Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 10, 1883, Page 2

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2 THE DAILY BEE---OMAIIA, MO NDAY, DECEMBER 10, 188 . — gum—— Royal, Rich, KRed Blood" In this coantry we are all kings, and we are all entitled to have as good blood as that which courses through the veins of emperors, There are princes and million. es languishing in feebleness and broken-down bodily health who would be glad to have the strength of the humblest laboring man, « And there are many people who arc neither kings, emperors, nor millionaires, whose blood is thin, whose circulation is poor, who are suffering from lassitude and debility, and who know not the pleasure of hearty meal, nor the enjoyment of | being able to do a good day’s work. If such people will put some iron into their blood, they will vitalize and enrich it. They can do this by the use of Brown’s Iron Ritters, the purest and most excellent iron med- icine ever made. Thousands who were weak, languid, pale, and pros trated, are now happy to say that Brown'’s Iron Bitters brought them up and gave them new life. ~=THE MILD POWER CURE! MPHREYS’ OMEOPAT, ES, igestion, Inflamations. orm Fever, Worn ¢ ts , Griping, Dillious Collc, Vomiting, .. i ¥ Eryalpelas, Ery | Rbeumatio Pains,.. . .25 hill, Aggiies . Catnfrh, acato or Whooniig Conel Genernl Debility, dney Diy inflhenza violent coug) Physical Wi and other Eurern nd_on Thirty BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS, An excallent lppnllzlnfi tonic of exquisite flavor, now used over the ; cures Dyspopsin e, and all v NUPPERMIRY, Sl av, No ¥, . co. uded, 3T e Ton 800, '8 SCALE, 85, Raf IR FARMER B SN 5820, B0 0TI MIZES, . Radueed PRICK LIST VIEE, FORGES, TOOLS, &c. i Fou 1GIT WLk, 10 A viE Riad 111 0P To0ln, 810 planaers st e ST Sy Acticios YO nksT PACES: WHOLESALL & RETALL. JEWS OF NEW YORK. Reasons Why They Resort to the Metropolis. Their Energy and Wealth--Ef- feots of Friendly Treatment, Sectariana—Poor Jews and Their Tr Surict ment, New York Correspondence San Franciteo Chronicle, One of the first impressions that a stranger on a visit to this city gets is that itisa veritablo Now Jerusalem—a city full of Jews. You seem to mect Jews or bo reminded of them wherever you turn. Take Broadway, for instanc u no- tice that nearly all the signs bear foreign names, and that while some are Irish, some Polish, some French or Italian, the great majority are German. Look again and you see that nine-tenths of the Ger- mans are German Jews. You can tell that by the faces in the doorways, and thore are Jews, too, under the signs bear ing the names of other nationalitics. Turn down one block to Church strect, the main thoroughfare of the great dry goods district, with its towering pile marble, iron and brownstone, holding such treasure that a fire searcely ever de. stroys a building there without its being reckoned a million dollar conflagration. There are £300,000,000 of insurance risks on that little district. Why, you say to yoursef, nearly overy faco in tho stores is a Jew's face—nearly every firm's sign is made up of Jews' names. Seo the great palaces of tho clothiers, the biggest and showicst stores in the motropolia soven in ten are owned by Jews, What a raft of Jews there is on Wall street, with the great house of Seligman at their head. What a hold the Jews have on the amusement trade, from Rudolf Aron- the musical caterer, and Theodore s, treasurer of Wallack’s theatre, down to the firm of Morris & Hickman, of the principal Bowery musefim, W hat scores of rich Jew lapryors thero are What a place the.d ows hold in the brow- ing trade. Why, there is a noted Jew pugilist; there are sovoral Jew burglars; the biggest rec of stolengoods in the Writed States is Mother Mandelbaum, a Jewess, and Rudolph, the billiardexpert, is o Jew. Two daily morning newspapers bolong to Jows, and every daily paper numbers Jews among its editors and re- porters. Everybody who buys a pack of playing cards anywhero in the United States pays tribute to a Jow, a Mr. Co- hen. The great markets are full of Jews and the big east side slaughter house dis- trict is wholly composed of Jews. The most singular street in New York, Divis- ion street, which presents a long line of millinerv stores side by side, withoutany other sorts of stores to interrupt the sin- gular array, is exclusively a strect of Jews, A CITY WITHOUT PREJUDICE, Lexington avenue, one of the choic residence streels of the city, lined with fine houses, is