Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 12, 1883, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

{ i L OMA A, MONDAY, FAY DAILY BEE- NOVEMBER 12, 1883. THE GMAXIA BEE. Dablished every woming, except Bunday, The @y Monday morning daily. NS BY WA $10.00 1 Threa Months, 6.00 | One Mouth e Vear @iz Moucns 8.0 1.00 THE SUPR 1t is now definitely settled that M. B. TReese is clected Supreme Judge over his competitor, James W. Savage. The only dispute has been as to the majority. The leading organs that supported Mr IR WREKLT RAR, PURLISTIRD RYNAY WROSRADAT, | J2ocso claimed his olection at the outset THRMSIPOSTPATD, by from 1,200 to 1,500 majority, Then 2.0 | T o o | ) Ooo Tear . 800 | Thrws Monttn M thay came down to 10,000, and they still meriean News Company, Solo, AgentsaNewsdeal: | ingigt that the official returns will give n the United Btates. ", 11 S e S ;_mmmm: him 8,000 majority. Tnx Brr has as A Communications relating to News and Fditorial atters should be addressed Lo the Epiron, or, Tim RUSINRSS LETTRRA, All Business Lotrors and Remittances should b ddressed to THR Brn PUALIAING COMPANY, OMATIA. Dratta, Checks and Postoftice orders to be mado pay @hle t6 tho order of the compaty THE BEE BUBLISHING 0., PROPS, E. ROSEWATER, Editor. ————- Thanksgiving Proclamation, “In furtherance of the ci this people at the closing of each year, to 6 upon n day wet apart for that purpose in special fosti- val of praise to the Giver of all Good, therofore, 1, Chester A, Arthur, Iresident of the United States, do hereby ¢ ate Thursday, the 20th day of November next, as a of national thanksgiving, for the year that is drawing to an ond has n replote with the evidence of divine goodness, the provailanco of hoalth, tho fullness of ¢he harvest, tho stability of peaco and order, the growth of fraternal feelings, tho spread ot dntelligonce and _learning, the continued en- joyment of civil and religions liborty—all theso and countless other Llessings a ANSO €or revorent rejoicing, 1 do, thercfore, recom- mend that on tho day above appointed tho poople rost from their accustomed labors, and meeting in theirseveral places of worship, exproes their devout gratitudo to God that He 4has dealt bountifully this nation, and pray that His grace and favor abide with it forover, CHESTER A ARTIUR, President. tom By Fuep, T. FukLINGHUYSEN, Secretary of State, Now 7uar Pennsylvania has fallen into line Don Cameron will speodily re- cover and return from the European Hot 8prings, Tho Czar has decideu to arm the Rus- wian army with repeating rifles of the latest American pattern. He has just ordered 200,000 of these arms through a London firm. Maxy of our exchanges are reading the Republican party u valuable lesson in tho light of Tuesday's elections in|: Now York, Virginia and Pennsylvania, The Mahones and ‘“‘bosses” generally aro condemned, This is a step in the right direction. Dismiss *“bosses,” bo honest with the peoplo and there will bo woro stability and harmony m the politi- «al household. Tur new trial of Hallot Kilbourn's case against ex-Sergeant-at-Arms Thomp- ct of §G0,000 It is said that tho first proposition was to award §125,000, but four jurors opposed it so strongly that the above was adopted as a compromise It is evident that Washington juries intend to thickly salve Mr. Kil- bourn’s lacerated feelings for living on son has resulted ina vi for plamntiff, sum. the fat of the land forty-five days as a prisoner in contempt. Tux tombstone of Rosewater, a picture of which was published in the Zeepubli can yesterday, was of Colorado sandstono, and was kindly furnished for the occasion by W. H. B. Stout.— Republican, That was tho Having failed to foist his sandstone or Omaha for paving purpeses has donated a slab for a monument t Rosowater. As usual Tom Ho horse. Tho corp isn't ready yet, uniindest “cut” of all, toss Stout Kimball's jumping jack is putting the cart beforo sorted that Recse, if elected, would in 000 majority. no event have oveor We now feel sure that Recse's major returns, will not ity, according to officis reach 5,000, We present helow oflicial returns from forty-four countios and estimates from the We lm\rl: credited Reese s as they These mates will exceed the actual majorities by from 200 to 300, but even if they remainder of the State with estima are made by his supporters osti prove corrcct Mr. Reese will got loss than 5,000 majority. Official Majovitie Ogiicial Majoritic COUNTY. IEESE, COUNTY, KAVAGE, Cany 107 Cuming . 