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e — | | | k | { L MAIA, THURSDAY. | e THE DAILY BEE--0O CRAY ECIFIC MEDICINES, TRADE MARK Tir Graar Exo PRADE MARK wisi REMEDY. An unfailing cure for Seminal Weak- ness, Spermatorr- haea, Tmpotency, and all Disoas OCCIDENTAI:. JdT'I‘INGS. yming. Cheyenne schools have a_total of 448 chil- ired, requiring eloven te ly good in Business is 4 Cheyenne at that follow Susin I8 unus / qeqience of St the present time, and our merchants are Abuse; as loss of happy. Lar: o City is soon to have a tannery, ar- rangements looking to that end being almost ymploted. The Wyoming Copper Company made a shipment of £3,000 pounds of copper bullion to the East on Friday last Tho artesian well at Rawling is down about three hundred and fifty feet. Water comes up to within sicty fect of the surface, v Memory, Univer. =5 BEFORE TAKING, sal Lassitude,Pain AFTER TARING, n th- Back, Dimness of Vision, Prematire O1d A t lend to Insanity or Con- ave. o retand money, when dragists from whom the medicine i bought do not refund, but refer you to tho manufacturem, and the Toquirements are Fuch that thoy are seldom, i/ ever complied with, e thek s cunmantos A trial of one single pacaus 1's Specic will convince the most skeprical ot S oot bave adopted the | The Wyoming Horeford ociation has ap- ow Wrapper; the only gentiine Jiea tor B ey D h Y'I‘l‘l"“llp-‘\:nmlnu n Out pamphlet, which we de. H:r' ¢ el oty ot the sire o send free by mail to every one. ga7 The Spe- \ siiraakn State FAlr eific Modicine 18 soMl by a1 druggists at 1 por pack. [ Nebraska : < Age,sor six packages for 86, or will be sent free by | “The bald siatior of Syt mail on the receipt of t , by addresmng sbrem,Potherwise Goorgs P. Gonlden, of Oley: THE GRAY premmlo, N ¥, | SECo SR el thie Ctown, Ieviny neveral — nd' ficklo women to don their irning robos, George used to scrape for o ng in Omaha, Fears of an India in Northern Wy« t bande of Indians have lately been killing cat: tle and steali « in large numbers, and ermined to prevent '3 across Dlack Feork has This br s 155 foet pose organizi d that could be to the bridge is placed uy between $15,000 and § foll er's example in the O1 man will probably soon beg ng o well in tho Fast. ern part of thh city, and subscription lists have been started for the purpose af ra sufficient to bore a wellin the City Park. The Board of Fish Commlssioners have planted five coumties in the Territory, viz: Laramio, Albany, Carbon, Sweetwater and Jintah, Trout to the number of 25,000 have been planted in Horse, Crow, Dodge Pole and Bear Crecks, Ponds in Laramio County have been stocked with bass, yellow perch and sun fish. In October 16,500 carp will be distri- buted., ws Den Dakota. Spearfish contains 1,500 people. Breokings has a population of 800, Huron voted water bends by 201 to fifteen, Columbus is to have a new 85,000 school house. There are 1,140 school children in Brule county. Copper ore has been found in the Rocker- ville district, The public school building at Rapid City will cost §16,000, Wheat in Elk valley averages from 18 to 25 bushels per acre, There are 860 miles of telephone wiro in use in the Black Hills. Mitchell can have the Methodist university when she guarantees $25,000 The population of Deadwood is variously estimated at from 3,500 to 5,000, TRUE Temperance Is not signing a pledge or taking a solemn oath that cannot be kept, because of thenon-removal of the cause —liquor. Thewaytomake a man temperate is to kill the desire for those dreadful An artesion well company, with a capital artificial stimulants that car- stock of $75,000, has been formed at Bis- ry so many bright intellects marck. it Thera i a constantly increasiug demand for to premature graves, and CErsl R T desolation, strife and un- been organized and another quarry opened. i i man A dilapidated old man, with sorry looking. }frpg’.?e“ into so Y | tiorss; tokein the Blous alla spevts bons milies, £500 worth on a running race the other day. Northern Dakota’s ninety-seven elovators, Ttisafact! BrowN's IRON with their storage capacity of 4,250,000 bushels, BITTERS, a true non-alcohol- are rrn\'hu; inadequate to the accommodation ic tonic, made in Baltimore, of the immense crop. Md., by the Brown Chemical (Clay county’s assessed valuation s $1,106,- Company, who are old drug- 683, "Clay has but twelve townships; with ists and_in every particu- this fact considered hor assessod value is equal fir reliable, will, by