a Jews’ strect, and the ad- jacent blocks of the side streets are al- most given up to Jews. What sort of a York that the younger men do notunder- stand how it is that Jews are murdered and stoned and hounded by the peoplein certain parts of Europe. Better still, whatever he undertakes or wherever he goes, ho moets ten Christians to one Jew, and he observes that they buy and sell with him, invite him to lunch with them, to drink with them, to ride with them. Once in a while he hears a Christian say that some of the best friends he has in the world are Jews. Our Jew son comes to the conclusion that his feet have fallen into pleasant path If he has good qualities in him, they are developed and asserted. Some of the best Jews in the world (and the nicest people in the world in many respects are your fine Jews) are to be found in this modern Jerusalem. HEBREW BEAUTIFUL MAIDENS, T only wish you could meet somo of their daughters coming out of a public school of an afternoon, Such complex- jons as they have! The olive and the peach are blended in their cheeks. Such eyes! You must go to southern Spain or Italy to see other eyes to compare with them. Such plump and shapely forms, #0 wholesome and healthy. Are these in the silks and jewels the hated mean, mi- serly, grubbing, self-denying Jews wo read about? you ask. Come and see their brothers, Washington and Julian Nathan, sons of the murdered Jew mil- lionaire, were for years considered the landsomest young “men in New York. Look at the young Hebrews in the thea- ters, the music halls, the billiard rooms, the clubs. how fashionable and costly is their dress, how they fling their money about. You say all Jews aro stingy. ~ These young swells are not. You say that if they spend a dollar they expect to make five by it. That may be 80 in business, butLord! Lord! here they are spending money like water on e other for drinks, for women'’s smiles, for seats at the play, forext gant dinner To tell the truth wonder what their old fathers who began life +/ith a ped- dler's pack or a geeond-hand clothes shop wou'! say if they could sec the vt bucks as 1 see them constantly in the vortex of fashion, or pleasure, or sin up town late at night. And yet, on the other hand, we New Yorkers have ob- served that a Jew will be as close as the door of a burglar-proof safe, denying himself not only the luxuries Lut some of the very common places, until he can afford to do the other thing, and then, presto! ho has a palace on Murray Hill, costly pictures, a corps of servants, dan- cing and French and music masters for his children and sealskins and a phaeton for his wife. A DARKER SIDE OF TH(E PICTU But thero are two sides to every pic- ture. Come with me to Baxter street. Here are Jews to excito your pity. Jew i in cellars; Jews sleeping twenty in aroom; Jews inhabiting the storeswhere they furbish up old garments and tinker capt-off shoes to be offered to new wear- ors; cooking, eating, sleeping, marry- ing, dying, and being born—whole fami- lies and firms and clerks and landlords in one little room, with their merchan- dise. I went into a Baxter street tene- ment with a Russian once to find some refugees lately landed. “Let me in,” said the Russian, knock- ing at the door of an apartment. firm went bankrupt the other day and gave about $1,000,000 preforences to creditors—the largest sum of preferred credits over fixed upon? A Jew cloth house. Who married the fat woman? A Jews have built churches here passed in cost or beauty, There Iiboral, extensive or Pobja Y P e 4! ewish huspiualy the 3 No nlass spondn mtory 10 hthe opera or to make art flourish n the Jews, Idon’t care where yonfi:) or what you do in New York, whether’it be to walk or ride, to shop or visit, buy or sell, to be amused or fed, you will'bo sure to meet Jows at your elbows, by your side, bohind the count- ers, the desk, the box offices, in police uniforms, on the theater stage, at the races, in tho clubs—you had better quit New York if you have got any silly prej udice against the chosen peoplo of Giod. Yet all this effect is produced by about 100,000 Jews. It is less than one-tenth Warranted absolutely p Cocoa, from which the exce: Ol has been removed times the strength of Ce con mixed and Is therofore far more econom cal. strengthening, R & MCORMICIE'S Patent Dried Fruit Lifter. fi NO DEALER GROCERY 'l Groceries STORE CAN AFFORD A8 A PAID OF TO WK vousterscares, |l Wishout 1. H.C.CLARK, SOLE PROPRIETOR, OMAHA, NEB. RED STAR LINE. Belgian Royal and U. 8, Mail Stea SAILING EVERY SATURDAY BETWEEN NEW YORK AND ANTWREP, The Rhine, Gernany, Haly, Hollaud and France, Oubward Bteerage, §20; Prepaid from Antwerp,820; Excursicn, $43.60; 44 Cabin, §65; Excursion, §100; Raioon frois 8000 815 et $110 o 8125, Foter Wright & Sons, Gen, .