28 Dodge 106 Jefferson Keith Lincoln Harlan Hitcheock Howard hnson carney. Lancaster Madison Nemaha Nuckolls Pawnoa Fetinated Mujorities. Tted Willow Brown LS Soward Butlor ot ) Washington Cheyonno Wayno Cherry Webster ... Codar York iiis 685 Dakota Otoo . Fstimated Majorities, Sioux Antelope . : Clay Total avage, 4,82 ODIOUS COMPARISON The Be indulges in an odious compar- ison when it bases its argument of loss of Republican strength in Nebraska upon the voto for Maxwell. The fact is that the lattor vote was cast previous to the Anti-Monopoly break, and subsequent to the Greenback disaffoction. When, in 1878, the Democrats and _Greenbackers united against the Republicans, the ma- jority of the Republican candidato for fovernor was much smaller than the ma- jority which has just been given for Reose. Cobb's majority was also loss than that of Recse,.— Lepublican. What a compound of ignorance and 2| falschood! In 1878 out of an aggregate of 52,417 votes polled Albinus Nance, tho Republican candidate for Governor, re- ceived 20,460 votes, W. H. Waebster, - | Democrat, 13,473 and Levi G. Todd, 4 Greonbacker, ve Albinus Nance o majori over all. In 1879, out of an azgregate of 61,681 votes polled, Amasa Cobb, Republican candi- date for Supreme Judge, received 46,113, Eleazer Wakeloy 20,827, Greenbacker, 4,74 gave Amasa Cobh 21 all, John ’ Saxon, Bod ttering 16, which 5 majority over and Boss Stout will have. to plant that| This year the aggregate vote polled menument in the jolitical graveyard whero the Loran Claris, Colbys and kin dred epirits lio interred. WasiiNGToN county, on which the op position relied for a grand boost in behalf of Savago, acquitted herself nobly on “Tuesday last, giving Mr. Reose 560 ma- This is a county in which the late jority, emocratic candidate for Supreme Judgo #ad an extonded acquaintance, principally acquired while gorving on the bench, and the voto shows that where heisbest known there he is considered least fit for the po- The merits sition to which he aspired. of the respective candidates wore ably but im{mninlly set forth by that tirelees polit- ical worker, the Blair 2ilof, and largely to that paper’s efforts in bohalf of tho Republican candidate must be ascribed lendid victory which we are now the s enabled to chronicle.—Zepublican, Washington county gave Judge Max- The Reopublican regents carried that county well B13 majority two years ago. this year by 778 majority, while Reese only receives 663 majority. That tiro- less blackguard and slanderer, the Blair Lilot, promised, before the election, to give Roese over 1,000 majority in Wash- ington county—and he fell short nearly The opposition did not rely on Washington county for a grand boost They knew that the merita of the respoctive candidates were impar- tially (1) set forth by every looal paper in ‘Washington county—in volleys of malig- Judge Savage. There was not an Anti-Monopoly ticket in the field, and with all this Judge Savage polled two hundred votes more than the Democratic candidates for Re- 500 votes, for Bavage. mnant slander vituperation of gounts, And now let us ask the brazen black guards, who persist in such mean and malicious assaults on a man who is ng longer a candidate, what they think of the spléndid testimonial of confidence given him by the people of this distric where he is best known. Douglas county 1| will exceod 85,000 and Reeso has a ma- _|jority a fraction above or below 5,000 Computed at the ratio of votes polled and majority given to Nunce in 18 - | based on the aggregate vote, Reeso ought to have at least 10,800 majority. Com- puted at the ratio of votes polled in 1879 on Cobb's majority, M. | havo at loast 26,000 majovity. In other words the Ropublican majority has dropped fully 20,000 since the election of Cobb. Bub we canmot argue with a brazen imposter who would deliberately falsify facts that avo within the reach of ovorybody. Such stupid and porsistent lying is simply disgusting. Its only of- foct will bo to destroy what little cre- dence the Republican may among intelligent patrons, ey Reese should possess Tur: pension swindlers are now receiv- ing the special attention of Commissioner Dudley, who is backed by the Secrotary of the Interior, and the war will probably be actively prossed. Too many years )| have already passed with these sharks plundering morcilessly and with impu nity those to whom government pensions were due. The povernment itself has boen