take up residence until next apring. Ten miles north is the state line, which separ- ates us from Dakota, or from the immense reservation of the Sioux nation, The In- dians are vory jealous of their torritory The | Niobrara, is “the water which runs,” or, | virtue in r dy hills | \ the | THE DAILY BEE-( and yesterday some white man came in to alentine to say that the Indians had re YAY WMARNA, SATURI the company's’ Atore it the village, Ty pil armed themselve'® for a #truggle and where they had | laged the buildings of the officers of the hosen a homestend, declaring that it was |company. For the first time in the his the land of Red Cloud. They went out | tory of Vermont the militin has been rain to-day to enforce their clnims. called oat woll a mob, bt as yet the GARNET miners have not clowded ‘he e 1 —y their cause by acts of violence The mine st icturosque spe rin the valley W « £ San Fi i mall tributary of t Connectient | i ! San Francisee Is ] River, The mouth of the shaft is faced Lot e by the groups of rough shanties built ,‘ A, Gracie, of St Joe, is & guest of the | the sand and bowlders of the river's bank, Grand Pacit | and here at sunrise on Saturday morning 1 F. M. Rubleo and wife, of Arapahos, are at | the Vermont soldiers landed with shin ) ing bayonets and loaded muskets, ready oAty [ to wake tho starving families with the | ! Mise Widow Dunni of Denvor, ls at the rived of food, sul- | Grand Pac | C. Lanfert, of Cheyenne, Wyo., is at the Paxton. | Milos Zentmoyer and son, of Scligley, aro at the Paxton j erack of firoarms. Do Jen, grossly wronged, and situated in reqion baveon of the fruiis the s l these Mmifers present an unhappy picture of New Bugland life 1 — Tho folloyring, copied from the Lowell | Thomas Miller, of North Platto, is in town, | Daily Courier, speaks well of an article Gonoral J- C. MoBride, of Lincoln, isin the | Made in their cy: “Hood's Savapar city, and callod at Tie: Brk office lust night., | 110 i8 fast growing into use, and doing by, o L much good. ~ This is no ‘patent medicing, Major . H. Wheeler, of Plattsmoush, is | but n preparation of a standard articlo for | still in the city. specific diseases, and its effoct is said to Frank J. Sibloy lard last night of Lincoln, was at the Mil | they give are bona fide The testimonials which | from parties who | haveused the preparation, and cheorful ho very marked. il rge Canfield has returned from {1y give their testimony as to its worth EIRBHgs | Those afticted with Serofula, Biliousness | 1. WL More, of Valparaiso, is at the Paxton. | or ieral Debility, should try this rom } H. C. Brome, of Norfolk, was at tho Paxton | 1. Hood & Co. are: careful and ex yesterday W. H. Clark, of Waterloo, is at the Paxton. E. 8. Towslee, of Ogden, is at the Paxton. perienced pharmacist rations can bo relied on e and - theiv propa Or p Notes. 1 Hon. James Hueston, & momber of the | Correspondence of the Bu senate of Michigan t the Millard, aBLk Rock. Neb., July 100 Crops Rov. Geo. W. Wainwright, of Blair, is .tlm- looking well. Corn is growing very the Millard | vapidly. Al small graing are ripening John R, Clark, Esq., president of the First | fast. The crops on the bottom lands ational bank of Lincolu, ix at the Millard | 1. 1. Silver, of Lincoln, is at the Millard Mrs. Ho H. Davis and Mrs, N, R Duzan, of Zionsville, Tnd., with Mrs. S, A. Williams, | of Tndianapolis, are at the Paxton AL Mol | and and wife and Geo, D, Cross Brownville, were at the Millard last i Hon. Julius F. Morritt, rogent of the State ‘l'niu‘pv(j. ias the “Granger” politi | Antelope ¢ lled at Tie B t. even of 1 | of | editor man : them. and had not the pleasure The only occupant of the hungry miouso trying to on the desk in the city. [ reach u sour pa E. M. JOALD W. €. Carpenter, of Ogden, is at the Pax. | ton, ter, of Papillion, tice, of Osceola, is in the city. Harry Hall, of the Burliugton route, is in town. J.N. Speer, the grain dealor, of Hiawatha, in in tow Miss Etta Wolls loft Thursday for Kenosha, Wisconsin, E. A. Ryder, of Greenwood, Ta., is at the Millard. 87 Lowe and wife, of Fremont, are at tho | Millard. Captain Burke did not return with Genaral Crook as ho goes to Europe, Hon. John I. Redick and family left for Chicago Thursday. | W. Hawke and Mrs. L. E. Root, | braska City, are guosts of the Paxton. J. 8. Wolbach and Geo. A. Kont, of Hast- ings, were guests at the Paxton yestorday. of Ne. Judge Beneke will leave for Europe to-mor- row. Further particulars hereafter. Wi, P. Evans and wife and 8. P. Cud- worth and wife, of Genova, are guests of the Paxton. Misses Margaret Wilson{|Belle Dickey and Lulu Cremer left Thursday' for & sojourn at North Lake, Wi Mrs. W, Umpherson and son, accompanied by Miss Annio Quigley, of the Contre stroet school, have gone to Milwaukeo, Mr. Isaac Dickerson, oue of the oldest citiz- ens of Atlantic and Cass county, Towa, was in the city yesterday, en route to Madison, It is reportod that a man named A. W. Collett, was struck by lightning in North Omaha, $his morning, bus no particulars are known, Mrs. Audy Borden, wifef the eity ticket o agent of the B, & M., left for the east last evening on an extondod visit to Now York city nd Philadelphia. Rev. 0. W. Savidge, pastor of the First M. i, church, has returned from a krip to Minne. apolis, where ho officiated at the wedding of his brother, Wi, H. Savidge, Ksq., of Kear- ney, to young lady of Minneapol Mr. Geo, W. Boyden, for a long time con- nected with the Union Pacific in this city and subsequently moved out to North Platte, has returned to Omaha and will make it his head- quarters hereafter. George is a very fino fol- low and & very popular one aad his return will be gonerally weleomed. Bir Colingwood Shriber and Sir Alexander Jampbell, of the Canadian Dominion, the for- Superintendent of railways and the lattor minister of justice, passed through the city to- day en route to British Columbia on & tour of nspection. Quito # purty attendod them, - —— Consul Moore Dead. Decarur, 111, July has been received here of the death by {..u..u fover of Gen. Jesse H, Moore, Tnited States consul at Callao, Ho was colonel of volunte in the war of the rebellion and served two terms in - con- gress from Illinois. He has been in the consular service for three years, C — The Camp Mecting at Clear Lake, Cixak Lake, lTowa, July 13— The Towa State camp meeting last night, was one of unusual power. Mr. Harrison con ducted the services, At the invitation to to come forward, at least fifty persons Information presented themselves at the altar. The closing hour witnessed the conversion of many, Morning services to-da; given up to experiences. the relatiotng of christain The interest is intense, At were | adopt along the Nemal are of course a failure, , that were overflowed, Many ive | gun harvesting rye and the yield will be in oxcess of lnst yenr's average, W had | a splendid shower last Friday, followoed be by warm weather, and the farmers are | feeling very jubilant Loaas, Ta’, July Small grain has | done well the last Farmors all | feel well. Corn never grow faster than it hus the last week What little full grain there is is good and nearly ready to harvest. A WIDOW | The Fortune of a California Railroad | King Returning to Benefita | Berkshire Village. A correspondent of the Boston Jour- | nal says: Of all the men of the east| who rushed to Califoroia immediately af- | ter the announcement of the discovory of gold in that region, Mark Hopkins was & leader, and subsequently ho be- came an immense power in shaping the dostinies of the State and developing its rosources. He inheritod his energy Irom his forefathers, whocame to this country in 1634 from Coventry, England. The American sire of the family was John Hopkins, who was made a freeman of Cambridge, Mass., in March, 1. The senion Mark Hopkins was a Great Bar- rington merchant, with Anaftasia Kellogg as a wife. In 1806 he left Berkshire for Henderson, N. Y., and he had soven children, Mark being the fifth son. This lad had a common school edu- cation in Henderson and Mich., to whi family in 182 St. In 1828 the fathor died, and_ Mark, Jr., at 16 years old, bogan the battle of life. He becamo a I at Lockport, N. Y., but had a sp tive turn of mind, and when the nows was confirmed that gold had_been found in the bods of the rivers and placers of California, he dotermined to leave for the new Eldorado. He arrived in San Fran- cisco in August, 1849, after a terrible voyage, and in _Octobor of that year went up into the mining regions and catered to the wants of the miners in the way of merchandise. This business was continued until 1854, when Mr. Hopkins came east and married Mary Frances Sherwood, his cousin, of Great Barrington. She was the daugh- ter of Prof. Sherwood, a New York toacher, who had retired to Great Bar- rington with his family and his little savings, In 1850 Mr. Hopkins bocame a lmrlmar with C. P. Huntington in the hardware business in Sacramento, under the firm _name of Huntington & Hop- kins, aud it was in their office that tho froo noil party of Sacramento, from 1856 to 1858, held their moetings. They started the first republican paper of the country, which was edited by Cornelius Cole, afterward United States senator, It wus in the oftico of this hardware storo that originated the plana for securing tho overland railroads from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and a coierie composed of Charles Crocker, afterward president of the Southern Pacific railroad, Leland Stanford, the first republican governor of California and president of the Cen- tral Pacific railroad, C. P, Huntington, vice president of the road, and Mark Hopkins, treasurer from the commence- ment of the road until his death, used to meet to talk the matter ov The sub- sequent history of the enterprise is fa- miliar, The energy and effort which these threo or four men, chumns ina hardwaro store office, put into the werk resulted in the great overland route. Berkshire county's interest in all this is that in 1878 the daughter of the New York teacher, who had od to Gireat Barrington, Miss Francis Sherwood, found herself the widow of Mark Hopkins, with | an catate of $22,000,000, the apy putting the valuation at the lowest fi 80 a8 to be able to get bonds for the exe ~utrix. She soon began to think of her plensant residence in - South Berkshire and in 1881 a special car brought he home, The Sherwood homest soon bought; over §30,000 was spent in | putting it in order; a barn which will cost €76,000 is building; 10,000 wasspent in fixing up the family lot in the cem i £10,000 the bur; 1 xom, Timothy Hopkins, treasurer of the Central Pacific road, g ,000 for the purchase of an organ | the close of the afternoon sermon My, |for the church; she bought a lot for Harrison led the entire audience in con- | site for o parsonage for 86,000, and | sceration servic more improssive |18 having it built” st her exponso | | than any that pre it. Rev. Dr, Joyce, of Cincinnati, is expected to ur rive to-morow — The Vermont Miners' Cause. The Pross 1f there is any justice in rebelion or istance, the striking Vermont | miners may command respect, if not symn- pathy. The stand they have taken is not a strike in the ¢ , but an ap. peal for wager , and if their ly carne ing it is o because their nceds are im (wmlnu and theirsufferings great. The { Vershire mino has been “reputed to | one of the richest copper mines in the | country. It has been operated very qui- | etly, and its ownora, & party of capital- | ists, have not paid the wages of the min- ers since April. The men, made desper- ato by femine, have seizod the mine and attitude toward their employers is menac- | se: o residence for the pastor, which sho will also furnish, and the total cost of it will | not be less than 860,000, The chapel | vas occupied for the first time last Sun- | The church will be ready for dedi- | cation about the 1st of August, and| though Mrs. Hopkins, this loyal daughter | of Berkshire, will not'bo present, as sho | is to spend the summer in San Francis 20, the venerable Mark Hopkins, so long president of William college, and who is of the family, will preach t ledics non, and the Congregationalists of reat Barrington will have a church property of over $200,000, free from debt, through the benevolence of this good lady. 1t might be mentioned, too, that the