#: right ., Agts aBeAs ot GOLD I_XDH-' PARIS, 1878, Broakg Cia, ol 1t hus thres with Stareh, Arrowroot or Sugar, It is deliclous, nourishing, asily digested, and 1 for invalids as 00. Dorchester, Mass. the Jows' paradise. It has happoned that theroare a do; tries, build home g'o wmong Chri selves with cept London, a turning over and making money. don, not only becauso this is tho pal City in - free country, withe projudices wminds of individuals, t there in no public “apirit here.~ Nobody cares what blockheads or scoundrels are elected to form our city government; no- body cares whethoer we have the Barthol- di statue of “‘Liberty” or not; nobody cares whether Central Park is being neg- lected or beautitied; nobody cares wheth- er our harbor is being gradunlly filled up with the garbage our servants are too lazy or corrupt to carry out to sea; no- body in New York cares for anybody but himself. *‘Hurrah for me, and you go to the devil!” is the motto of the New Yorker. Everybody says that of us, and we have little doubt that it is true, INFLUENTIAL JEWS, Well, sce how that works in the case of a Jew. 1f he settles down inaninland country town, the children hoot him in the streets and peg stones at his storo windows. His custom is confined to the poor and ifinurnnt, to whom he sells the lowest grades of goods at the lowest line of prices. There is no Christian door open to him, no Christian hand extended towards him, and at the same time there is no Jowish community with its Hebrew tongue and synagogue to make him feel that he belongs to a body with influence and a common interest to bind it togeth- er. Lt him come to Now York. No- body will hoot at him or stone his win- dows, That is tho fate of the latest and most odd and weakest comer—the China- man, A Jow does not attract attention, A hundred of them with bags on their backs and beards to theirwaists, all walk- ing together up Broadway, would not ex- cite remark. Our Jew son sees that and walks more proudly and goes about his work with more confidence. Next he finds his fellow-Jews honored in every mmercial calling. He finds them lav- ish, and they take him iuto splendid homes, and let him share pews withthem in palatial synagogues on Murray Hill, He the names of Jews among the guests at public dinners. He subscribes to Jews' newspapers, gets Jows' meat with ease wherever he may live, runs across Jows everywhere, and actually finds that they are treated so wellin New ) of the population that has managed to assert itself so as to stmnp New York as reasons why Jows should remain with us, establish indus- , found charitios, min- tians and identify thom- tham as they have not done with any other city in the world ex- Thoy have come to New York becauso it is the business center and affords the most opportunities for Thoy have put themselyes forward as thoy havo not done elsewhere, even in Lon- princi- P t any eatablished church of its own, but bo- causo_they have found that whatover y exist against them in the ro is no general or popular exprossion of shat feeling. We New Yorkors, whether wo bo Jews or Gentiles, aro very fond of saying that A young girl's face, crimson with mor- tification, appeared at a little window opening out on the hall, “What do you want?’ she asked in ussinn. “Lot me in; T want to said my g I can’t,” N ¥ R ?.nf with you,” N g i ramete S my of ther things- : st a8 the wash.”* Take the“elevated cars on the Second avenue road_and look in_the notorious tonement cigar shops. Half of theso slaves you soo at werk in_what ought to be their front parlors are Bohemians, the others are Jews. Look! the walls are bare, the floors are bare, the windowsare curtamnless and dirty. Only the half- naked infants crawling over the strips and fragments of tobacco on the floor are idle. The rest—the hent grandfather, the wrinkled granddame, tho pale hus- band, the wan wife and the children from the fourtcen-year-old to the four old, are manipulating the tobacco. s is at once home and shop. Aro you surprised? T'll cure you of the firstshock and mako you used to such sights, if you will let me show you how many thous- ands of parlors are also tailor shops, pic- ture-framo _shops, rag-carpot fuctories, shirt