a great sufferer from their rapacity. ‘Ihey put up equalization schemes, and planned jobs with millions in them, de- coiving the voterans by using thom to urge upon Congress to enact the arrears of ponsion bills, What should havebeen done long ago is but just begun, and the pension claim attorneys who have col- locted back pay and pensions for needy soldiers, or the widows and orphans of such, and taken the most of it for so -|called *‘services,” will now walk up to judgment, e ) ¢| M. Awmtuvw's frionds are confident that any Ropublican can carry New York ¢|next year, and Genoral Logan's mous-. tache is beginning to bristle up, R has resented the villianous libels of the . - shysters and blackguards, who conducted campaign sgainst Judge Savage through the Republican, by giving him 1,532 majority, and this in spite of lib- eral contributions made by Boss Stout to the campaign fund. Sarpy gives Savage the 182 majority. Deduct from these major ities the 503, which Reese receives in O'pyNawmite Rossa is suspectod, as usual, of being at the bottom of the latest explosion. Some day he ought to be found on top. —_— Tae civil rights decision seems to have . | had no visible effect on the November elections, ‘Washington, and 111 he received in Burt, - - and Bavage still carries his old district by 1,000, On a square party issue that alistrict is Republican by from 2,000 to 2,000, DurinG the recent war it was unsafe to throw & stone at & dog in the city of Washington, for fear of hitting s brig- adier-general, In Morocco it is equally unsafe to fling rocks. Cable advices from Tangier report that a stone thrown promiscuously struck a Fronch charged’ affairs, who domands satisfaction or blood. WEST OF THE MISSOURI. The fertilo brain of the thirty day Sen- ater of Colorado has evolved n gigantic scheme to lighten the burdens of the op. pressed producers of the Continent. He has secured as aids none other than the bullionatre of Nevada, Senator Fair and W. Cornell Jewett of New York. *‘The Anti-Monopoly Overland Broad Gauge Railroad Company” is the far-reaching title of this public benefactor. The road contemplated will run direct from New York bay on the New Jersey side to San Francisco, via Chicago. In crossing tho continent it will pass through Nebraska, Colorado and Utah, and beyond Salt Lake City will run parallel to the Central Paci- fic railroad. Owing to the small shipping capacity of the North and Bast rivers of New York, from the growing commercial rela- tions, and 8o as not to come in conflict with the Pennsylvania and other lines at Jersey City, the © verland Railroad and Construction company has sccured a ter minal water front, with lands, from New York bay to Newark bay, near Bayonne, Now Jersey, and through a prof system of docks and dredging to o largo basin for shipping facilitits, throu which a direct outlet with Europe, avoid- ing in part the at present yearly expense of £100,000,000 for landing and shipping from New York, at the samo time secure for New Jersey a practical commere'al port at Bayonne, New York bay, from which point Mr. Jowett designs laying ocean cables to Ortend, under the concession he now holds a8 granted to him individually by the Belgian government, using wires with extensions to be laid over the pro- posed route of the new Overland railroad. The tariff that Jowett proposes is 50 conts n message in place of H0 cents a word. Mr. Jowett, who seoms to bo at the -|head of the scheme, is known in con- nection with the Niagara peace negotia- tions and mediation policy of France with reference to its position during the late civil war, He is an anti-monopo- list, and the new railroad is an incorpora- tion of anti-monopolistic character. This sounds very good and looks well on paper, but the moment Tabor, Fair & Co., begin to be troublesome to the rail- road giants of the east, they will be made feel that a Kansas cyclone struck them without & dugout in sight. Montana has taken the preliminary steps for admission to the Union of States withing the next two years. At the election last week members of a Con- stitutional Conventionwere elected,which will assemble at Helena the second Mon- day of January next. The convention will consist of forty-five delogates. Of these, thirty-nine were apportioned among the several counties upon the basis of the vote of last fall. The remaning six were chosen from the three judicial districts. The product of the convention will be submitted to a vote of the