estate, inventoried in 1879 at $22,000,000, has increased in value to fully $50,000,000, and the Berkshire girl may be ranked among the richesy wonen of the Unitod States, JULY 14, 1383, | THE TONY BURG OF CASS. ann Pale Ambient Airof Morn Knocked | into Smith-greens, l’l‘\ ‘e Racket Raised by a Small Fire cral News, stic and J nrnalistic o w, Neb, July 12 the il Corres, PLartenon st towt wia county is too well x The connty-se sown throughout the iption or a detail 11 known ad w. < ts, Sinee vantagos and Dusiness inderm the B. & M. bridge was completen and the establishing o whops state to need any dose & account of its mamy 1 about the two yoars MY machine (A general ropsir lerd, the town hag staadily growii, (bl Plattsmouth is numbered snons the Fest towns in Nebraska Business with rotailers has 1Sedn rathe Juiet during the past month or s *% Woeks, but now, a8 the prospects for an Abun dant erop of corn, small grain and frnt are wdy trade has veviv and ey Y thing rood sl chants are gmiling and hagpy This moming, at about half past three, s on in and when the plaintive mosquito had consed his bloody skirmishing and had rotived to his jungle too full for utterance; when the i, the ra noses of the Perking' Touse hoar shricking of & locomotive whistle out loud and Loy Everybody was before any can awake in an instant and | o could be attributed to this outlandish uproar, a second engl joined in, accompanied by the big shop whistle and the ringing of all the engine bells in the yard. Finally, after all the inhabitants of Cass connty were and prancing about in their night cothe trying to find cotton to stutl’ in their | cars, or a dose of ladanun to put them out of their misery, the deafening noise | stopped, and | hogan to hreatl tor. Some one said there was a fire, sty soon some heavy weight individual | commienced pounding a big bell with a onsed slodge hammer, and again all the whis- | tles in town wore heard from. People bogan to grow frantic, and a wicked drummer suggested that the wan with the sledge hammer be visited and shot, but some cooler heads renmonstrated, say ing that no one would attempt to make such a moise unless e were bullet proof to start with. After the engines had wasted all their steam, and the man with the sledge hammer beeanme weary and tired, quiet was restored. The fire proved to e in the store of W. R, Car- ter, about half a mile southwest of the main business conter. The building was | a total loss, and was insured for 8600, Tho stock was mostly earried out, but was considerably damaged by broakage and water. Hon. Daniel H. Wheeler, sceretary of the state board of agriculture, informed your correspondent that he had just re- coived notice that the Altman Tailor Co. had shipped the 8480 separater which was awarded to the Hall Co. agricultural society for the best exhibit at the state fair last fall. Mr. Wheeler reports the acreage of corn for 1882 at 1,760,000 and for 1883, to date, at 2,010,000. Articles of incor- poration of the Plattsmouth & South western railroad have been filed and will be published in a_day or two. Although there is not much railrond talk there is evidently a good deal of thinking and acting going on, and as the parties names who arc at the head of the enterpriso are among the hest business men in the state, there is little doubt about the success of the undertaking. A game of baso ball, between the Plattamouth club and the Wahoos is in progress thin afternoon and drew a large crowd to the fair grounds, o milo west of the city. Thero was an entertainment at the Opera house last night, and to-day an itinerant_combination, consisting of man and another man is giving o ten- t exhibition in a vacant store, and an Unclo Tom'’s Cabin company is_expectod soon, all of which goes to show that Plattsmouth fs not behind in the way of amusenonts The Plattsmouth sportsman’s gun club ield & shooting match hero last week for the silver cup held since last fall by Geo, Smith. The cup was won by O. H. Smith after a close contest in which clay pigeons were used in stead of glass balls or live birds, There is still two more Smith's to hear from, and the other mombers of the club have little or no faith in winning the cup until all the Smith family have been aerved. Preperations are being mado for the county fair here this fall, and everyone anticipates a big time and a successful show. Local politics are being talked to quite a considerable extent and several ceandidates are reported as getting ready for the baby kissing, button holeing and handshaking campaign, 4 The Journal suspended fts daily edition for tho present on Tuesday last, o fact which s uch regretted here. The Horald i« now the only daily paper i | town, and 8w large list of suby bers well informed on all subje st A new paper, to be called The Cass County Press, will soon be Jaunched on the uncertain ses of jonrnalism, with M. 8 of in to O'Donohoe as editor and proprictor, Crobill met with quite serious | accidont to-day, at the Burlington & | Missouri shops, by lotting fall & heavy picce of iron across his foot, eutting the great toe and otherwise bruising his | H. 5. 8. | t of Cass il soft-eyed house-fly was still | pring in his Iair preparatory to mak his morning rounds to tickle the on the still night air, | THAN CURE! 1t is so much easier to save a good head of hair than to grow one, that every one whose hairisbegin- / ning to FALL OUT | - should TAKE It in time and save Iit. While we can not turn a WHITE hair back to its original@s solor, we can most \ surely ARREST Iits turning gray. " THEN WHY NOT USE AFTER US For salo by all Ilvmlill’." l:'rlur ) ;,‘.'.,.h,.'.::":"' B s ook, . Address, THE BENTON HAR- 0 o0 © ) amabiat Snd PREVENY fiurr. — | | | FIREWORKS, FLAGS, BALLOONS, Tirs Crackers Topedos, 40 Juy Goods SEND FOR PRICE ‘LIST TO THE HEADQUARTERS. Mo X Meyer & Co. } | Anheuser-Busch ... BREWING ASSOCIATION | CELEBRATED Keg and Bottled Beer Thie Excellent Beer speaks for itselt, ORDERN FROM ANY PART OF THE “umsfl?,flus STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, < STUBUISMO Will be Promptly Shipped. ALL OUR G0ODS ARE MADE T0 THESPANDARD OfOurG-uarantee. GEORGE HENNING, ! Sole Agont for Omaha and the West. Office Corner 13th and Harney Streets 'E. B. CHAPMAN & (O, Wholesale Grocers ! 1213 Farnam St., Omaha, Neb. v Double and Single Acting Power and Hand PUMES, STEAM PUMPS, Belting, Hose, Brass and Irow i Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, ; HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, € Steam Packing at wholesalo and rejail. AND SCHOOL BELLS, Corner 10th Farnam St., Omaha Neb. - SALEM FLOUR. bis Tufs Flour i mado ab Sales hardwon Cor, Nehruka, o the C give EXCLUKIVE aalo of our 0 ono firu) in & place. We have open Omahi. Writo for Prices. Addross oither VALEBENTINE o REPPY, Balem or Omaha,’ Neb. od Roller Bono Bystem. We o branch at 1618 Capitol avenue n10mko-0in WILSON’'S ler and Suegt ron Works | OMAHA, - - NEBRASKA, For You, Whose Complexion betrays | some humiliating imperfec- tion, whose mirror te you that you are Tanned, Sallow and disigured in “counte- nance, or kave Eruptions, | Redness, Roughness or un- wholesome tints of Complex- | ion, we say use Hagan’s Mag- | nolfa Balm, ‘ It is a delicate, harmless | and delightfid article, pro- ducing the most natural and entrancing tints, the artifici- | ality of which mno observer can detect, and which soon heeomes permanent if the Magnolia Balm 18 judiciously used, Build all kinds of Steam B Pliteire Done at Eastern Prices and Warranted ! Socond-hand Boilors will be kepton hand, Having bl many years experiencein the trade n difterent parts of the conntry, Lam confident | car givo satisfaction, Lasing the best shop nd tools in tho State. ~Shop cor, 19t Plerce Street J. M. WILSON, Proprietor. e | J. H. GIBSON, CARRIAGE AND WAGON MANUFACTORY. CORNER TWELFTIL AND HOWARD TREETE, . ODMATIZIA., - - - - - - I EER. Particular attention given to repairing. Satis ect (x yuaranteed. ke Stacks, Broc Lard, Wator and Ol Tanks, and do a geners Repairing done in City aid Country. Al work T. SINHOLD, MANUFACTURER OF Galvanized lron Comices, Window Caps, Finials Bkylighe ko ‘Thisleenth Bireeh, wa Neby

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