factorios, or the workrooms of any one of a dozen other tradoes, those Jews at work in them! Yes, in- deed. And do Jews do hard work! You can answer that still botter if, when you are at the great Chatham Squaro depot of the cast side elevated roads, you will look into the factory alongside ‘»? you to your right. There you will seo some of tho wretchedest, thinnest Jews and Jew osses behind noisy tailors’ sewing ma- chines. Look at the front row of faces at six o'clock in the morning, then look again at midnight and _you will seo the same countenances. Yes, indeed, Jows work. It uged to be said that there wers no poor Jows. That we have seen to be nonsense. You have often heard that there were no Jew beggars, T am told that this is equally untrue, There are Jow beggars, but they do not beg of Christians, The vast charities that ar maintained by the rich Jews of New York aro busy the yoar round supplying tho shiftless, the improvident, the lazy, the unfortunate and the fraudulent Jews with food and fuel and money. Well, you say, let the rich Jews take caro of their poor. O, but they take care of our poor besides, Al of their hospitals and asylums are absolutely non-sectarian, and they are so well managed that many Christians apply to them and get what they ask for. KFFECTS OF FRIENDLY TREATMENT. The effect of fair and friendly treat- ment upon the Jews is revolutionizin, them in New York, They do not feel the necessity of strictly ~enforcing the Mosaic laws or of relying upon their an- cient superstitions, You will see them eating pork in the restaurants and in the homes of Christian friends. They inter- marry with us Christians more and more each year. They are actually urging in some congregations the prufi»nuty b ing their temples on Saturday and cele- brating the Sabbath on Sunday, while in other synagogues Sunday services are already” the custom, to accommodate those who do not care to neglect their business on Saturday. Further still go those wealthy and intelligent Jews who form the congregation of Felix Adler, the apostle of ethical culture. He is a ra- ist, and teaches his followers to shake off the fotters of Old Testament superstition and accept ouly what they can believe. Very many Jews hold pews in the synagogues, but never sit in them, preforring the liberal teachings of this nlmlluenl young Jew, who practically as- saults the pillars of Judaism, RIGID ADHERENTS T0 THE LAW, You must go to Kast Broadway to sec the Jews who still cling to the pure and simple Mosaic faith. They don't all speak English, They never use English when talking among themselves. The books they read are printed in_Hebrew \When a woman marries she shaves her head and puts on a wig. When someone among them strikes a blow, or gives a stab, or steals from another, or commits adultery or bigamy, our police and cur courta never hear of it unless death oc- curs by violence and a coroner is called in order to get a burial permit. In all their troubles they go at once to the nearest rabbi, always avenerable bearded man, wrapped up in books. He is judge as well as priest. His word is stronger law than the weightiest finding of the United States supreme court, No man or woman in that colony would dare to cat pork, or rabbit, or oysters, or crabs, or lobsters, I heard of a case where a rabbi’s daughter fell in love with a Chris- tian youth, She was beaten and starved and lectured and locked up ana prayed over, and the Christian youth was warr that terrible things would happen to him and to her if he persisted in his atten- tions, Nevertheless she slipped out into the street one day and met the youth (he was a butcher in the neighborhood) and they were married, She went homehand in hiand with her husband. Her father tho rabbi calmly and with_affecting pa- thos told her he had a daughter EXACTLY RESEMBLING HEIR, but that that daughter was dead and would be buried on the following day. Her mother turned her back on her. The next day the butcher saw from his store a hearso drive up to tho rabbi’s door. Men and women in mourning filed into the hou Presently pall-bearers omerged carrying a casket which they lifted into the hearse. The relatives of his wife got into the carriages that dro to the door. ITe knew that he was lool ing at the funcral of his wife, who was nevertheless hoarty and well in his home near by. Hadmhe been there she wouid have seon her own funeral. Had she chosen to do o sho could have read her name and age and the date of her death on the coftin lid. Every now and then afterwards she met her parents and never failed to speak to them, buv they hurried by and pretended not to hear or seo he J. E. Ravrn, e Without question St. JJacobs Oil is the great pain ouro of the — JRESTING NOVELTIES Only $2,000 Commission for s Horse Sal SOME 1 From the Denver Fribune. Some men are unfitted by nature to be the owner of a fast herse,and Mr. Mather, who rocently sold the pacer Johnson to Commodore Kittson, is one of them. M; Mather is a banker at A} nd discovered the new famous pacer in that sylvan nook some three years ago. At that time Mr. Mather was the owner of a pair of gray driving horses, whose speed he rated at about a mile in three minutes. It was while driving these moderately rapid stoeds up the road one day that he first saw Johnson. The owner of the pacor a man of moderate means, convey- ed to Dr. Mather the information tha the bay gelding could go along pretty well, and suggested that the ownersnip of a half interest in him would be a good thing, oven for gdluker. Mr. Mather, judging everyt] i way of horse flesh from the s he gray team, told his nei . up the road ith thin nace: fi:)nféxl;lfi'e With t the V) Tear, but this fact so impre! him that he became a half owner in tiie pace, pay- ing less thgn$500 for his share of the an- imal. Later hesecured the other half,and in the summer of 1882 found himself the owner of a horso that could go a mile in Last spring the animal was placed in Peter Johnson's hands for training, and soon after that Mr. E. H. Smith secured a controlling half interest in the horse for $5,000. When the trotters and ] began operations in Michigan, Mr. Mather concluded to go across the lake and see how his horse would perform. He hed Detroit in time to see Johnson win his race with ease. At the Chicago races Mr. Mather again had the plea- sure of beholding Johnson win, and at the end of the second heat the entire field that started against him had been distanced. Then came a cloud on the hitherto rosetinted horizon of Mr. Mather’s turf experience. At Pittsburg the horse was taken sick. Mr, Smith, the other partner, wanted to buy or sell. Mr. Mather reflected—and bought out Smith, At Chicago this fail Johnson paced a mile in 2:10. In the menn time Mr. Smith had secured an agreement from Mr, Mather, which was to the effect that in case Smith could sell the horse for over 18,000 the surplus was to be his commission on the transaction. Ne- gotiations with Commodore Kittson were opened, the price of Johnson being placed at $20,000. These figures were satis- factory, provided tho horse could show throe good heats. . He did that, and then nothing remained but to pay the money. Dan_Woodmanseo was the paymaster. Mr. Mather suggested that the entire 320,000 be handed over to him and he would settlo with Smith, ~ Mr. Smith objected gently, but firmly, He wonld take $2,000 and My, xllllhcr could have $18,000, At this juncture Mr, Mathor sought censolation and advice from John Splan, who was one of the party. *It seems to me,” he said, “that T am paying an awful commission “Does it!" replied Splan, *I think you are getting off remarkably cheap. As a rule, when the boys sell a horse for a man, they just split the amount in two with the owner,” ““What! Is that really the custom?” : *‘Certainly, When Itarus was sold for 856,000, 1 ot 817,000 for my part.” Mr, Mather wanted to hear no more, but went across to the Palmer House rotunda at a 2:20 guit in order to sign the bill of sale. After the salo had been con- cluded and the draft for the money hand- ed over and vouched for by a bank, the party again fell to chatting, “Don’t you think,"” said My, Smith to Mr. Mather, *‘that now that you have got all that money you could afford to buy us a nice cigar?” *1 should like to,” was the reply, “but I have only just time to catch my train,” and a grab was made for his satchel, “‘You'd better look out,” said John = Splan. “‘Every sandbagger in Chicago has boen waiting for you to get that mo- ney, and they are lining the road from here to the depot now. “Oh, I haven't got the money,” re- glied Mr, Mather carnestly, *1 put it all in the bank except £15. Good day, gentlemen, “Good day," replied Mr. Swith, *‘and God bless you.” . Angostura Bitters is known as the great tor of the digestive urgans all over the Have it iu your house. you Ask druggist or grocer for the genuina aréicl manufactured by Dr, J, C, B, Siogert & Son CHEAP CATTLE. How They were Received fo Fill an Army Contract, Arrest of Two Wyoming Stock- men, One of Whom Hails from Omaha, Charged with Gobbling Govern- ment Beeves, How a Herd of 1,000 D" Steers isappeared, Denver News, December 4. The Thornburg massacre, with its ac- companying horrors and fiendish outrages, is still fresh in the memory of the people of the west. The killing of old man Meeker, and the dragging of the body about the White river reservation by a log chain attached to his neck, the massacre of Major Thornburg and his 300 troops by the Indians, and the hor- rible fate that befell poor Josie Meeker and the other women whn were made captives, are to well known to need any comment at this date. The breaking out of the Utes drove everbody who escaped with their lives to the settlements, ex- ting a few white men who were more dangerous and troublesome than the In- dious _themselves, and have always caused the government mere trouble than any tribe of redskins, The massa- cre oceurred in the fall of 1870, At that time there was connected with the White River agency a herd of 1,700 cattlo, owned by the government. When the outbreak occurred the herders forsook their herd and sought safety in flight. They had ranged on White river, and in the vicinity of the reservation. The ani- mals bore” the **L. D.” (interior depart- ment) brand, and wero the property of the government. As a natural conse- quence the herd became badly scattered, and during the winter and spring follow- il bout 1,000 head of the herd were n, and the government, after a long and diligent scarch, were unable to gather more than 700 of the animals. A search was then instituted by goy- ernment oflicials and certain parties were arrested on the charge of stealingall or a portion of the missing stock. The parties arrested were placed in the hands of armed citizens at various points in the White river country. During the fall of 1880, and but a short time previous tothe time when their trials were to be called, they were cither rescued by their confed- erates and escaped, or escaped without assistance. For some reason their man- ner of obtaining freedom was nover know, but certain it is that they esca the guards and were never after h from. What is now Routt county, in which was the Ute reservation, was still unsettled, the Meeker masacre still being fresh in the minds of the people, and every suspicious per- son was suspected of being an accessory to the hideous horror. Thus, when these parties were placed in their custody they guarded them closely, but apparently not closely enough, as they escaped, and thus avoided the punish- ment that would undoubtedly have been meted to them. Whether the men ar rested on tho chaso of stepling,th oiiv, has never been known, as the witnesses by whom it was expected to prove the charge had also left the country, and evidence against the accused could not at that time be obtained. _The maiter was apparently allowed to drop with the escape of those who evidently were im- plicated in the theft. It was not dropped, however, and from that time until this fall efforts had been quictly made to obtain evidence, and if possible bring the guilty parties to jus- tice. The ofticers knew they had spotted the right men, and made every efiort to prove the caso against the accused par- ties, which was finally obtained, and was given to the last grand jury of the United States court sitting in Denver. The arrests were made. One of the parties was Wilbur B. Hugus, who at the time of the massacre, and at the time of the disappearance of the cattle, had a contract with the government for sup- plying the contonment of troops then stationed along White river, and com- posed of thirty-one companies, with beef. Hugus was arrested in Wyoming last Tuesday by the United States marshal for that terntory and gave bonds of 5,000 for his appearance at this term of the United States distric{ court, which meets in Denver The other party arvested was one Wilson, and he yesterday gave bonds for 81,000 to appear in the samo court. cattle for West Travins, who had a con- tract to deliver cattle to Hugus & Co. Before the stealing of cattle referred to Travis was a resident of Chaffee county, and was well known in the vicinity of Sailda and Buena Vista, He went in the White river country several months before the Meeker massacre occurred, and was possessed of & very savory repu- tation, Travis from what can be learned, was but a tool for Hugus, and hired men to do the stealing. And he did not con- fine their depredations to government stock either. It was Travis who changed the brands of the government cattle from *“I. D.” to “J, H, P” and turned them over to Hugus with that brand, Travis is now dead, having received injuries in a dis- turbance with some of his men a few months ago. Hugus & Co. slaughtered these cattle, disposed of the hides at a nominal price S SR T oy governwent for 16 conts a pound, from the block. They could well afford to sell at that low figure as the animals cost them but 88 or 80 a head. As beef cattle were then selling readily in that section for $30 to 835 a head, the low price of furnishing the government with dressed beef at that remarkahlv low figure attracted the at- tention of the government officials. They at once commenced looking into the matter, and after a long siege of inquiry at last succeeded in | ng their game, The date for the trial of Hugus and Wilson has not yet been determined upon, but probably will be fixed the pre- sent week, The arrest is looked upon by govern- ment ofticials as oune of the most impor- tant that has been made in some time. They say that Hugus took advance of the excitement and the generally unsettled condition of the people in the White river reservation to run in and slaughter all the cattle possible. Ho obtained his contract for supplying the troops with beef bocause his figures were the lowest of all the bidders, for, through the ar- rangement he had entered into with Travis and Wilson, enabled him to obtain stecrs ata very nowinal price. Hugus at present has a herd of several thousand cattle on the plains of Wyoming territory, and Wilsen is represented as being his right hand man, Heisreputed to be a man of considerable wealth Should the government be able to prove the charges on which the men have been arrested, it will prove of great benefit to the owners of small herds in northern Colorado and southern Wyoming, and in a measure alleviate the uncertainty that now exists among stockmen in that vicinity. The News' informant, who is a govern- ment official, feels uite contidentthat the right parties have at last been captured, and that they will be prosccuted for all there is in the cz He was one of the men hired to collect | i eclfi 70, i?tlanfiz,é’m ONE OF THE BESTNPHYSICIANS, ng 1 have beent wift's Speci for quite a long tir riit th ination asa blood puri 1t is entircly vogetable Deing composed of the oxtracts of roots which grow in this section of Georgin, 1 am familiar with its his tory from the time the formula was obtained from the Indians, 1t i safo remedy for all Kinds of bloo n humor, and in_ the hundred of cages in which I have used it and scen it never been a failure to cure int in THE THIRD GRNE with it, after T had most signally failed by the most approved methods of treatment withmeren nsed, thoro | cured blood ta Indidide of potassinm, Theso cases overfifteon years, and have never 1y et tho disease {n themselyes, or in their children FRE:D M. D, el § retail, wnd ta . Some ple use it regulary as a tonic and alieratiyc, JOSIAIL BRADFIELD Atlanta, G, Our treatise on Blood and Skin Discases maiied freo to applicants by THE SWIFT 8P Drawe The use of the term ** Shor Line” in conncction with the corporate niamic of @ ireatroad, conveys an idea of v h ho bra ; jest of accommoda: of which are furn: tshed by the greatest railway in America, Gazcaco, Wl wavREE And St. Paul. Tt owns and operates over 4,500 miles of road n Northern Illinois, Wisconsin, Towa and Dakof nd asi ts n lines, nd connec: i centres of the Northwest and_Far West, it nat deseription of Short Line, and Be Chicago, Milwaukce, St. Paul a filwaikeo, La C Aberdeen and Ell , Eau Clairo and Stillwater: Iwaukee, Wausau and Merrill. Chicago, Milwaukee, Beaver Dam and Oshkosh, Chicago, Waikesha and Oconomowoe. Chicago, Chicago, Owatonna and Fairibault, Chicago, Beloit, Janesviile and Mineral Point. Gt Bhlott Jenormiie e Chicago, Clntan, ok i AL e Chicago, Council 1St Falls and Yankton Chicago, Milwaukce, Mitchell and Chamberlain, Rock Island, Dubuque, St. Paul and Minneapolis. Davenport, Calmar, St. Paul and Minneapolis. Pullman Slecpers and tho Finest Dining Cars In world are run on the mainlines oftho CHICA G MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL RAILWA and every attention is paid fo passcugers by courte ous employes of the company. S. 8. MERRILL, A. V. H. CARPENTER, Gen'l Manager. Gen'l Pass. Agen). J.T. CLARK, GEO 1. HEAFFORD, Gew'l Sup't. Ass't Gon'l Pass, AR A GREAT MEDICAL WORK ON MANHOOD! Nervous and Physical Debility, Yy uth, and the and chronic dieases 8o found by the Author, whose experience for years is such as probably never before fell to thy of any poysician. 300 pages, bound in beautifu French muslin, cmbossed coy ers, ful to be a finer work, in every sen k eold in e ‘other worl mple 6 awarded the author ssociation, to the otficel This book should he read by the young for instruc. tion, and by the afflicted tor relief. 1t will Lenefit all.-" London Lancet There is 10 m ety to whom this book will not be uscful, whether youth, parent, guardian, instructoror clergyman, - Argonatt Address the Peahody Medical Instituto, or Dr. W. 5 Lobstinatedis other phys 4 success tence. Chronic a tho skill of exj Latfe cinns tully peHEAL " THYSELF UFRENE & MEND ELSSOHN, ARCHITECTS MAKHOOD RESTORED, (] A victim of early imprudence, causing ner > ty, prematuro d to., having tried in known remedy overed a simple me Sure, which he will send FREE to his follo Addresa. J. 1. REEVES, & Chatham 31 paper. no evidence the advertisers are ver, may got sealod ci addressin Bufflalo N Y. "~ FOR SALE. PRINTER'S INIK' A Rare Chance for Printing Offices Wo havo for sale several barrels of a firit quality of printing ink. Being made for use on smaller or slowér presscs than we are now using, wo will sell the same at 6] cents board cars at Omaha. Will guarant satisfactior: ou smaller and medium pre THE BEE PUBLI o Intorested oulars giving " all"p Medical Co., . O box 51 ‘oledo Evening Blag 1 Fliwtrie et O DISEASES OF THE EYE & EAR J, T. ARMSTRONG, M. D.) Oculist and Auris 1404 Farnem Street, opposite Paxtou Hotel, Oma ha, Neb. DR, FELIX LE BRUN'S AND PREVENTIVE AND CURE. JOR EITHER SEX. Th remedy belng Injected directly to the soat the <caso, roquiros no change of dfet or na TerCUrial oF PoisoNous m Vhon ‘1860 43 & pr contract any already unfortunately affficted wo gu joxes to oure, ot we will rofund th by mail, postago paid, 82 per box, o money. WRITFEN,GUARANTEES semed by all authorized agents. Dr.Felix LeBrun&Co SOLE PROPRIETORS, C. F. Goodman, Druggist, Sole Ageat, for Omaha Neh m&o Wiy Hea @ lth is Weaith | pression, anity Prom o londing te uro Old Age, ex, Involuntary Los Iy order re smpanicd with e t does not offect caned only by ERTEL'S Are tho cheapost; will bale hay at less expense; load more in railroad car than any other; so warranted or no sale. o3 Send for illustrated cir- cular, CEO. ERTEL & CO., Quincy, I, N. B.—Mr. Dederick: The Economy is still ready Gttlo the challenge with $600 00 to the winnor. Just say when and where, and we will go for the wpoils. @ E. Ly 11-waev eat me Imported Beer ZIN BOTTLES. +«.. Bavaria, “BoMeRiaR: e st e sls I3 e MmEnY DOMESTIC. Budweiser..ceoevs .. ov. St Louis Anhauser St. Louis Best’s.e.vvvveieas oo Milwaukee, Schlitz-Pilsner . Milwaukee. Krug’s........ +vver.Omaha. Ale, Porter, Domestic and Rhine Wine. ED. MAURER, 1214 Farnan. J.P. WEBER & CO,, MANUFACTURERS OF BRACES! FOR THE CORR Physical Deformitie Hip and Spinal Diseases, Club Feet, Stift Knees, Bow Legs, Knock Knees, &e. TRUSSES Of the bost make kept on hand. Trusses repaired, Crutzhes made to order. Small jobs of all kinds do Steel, Tron and Wood. ar'l of all kinds dono ncat, cheap prowpt. First premium given our work at the Drasika Stato Falr of 1858, 803 Suurtlz VTer’:trll Sl,,VOIrln/m. §T, LOUIS PAPER WAREHOUSE. Graham Paper Co, 217 and 219 North Main St., St. Louls. WHOLESALE DEALERS IN { WRITING }’PAPERS,] WRAPPING ENVELOPES, CARD {BOARD AND PRINTERS’ STOCK, po Stock, SorMetalnda re STIONOF nd BOOK, NEWS, #4rCash pald or Rage a 'DR. WHITTIER, 617 St. Charles St., St, Louis, Mo. REGULAR GRADUATE of two medical colloges has been engs ed lon in the treatment of CHRONIC, NERVOUS, SKIN AND BLOOD Discasce than other physician in 8t. Lows, & city papers show and all old residents know. Consultatios invited. Whe ¥ treatment, sent by mall or expres everywhere. urable cases guaranteed; where dou exists it is frankly stated. Call or write, Nervous Prostration, Debility, Mental and Physice Woaknoss, Mercurial and other affections of Throat, & 100a tmpurities and Blood Poison ing, Skin Affections, Old Sores and Uloers, Imped wents to marriage, Kheumatism, Piles. Special af- feition to cases from overworked brain. SURGICAL CA! Teocive special attention. Discases arlsing from luiprudence, Excomes, ndulgencos. MARRIAGE: 75 GUT ) why, auses, CONEqUERCES Bnd cure. POSthge OF stalmps. ey, who may ot. Mailed for 26¢; sopt 20-dawly

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