peopleat the general election in November, 1884, 1If it shail be ratified it will be submitted to Cougress with a prayer for the admission of the Territory. What the probabilitics of success in that form can only bo con- joctured. There is one favorablefeature. The m of Dakota to Statechood is too strong to bo easily denied. At the same vime 1t is scarcely supposable thata Dem- ocratic House will add two Republicans to the o and three to the electoral college unless offset can be found. For this th must look to Montana which has /s given round Demoer: majorities, with a single exception, thirteen years ago, when other than par- tisan considerations prevailed. The ad. mission of Montana and Dakota at once is therefore possible. The intvinsic merits of the demand which the latter will make are such as cannot be over! lection last fall the T 23,000 votes. Since then the Pacific road has been completed and the access of population during the present year has porhn{mlnwu greator than in any other part of tho country. In the two years that must olapso beforo the admis- sion could be consummated under the most favorable action, it is not unreason- able to expect that the Territory will have attained a population of 150,000, 2y One of the most important decisions recently rondered by the United States court, was that recently delivered by The suit Judge McCreary in Colorado. which was begun about thr was entitled the “‘United States against the Colorado Coal and Iron company.” This corporation was composed mainly of officials of the Denve: Santa Fe roads. Extensive blast fur- naces and iron and coke mills were built at South Pueblo employing hundreds of mechanics and laborers. In fact so ex- tensive and profitable had the vlant be come that Pueblo justly claimed the title of *“I'he Pittsburg of the West.” The suit was started by the government to recover some 9,000 acres of coal and mineral lands in Las Animas county, Colorado, ewned and claimed by the com- pany, ‘I'he property embraces the ex- tensive coal fields at El Moro, which located in a spur of the Raton mountains, Nearly twenty-five miles of galleries have been run in on these veins, which are probably the finest coal veins known in the world. The complaint alleged that the patentees, sixty-one in number, were fictitious persons, that the pre-emption papers were fradulent and manufactured to dofraud the government of its title, and that the lands, even although they had beenhonestly entered, were mineral and notagricultural in their character. During the progress of the caso a vast amount of testimony has heen taken, und the final argument was held in 8t. Louis September 13, The decis- ion aflirs all the- points climed by the government, and legally ousts the Col- titles, bo far more sweeping than would_appear from the details in the case, as it is no- torious that thousands of acres of land equally as good in different portions of the State have been acquired in the same wanner, The value of the land is beyond com- pute, because with only slight develop- ment, comparatively speaking, it s now to contain great treasures in coal and iron, which exist in_immense quan- tities, Since the consolidation in 1580 the Colorado Coal and Iron company has conducted a large business in the miniy of coal and the manufacture of iron, an promises to be the wealthiest corporation in Colorado, Under the decree this rich & Rio (irande and |+ orado Coal and Lron company from their | ¢ The effocts of the decision will | Af possession, having a value of many mil- ions of dollars, will return to the hands of the government, 1t may be regarded a8 a certainty that the Colorado Coal and Iron company will not relinquish its pos- sessions, inasmuch as it will be its privi not all, as mineral land. show no diminution in their stores of wealth, On the contrary, the output | shows a steady increase from month to month, There are no excitements, no “hoems” or stampedes to new camps, yet the mineral stream pours down inte the | valley with a regularity that proves the source to be unfailing. Statistics of re- coipts the past ten menths of this year, compiled by The Salt Lake Tribune, aie ag follows: January February 5.83 March April. 341,77 May 5. 