Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
3 THE DAILY BEE --OMAHA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1883, —x N THE GMANA BEE. $10.00 Three Months 6.00 | One Month..... PRIMARY FDUCATION. Our public schools will reopen Mon lay, and we deem it proper t» urge upon tho superintendent apd board of educa- tien the primary importance of the srimary schools, In Omaha, as olse- +here, the relative proportion of those vho complete their elementary education w graduating in the high school form a very rmall fraction of those who receive their education at the public expense. Fully fifty per cent of the pupils in the public schools do not pass beyond the rimary grades, In other words, out of Drafta, Cheoks and Postoifice orders te be Tade pay- | 100 boys and girls who enter to the o hogh bbb Aimary schools only ahout 50 go any THE BEB BUBLISHING CU., PROPS‘ further up the educational grade. About E. ROSEWATER,ZEditor. thirty advance as far as the grammar —_— e | 4chools while not more than three of the original 100 who began at the bottom of the ladder ever reach the top toenter the high schools. The important fact which these statistics demonstate, is, that about one-half the children whe go to the public achools f this city enter upon their R ERCLT BN, PUSLISNNS RYRRT WRONRIDAY, wERNS ponTEAID, .$2.00 | Three Months. . 71,00 | Oue Month American News Company, Sole Ageats orw i the United States, CORRRAFORDENCR, Oommunications relating to News and Rditoris) matbons shoul e a1 reced to' the EorTon o0 Twr B L * owadeal. PRI, LTIERA, AW Business Tottors and Hewmittances should e to THr BER PURLISIING COMPANY, Ir was eminently proper for the repub lican governor of Nebraska to appuint ax judge of this disteict a democrat who re mained at home during the entire wai and was classed in those times amony “gopperheads.” But it is high treason for Tue Bre to declare that it would ; i under cortain conditions support for | ife-work with no more education than supremo judge a democrat who gallantly | they can pick up at the primary school, wont forth to save the union and braved | #hile the remaining 25 per cent leave the perils of war for four long years. whool when, or perhaps before they - have gone through a secondary course. ¥ KNEvALs' agent visited this place the The moral of these frwf- i? 80 ‘lein uvuu first of the weok, and deposited a lot of [ there can be no disputing it. Since twice del'ld- for fl:’"fl "m‘ ';‘ed u--iflydlth;ir as many pupn.nmdnd the primlryllchl:'olu willingness to accept his tyranical €e | a4 go to any other department, and about mands —Superior ~(Nuckolls County) .m:-hflf ofy them g!n nowhare else, the id, H;r:m sottlers evidently do not foel primary schools deserve and demand the " Jromise made on | Tgest share of attention and their &:;axh:;:";yfl‘;,:";; O ames. Laind | *Biciency should bo raised to the highest some weeks ago. Knevals was well sttainable standard of excellence. satisfied, and treated Mr. Laird and his associates with a champagne supper at Delmonico's That ought to have satis fied the settlers also, but they evidently do not appreciate what was done for them. Just as we are entering the month with the regulation *‘r” in it the report comes all the way from Chesapeake bay that a fatal desease has broken out among the Ogysters. This is sad news but we suspect the report has merely been sent abroad to afford excuse to oyster dealers for disposing of last years stale crop. _— In the beginning of the centary there was & most bitter prejudice among a large olass of Georgians against the establish- WEST OF THE MISSOURI. ment of a supreme court. The smalll pg recent decision of Chief Justice number of judges and the meagro salaries | Sener, of Wyoming, in the case of the allowed them mark the deference to this | (7,ited States vs, Aloxander Swan ot al, projudice on the part of those who finally | y\joining squatters and cattle men from sucooeded in having the court created in | fanging unsold public lands, is a most 1846. It is & curious fact that the hostil- important one to the west. During the ity shown to the “"‘b“'h"“"'. of the| ust fow years stockmen on the plains court began with the Virginians in Geor- | b,y fenced in thousands of acres of pub- giny who were the most influential public | i, Jands, The evil spread to all grazing men in the atate, and who virtually gov- | digtriots and increased to such an extent erned it in the early part of the present | thay the poorer cattlemen and actual set- contury. They had carried with them to | tlorg were forced to seek redress in the Georgin a contempt for the ““law's delay” | gourts, Tho concentration of the cattle n‘uhi.bited in the Court of Appeals of {intorest in the hands of a fow non-resi- Virginia. dent syndicates added to the power of A bill is now pending before the Geor- | the usurpers, who, last spring, defied the gia legislature for the relief of the su- preme court of that state. It is proposed [ down their fences, in southern Kansas to incrense the number of judges te five wl_m,:‘ ur:ur:i 'fi do dm ‘,‘,-:Iznd out the 1 + i mi itary to take them do - and fumish oach judgo with & ateno- | o5 T, L} band of determined men, graphic clerk, Like Nubrasks, the su-| 4y hiud been cut off from water courses preme court of Georgia has only three|by the squatters, tore down the fences judges, but the Goorgia court has a vast |and have since ulljn{o{l equal rights on f i | the public lands in that region. ':i“l.tm‘.". !Ovork.. Th:;m,:. “;D ‘;ei“n(‘..n Outside the ranchmenof Wyoming, the mit in Georgia and the docket of ils| qegiyion meets with unqualtied approval highest court has contained cases involv- | and praise. The Cheyenne Sun, spunk- ing as little money as one dollar and a|ing of its effect on the territory, says : quarter. Thero is naturally an abun- “It will remove the barriers heretofure a ¢ work. About 600 ad erected in the face of immigration, and AP O WP i cases are ad- | will aocomplish more in the work of de- judicated each year. The decision is ve- | veloping and settling up the territory quired by the state constitution to be than could be brought'about in any other ade at the term to: which the writ. of wgb{. The removal of these fences really ecror ia brought, with liberty to the judges will work good to all cattle men, because " y Judges | it will put all on the same level. Every to withhold it, when necesssry, until the | man can then take his own road unless, next term after the case is argued. In|perchance, the actual settler intervenes other words all casos must be decided | All Of the streams will not have been Nt closed to range cattle, and, in winter, ed within twelve months after they are | wpan the storms cause ti\alniodrifl,thuru ied to the appellate court. For this | will not be as many fences to bar_ their amount of work, done with this ‘‘conati- | progress and cause them to huddle in tutional haste,” the judges receive a sal- erds and perish in the pitiless storm.” of $3,000 each, The defence set up by the stockmen, ary s 3 stripped of its legal phraseology, was that the land was worthless for other than frasing purpeses aud that no attompt had o o X en made to homestead or pre-empt any The reunion of ve'eran dofenders of portion of the tracts involved. Yet it the Union, under tle suspices of the|was shown that the fonces prevented the Grand Army of the Republic, begins at |free passage of stock and debarred others Hastings to-day, Nebraska is pre-emi- :“"‘ ""l"“bfl""’“'f'p"“l u‘i'“‘"“"d tracta nently a soldier state and the reunion S pheasiie gl Jand. | The deci- H 2 sion is in accord with two decisions of promises to bring together a greater con- | the United States Supreme Court, and course of the boys who wore the blue | the statutes of March 3, 1807, which pro- than has ever been seen at any previous vides that the President shall ‘‘remove gathering. Over 6,000 veterans have aig- nified their intention of sharing together | States,” once more the pr.vations and comforts THE GRAND AKMY RIL.UNION. of army life,. Camp Bheridan, named .At h:uh noon next Saturday, the 8th,|fever and started west, while those re -M:H away $3,000 wmht.l;' l!lim jors) after the hero of Winchester, is located | with wine, wind and a golden spike, the | maining were profitably occupied in out MR, N0 A0, AEDOSE. 0650 bususes, wild, neither of .us drink. on a beautiful plat of ground, and the | junction of the Northern Pacific will be | fitting the thousands passing through, 1t q;lmh on the nine hundred large tents will afford am thousands to come from the most dis- historic memories of twenty years agoand |at 10 a. m. and end at noon, A delega share with the survivors of a bloody civil | tion of assorted nobles from Germany | the eastern papers and dilating on the vo. | B Parmalee, Mrs. David Newman and Miss | foet five inches high, of medium weight, war the reminiscences of glorious deeds |and England will be there. Hon. Wm, | periority of the route leading from each of valor, patriotism aud self-abnegation. | M. Evarts will open the ceremonies with | Particular town, The Omaha Nebraskian | Hill county, endeavored to clinch an argu- as |one of his choice paragraphs, and Secre- The programme for the reunion, outlined by Commander Bonnell, tary Teller will pronounce ths benedic. affords every assurance that the reunion [tion. The intermediate spaces in the m. will be filled out with with by Henry Villard, president of the road, and the governors of the states ‘,"‘"‘ and J Stanwell were among 1he and territoriea through which the road [ first to return from the gold diggi will be entertaining. We append bolow the outlines for the week: Tuu&y—-Pnlimiwy work in states organization and meeting of prisoners of war, and camp fire that night under their suspices. Band parade during the day, Wednesday—Grand Army day, includ- ing formation f the G. A, R. of Nebras- ka a4 a division, to be reviewed by the Deputy Commander, and marching past in review. At night a red-hot camp fire. | coach will be put on exhibition as & pass Thursday—States Day, including a|ing reminiscence. It will grand chariot drawn by & dozen horses, | Sreat rejoicing in the northwest. and carrying 88 little girls dressed in costume and representing the various |, states, together with the veritable “Brother Jonathan,” who is a live old soldier, measuring seven feet and two inches in his stockings. At night, a state cawp fire, * Friday—Morning, the competitive drill scale—principally by banquets and pyro. technics, at an estimated cost of .75,&00 Portland, Oregon, will join in the iron jubilee and drink to of Montana have made lavish prepara Pacific coast. While it is unlikely tha quite probable that the Utah Central sham battle, in which cavalry, in- |and would enable the Union and artillery will engage, closing wp with a dress parade. At night, a §00d-bye camp fire. Saturday—Leave taking and good-byes. of oattle and (200,000 head of sheep |ire | orado alone produced two-thirds, With interior department by refusing to take ¢ % | are an ‘‘expel A : ¢'Pike’s Peak or bust” with all, all intruders f lands th: A which has not p':.l:,d:u; of :h.uél;“:: was then in her swaddling clthes, | Cians, to buttonhole voters or to make political | low: made at a point about fifty miles west of|was not until the following spring and' ple accomodatiuns for a respectable army. | Helena, Montana, and the road will be|summer that the tide of gimlmig;“-nt-i'x:d “I:‘%“."“fl“. o The reduced rates of fare will enable | formally declared open to the commerce of nations at rates already fixed by the tant section of this atate to revive the|overland pool. The ceremonios will begin | the stream of gold passes. ; Bt. Paul, ‘the eastern headquarters of the road, will celebrate on an elaborate 0 highway that | inks her to the lakes, The fhiaryci«io. in gold dust! tions for a grand spree, and the old stage | suthenticated! be a day of | triumphantly vindic The rumor is again abroad that the q 4 i mion Pacific is to be extended to the |1 'e88 and Tribune, Chicago” Times and the main line will be thus extended, it is | creek dates the settlement of Denver and which is controlled by the Union Pacific, may soon be built on through southern Utah and Nevada to the coast near Los drill of posts, and in the afternoon a | Angeles. Such a line would be »mfi:‘uble acifi to | oulty obtain all conocessions it might desire on t i ST 82 fonsem g mated that the Rocky mountain country, Wyoming covers an arca of nearly | iy twenty-five years $100,000,000 in gold, 100,000 square wmiles, and 1,000,000 head | silver and improved machinery it is not unlikely that Colorado will duplicate this amount in the next quarter century, L — ", ROMANCE BY THE SEA. paatured upon it. Though scarcely fifteen yeoars of ave a8 a distinct portion of the nation, ita wealth over groumd is esti. mated at 850,000,000, while the wealth in the conl, copper, gold and silver mines, the new oil fields and soda lakes is incal- culable. The Laramie plains rank next|, to Texas in extent of rangs, Thegrasses| L ., i (ojoying another postofice are superior in fattening and hardening | ight. properties,and the dry and warm summer . lAlh- 0dd Fel climate cures the stalks, they retaining|™*' Al their nutritive properties, so that |y, 4 maching shop ls the Iatest additlon to the stock find plenty of good food through | Senator Van Wyck will deliver the address the winter. Many other interests which | 8¢ the Cwas county fuir. ship, They Form an Acquain. tance Upon the Beach, Correspoudence of the Philadelphia Press. Artaxtic Orry, August 27.—The pre. orietor of the Germantown Hotel, well » of Syracuse are building & table persons attest the entire correctness W HOLESAIL - A Separated Brother and Sister Uni- South Auburn has started a board of trade. . 4 j:rulunhurx hus been incorporated ss & vil: | Without Knowing Their Relation- y . SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO, nown in Atlantic City, sud other repu- | Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - ST. LovIs. mo, naturally come with the stock interest Work will be_commenced immediately on & / new elevator ut Fairfield. are making steady progress. An exten-| (maha has beon selected as the place for the sive ahbatoir lus been established at |next firewen’s turuaument. ML i i The old settlers of Dakota county picnicl m. shipped to all parts of the country, Next| Xalls Cisy tastill in need of a fire engine whose romantic claim to the English o Db atock. induatry ‘come. the. famous | 424 & Well oncauized re cutupany. baranetey of Tichborne once agitated the W i 1 mines at Rawli G The U. P. depot at Wahoo was dumaged by | civilized world. TI19 Ortons of German- yoming coa’ ijnes at tawins, GrCON | gre to the extent of 1,200 lust weok. town were blessed with a boy, whom they e "“v"k &P:m“.'m""d i Ther a great rush for land in the imme- | named Richard, and roon afterwards their ;‘,',f\‘},",yu;,:"' Wi sl "J;"'fm’;‘,"';“l"‘:l‘{; diate viciuity of Lwiug, Holt couty. humble home was mude glad by the birth A s avel J y' v of the fullowing romance in real life: Some twenty years ago in Germantowr, lived a plain, hard-working man nam d He was not, or, at least, did ut article of fuel, and the supply has scarcely been equal to the demand. A large mountain of iron ore has been found but a short distance from Laramie, equal in richness and quantity to the cel: ebrated *“Tron Mountain” of Misson It is reasonable to suppose that this f body of ore will not long remainidle, and with the abundance of coal deposits in the territory, smeltirg works and steel works will soon supplemont_the rolling mills now run by the Union Pacific road Chas, Martin, & brakesman ou the S. C. & [ their cradles manifested for each other a 1 wan crushed by the vurn at Valeatie, | degreo of affootion which was - touching The body of the Loy druwnel at Plattsmouth, 1 rei kable. Subday w sk, wan rooovered ab Forcival i, | "B rPRREON 1100 and then his wife Tho Suuth Platts Lumber men have pool d | followed. ' At the age of three or four e e rercutan sounty, ok oy | Y8 Richird and Clara wore. left or- by fire lust week,mostly corn aud a new buggy. [ P05 The urgent nced of & new cemetery is felt at Vawnee, The eounty election is spproach- ter county heard of their unfortunate predicament and took Clara to live with him, she being then of years so tender as 'he new M. E. church at Pleasant Hill, |scarcely to realize that she was changing Saunders county, will be dedicated Septem- | cne home for another and receiving the at Laramie. BeEh i tha A1 &5 A great many rich veins of gold, silver, | “The country preas are devoting twenty-three },}v":fiflf:&&r‘;‘l‘l'n',‘:‘;‘f"":h'i'éh‘fiu't‘h"l‘,‘:(‘l copper and lead have been found in all | hours and sixty minutes of each day to county Qunbived ey TN Trisiab ol Hilpaverite rts of the territory, and more particu. | politics. P b L L5t mly 1" DAL ttuti: QALeict, Wherd |2 THS young son of Frank Everhart, living | t0ok chargo of the boy Richard and gave mins City is situat Copper, also, | nesr. Ithuca, fooled with a corn sheller and | him a home. He scarcely knew he had Y gL st & slate# or the necessity which had tom : : i lost his life. is becoming prominent. The mines at i i o i Hartville are shipping copper mat r(.s The Burlington & Missouri has put in a | her from his arms and decreed that their larly, and a new district, termed the ?:":2'3.1;'.‘:1;."“"" south of Fairbury and calls | homes should be d‘ufl‘crent. ver Crown, only 20 miles from Larami Burglars ralded several stores in Humboldt THE BROTHER'S COURSE IN LIFE. bids fair to be a producinig one Within [ 4.t waek, aud got away with wbout $600 woreh | A Richard grew up he became a hand- a very short time, some, intelligent boy, but his life was & e, BR of property. Several large deposits of chemically pure sulphate of soda exist_some_twolve wmijes west of Laramie. These deposits are known as the *“soda lakes,” which term is misnomer, however, for they are not lakes, but beds. The deposite covers an era of more than 100 acres, being & 1t is thought the railroad from Cheater to | lonely; often he had strange fits of reverie Hebron will be in rnuning order in about |in which a voice he did uot know. spoke N three months. to him in tones which waked familiar| 3 ns of Hastings are securing artil- | echoes in his heart. He was sent to tertuiniug a possible overtlow of | sehool, and soon manifested his com- ng the reution, petency to take a position of trust among of potato bugs tackled a patch of | ¢, young business men of the vicimty. solid bed of crystalized_sulphate of soda | fabaeco I kufden near Exemont, wid ber- | Rox goveral years past his home has been among the friends of his mother. about nine feet thick, supplied from the | y ) orty farmers in the viciuity of Grand | SN FAC FIERCL O PR A ¥ bottom by springs, whose water hold the | fylund have st notices in the papers that salts in solution. Tho water rising to the | hunters st l(‘:up off thelr prumifef Chester county doctor came to Atlantic surface rapidly evaporates, and the salts| Re, Rey. Bishop O'Connor sdministered | city and stopped at the Chester County with which it is impregnated readily crys- | contirmation at Fremont, Sunday, to 150 can- | House, with his adopted daughter, Clara talizes into the form mentioned. ~Upon | didates from Dodge, mders aud Colfax | Orton, a pretty, dard-eyed and dark-hair- romoving any of the material the | counties. ed maiden of eighteen. Last Saturday water rises from the bottom, fills| Liucoln county hasnearly 1,000,000 acres of | ,fternoon, as the young lady was strolling & ST.LOUIS, M - Office Corner 13th and Harney Streets. STEELE, JOHNSON & CO.,, AND JOBBERS IN and recontly Montana with & superior | it fule st e e ™ [, aughter, Wl 1t oo | FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED G0OT§, ‘ND ALL GROCERS' SUPPLIES A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. A charitable physician in Ches-| AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER €O Keg and Bottled Beer HBRE\"‘“GM )’ ORDERS FROM ANY PART OF THR STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE TO THESTANDARD the chritatle O F O UL GrULlarantee. GEORGE HENNING, Grocers ! Anheuser-Busch EWING ASSOCIATION CELEBRATED This Excellent Beer speaks for itselt. Promptly Shipped. Sole Agent for Omaha and the West. i vacaut _governwent land ~subject to entry | k 4 th ex~avation made, and tho salts | vACAUE overuiont, nd subject by sty | un the beach, her eye lighted casually on crystalizing replace, in a fow days, the | culture laws, a youth of twentv, whose hair and eyes, material vemoved. 'Honce tho depost i | ““Tiy it mumualtie.of the Metope County | Father graceful figure, of medium size and practicably inexhaustible, and it now | Agricultural suciety will be held ut Neligh on | Weight, and smooth, dark complexion, containa_about 50,000,000 cubic feet of | Thursday, Friday and Saturday, October 4th, | made him a pleasant object to look upon. chemically pure crystalized sulphate . of | 5th and Gth. He saw her and, impelled, as he says, by soda ready to be utilized. The Union| Tlie wreck - f twofreight trains at Waterloo | some irresistible impulse, the strangers Pacific is now putting up works by means | was compiete. N.ioue wa hurt, but Engi- | spoke and wal of which it is proposed to convert the | neer Barry erawled out of & wixhty smallhole | sother. sulphate of soda intu the caustic soda of | i tho cab of his overturned eugiue. ) commerce—n material which the house- e e by free ol e st wife calls *‘concentrated lyo,” and which | Gecu e bol ilva T dIFalo 0 e is used for a thousaud different purposes, | were appreheuded by the suy ) st, by manufacturers. These works | The Burlingto Growers of Live tion, each trying to read in the other's eyes the mystery of their mutual attrac- rs s d he i might come and call on her that evening. | it mer .| She said yes, adding, “Iam staying at the d marketable condition in the sy ring. 'y it and judge for yourselves. - Price SPECIAL NOTICE TO WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO e e QUE Ground Oil Cake. Itisthe best and cheapest food for stock of any kind. One pound is equal to three pounds of corn tion. Richard asked the young lady if he | Stk fed with Ground Oil Cake in the Fall and Winter, instend of running down, will increase in velgh ! Dairymer Stock and Others. vell a others, who use it can testify o charge for kacks. Address O11, COMPANY, Omaha 00 pes MA nt,” but the experiment | ors have run the Chester County House.” represents between $40,000 and $50,000. | versecting tho St. Juseph | Smilivg in turn, Richard said, I sup- The output of the works now being | sbout two und oue half miles west of Lelvi- | 080 T ought to tell you that my name is erected will be from twenty-five to forty | 46 i Richatd Orton,” > £ tons of caustic soda per week, and it will |, The republicans of B:fl“fl'flfg“mg }'“‘;'.’ ‘;‘* ©Why,” said she “that is my name, takg about.wo b of the sulphate to o sysieun of tation wid 4|40, o very strango; whoro ia your u HS al‘l‘]a BS make one of caustic. Caustic is sold in | gr., and either to take out patents or for- | home?” And the story of their early y New York at from 875 to 880 per ton | reit the lands tu the governmeLt. years leakéd out little by little; they fully $10,000,000 worth of soda is annu A new church ix soon to be built at Olean, | knew that they ‘must be brother and sis- ally imported from Europe. The duty [ Colfux county, that will, when completed, on'soda is 830 per ton, and the above | #clipse auything of th kind i that parcof the | teen years’ absence fell from their eyes. A.HE. DAILEY, MANUFACTURER OF FINE My Repository is constantly filled with a select stock. Best Workmanship guaranteed, ter, and the scales of ignorance and ff. | Office and Fectory S. W. Corner 16th and Caprtol Avenve, Qmoha and Spring Wagons reader some idea of the mlvnnt:ngs of the the Utoe Indi the proprietress of the Germantown product over that of foreign manufacture. b }:“;‘l.wr:u ‘:.ilensfrm:.:ha orth lino of Kan: | House, who had known their father and The works will commence operation |«as. The town has the throuch liue of the [ nother in Germantown. Richard had this fall. The branch railroad to the | Burliugton & Missouri River ruilroad to Deu- |intended to go home by the Narrow works will be completed soon eo that | ver: Guage Sunday night, but Sunday morn- there will be no delay from lack of trans-| A Kearney merchant recently chartered a ing portation facilities. car at Omaha to take his merchundise to|,hia together, united after a Lfetime of 5,00, W cl Theso fusts and figures, condensed | Sty tha Tl wan, 870, o $30. e oue | absence. TWO LADS' ADVENTURES. D et M | two young peoplo was told to Mrs. My, | " R IBESIFL O W ST ERS Booth’s ‘Oval’ Brand AND / % and his sisver’ wont o Bhiladel.|D, D. MALLORY & CO'S “DIAMOND” BW F'resh ¥Fish at Wholesale. D. B. BEEMER, Omaha. from u detailed review in a recent num- | weight. Merchauts should provide themselves ber of the Laramie Boomerang, make an nl:fi car scales, ex::lullenz showing of the steady growth prosperity of the territory. were enjoying, the bicycle tournament ducts bear the imprint of permanence, treutlo by the incomiug traln about 11 | 14"y, ){:xyn’,euf;ireworku ythsre were two and with a continuance of t} t Raturduy’ (arostug o Kiiled. (¥He ; ! ALl umneo of tho present | jeurd thy erain coming aud started torun, bug | young men, or rather boys, among the influx of eastern and foreign capital, it | .tumbled and fell between the rails. will be but a few years before nature's At the Lafayette excursion house this and worked for all it is worth, vicinicy of Blyville, Knox county, They are | coat of waiters and rerving beer to the —_— following the o'd survey of the Covington, 1619 DODGE STRE [l b v s comm i ek | aftermon widle Shounds o faniliv PIANOS&LCLORG ANS On Long Time--Small Payments. throng who had forsaken luxuriant homes, e “ : The surveyors on the Wakefield branch of | influences by a strange spirit of adven- storehouse will be 'Jlumug'}l‘ly explored | the Sioux City & St. Paul railroad, ure inthe | ture. Wearing the white apron and short N . thirsty Jerseymen, were Harry Gwinn Tweniy:fivel yours! ago. tho prosent ilumbun & Black Hillsnarrow faue, oward | 3,q Hamilton Crankshaw, both sons of month the frat discovery of gold was I op tha b Tl la Ol Hanees aro wealthy and highly esteemed families in i anxious to put their charucters o » substan- | Atlanta, Ga. SIOUX FALLS made in Cherry creek, wheve Denver g.‘n:_.,..d.ln.,n before they "m'. m:'-r:'wll:an Tlmrc; was, indeed, something in the City now stands. The snnouncement | propertion=. The News chief hus wuod the | appearance of the boys which indicated was not slow in_crossing the plains, and [ S iae elmtes s blo sommtod moaty, > P | that they were moro or less out of: their thousands of fortune-hunters immediately | A Buffalo county offce sosker procluima his | Gqrcr oy ieit hands were white and wante in the papers in plain Words, thus: “I elicate, their skins smooth and soft, ant started for the new eldorado. It was Wwan the offica of probute judge. I run inde. | their features characterized by refine- Omaha | jendent. I have uo time to consult politi. | ment, The story of Crankshaw is as fol- Company. though a vigorous infant. Many of her :np;‘:limiy.“I‘;l;cmhfllnn::r:yh;::: i:f'.'“ 4ol vitizens were struck with the mountain **My father and mother know that I am here, but Gwinn's do not know where ‘The notorious Humboldt hog thief who got | he is. We were tired of home and its s neighbors' | ragtraints; yet neither of us is specially e © ran A of & sl i Ll b3 | AwaY from Atlanta last spring. When the nose of & lh.ph'ir‘s' and when under the | we get out of money we have to work at load them iuto his wagon | anything we can get to do, as you see vo off, now. have been through all the Governor Dawes has appointed the follow- Frincipnl cities in the south, sometimes i ing numed delegates to the national conference ing lik i t other ti iti (InconromaTan.] f Charities aud Corrections, to be huld at | *V*" @ princes, at other times Walting | mnis company is now to reonly orders tor wekers, but it availcd | Louistille, Ky., conmencins Soptember 24, | i _saloons. B10UX FALLS JASFEL STONE, for Mary MoOowan, has reddish hair and blue eyes, a fair nothing. The Misseuri river press de. |1383: Dr. H, P’. Matthewson, Dr. Geurge W. Harry Gwinn is said to, be the son of voted itself to refuting the assertio 1 | Collius, Professor J. A. Gillespie, Professor .. | & wealthy clergyman. He is about five B .3 uilding Purposes, Anexile of Erin, located at Doniphan. | complection, without freccles. Hamil- rankshaw is said to be the son of a | Add will make figures on round lots for prompt deliv® o7y, The compa y is shipping mathod was to reached ita higheat. The press of Chica- || %o and the lake cities attempted to turn was the mouthpiece of the North Platte | went with a fellow Iaborer with a revolver, | {01 route, and its arguments were 80 effoct- | Lhe display of arms was enough, but the police | Pusiness man of Atlanta worth nearly ive that a majority of pioneers of Denvi r [ Judse fined ud costs, which he refused | half a willion, He is about five feet . and Golorado made this city thelr resth s | © V% Ho wan sent o jall, but in's fow |nine inches high, of light weight, has amg 0C lace both going and coming, W, N h:fi'fim:r:yrfl'.firfifif" f, Wepiched off | dark hair and eyes and " smooth, fair yers, William Chess, A, Dean, W. De- | che neighboring helds ¥ 1| complexion. T Sume Hall Gouan y Corn, with substantial evidence of the hidcen | Poniphan Iudex. wealth at the base of the Rocky mount-| We happened into the office of J. W, 8. The Nebraskian n!JulyMIL 18 Small yesterday afternoon, and while announced their arrival, with flaming |tlere our popular county attorney, J. and pictorial headlines, in the following | M. Ragan, dropped in, and in the course lanzuage: of sume remarks, said that he had just “'Nery latest from the mines! $7,600|scen a pieca of corn south of Dr. Ly- i We have seen the gliter- [man's farm that would yicld over seven - |ing precious metal! Former yeports | hundred bushels per acre. This state- ) The Omaha Nebraskian | weut coming from the lips of & man . | still ®ove earth, and the western press| whose rux{umtiun r truth and veracity ted in their state. |is 8> well established as Mr. Regan's, menta about gold in Cherry creek and |completely staggered Small, who made the mountains! North Platte the routel | some feoblo statements about measuring GER VHE “GREAT Lot tha Burlington Hawkeye, Chicago |4 orop of corn onco that went 108 bush: M AN REME“ els l\l:lr urel,wund (l)" having a field this year, down below Fairfield, that would ot least 112 bushela o the aere, M. | EPOER, ED A IN. agan reiterated his statement and said ica, there were from four to six stalks to a nhful‘,'g'a“s".‘ fleura.mla sufi-k::i‘n ; hill and four or five ears to each stalk, v, and furthermore, that each ear was near- ly ws big as his leg. Now, if there is an- other lawyer.in the state who can beat this corn story he can call at this office products of the east. It is esti- fand take the cake. t0 both Chicago and Omahs, and solicits correspond- ence and orders from_contractors engaged in paving wirnets in vy of the wester cities. TESTIMONIALS. ? SormmumomTs Orrick, Chicago, West Div- Railway, Chicags D. Elwell, Fresident Slous Fails Water Power Com- pany. Dak Sik: since October 1, paving blocks ind | i Gur street railway trac have been using {nvh.- ‘material in this city for many year, aud | tao pleasiro {n aaying that in my opiu- lon the granite paving blocks furnished by your com- bany ars the most rogular in ahiape nd perfoct in Jorsh, and s (ar as 1 have boen able to judge, are Joasessod of a8 durable feature as any material that LM ever been offered or laid in the city. Yaurs, JAS. K. DAKE 1 have received from your company & 2 Lourm, March 23, 1853, TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN— 1 have examined a plece of he Sioux Falls Granite Quarries, Sud, in wy opinion, it is the best stome OF wtreet pav- inig 1 have *4.0 in America. (Bligued) Racine Journal prepare to hawl?” ith the discovery of gold in Cherry t HENRY FLAD Pres. Board Public Improvinenta, Colorado, and in fact the entire Rocky mountain country. Denver has grown to a well built and wealthy city of &) 000 inhabitants, with eight lines of railioad to carry'away her mineral products in exchange for the manufactures and agri- ) Stone for Paving Purposes. And any person interosted in such improvement will find it greatly to his advantage 10 communicate ith us. invite correspendenee on the subject. The general management and supervision of tne company’s business is now in the hands of W, Mo- Address yeur letters b0 A. C. SENEY. wimaest ' Pres. of Jasper Stone Co, ) B AMES MoVEY, compriaing Colorado, Now Mexico, Wyo: | Nothing was done at the directors meeting | Ppactical Horse 8hoer. ming, Idaho and Montana have produced | ok’ yesterday. The regulas -“N;' NN m{lhohl‘ilwdq next, when some ac- of presidency will Makes & specialty of Roadsters and tendertoot hos- It Dodge sirest 1345, Old copper. Of this amount Col- 1% o the matter bo taken. :-fl:‘-u - | BURBX.A I Have Found It! Was the exclamation of & man when he got & box of Eureka Pile Ointment, which s a simple and sure oure for Piles and all Skin Diseases. y centa by mall, postpaid. The American Diarrheea Cure ¢ Haa stood the test for twent, Bure cure for o twenty years, all. Never Fails. Dysentary, and s Morbus. Deane's Fever and Agn Tonic & Cordial. 18 s Impossible to supply the yapid salb of the same. SURK CURE WARRANTED For Pever and Ague, and all Malarial troubles. PRICE, 9100, W.J.WHITEHOUSE LABORATORY, 16TH ST., UMAHA, NEB, For Sale by all Druggists’ ¥ son) by Express on receipt of prics. ‘mbed NGOSTURA BITTERS. > LN LR tved over the 1 heware of counterfs 2] grocer or druggiet for the genuine article, manufactured Va. R J. G, B, BIBGERT & BO! e v g 1 roadway, Ne ¥ . BELLEVUE COLLEGE. Under the care of the Presbyterian Synod of Ne- wrasha. Begine September 10th. Classical and Sclontiflo courses with proparatory departwent; also, Musical and Art Department, all open to both sexes, Tuition low. Location beautiful and healthtul. Onl mine miles from Omaha on the B. & M. R K Ade dreas for o BOLLMAN “Belle- vue, Neh. 00 Kok w 2m ) Oldest Real Estate Agent. Na!ary.Publlc and Practicar Con; veyancer. JCiarks sels Houses s Luts, Rendence ” l.vu.dblludl t.lhml)‘p:’nddluw #ides improved wnd_ uniwproved farms ower By okher arenl, - e 10~