Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 6, 1883, Page 7

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b [ S e - . J THE DAIL Y BEE MONDAY AUGUQT 6, 1882, M WHOLESALE Weber, FOR CASH OR ON J. "COUNCIL BLUFFS 1 The following are the time of areival and dey f trains from the local depots. Tho traing start from fthe Union Pacific depot about ten minutes eatlier than below stated, and arrive at the depot about ten minutes later. ins on pool lines and K. €. run on Chieago ti ¥ faster than local Vabash trains run bulh it Doty Tanetse d Lincoln trains run on ¢ 0 p. . | P 0% 35p.m. | Counail T 945 m | Mail and Ex CHICAGO ANl XORTHWESTRIY part. 816 p. m. . m, . m, . 1, Expross Mail and Ex USION PACIFIC. . m, . 1, Aarive, OverlandEx. . 4: Denver Ex cal WAnABH, BF. OIS AND FAGIHIC Depart. Arrive. 45 8. m. | Mail and Ex Cannon Ball. . 4:50 p. m. | Cannon Ball BIOUX CITY AND PACIFIC. Arrive x City0:50 p. Fort Niobrara Neb .8 m. | From St. Panl’ CHICAGO, MILWAUKER AND KT, PAUL . ., m. m. L. Loaves Omal Mail and Ex 5 & m. | Pacific Atlantic Ex. ... 8:40 p. m. | Mail and Ex . m, ., All trains dail CHICAGO, MILWAUKER AN Leaves Council Bluffs. Al Mail and Ex a. m, [ Mail and g Atlantic EX....15:15 p. m. | Atlantic Ex .. COUNCIE KLUVYS AXD OMANA STREKT RAILWAY, Leave Council Bluffs. Leave Omatia. 8a.m fa. m10am. 11a, [8a. m. Da, m. 1p.m. 2p, m.8p.md|a mim P.m.5p. . 6p. m. 4 X Street cars run half Imurl\ lvv the Unios depot. s begin their trips at 0 o'clock a. m., and run rly during the day.at 9, 11, 2, 4, 5, and 6 o' clock, and run to city tiu Health is Wealth for Hysteria, Dizziness, Convi Neuralgia, 'Headache, Nervous use of al hol or tobacew, ftening of the d Jeading to matire Old. Age, B treatment. 8100 a box, or 1t by mail prepaid on receipt SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received by ue for six boxes accompanied with 5,00, we willsend the urchaser our written guarantee torefund the money [f'thie treatment does not affoct a cure. Guarantees seued only by C. F. GOODMAN wl Druv’ ist .Omaha Neb IJI? FELIX LE BRUN'S AND FOR EITHER SEX. This remedy being injected directly to the seat of the disease, requires no change of diet OF nauscous, ‘mercurial of poisonous m 3 to be taken intern” ally. When used as a preventive by cither sex, it is impossible to contract any private disease; but in the case of those already unfortunately afflicted we guar- antee three boxes to cure, or we will refund the money. Prico by mail, postage paid, 82 per box, or three boxes for 85, WRITT! UARANTE! issued by all authorized agents. Dr Felix LeBrun &Co This Electric Belt \nll Cure the Follow- ing Diseases Without Medicine, s in the Back, Hips, Head or Limbs, Nervons Lumbago, Debility, Rhenmatism, uralgia, Sciatica, Discase of tho Kidneys forpid Liver, Gout, Sexual Exhais- minal Emissions, Asthma, Heart Dis Dyspepsis, Constipation, Erysipelas, Indiges | Hernia or Rupture, Impotency, Catarrh, Piles, | Tesy, Dumb Ague, Omaha Testimonial. Oxana, Niw., April | DR. W, J. Horx, 191 Wabash'Avent DrAR Sik—1 purchased one of yeur Electric elts in Denver, Colo., December, 1852, ™ It relieved the pain neys and ‘stengthened them so that more trouble. Thespinal irritrtion it re: lately which nothing could have done. sults in each case more than otor any one to these ps Respectfully, 3 Capitol ave., Omal MAIN OFFICE— Opposite Postoffice, Frenzer Block i ga'For Sale at C. F. Goodman's Drig store, 1110 Farnam Street, Onaha ST, LOUIS PAPER WAREHOUSE. Graham Paper Co, 217 and 219 North WHOLESALE IPAPERS ENVELOPES, CA PRINTERS’ STOCK, DEALE BOOK, NEWS, ( WRITING, LW g WhA D BOARD AND £ Cash paid for Rags and Paper 8 ck, Serap I and Meta Paper Stock Warchouses, 1229 to 1227 North Six trect. way24-3m PERSON.A X, Tt o t y enlarged, Joped and strengthen rtisemient long run in - % wo will say that there Js iumbug about this. On the contrary, ghly indorsed. Interested hunm ete. paper. o v the advertisers arc ver PALACE MUSIC HALL The Largest and Most Reliable House for Il Famy Gools. IN THE Lindeman and Hardman Piancs, Western, Eastern, Cottage, Burdette Organs, MUELLER, WEST. AND RETAIL. TIME PAYMENTS, TOWA Westérdfinmice-Wufis. IRON AND SLATE ROOFING. C. SPECHT, PROP. 1111 Douglas St. Omaha, Neb. MANUFACTURER OF Galvanizen Iron Cornices) £ar Dormer Winaows, Finials, Tin, Tron and Slate Roofing, Speoht’s patent Metaflio Skylight, Patent adjusted Ratchet Bar and Bracket Shelving. 1 am the general agent for the above line of goods. Tron Fencing, Crestings, Balustrades, Verandas, Iron Bank Raiungx, Window Blinds, Cellar Guards: also general agent for Pecrson & Hill patent Inside Blind. $200 A YEAR CAN BE SAVED IN THE LIVING EXPENSES OF THE FAMILY by the use of Rex MAaxus, The Humiston Food Pre- servative. It preserves Meat, Fish, Milk, Cream, Egys, and all kinds of Animal Food fresh a; t for weeks, even in the hottest weathor. This can be proved the testimonials of hundreds who have tried t. ‘Youcan prove it for yourself for 50 cents. You will find that this isan article which will save you a great deal of money. NO SOURED MILK. NO _SPOILED MEAT, NO STALE EGGS. o STALE POTS. ill keep them fresh and sweet for many days es ot fmpart th test forcign taste to the s treated. 1t ple_in operation that a child can follow the s, s as harmless as salt and costs only a fraction of 'a cent to a pound of meat, fish, butter or cheese or to aquart of milk. This {s no humbug; it is cndorsed by such men ns Prof. Sam'l W. Johnson of Yale College. Sold by druggists and grocers, Sample pounds sent pre-paid by il or express (as we prefer) on receipt of pri Name your express office. Viandine brand for meat; n Wave for fish and se , butter and ch RE ACKNOWLEDGED T0 B THE BEST BY ALL HAVE PUT THEM TO A PRACTICAL TEST. ADAPTED TO Hard and Soft Coal, COKE OR WO00D. MANUFACTURR BUCK STOVE CO, [ SAINT LOUIS, Pierc/ & Bradford. BOLE AGENST FOR OMAHA HURERKA Was the exclamation of of Eureka Pile Ointment, cure for Piles and ol & tnall, postpaid. The American Diarrhea Cure Han tood the test for twenty years. all. Never Fails, Diarrhaea, Dysenta ra Morbus. Deane’s Fever aud Agug Tonic & Cordial, 1t is Jmpossible to supply the rapid sale of the same, SURE CURE WARRANTED For Fever and Ague, and all Malarial troubles, PRICE, §1.00, W.J.WHITEHOUSE LABORATORY, 16TH ST., OMAHA, NEB. For Sale by all Druggists mbet_ nd sure Sure cure for , and Chole- Or sent by Express on receipt of price. Himebangh & Taylor | OFFER§A NEW STOCK OF HARDWARE FULL ASSORTME OF BUILDERS’' MATERIAL. Carpenter and west styles in Bropze Goods. iuists- Tools Warranted Cutlery and Buf- falo Scales. OMAHA 1425 Dougl. Strect, ) DUFRENE & MENDELSSOHN, ARCHITE GTS 24T REMOVED 1O OMAHAINATIONALIBANK B HOUSE, Consulting and Civll Englnger and |} SURVEYOR. Special attention to Surveying Town Addi ons ana ‘ rsons may get sealed circulars giving all particulars r addressing Eric Medical Co. 0, box blx Buffalo, = v R S Lots, es Estiniates of Excavations, Making May orfi STHE FIRST NATIONALJBANK, ; ~OMAHA, NEB. [ perity of the empire. | future, Russia. | been doing in | and ought to do NEW RUSSIA The Crar's Pulicv for the Fatare---A | Strong Desire for Peace. Commercial Development Ohject of His Policy Nihilist Plots, A Great | St. Petersburg Letter in New York Times, of Moscow are Czar Alexan- o gone into partial The cororiation day now a matter of history der IIT has once mc retirement at Peterho after the arduous labors at his ancient capital, and probably no one needs rest more than the newly crowned czav, if it be not the czarina, who shared all her husband’s joys and dangers during the long weeks of the festivities For now that it is all over it becomes known bit by bit how great were the precautions that were considered neressary for the protection of the imperial lives, and how near the nihilist conspirators were con- stantly to the person of the czar, We know that the police made many arrests of suspicious persons during the time of the fetesand a Bavarian oflicer told me how he had seen with his own eyes a_lackey, who stood immediately behind the emperor in the pavilion as he watched the popular fetes, suddenly and noisely arrested and taken away. The night before the czar returned to St. Petersburg it is known that the police of the capital were busily employed in send- ing divers inte the canals in places imme- diately beneath the bridges along the Neffsky, in search for explosives, and when the imperial party returned to the capital on Sunday morning the thousands of people who had stood for hours on the streets leading from the Kasan cathedral to the quay near the Winter palace were deeply disappointed when they learned that the czar had suddenly orderod his conchman to drive down to the river by another route. That the emperor’s life was in danger all the time is a very gen- eral belicf, and the wife of a dist nguished diplomatist assured me that m-urly all the high personages with whom she had con- versed while in Moscow felt assured of the emperor’s safety only so long as the empress was at his side. And she "went everywhere with him, as he was driven through the streets of Moscow, bow- ing and smiling to the people, as if she felt no fear and knew that she was the guardian angel of the man who sat by her side. < ‘ THE PEASANTS' HOPES, The Russian peasant has long ago come to the conclusion that he has nothing to hope for from the agitations of the nihi- lists, whose enthusiasm based on the pro- foundest ignorance mixed with cheap German philosophy, have nothing tangi- ble about them, and whose adoption by him has hitherto brought him no benefit. If the Russian government of the past has been n rent in its duties to the peop! wder 111, has shown ever since hi< accession to the throne his desire to rectify public abuses and to stop the progress of extr nce and theft that have so long undermined the pros- Official robbers have been arrested by scores and se ly punished by him; he has reduced the expenses of his court, given up many im- | perial palaces for public offices and na- tional ~ educational establishments, has | n example of moral rectitude i his | private life and public action, and has, m short inspired the people with confidence that he intends to labor solely | nd conscientiously for their | welfare | and for the prosperity of Russia in the fu- | ture. PLANS FOR THFE FUTURE. |I""“‘“ wlth foreign nations is very clearly | expressed by the Emperor in his rescript |to M. Do Giers, which, his Majesty s sures the world, has been chosen to ]u- the expression of his wishes as against wrope. We all know that this rescript | had & very soothing influence, moro specially in Vienna, where the fear of a onflict with Russia about the settlement of the Oriental question had become chronic. M. De Giers' note to the re | presentatives of Russia abroad increased | the satisfaction felt in other capitals at | this peacefui prospect for the future—all | the mere because the Minister of Foreign Affairs, whose duty was mere ly to thank the rovereigns of foreign Powers in the name of the Emperor for the proofs of | friendship they had shown in sending re presentatives to the Moscow fetes, went further to assure them that these proofs of friendship which the Czar had received were regarded by him (the Crzar) as a pledg harmony and peace, the main taining of which coincided so completely with his own wishes. L — *Among the most efficacious of reme dial agents are the medical proparations from the laboratory of Mrs, Lydia E. Pinkliam, Lynn, Mass, e A CLEVER COUPLE. Lot Two Western Men Who Bought tery Tickets in Partnership And Divide $15,000 Be- tween Them, New Orleans Picayune July 14, Yestorday afternoon two gentlemen of good apperance presented themselves at the oftice of The Louisiana State Lottery Company to collect £15,000, one-fifth of the capital prize drawn by ticket No. 37, 8, at the last monthly drawing on the 10th One Gns ;Botto proprietor of the Grand Opera Salson, Cairo, 111, and the other A. B. Gibson, of Carmi, Ill., a passenger conductor on the Cairo Divis- ion_of the Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific Railroad. ““We're in partnership in this ticket,” said one of them toa reporter. **We've been taking tickets together for six months. About three weeks before the drawing we contributed five dollars apiece and invested in ten one-fifth tick- ets. We only paid one dollar for this lit- tle piece, but it brought us (815,000) fif- teen thousand dollars.” Mr. Botto explained that he had been playing lottery on his own account for ten fenr:. He won 8150 the month before ast, and has also got his money back on an approximation prize in the drawing just over. Mr. Gibson also played before and since the partnership, but never had the good fortune to win until his haul of fif- teen thousand dollars at one time. “How did you become aware of your having won?{” “*A dispatch reached Cairo soon after the number whieh drew the capital e of 875,000 had been announced,” said Mr. Botto. . “Mr. Gibson was on his in and was telegraphed to come to Cairo immediately. He came, and together with Messrs H. H, Melner and.J. M. Booker us invited guests, wo started off for New Orleans to collect the money and have a little fun.’’ Mr. Gibson is o Kentuckian and ried. He has been in his prosent po tion on the railtond since 1876, M. Botto has been in Cairo since 1865, and has always been engaged in the saloon business. Thoy said that they had not decided what to do with the magnificent veturn of the one dollar investment. Joth are comfortably established, but it possible they may form o partnership to conduct some business in the near future, hook hands with the f 3 | s, $15,000 was handed over future is not yet revealed fully to the| flice, world. This will be a_matter for the " e T consideration of his ministers and his ad- 7 g visers in the imperial council Ho has| Vertigo, Hysterics, Convulsions—all begun, however, by some notable meas- ures for the benefit of the peasantry and some carnest advice to them not to be led astray by the fantasies of agitators who u; them to claim a di land, but to listen to the advice of their natural leaders, the nobles, whomn (the Czar) will look to in the future to assist him_in the great work of elevating the wdition of the peasant and educating him so that he may be able to take an intelligent share in the work of his own redemption. The question before the ar was very clearly put before him-— either he must resign the reins of govern- ment and the task of elevating his people into the hands of socialistic agitators « reinstate himself at once and forey the rightful ruler of his empire and the wise ruler of his people, And, in_spi of threatened assassination, he has chosen w do as the Russian people expocted of | him and to take the reins of rulership i to his own hands. And everywhere in Russia the mation has be hailed | with joy, as marking the boundary li between the davk past and a brighter w the dawn of anew day for| a NOT READY FOR A CONSTITUTION, think that a single diplomat- Moscow gvill express him- of Russia alim- I scarcel 15t who was self in at the | not be found in the world. pression carried aw. nder 111 1 and healthy-minded people to deal with, and that lie magnificent chance before him to ‘m\. the worth of the autocratic system which | he represents. He has n-hody to thwart | A loyal, devoted super nhlllvnn him but his own ministers and officials, | t hias unlimited power to clevate his people | and to make doubly good the sins and shortcoming of the officials of his prede- | And the flrst thing the czar will | have to abolish is the odious mir, which, highly praised by some fanatics, is the source of most of the evils that afflict the peasant, and which has nentralized all that was of beuefit in Czar Ale: uulu 1's measure for cimnncipating the serfs. A [ hundred or wor prasniks,” or holidays, be blotted out to advi gl the absurdities of polic | ulations and petty annoyances removed | at once and forever, As a St. Petersh s¢ in inst the last emperor, and who finally | eeded in killing him, lived in th capital under the protection of the police, or passports duly & t it would take nan; I to say what the ez intends to'do, He has all unity of doing and had most | 1ed I weale much better than either socialist awi tati representative parliament, has nothing to thwart his THE DESIRE FOR PEACE, About one thing M, De Giers, the Mi nister of Foreign Atlairs, is decisive, namely, in wishing me to e fact that the policy of the ( phasize the I is essentially one of p for the reason that he is very desirous of giving every attention to internal affairs and improving the intrusted to condition of his care. the le This desire for ar Alexander | nervous disorders in fact Samaritan Nervin “This certifies,” writes D. D. Christ- man, of Oswego, Ind., “‘that Samaritan Nervine cured me of Epileptic fits.” At Druggists, $1.50. — A Novel Clock, Eight years ago George O. Hol of Newport R. T, an honest and industrious citizen, a watchmaker by trade conceived are cured by a novel idea in the shape of a clock. He drow frequent designs upon the white walls of his kitchen, one of which met the approval of his estimable wife, who died about four years ago. He uuqu]]y studied the matter, but neverallowed his most intimate friends to know what he was engaged in doing, He devoted his evenings to the task before him, and act- ually consumed 170 days of ten hour each inperfecting a‘clock the like of which can The finish- ing touches were added to tha timekeep- er a few wecks ago, and the monument of skill, industry and enterprise of an adopt- zen was shown to his friends, ull of | whom had beew ignovant of what he had o, The clock has on beating one second at = ly one movement, a time, and from the hand part of the movement, all the other hands—cighteen in numb are connected. The de is furnished with nine dials, indicating the time at St. Petersburg, Newport New York, San Francisco, Boston, Geneva, scca (Arabia), Rome, and London. Tt | has fifty three wheels. All the hands are driven by one mainmovement, which is furnished with two main-springs, and caleulations have be n made to have all ime indicators run for nine conseeu- tive days without winding. They ave all run by oscillating power—that is to say, that all the nine movements form the pendulum ball, which is connected with the pendulum rod. On top of the pend- ulum rod is the pendulum spring on which the whole clock rests, Itis over four feet long and about two feet in wid- |lv The dials are set in a sev a dial being in cach ¢ ||u wpert dial in the cen | port dial is also set in the b -pointed | with A New- , this be vog. | g for the special use of the maker, who | has the clock set in t) Jewelry store on of window Thames stroat, his | The | paper very truly remarked a fow days “,,,", main movement is fastened between two | ll'the nihilist conspivators who plotted | Plates as lu o a8 the whole star on the back and the works can be taken out of | each clock and cleancd in a few minutes thout disturbing any of the others, woodwork represents the order of Odd-Fellowship, of Mr. Herrmann i a member e carving of the and heg cronk, three link whicl: Low the is wrows, th bundle of reinarkably th , ofe, art of clock, including the woodwork, except the hands, is mado by Mr. Herrmann who might be expected, is proud of the success of his years of toil and labo The clock attracts a deal of attention, the sidewalk in fronte of Mr. Heremann's plice of business being ed with peaple Mr, lu,‘,,l. G. ¥ Sherbrooke, Cana., queror of pain, St. | selling article he | trade. repeatedly block e lton, druggist at says that the con Jacobs OLl, is the best ever handled in his | WASHINGTON NOTES [ Brer Peter, An Old-Time Nenru ‘ Prnacncr ; A Practical Joke Played on Soth ~How Grant Secured His Ap- pointment to West Point, Washington Correspondent to Philadelphia Recow The old-time Hu kinky wisdom, are negro preachors, black, fat, oily old sinners, whose | gray wool covored so much fast dying out in the south, We see and hear them overy year. Their | places are passing to better if not bright or men, the young graduates of the post bellum colleges and seminaries, and they | themselves are swiftly crossing the rush ing “Jordan,” with'the fields of living | green full in view In their day these shrewd old Africans were a power, They could do more with the f-starved souls | they had to foed and guide, than all the whito she pherds in the country put to gether, Unlearned and untraveled, they exerted a tremendous influence, and 1 like to think that on the whole it was used for good, Whatover may be the truth — of listory in " this particular, itis certain that no similar set of men ever did so much to make the world laugh and grow fat. The best stories you hear in the south are about the negro preachors, and the best amuse- ment you can offer in the average south- ern town is a sermon by the local Brer Jasper, who moralizes with soul tickling gravity about something of which he knows nothing until you feel your sides ache with suppressed laughter. One of these ancient worthies is before my mind no He answors to the general dos tion, faded and gre broadeloth and battered beaver included, and we'll call him Brer Poter. When the Fedral army and the army of sutlers which followed it first struck the black districts in the south the negroes of those districts tirst made the acquaintance of fedoral pape money. Many of them were «mp\mml in the quartermaster’s or commissionary's department, and at the end of the month were paid $20 or 830 —extravagant wages tomen who had never had wages befo and would have beon perfectly willing to serve *‘Lincum’s s ' for rvations and clothes. They were paid in paper money. For the first six weeks or 80 in every district the sutlers flourished like green bay troes. The negroes couldn’t tell o & bill from $1 bill or a 50-cent, note from a quarter. They bought from the sutlers for the sake of buying; he gave them what they asked for or what looked like it and some change, and they who had everything they were accustomed to have before they went to the sutlor didn'’t care whether he gave them two ones or two fives in change. Brer Peter, who was much sharper than his flock, soon found out that they were boing fleeced right and left. So, ona Sunday morning when his little meeting-house was filled with soldiers and sutlers, Brer Peter announced: “My tex’ will be foun’ in_the book of Genesis, chapter first ‘Now de sarpient was sutler dan de udder beas’ ub de fiel,” " and then he riddled “‘dem sutlers” for an hour. It was Brer Peter who referred to the mysterious ways of an “‘unserupulous Providence” after his house was burned down; who prevented a glib white recruiting officor from Illinois desirous of addressing the flock, with a view to filling the quotas of some <northern regiment as DBy gadeh Gineral Littlefield. as it were, and who asked the Lord in a prayer fol- lowing the stupid sermon of a white Drother who had invited himself to fill Brer Peter's pulpit to “‘bress the words which hab fallen from the sinful and pu]. luted lips of thin unworthy servant.’ But Brer Peter's crowning achiev munl was in the matter of the n tificates. He came to a fr who had a printing shop in his town, ono day and asked in low and somewhat mys- terious tones whether he had any of “‘them pretty pictures, ’stificates or some name like that, the white people hang on the wall to show that they're married.” He had “‘seed” them, he said, and he wanted some like them. My friend said he could not make them; they w graved. “Yos, yes,” broke in Peter, ““a man and a woman standing to- gother and a preacher joiningtheirhands. Very pretty, very pretty.” tinued my fr “but you'd have to y 1, send to the north for them, and they would be expensive.” “All right, ail right,” said Brer Peter, “I want them, Send for them; send for a hundred, and then print a hundred cheap ones without any pictures for m | engr tificates of marringe arrived from the north. They were more expen- sive than my friend had expected. *“They cost 25 cents a picce,” he told Brer Peter, rather expecting that he would have to send them back. ““All right, all right, said Brer P Here's the mone high feather, end thought that two hundue ringe certificates ought to last one negro preazher a year or two at least. Ina little more than a month Brer Poter surprised him by returning went in it be a secret atwe W 'l ‘Al suid nu and you, o for them wy friend. *Y give you b0 cents a pic id right,” Brer Poter, “‘anil get a lot of them, s 1 can come to you ¢ a8 many as 1 want every tim y well,” waid my friend, and he did, Ho sold Brer Peter a thousand in a little over a a hundred or 8o at a time. Then hie began to investigate. He found that the smart old rascal had gone to every old ouple in the country side for miles and miles, had told them that General | Grant llmlllu ared all the ante-bellum i o8 “‘no account,” had issucd llmnulllulnlhllllll) must be re-performed in order to validate them, and had sent a supply of certificates to Bror Peter, which, | | hung upon the walls of the cabins, were to authenticate the new marriages to all futures generations, His news power fully affected the women cven where it didi’t touch the men, s of | them wanted that * wot it—for fifty ce an additional mary ever and prety picture und Brer Peter got of #2 in each wfortable house Case He live on the spacious Lot he wmade out of this ingenious trathic Then, as now, Grant's name was one to conjure with in the black districts I— TRYING TO REACH CHINA, A Gas-Well Which is Already et Deep. Four Thousand I Wheeling (W. Vi) Register The MeGuigan gas-well, the light from | which can be seen from the top of Wheel an t 3y-and-by the with: “Can’t you get me some more of these stificates, They'r s hot cakes.” “Yes,” said my [ ml, i pu ded way, *Vos,” cchoed Brer Petor, | “and, boss, T want to make a bargain with you. T don’t want you to sell these | stiflicates to anybody else, nor to toll nobody else where I gets them, Just let They | FURNITURE! THE. VHEAPFPEG" PLACE IN OMAHA TO BUY Furniture —]S AT DEWEY & STONES They always have the largest and best stock. NO STAIRS TO CLIMB ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR TO THE DIFFERENT FLOORS ing hill, is the pionver gas-well of this vi cinity. Tt led toall of the others now SHORT W tions—all of which are furm- making such a turmoil in this vall 1t ished by the greatest railway in America. was sunk for oil, not gas, and the great gaseous reservoir was tapped unawares, (caco, [V iLWAUKEE And St. Paul. Just three miles nearer us the Buchanan Ttowns and operates over 4,500 miles of road in well was sunk, and is now the deepest well in the world, having reached 4,300 foet, and is still going down. When a depth of about 3,000 feet had been reach «d the tools broke and were left Northern llinois, Wisconsin, Minnosota, Towa and Dakota; and as its main lines, brancl tions reach all the great Husiness o , 1t naturally answors the Ll Bost Routo botween there, and for some time the well was €. Paul and Mnneapolis. The use of the term ** Shord in connection with the rate name of & greate) conveys an idea of just whal geanired by the traveling pub: lic-a Shert Line, Quick deserted. Then a new concern took hold of it and is now vigorously drilling fo the greasy fluid. The rope broke in March, and the cable, between four and five thousand feet length in and weighing several tons, parted several | Northwest and Far We fForts | deseription of Short Lirn Chicago, Milwaukee, Chicago, hundred feet from the top, and all e to catch hold of it and draw it out with the great iron shaft or drill at its lower end failed. The workmen were then discharged, and the public supposed the woll abandoned. Supt. Crocker had no thought of quitting the work. Addi- tional tools were procured, and on the 11th inst. work was resumed. The well, which was dry, was filled with water, to assist in floating the cable, a proper in- strament was inserted, and the rope was caught and lifted out. It was supposed that after getting the rope taut a *‘sucker| puliman Steepers and the Finest Dining Cars in the rod” would have te be sent down to|worldare run on ¢ nllnwullhfi% \f@fi loosen it from the deill at the bottom, as| MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL RAILWAY that was fast and could not be lifted with | ous empioyes of the company. the weakened rope. Fortunately tho Milwauke Milwaukee, Aberdoen and Milwaukee, Eau Claire and Milwaukee, Wausau and Merrill. Milwaukee, Beaver Dam and Oshkosh. Milwaukee, Waukesha and Oconemowoo. Milwaukee, Madison and Prairio du Chien. Owatonna and Sairibault. nosville and Mineral Point. in, Rockford and Dubuque. nton, Rock Island and Cedar Rapids. luffs and Omaha, Chic Davenport, Calmar, St. Paul and Minneapol . rope cut itself offt whero it was attached | 8. s. MERRILL AV murwnu. to the shaft, and thus saved|, a wront denl of trouble. The next thing to do was to remove the water from the well and pumping was resorted to, when nearly a | barrel of very fine crude oil was obt The well is cased to the depth of twelv or fourteen hundred feet, and is dry. When the water is removed, which will b donein n day or two, a “spear” will he sent down after the drill, and no difticul- ty is anticipated in bringing it to the sur face. When this is accomplished the work of deepening the well will be recom menced. Mr. Crocker states that the machinery he has on the ground will en- able him 'to go 500 fect deeper, and by increasing its power he could go to the depth of 7,000 feet, but he hopes: to reach oil in paying quantities at a small addi- tional depth. —— | Real Lstate Transf | The following deeds were filed for ro- cord in the county clerk’s office, August 4, reported for the Bee by P. J. Me- | Mahon, real estate agent: J. P. Casady to 1 , 2 and 3, block 81,1560, 8wxft’s Speclfic A. Sprague, lots William's, st add; 15, Tt th 1o harpos Thomas Bowman to e lot 22, block 23, Burns, add; $5 mkertoJans C. Pete utsman’s, 2d add; $ N. Casady, to '\lm;.uwt n, Curtis and Namsey's, Louise Feue Iut 8, block P, After suffering twenty-five y tetter,and tryin by the u ’ | e b s stuminrly, atheto ward will be paid to an; MI’?‘\AI l?\uoll nuu the analysis of 100 bottles one particle of Mercury, lodide Potassiun mineral substance. Swmith, nw }, THE swlwr l. lot G, plo add; §500. W. B. Booth to Hiram ne §, 8, 74, 39; 8700. Botty Bardsley to D. J. ne * , 78, 42, $700. M E. Booth, s 3, ing double 1antity) $1. it. T. R, Bardsley to ned, 26, 77, 4%; $700, J. F. Clattenbuck to J. lot 11, block b, Streets’s add; $400. Henry Gittins to Lars Jensen, ne}, swj, D. J. Smith, sw DR. WHITTIER, ?. Hamilton, 0. Emma C. Millett to lots 13 and 14, block I, Stuttman’s, 2d A REGULAR GRADUATE of two medical coll {lot 2, Dlock 2, subdivision of Mill lot; | §260. John L, Howe to James W. 5, block 3, Casady's add; £1,000, Total sales, 6,820, Mtration, Dol Civegy, lot | Skiu and Bones, Blood Impurities and Blood_Pol ing, Skin affections, Ol Sores and Uloers, Tnip ments to Marriage, Rheumat i overworked brain, welal attention, pradence o, | TELEGRAPHIC MATTER. iy Our latest correspondence, May 16, 1585, brings to s the narrative of Henr igramm, the General as the narrative of Henry B, Ingran wral ol ok M Superintendent of the District Mossenger Co, of Now marey, whonay i G-I TID X, why, catises, conmequences and o re. POStage oF stamps, ' Mr, Ingram says: “For many months | 1had heen sorely troubled with a weak a fouling across the loiny, almost invari 1 had noticed al accompan fed with a headache thatat stated periods following these pains my urine would bo exceines or other causes ate abied, A4 unsble b8 highly colored, and leave & heavy brick-colored sed i fment when allswed to stand in the vessel, uld not work,and I was discours Nothing helped me. | was prescribod for by some of the hest physicians In New York city, where 1 was located at that time, but ¢ Ived no benefit or relief. When alimost ready to give up in despaie i tance said to me, ‘1 want you to try Hunt's Reu 1did 5o, and hardly twenty-four hours had clapsed | before | obtained relict, wnd in threc s thmo all the aforesald ailments had disap) and 1 im prosed steadily, and was infased with new life, so 1 eould rosume my husines again, which § that i i L0 | Bubjects me to trains of all kinds, which are likely to rw. effect the kidneys, nunely: Erecting tolograph and \ telophione lines. Hunt's e W occugies the most honored place in 1y eabinet liclies. 1 would 1ot be without it, and § cheertully and heart iy r wend it 10 all who are tronbled with d , kiduey, or urinar wis Itnever fally 803 5. 10th St., Omaha, TOWN CLERK FORTY-TWO YBARS o foll f from Mr. Othnell 1 and respected Town Gl i trust for 42 years, and 1543, ho wri v i with disea Physical Deformities, Hip and Spinal Diseases, Club F Bow Legs, Knock-knees, ete, cars 1 have sudere { the Kiduoy s and Trussos repaired. nd have Crutches made to order. Hunt his 10 hesitancy i recommending it e for these complainty th of relieving me of terri- | Repairing of all kinds done eh ) promptly et |y P WEBER & 00, u performing the dutivs of the oo 803 5. 10th St., Owmaha, lo pain, but has cu cor. Today | of Town Clork, walch | have held far forty-two yoars 1l able ¢ ot in w fal awitig to the use of Hunt's Remedy.” which 1 eould Stuto of health o hs eured me of Serofula, which is 1 with it for s Spoifle [ was in a hor- but thanks 4o this groat remedy, [ it C. E. Perkins, trustee, to W. Stull, A L and 1 hoeany whe lots 6 and 7, block 10, Eubank's, 20 add} ¢tome. o §100. Clarsyille, Ga. vy with a painful dry 4, 1 was ot lnst re- , and cheerfully or any A Write opy of the little honk —free. ary . Totten to Peter Brenholin, | price: small s, $1:00 per bottle, Lange size (hold- lot 2, block 156, Hall's, ndd; $150. 76 bottle. Al druggists sell W, Sicdontopt, | 677 St, Charles St,, St. Louis, Mo, ger in the treatment of CHRON- M. I(uun-m to W. Siedentopf, lot 4, N'AND BLOOD Discases than any | block 1, Hillsdale, add; in- lot 7, block g;,";'l"“"""" i 8% Toals, ay city papers AN AR 23, Mlllliu'n sub. in lot 13, block 48, “Lm city for treat- Riddles sub; §100. i orexires every: Mary B. Swan to Martin Roberson, Rhle; caach: 13 Whero doubbigKs al and Physieal s of Throad, Spocial ab SURGICAL Diseascs arising Imlulx»n;. uuul oe m‘ | A BOOE T0 MEN Make Braces for the Correction of BUT Knees, Trusses of the Best Make kept on Hand Swall Jobs of all Kinds done in steel, fron and weeds Py neat and

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