10 Tune 4513,480.20 July 481,919.00 August September October., 6O5,150,42 Total vies . £5,616,149.88 A number of the heaviest producers are not included in this list on account of their not making reports until the close of the year, The receipts in Salt Lake City for the week ending October 51, in- clusive, were $160,430.63 of bullion and &1, of ore, an aggregate of § 080.63. Receipts for the previous week were, in gross, 8158,203.00. The ship- ments of bullion for the week end- ing October 31st, inclusive, were as fol- lows: 46 cara bullion sent enst 6 cars ore to Denver. . 15 cars ore to New Mexic 21 cars ore sent west 5 ¢ 1 car white lead to S'nl'rancisco 1.204,780 1bs 171,620 ** 315 00 cars 2,201,839 1bs The shipments of the Horn Silver for the same week were twenty-two cars of bullion, 66,000, Previously reported for the present calender year, $2,800,000; present aggregate, $2,866,000, The fam- ous Emma mine is_again revived and it is said good paying oreis now being brought to the surface. The prospect of a dividond succeeding countless assoss- ments will be cheering news to the long list of flecced stockholders. The new placer diggings in the Coour d’ Alene mountains, 200 miles west of Helena, isnow exciting much interest among miners, and hundreds are moving ing in that direction regardless of the dangers and privations of a winter in the mountains, The new district is de- shteen miles long, scribed as about e varying m width from twenty to eighty rods. It is flat and emooth, having a fall of two feet to the hundred, with a gradual and even slope. The gulch is all covered with heavy timber. Rocks are also quite numerous, Water is abund- ant and sufficient for the diggings. The ground will be worked by either strip- ping or driffting, but most likely it will not pay to drift very extensively. Ten miles of the gulch > already been prospocted and pay dirt found. Two hundred claims have been located, and very claim opened up so far pays from €20 "to €100 per man daily. ¢nly ten strings of sluices are nhow running. The bed-rock is slate, and pays from one to two ounces per pan. There are a few inches of pay gravel on the bed-roc which prospects from two bits to £10 per pan. It is not yet ascertained how wide the pay streak is, but y working in the centre and on both sides | of the guleh in various places. There this, which } ly: Engle cre | bout s long Gold Run, two or three iniles long; Quar | guleh, on the south side, four or five | miles long. This gulch gets its name from an extens 2 formation at its | head. It is thought some eight hundred n will winter in the A _postoflice will soon be estab- even hundred names havealready | 1ed to a petition for the esta lishment of mail service. A trail is now being made over the Cour d’Alene range to the new gold fields. It will be com- pleted by the end of November, or one thousand 1 guleh, Mr. C. Gilmore, Foreman of Hobbs, | Wall & Co., San Francisco: St. Jacobs | 0il is the best remedy in the world for rheumatisy STATE JOTTINGS, ture in Plattsmouth scarcity of tenement houscs. Soap-bubble parties are popular in Lincoln, | The greatest favorite is tiie Diggest blow- hard, Sheriff Gregg, of Dodge count; sessor silver mounted revoly Judge A noted Blair bum named Bucher was shot and killed by an officer, lust week, while re- ting arrest, A slick thief raidod a ste daylight, and secured X160 wh tor was sneezing The S-year-old daughte Payne, of Nebraska City, outhouse on the bth inst, Keith county is settling up rapidly. It is said 140,000 acres of land were taken up the st eighf daya of Octeber. The B, 8, C. (."is a B and being translated nieans Bla fort Club, The club gives dances. The foundation of the new opera housoe at Central City has been laid, mn} the building is actually rising bofore astonished eyes. | A Schuyler woman who has had four hus- bands, none of them yet dead, though the w man now lives alone, s spoken of by a Schuy- ler paper as a “xind of standing challinge,"” The depot at Blair was robbed the other night. Two safes were bl »en, and about 830 was stolen, Seve also | plandered, the thieves securing several good | overcouts. | “I'he lady didate for superintendent of schools in Butler county was snowed under by the present holder of that office, M, C, Del. ney. Similar fate was i store for the lady candidate in Dodge. | The Arapahoe creamery « about decided to branch out a lit reamery business that of ¢ will have the fow ngs put v hundred hogs the present win Dan Geiyer served four years in the peniten- . Now come his twin sons, ve been found guilty of horse n the penitentiary for three years. They awrived at the pen last Tuesday, and were put to work in the tailor shop, Fred New, farmer