remov- to any county in Dakota, ing the eraving appetite of W, Garland, alias Thos, Clark, a cook at the drunkard, nndLy curing the Merchants hotel at Bisr.arck, nas fallen A EAT s i G Vrieas T hoir to $25,000, his father, a Peruvian, having FEv R R A died, leaving him that sum, ing from intemperance, uo The Bismarck Advertiser,which was started Taote tb Diomole feipertce some months ago, has suspended, Tho oditor in the strictest sense then | undertook to handle without gloves things that S should be only touched with tongs. Y 4 At tho Yankton fair grounds sn artesian well has struck flwing water at a depth of 43) foet. The flow i« not very strong, but it is thought will fur..ish all the water required. The new Miner county court house is to be built atter the Italian style of architecture, two storles high. 1t will stand on a foundation four feet high from the ground, constructed of Sioux Fall jasper. Miller, Hand gounty, boasts of the smallest man in the world—Col. Wm. Dwiggins, a bus- iness man of that town, who only stands forty inches high and weth- sixty pounds, He is 27 years of age, well proportioned and intelli- gent. 1t is proposed at Bismarck this winter to wnutmut:bly house of blocks of ico, Which shall be used for a skating rink, something af- ter the plan of the winter paleces they build in Canada and Russia, The climate is certainly favorable. The gross bullion product of the Father DeSmet mine for 1882 was $432,039.62; out of this the stockholders received $165,000'in divi- dends. The capital stock of the company is $10,000,000, divided into 100,000 shares, = 1t haw padd this far $680,000 in'dividends, and is valued at $870,000, Part of the Highland wood, caved the 8th [risoiing three " worlanon ~ ebind _ono hundred tons of ore, One man worked his way out threngh eighty feet of ore by using glant-powder. The corpses of his comrades Were recovered on the 9th, Col. Ankeny, who recently suicidod in the Black Hills by hanging, was at eno timo a woalthy and influontial citizon of Waterlno, T, boing largely interested in the real estate of that placo, ns wll s of Ackley and Eldora, It is a well authenticated fact that many medicines, especially ‘bitters,’ arenoth- ing butcheap whiskey vilely concocted for use in local option countries, Such is not the case with Brown's IroNBirTERS, Itisamedi- cne, a cure for weakness and decay in the nervous, muscular, and digestive or- gans of the body, produc- ing good, rich blood, health and strength. Try one bot- tle. Price $1.00. mine, at Dead- instant, im- Western Cornice-Warks, IRON AND SLATE ROOFING, C. SPECHT, PROP. 11 Douglas8t. - - Omaha, Neb. in Hardin county, same State, which town he laid out. He wasn hold speculator and in MANUFACTURER OF 1872 lost in the neighborheod of $150,000, al- most all he possessed, The commissioner of the general land offico has notified the rogister at Huron that a fail- ureto give personal notico in contest cases when the residenco of the contesteo is, or might be known to contestant, is fatal to the contostant, that the same must be dismissed. He also holds that notaries public and other officlals cannob take afavite i casoe 1 which they act also as attorneys, and that affidavits 40 taken are not to be recoguized in land office practice, Galvanizea Iron Cornices 4@ Dormer Windows, Finials, Tin, Tron and Slate Roofing, Specht's patent Motafllo Skylight, Patent adjusted Ratchet Bar and Bracket Shels tho genaral agent for the above line of ron Fencing, Crestings, Balustrados, Verandas, Iron Bank Ralangs, Window Blinds, Cellar_ Guards; also genoral ent for Peerson & Hill patent Inside Blind. DR. HORNE'S ng. 1 am Colorado. The Fort Colling Artesian Well company be- an operations in boring tho well at Loveland [ast Monday. It takes but nine or ten days to sink an arte- sian well in Donvor. The cost is about for sinking 1,000 feet. “The Union Pacific road has: taken posses- sion of the stono quarries at Fort Collins, and will increaso tho force of men working there, Dr. Labrie, city physician of Denyor, whoso erookoduuen and duplicity lus just Dotn dise covered, hus disappeared toavold the wrath of the couneil. The success of the artesian well in Denver i Constipation, “Erysipélas, Indigostion, HrntEon ipture lupoiency, Latareh, Pt Ague. Las forced the Holly to furnish the pure stuff s losy, Dumb oo BS990, Would MotBUY ey ror | and at one-half the wsual prics§The/company soma. tiune, aud 1t has dons il that your Agont | will sink soveral wells. I e tvouiay. by Horme's o Bl | The Colorado Smelting works of South Pu- oue of the thirty dollars belts cured me of the sbove | 6010 give employment to 125 men, The ma- disease in & short thne. Auny one wishing to cenfer | chimery is duplicated throughout, and 200 tons With T, oan do o by writlig or callig uf my stors | of ore can bo treated daily, “Tho printers of Donver have considerablo 1420 Dotiglas 8t. Ouiaha Neb, WILLIAM LYONS . 1 choertully recommend Home's Electrio Bolt as an | stylo abont them, They gathered uy efficient cure for rheumatism, Laving worn one for | lunch baskets the other day and picnic that malady. Paliner luke. The excursion was a most suc- » uly, A M. UNDERHILL | couful and pleasant or Jor e by Fose “}"‘" s, Lows, ook | Tho Augusta mine iu Poverty "guloh, Gun. garFor Sale pt C F. Goodmau s Drag otore. 1110 | nison county, is said to be oue of the richest Tarvam Stree! Owaha ruby silver mines in the State. The owners are . W. Ross and Mr, Ramie. The ore L5, JENDERSON, St shows by assay from $20 to §2,000 in silver per KANBAS CITY, MO, This Electric Belt will Cure the Follow- ing Diseases Without Medicine, , Pains in the Back, Hips, Head or Limbs, Nervous Debilty, Lumbago,’ General Debility, Rheumatism, Paralysls, Ne , Sciatica, Discase of the Kidns Biscascs, Torpid Liver, Gout, Sexual Exh Bominal Eumisel may Hoart Disease, A rogular graduste v -y oler sxices %}:‘fla— welve In vate ton, and from 520 to $200 in gold per ton, WThe Loadville city council a few days ago passed an ordinance granting the South Park road right of way through the streets and ul- leys of the Stray Horse addition to that city. Phe votestood sevep to five in favor of the or- dinance. This giventhe South Park the best of the fight so far, but it must have taken “goap" to doit. s dice Con | Puoblo e towopuly of the preduction o age u the Rocky mountain region. " BOOK o ok e B0 Mt a6 bt daoen s just i | beyond, and the ore alone has & bo brought vodw any considerable distance. Already the iron interests of the place give employment to | 2,080 men, yat three y reely thought herself as the | West," ars agn Pueblc the Pittsburg The brutal beating of City Fditor Cowen, | of Tho Leadville Herald, by Alderman Joy of | that city, has_united the press in favor of Iynch Iaw. The Tribune of Denver says the fact that Joy is ot on bail will facilitate the job | nd save the trouble of breaking jail doors The Tribune continues: “Joy is an over-grown loafer who has no business in decent any time, 1t is the disgrace of a c ille that ho should be ey member of i A low, illiterate creature, with nothing but brute strength and a bad record to stand on, his eolevation to a position of responsibility is more of reflection on the | city which chooses him than upon the scoun drel himself, If the city editor of the Herald i sty cur ought to be hung. rty jail-bird ought to be sent to ity until he leses some of his flesh.” Montana, If he | " SECRET OF THE CRYPT, | Visit 1o Where A, 7, Stowarts Ro- nains Do Not Lie. The Story Told by a Police Official of the Fruitless Negotiations f r the Return of the Body. New York World. ‘‘No, sir; you can't get locked, sir.” “Why 18 it locked? 1 titling me to view the entu and 1 should like to see that. B | ““I am 8o sir, but you can't go in | there, sir, Mr, Stewart’s remains are | supposed to be buried there, and no_one | is admitted into the tomb. " there, sir,it's s pass en- cathedral, 150 business honses in Living of the Alice mine, at Butte, for $117,000. Pt at the 1 rritorial Foir at Helona were Gallatin ¢ 7,000,000 th 1882 14,000; gate money, 5,600 will roach that of ment almost double kin has beon taking testimony ntest Martin Magiuis' electior inn well mania has reached Mon tana and soveral companies have been organ ized to sink wells, 1t hs been discovere in Helena sometimes ron day from her men The citizens of Mg tors, take ‘“a spike i spikotail is the that a beggar woman izos as much s £30 a ally the edi- " overy time, The sular stimulant, A Butte prospector has been sti sluggish blood of that camp by exhibi imens of quartz which assay nearly $28,000 in silver to the ton, There is a peisonous weed in_Gallatin county which is death to sheep., When they vat it thoy becoma crazy, leave the band, and run headiong into the river, The Torritorial papers are commencing to agitite the constitutional convention ques- tion. The election of delegates takes placo the first Monday in November, and the conven- tion meots in Helena the second Monday in January, 1884, Another wonderland along the line of the Northern Pacific railroad has been revealed in the Crazy Mountains, near Hunter's Hot Springs, Gallatin county. A waterfall 200 feot in heizht, a chain of {nkns and other won- derful natural curiosities. The highest point of these mountains was found to bo 11,184 feet above sea level. Phillipshurg is mminq to tho front as a bul- lion producer. Thg Granite Mountain and Hope companies have brought in another large consignment. That of the Granite M untain weighed 3,016 pounds, and was valued at $49,- 102,71, The Hope sent over 1,111 pounds, of a value of 815,086.63. The consignmnent ag- gregated 804.180.34, which is not bad work for & short run by 30 stamps, ing the California. They had to close tho schools of Gilroy on account of diphtherin. Tt is estimated that it will cost 850,000 to pick the Medocino hop crop, A mine rich in both gold and silver, has boen discovered in the dry bed of the San Jacinto river. Some fine marble specimens have been brought to San Bernardino from the desert east of the mountains, The farmers of San Bernardino somplain of tho ravages of the birds. The linnet and the butcher are the principal thieves. A fine deposit of sulphur in almost a pure stato has boon recently discoverod by Major Williams upon his ranch at Ortega, Hill about five miles east of Santa Barbara. A force of 200 stonecutters, stone masons, laborers and 1pachinists are now at work on the construction of the dr{tlm:k at Mare Island, The total host of the dock will be 2,000,000, Tha huckluherr,y fields in the vici of White Sulphur Springs are said to be inex- haustible. There are acres and acres of the berry in the Castle mountains that have never boen touched, Thedo will be more grain in Shasta_county, this year than was ever harvested bofore in any one year. Wheat will average 30 bushels d barley 40 bushels to the acre. ~ The largest crops have not been harvested. Inyo county is gotting raml‘r for o minin boom. Furnaces are buils I"fi at several points in the connty. Mines are being opened out and a great deal of reneml prospecting is being done. Inyo is rich in minerals. Miscellaneous. The British Columbia salmon pack this sea- son is 150,000 cases, A national bank with a capital of $50,000 is to be establisked at Colfax, W, T. Fan ‘mrtiun are popular in Nevada, girls fal they revivi Several Eastern capitalists are in Salt Lake looking for a site on which they intend to build & $500,000 hotel. The Canadian ‘Y):»'urnmnut offers a bonus of 85 for every able-bodied white man who may settle in British Columbia, The wide tracts of pasture lands south and west of Tucson, A. T\,can be utilized for stock purposes by digging wells and using wind-mills for raising the water. The Kootenai Indians are said to be pannin, out about $500 a month in gold dust at Sand 2 I They refuse to reveal where they obtain their liberal supply of the ‘‘where- with,” The New I[dria quicksilver mine, which has been successfully worked for 23'years, is now not yielding enough to pay expenses. The mine is running behind about $3,000 per month, and will probably be shut down before long, Two cougars that have been the terror of sheen men for some time in the neighborhood of Junction Bar, Oregon, were treed by a shopherd’s dog, and shot by a shepherd re- contly. They were both males and measured five foot eightinches from tip to tip, At Salt Lake a young man connected with the 1 on bank of “Umh went up to the Dosert bauk and obtained 85,000 in green- backs, On the way back to the London in- stitution he accidentally dropped and lost 81,500 of the money. mflm.\muuy $1,000 of the amount was found, butat last accounts no trace has been obtained of the remaining 508 package, which was composed of $10 bills, The nd the young men fan them until —— Horsford's Acid Phosphate, ‘Tonic for Overworked Men, Dr. J. C. Wison, Philadelphia, Pa. says: ‘1 have used it as a goneral toni and in particular in the debility and dy popsia of overworked men, with satisfac- tory results, e Apaches have sold at Casas Grandes a chased gold ring marked “R, R. F.” to “F. N. McC.," and two gold bracelets marked Mo 10, the chief who captured Charlic MoComas, was in Casas Grandes last Wednesday and said he had not seon Comas since the fight with Crook, . —— The only known specific remedy for epileptic fits is Samaritan Nervine. “1 had epileptic fits for 16 years,” writes John Keithly, of Principio, Md., Samaritan Nervine cured me.” $1.50 at Druggists. e Referring to Sheridan at the battle of Winchester, in his address at the sol- diers’ reunion in Ounconta, the Rev. Dr, Fulton quoted the general as saying, in untheological terms, ‘We shall whip them.”” This was too much for one of the old vets of the audience, and rising in his chair and shaking his hand at the reverend speaker he shouted: *“That isn't what Sheridan said; what he said was, ‘We'll lick h—1 out of 'em!” This brought down the house. After the con- fusion had subsided Dr. Fulton smilingly added, ““And he did it, too. Charlie Me- | |~ The speaker was the custodian of the | beautiful new cathedral built in mem of the late A, T. Stewart, at Garden C and the | to whom the rer W who went there yesterd as announced t 1e edifice been | completed. The room or erypt referred | to, and concerning which the gossips of | the vill re accustomed to talk by the | hour, is_gituated directly beneath the | chancel in the basement. Four heavy |doors, barred and grated. bearing smali, dinmond-shaped panes of stained glass, | afford little clue as to the contents of the mausoleum, if such it be. A careful sur- veysof the grounds revealed no other mode of ingress than the doors. It seemed vain to attempt an entrance with- out the connivance of the custodian, so he was again approached. ““I presume you carry the keys of that secret receptacle with you?’ said the re- porter. ‘I, sir? No, sir. I never saw the keys, sir. They say they keep them up at the office, sir, but I never saw 'em.” “‘Are the remains really in there?” “‘Some say they are and some say they are not. Nobody about here knows."” “But if they are not in there, why is the place kept locked.” I don’t know, sir, I'm suro. Perhaps they are fearful that someone might spoil the beautiful marble carving which they say is in there, Anyhow, the doors are always locked,” At the office of Mrs. Stewart’s Garden City ecstate the same vague infor- mation was given. Perhaps the body was buried there, and perhaps it was nnti. Those in charge could not really tell. A second visit was paid to the cathedral, where theill-informed custodian was found engaged up stairs pointing out the beauties of the church to a party of tourists, This wasthe golden opportuni- ty, and after somo difficulty an en- trance was effected into the double-locked vault. . The bare white marble walls seemed to cast back and forth the echo of the intruder’s footsteps on the hollow pave- ments complaining of this desecration of death’s temple. At one end a white marble chancel, domeshaped, with marvelously carved pillars, rose eut of the gloom. Wreaths of finely chiselled flowers, festoons of carefully carved foli- age, and the clinging tendrils of vines hung tenderly over the tile floor beneath which the remains of Mr. Stewart are said tolie. The hollow floor revealed nothing of what lay beneath. Esach tile was carefully sealed, and no crevice, no secret door, was revealed by the closest scrutiny. The wide wooden benches completed all the furniture in the crypt. Returning to the cathedral proper the reporter asked the custodian what pre- cautions had been taken to prevent a re- currence of the theft of the remains, He couldn’t really sny just how many watch- men there were employed, nor whether there were uuy. They were kept apart from him if there were other guardians. Throughout the village the impression prevails that the remains are at rest be- neath the cathedral chancel. The popu- lar story is to the effect that one night in June, a year ago, a train arrived at mid- night with four trusty men on board. Stopping half a mile out, the coffin con- taining the embalmed body of Mr. Stew- art was carried to the church, ‘where ar- rangements had been made for its rcch- tion. Before dawn the work of securely sealing the vault was completed, the se- cret of its contents being known to these four persons only, besides Mrs. Stewart and Judge Hilton. The employes are sworn to secrecy, and trusting to them and to the precaution taken, the friends of Mr, Stewart believe that his earthly robe will be permitted to lie at last where it has been placed after such devi- ous wanderings. Further investigation concerning the resting place of the great merchant's re- mains, among well informed persons in the city developed new theories, gentleman very close to Judge Hilton, for the body had een one of his Yrinci- ple advisors: “This stor; which mere moonshine, Hilton is to-day no nearer the possession of Mr. Stewart’s remains than he was a veek after its removal from St. Mark's Church graveyard. I know this to be a fact, and Judge Hilton if approached will bear out this statement.” I have naturally great reluctance to speak of a matter in which I have been so intimately connected,” said a prominent police official who has taken the principal steps in negotiating between the grave robbers and Judge Hilton. *‘But this much I will say, and you may consider it authortaitive. Judge Hilton is not in pos- session of the remains of the late A. T, Stewart unless ho obtained them surrep- titiously within the last two weeks. This I can sacredly assure you to be the truth, Early in the present year I felt confident T had the body almost within my grasp, and if the ghouls had possessed more confidence in the police authorities it would have been recovered. An individual came 10 us—the heads of the detective depart- ment—and informed us that for the sum of §25,000 the stolen body would be de- posited in a certain place, Of course, the individual making the offer was known, but he professed to be merely an agent in the affair, apd was undoubtedly only such. I was delegated .to speak to Judge Hilton, and then he was perfectly willing to deposit the sum named in the hands of a suitable person, to be paid over upon the delivery and identification of the remains. The negotiations with this party occupied a period of nearly three woeks, and then came abruptly to an end. Although we promised immuni- ty, the robbers feared we were making efforts to discover their identity, and of course that ended all. It seems they did not fear Mrs. Stewart or Judge Hilten, and believed that the money would un- doubtedly be paid them immediately on delivery of the body. Still they feared Said a and who at the beginning of the search the Garden Uity gossips so confidently assert to be true, of a ghostly midnight train and secret burial, is in my estimation, all I can assure you of my own personal knowledge that Judge SEP (EMBER 20, 1883 arrest under the indictment still pending against them in the dissrict attorn office charging John Doe, Richard Roe and others withrobbery, andirefused toact further.” “What was the plan robbers?"” “They demanded that tle money should be sent by express to s small coun- try office not mentioned, and they prom- ised that immediately upon receipt of the cash the remains would be forwarded to New York.” ““What objection was there to this?” “There were two very obyvious objec- tions. One was that Judge Hilton natu rally objected to sending a fortune to a number of self-confessed thieves, and trusting to their honor to return a bun- dle of bones—all that now evidently re- mains of Mr, Stewart. Then, again, the partics could easily procure a suitable | skeleton from some country we yard and forward it; or, more easily still, hay- ing once gotten possession of the money why should further risk be encountered by sending anything? That would af | pear to be the most common sense plan.” | “Do you believe these negotiations suggested by the , | were with the real robbers” could be no doubt on that point. The parties presented evidence that no one | except the purloiners of the body could have become possessed of. For a certain trinket, of no intrinsic was unknown ty any one, except Mrs, Stewart, buried with her husband This minutely described, as were a dozen little details, which nothing but an sxamination of the remains after death could have revealed. Oh, yes; the real robbers were undoubtedly our correspond- ents. The strangest part of the affair was,” continued the oflicial, ‘‘that it changed our entire theory regarding the theft of the body, and proved the story of Reilly, the hackman, presumed to know where the remains were buried, to be false. It established beyond doubt the fact that Stewart’s body had been buried and removed at least three times before it was finally laid away in a distant State—the ali‘nt said to be known to only two people. That the remains are in that grave now 1 am confident,” “‘Was this the only communication had with the real robbers?” “There was one other occasion, when a party giving his name as Romeyn called upon Patrick Jones and desiged him to act as medium for the restoration of the body. Jones, instead of secking Judge Hilton, went to Police Superintendent Walling, and the thieves having shadowed him the negotiations were broken off. It was on this occasion, you remember, that the piece of velvet cut from the casket, the silver plate, and the three small shirt studs were produced, as evidence that the robbers really held the body. Judge Hilton admitted that these were undoubt- edly genuine, the five-cent shirt studs forming part of the burial garments.” “Even if the remains should be recov- ered, would it be impossible to identify them?” “By no means. All that has been said concerning an embalming process is non- sense. Nothing now remains but the skeleton, That is certain. But there are certain marks by which that can be positively identified. The false teeth were fitted into Mr. Stewart’s mouth by a peculiar process which it is impossible, declares the dentist, to duplicate, and there are other marks by which the skele- ton would be known.” “When do_you hope for a restoration of the body?” “Never. Judge Hilton and Mrs. Stew- art felt for a time that a restoration must be had at any sacrifice. Men were sent all over the country on vague clues, and over $100,000 was spent in the search, and everything possible was done to re- cover the body. The matter is definitely settled now, and underne circumstances will further negotiations be entered into. After the first failure Judge Hilton and Mrs. Stewart held a conference at which it was decided to hasten the cathedral to completion, believing that by carrying out this great project of his life the mer- chant prince would be shown greater honor than by a fruitless search after a moldering skeleton.” e —— A Cure of Pneumonia. Mr. D. H. Barnaby, of Owego, N. Y., says that his_daughter was taken with a violent cold which terminated in pneumonia, and all the best thniginm gave the case up and said she could not live but a few hours at most. She was in this condition when a friend recommend- ed DR. WM. HALL'S BALSAM FOR THE LUNGS and advised her to try it. She ac- cepted it as a last resort, and was surprised to find that it produced a marked change for the better, and by persevering in its use a perma- nent cure was effected, | possib y instancs [ value ——— A Chapter on Oysters. At a recent meeting of the Socioty of Old Brooklynites, Mr. Joel Conklin read a paper on Oysters, from which the following is taken: *‘In early days oysters were roasted on a gridiron fully two feet square; the back part of it would rest on the back log and the front on the fore stick, the oysters first having been placed on it with their hollow sides down. The test to ascertain when sufficiently cooked was to press the shells together with the tongs and judge from the escaping steam, a knack which may readily be acquired. In roasting over a blazing wood fire the flame would envelop the oysters and cook them equally well at top and bottom. Those who have never eaten oysters from the fire have yet to eat their tirst really good roasted oyster. Although over half a century ago oysters were cooked in the regulation stew-pan, yet, until coal was in more general use, chafing-dishes were Lmostly used for cooking stews, and to this day no method has been devised to make as good an oyster stew as can be cooked 1n a chafing-dish. Consumers who understood their business always preferred to umniyulntu their stews for themselves, after having been provided with a chafing-dish and a spivit lamp ready for lighting, the necessary table furniture and condiments and the indispensable freshly opened oysters with- out which a good ‘oyster stew is an im- possibility. The best fry procurable fifty or sixty years ago was far inferior to the fry now served, although then oysters of proper size and quality for frying were much more abundant that now. Then oysters were either covered with rolled cracker or a heathenish mess was made by mixing them with batter, und in either case they were usually cooked with lard. Broiled oysters were then almost un- attainable, and I used to hear it said that oysters could only be properly broiled on a gridiron provided with silver bars. ()yu(us are much better broiled than fried, especially for dyspeptics.” — Humor in the Stomach, Much of the distress and sickness at- tributed to dyspepsia, chronic diurrhoea and other causes 1s occasioned by humor in the stomach. Several cases, with all the characteristics of these complaints, have been cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla, Other cures effected by this medicine are so wonderful that the simplest statement of them affords the best proof that it com- bines rare curative agents and when once used secures the contidence of the people, Mischievous Malaria. To say that malaria is mischievons is to put it very mildly. It is all that | and more. , It is cunning, deceitful, | treacherous, sly, and underhanded. It does its work in the dark, and in such a sly way that much of the mis- chief is done before it is discovered. It saps the foundations of a hc.\l}h{ system. It robs theblood of its vital- ity, demoralizes the liver, confounds the stomach, and makes the victim wish he were in his grave. Itissad | prain, re it K tosee peoplesit down in their misery, ‘(‘f:yn;',’:.‘\;f-nr.::'n‘nr:;':»":‘(}'xr.ul:\’\'Itlul\nfl'r{' Tows 1 content to be the victims of mischiev- | spermatorrhea caused by over exertlons 5t ous malaria, and thinking that noth- | b selfsbuse o8 I 008 b ing can be done for them. The power Dr. . G, West's Nerve and_Brain Treatment, l guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizziness,2Convul sions, Fi s Neuralgia, 'Headache, Nervous bx the use of aleohol oF tobacoo, Mental Depression, Softening of the ing in ineanity and Jeading to misery, Wakeful tains one month's troatment. $1.00 a box, ot boxes for 5,00, Sent by mail prepaid on receipt ) price of BROWN's IRON BITTERS overthe |"™ wg quARANTEE SIX poxes CaRIIl ) s Lsen a0 ¢ 0 onre ase. With each order received by ue mischiefs of malaria has been so am- | T8 S¢S, S panied With 8600, wowillsend the | ply proved that there is no reason | purchaser our writ guntantee toretund themoney why anybody who can procure a |'tthetrettment doos notafgt @ GEGHMAN - bottle of this Prince of Tonics shall mko w1 Drue’ ist_Omaha Neh uffer. Great is the power of malaria, nd great are its disastrous effects, But greater far is the beneficent in- | 'fluence of BRowN's IRON BITTERS, { & | The preparation of iron in thisfavor- ad | ite family remedy ‘can be taken without ruining the teeth or produc. | ing constipation and headache. { DR, FELIX LE BRUN'S 4 PREVENTIVE AND CURE. FOR EITHER SEX. ANTTD nedy being injected directly to the seat o0, aire ge of diet or nauseous, | HURBIXA Of PoIsANOus M \en intern+ | ally. N 1sed as & proventive by either sex, it is T Have Found It it i it due b i the case of those already unfortunately aflicted we guar- cure, or we will refund the antee three boxes to postage paid, §2 per box, oF Price by m Was the exclamation of & man when he got & box of Eureka Pile Ointment, which is a simple and sure e A oure for Piles and all Skin Diseases. Fifty cents by boxes for §5. GAll; postpaid, \WRITTEN GUARANTEES The American Diarrh®a Cure 1| s vy a authorized agents. Hng 8tood the test for twenty years. Sure cure for Dr_Fe]jx LeBrun&Co Neb l.ll" N‘:var Fails, Diarrhaea, Dysentary, and Chole- orbus. Deaue’s Fever aud Ague Tonic & Cordial, SOLE PROPRIETORS. It 18 impossible to supply the rapid sale of the same, Sole Agont, for Omaha, SURE CURE WARRANTED m&e wiv For Fever and Ague, and all Malarial troubles. hi Biicr, ton DR. ERNEST H. HOFFMANN, W.J. WHITEHOUSE Physician & Surgeon T ra OFFICE—18TH AND JACKSON STS. For Sale by all Druggists Rosidence, 18th Streat, Bover, leimrod &;Dorman’s r sent by Exproes on receipt of price. m&ol store, near Jackson strect. Reference—A 20 years' practical experience. Rstablished in 183958. . Stmpsan, THE LEADING L Carriage Factory 1409 and 1411 Dodge Street, NEBRASKA. NXYDER, WM. S I Tia0es, Buooies AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. 1819 and 1320 Haney Street andf403 8. 13th Streot, ustrated Catalogue furnished free upon applicatian. ~~OMAHA, NEB A.HE. DAIL.RY, MANUFACTURER OF FINE Buogies Garriases and Spring Wagons My Repository is constantly filled with a seloct stock. Best Workmanship guaranteed. Office and Foctory S. W. Corner 16th and Capitol Avenue, Qmaha PIANOS®KLORG ANS On Long Time--Small Payments. Al Mamufacturers Prices. A Hospe Jr 1619 DODGE STRE Houselxeepers ASK YOUR GROCERS FOR THE HA DRY HOP YEAST! WARRANTED NEVER TO FAIL. Manufactured by the Omaha Dry Hop Yeast Co, CORNER 15TH AND DAVENPORT STREETS, OMAHA, NEB, QIR R Anheuser-Busch -, BREWING ASSOCIATION | by CELEBRATED 452 Keg and Bottled Beer i This Excellent Beer speaks for itselt, &Y ORDERS FROM ANY PART OF THE STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, Promptly Shipped. ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE TO THESTANDARD OfOurG-uarantee. F. SCHLIEF, Sele Agent for Omaha and the West, ] =sioliio- Cor. 9th Street and Capitol Avenue. P g i