residing in Otoe o las one of the smallest calves ever seen country. When three days old it weigh only fourteen pounds and is twenty-one inches in Jength from tip of tail to head, seven- toen inches high, and fs perfectly white in color, ‘The first station north of Beatrice on the U, founded and laid out by the Pickrell Bros,, bear the name of Pickrell, and starts out on a plat of forty acres. Considerable inter- est Is already L.Jng manifested in the new town, which promises to have a population of several hundred by spring. wan named Strait hereafter from a barn just | v, is the pos- , the gift of n Wilbur in the proprie of Hon. Robert as drowned in an organization, Solid Cor necessary and intend packing about five A Lancaster count; launched himself into lege to locate a part of the territory, if I i The mines tributary to Salt Lake City |t | ness in its history n taken up, name- | | been together three years we | clothes again. straits. Ho was about thirty.two yoars of age, was moderately well educated and was sober and indastrious, He had a beautifnl ablo wife and sevoral children, 'ho citizons of Brown cotnty are excited by the revelations made by a member of a gang of horse perating along the Niobrara. Through sssion & number of reputable L 3, me means i arrestod and the and location of all the members ascer A vigilance corumittee has boen or and es- tamonth Herald say nisiness, o C,, B, loing the heaviest busi The, company find it al urnish shippors with cars their business, and in the d west con: the summer most_impossible sufficient to trans; passenger travel the rush east tinues fully as heavy as duri months. a ot of features, a complexion The tincture of a skin that 1T admire,” In using Pozzoni’s complexion powder, w h ms vou will aconire e e 1:U8S CLAIMANT. ANEW CHY The Story of a Curiosity of a Bowery Mus New York Times, Among the individuals starring the U | spotted man, the tattooed girl,the albino, the “Mulbe street wonder,” and the other curiosities in the Windsor Museum, at No. 105 Bowery, yesterday afternoon, was a mild-mannered youth of apparently 20 years of age, who wore a slight mus- tache, was attired in a suit of brown, and ass diamond about the size of a door-knob at the end of a fob chain that dangled from has pocket. He will be on exhibition himself to-day, and if his stories be true, he is a unique curiosi- Charlic Ross. According to his state- ments he was abducted four years before he was born, since Charlie Ross was four years old when he was stolen in 1874,and the “‘curiosity” alleges he wae kidnaped 13 years ago, The guileless Charlie was called on by one of The Time's curiosities and request- ed to give an account of himself, “Well,” said he, ‘I can remember being stolen from Phijadelphia and taken on board a steamboat and kept in a daak room for a year.” *'On board the boat?” asked the spot- " said Charlie. you sca-sick?” inquired the tat- tooed girl with sarcasam. “None o your business,” Charlie pelitely. “After I'd been there about a year,” he continued, ‘‘they stolea girl and put her in the dark room with me and kept us together for another year— 1 pity her,” intejected the tattocd =irl, sotto voice. “‘And then we got away together, con- tinued Charlie, regardless of the inter- ruption. “*You sec it was a big boat, a reg'lar pirate boat, and they had horses and everything on it, When we got to some place in I everybody got ofl and went away but one man, and he came to the doorand siid: ‘Come out, you children, and make your escape.’ Ire- member his sayin’ that,” said Charlie in a burst of confidence, *‘as if it was only yesterday he said it.” “And" he probably said it yesterday just as much as he did then,” remarked the tattoed girl, scornfully. “*Was it a low, black vessel, with rak- wsts, and did it carry a skull and cross-bones at the mizzentop fo'gallant reef-sail halyards and do its cruel and bloody work on the high seas, regardless of the laws of God and man?” inquired ‘The Times curiosity, who possesses a fine command of language and an extensive knowledze of nautical afla ““Yes,” said Charlie, “How do you know,” asked the tat- replied | tooed girl, “if you was shut up in that dark foom all the time? ‘Git onto the blue and white parrot chinnin to itself,” remarked Charlie, i i ing the tattoocd young scornful jerk of his “You're a fine Charlie Ross, you ar retorted the damsel of the vari-colored skin, *‘You wauf to tie a string to your- self or you'll be gettin’ lost again. Some- | body'II'be a kidnappin’ you for your beau- ty. Sa Barte yor?” “Don’t pay any attention to her,’ Charlio. “As 1 was saying in Brazil, and this lend me your” face to go to the rs’ Association mask ball, will said ve got away there rl dressed up in | men’s clothes and ot a puss as cook on a She was vessel that sailsd to New York. three yecars older than I, but she took me with her. She was cook on that vessel for three years and nobody knew that she wasn't a man. Her name was Fannie Presgall and she was an Italian, but she spoke English and Spanish. After we'd ame to Soston, and then she” put on women's The way 1 come to know that I'm Charlie Ross was that she went to work in ashoe factory in Lynn, and before she went she gave me a paper that the man who told us to escape zave her when we went away. It said on it: ‘Charlie Ross. Stolen from Philadelphia by Moiser, the two Stephensons, Jesse James, Pinkham and Douglas,” She told menever to partwith it.but I lost itonship- board while I wasfurling asail. Ican’tread or write, but 1 got one or two letters from Fannie after she went to Lynn, and the last 1 heard of her she was in Lawrence, A Dutchman in our boarding-house us to read the letters to me, and he answ ed them for me, but I've lost them all, Since she left me I've been at sea until now as cook. Now I'm going to stay here awhile and then go to Philadelphia and see my father.”” “I'll give you a straight steer,” called the tattooed ‘girl, as the allegod Charlio Ross walked toward the stairs, *‘Don’t o to Philadelphia, Go to the dock and fall off. You're no good for anything,” “‘She’s jealous cause she knows she won't get no attention when I go on ex- hibition," said Charlie, in confidence to The Times curiosity. Mr. Thomas B, McCoy, the proprictor of the museum, has written to Mr, Christian K. Ross, in Philadelphia, in regard to the matter,and a8 sent an agent to look after the girl annie Presgall in Lawrence, | THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN Relieves and cures RHEUMATISML Neuralgla, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SW uin oGS NPRAINS, Soreness, Cuts, Bruises, FROSTBITES, HBURNS, SCALDS, And allother bodily aches and pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. Sold by kil Druggists s ud Dealers. Directions i 11 Tniiguages. Tha Charles A. Vogeler (¢ rafter, last Monday. He was in finaucial ty, for he claims to be the long lost AND JORBERS IN AND STEELE, JOHNSON & CO,, Wholesale Grocers ! FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOOLS. ‘ND ALL GROCERS' SUPPLIES A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF | Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER €O FRESE OYSTERS. . Booth’s "Oval’ Brand FRESH FISH AT WHOLESALE. D. B. BEEMER, Agent,Omaha, On Long Time--Small Payments. 1619 DODGE STR PIANOS&KORGANS At Manufactorers Prices. A, Hosve Jr MANUFACTURER OF FINE A. . DAILEY, Buggies Carriaces and Sering Wagons MyfRepository ls constantly filled with & selectstook. Best Workmanship guaranteed. Office and Foctory S. W. Corner 16th and Capitol Avenue, Qmata’ MANUFACTURER OF OF STRIOTLY FIRST-CLASS LArTiages, Bugoies, AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. 1819 and 1820 Harney Strect and“408 S, 13th Strect, u:trated Catalogue furnished fre¢ upon applicatian WM. SNYDER, Wi —~O0MAHA, NEB LMPORTERS OF AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIC to $120 per 1000. Brigands. T AND SAMPLES. MAX MEYER & GO., HAVANA CIGARS! CIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES S SHOKERS' ARTICLES PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS: Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from $6 | AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: | Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES SEND FOR PRICE LIS It Never Fails, ASK YOUR GROCERS FOR THE WARRANTED NEVER TO FAIL, 2718 BURT STREET, OMAHA, NEB I—Iouéekeepers = OMAHA DRY HOP YEAST!Z =) Manufactured by the Omaha Dry Hop Yeast Co, | = L Anheuser-Busch ~% . BREWING ASSOCIATION CELEBRATED f Keg and Bottled Beer This Excellent Beer speaks fcr itselt, Promptly Shipped. ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE TO THESTANDARD OfOurG-uarantee. 'F. SCHLIEF, Sole Agent for Omahajand the West, Cor. 9th Street and Capitol Avenue” M. HELLMAN & CO,, Wholesale Clothiers! OMAHA, 11301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREEY COR. 13TH, NEBRASKE g \\

Other pages from this issue: