Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 17, 1884, Page 2

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R A THE DAILY BEE--UMAHA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 183. P e I S e ey g’y SWhen You sre in Trouble \* Don't be dismal! Your liver tn id, perhaps, and you m f) be sa. 0 be bilious. The way to help you out of the difficulty is to take Brown § Iron Bitters, which sets disordered livers at work in good style. + Don't be cross and angry! Your digestion is bad, and that upscts your disposition. If you will try Brown’s [ron Bitters, you will find the digest- ive difficultics driven away in short order. Don't be despondent! You are weak because your blood is thin, and you cannot face trouble, or think you cannot. Brown's Jron Bitters will put iron into your circulation, enrich- ing the Ix]nm?, making it a royal red color, and giving you the strength you need. ° The troubled. the weary, the de- spondent, the nervous, the debilitated and the bilious find rest, repose, re- freshment, and reconstruction in the use of that prince of Tonics, Brown's Iron Bitters. The druggist charges a dollar a bottle for it. 10 fl&'..'.foliflfli.‘fi’ ET Egslr%lc‘l\F ICS FOR THE CURE OF ALL DISEASES OF L] A1 G OGS, wORSES.CATTL [, D0oe- HOOS O TWENTY YEARS Humphreyy' Homeo; y 8 sen et b h"‘“"n{:‘l’:"‘;r’{-‘rflrlfi 3 Rinbio and i Hal and ol 109 Fukon Street, New York, NERVOUS DEBILITY H“MPHHBL " Vital Weakness and Pros. tratlon,from over work ue indisoretion, 13 radically and prompily EOPATHIG &z Been In use 20 years, cl Nu 2 =13 the most miccess: ) ul remody known. Price 8T per vial,orf vials or 10 Doat free on v D S prica. THumuire pa” Horhen: Sicd Durham s historic. It was neutral ground durin thearmistico betwoen Bhorman and Johnson. _Boldiors of both armiea filled their pouchea with thetobacco storedtiiere, and, after the surrender, marched home- ward. Soon orders came from East, Weat, Northand Bouth, for “more of that elogant tobacco.” Then, ten men ran an unknown the best tobacco n tho world. Blackwell's Bull Durham 8moking Tobacoo has ~ £ he'd gon: ok o ot Biaeoie Bl rham Smokinie o hows tod, G have oo Torhored LY the bulk Imported Beer IN BOTTLES. Erlanger,........ + Bavaria, Culmbacher, .. ++++..Bavaria, Pilsner. . . +++++.. Bohemian Kaiser. . siesseesess.Bromen. DOMESTIC. Budweiser. ... +++..8t. Louis Anhauser ...o.oones St. Louis, Best's.everenniens oooo Milwaukee, Schlitz-Pilsner . ... . ... Milwaukee, Krug’s. . . Omaha, Ale, Porter, Domestic and Rhine Wine. ED. MAURER, 121§ Rarnsi GONSUNPTION o, ‘worst Kind #nd of foo o T i T Ly S e S U R e s 5,0008HARES A BONANZA FOR SALE CHEAP. 6,000 shares of the Union Consolidated Silver mflu Bmy. of Oo.\;ndl Blufls, lows. For tur- i e JOHN JARVIE, d21.m eoddeweow-2w DR. WHITTIER 617 St. Charles St., St, Louis, Mo. Brown's Park, Utah, Weakneas, Morourial sud_othor affeotions of Throst E'm’ Afteotions, Old Sores_and mam% , Whou: , Pilos, By fention o cases from overworked Traln. BURIOAL: GASES rooeive spocial wttention. Diseascs arisiog @ 8, CONBIqUELOM and 08, sank Sddawly §1. LODIS PAPER WAREHOUSE. Graham Paper Co, 217 and 210 North Main 8t., 8t. Louls. DEALERS i |PAPERS, (Wil XAVELOPFSJCARD BOARD AND PRINTER'S STOCK &@rOash oaid for Bage of ull kfads, s the - e flocsen Com ™ ACK WORK. A Talk wih 2 Man Who Writes Stris by the Yard, Religion and Blood and Turned Out from the Samo Shop—How It Pays. A well dressed, fall bearded gentleman, with tho fair round belly of an alderman and the self satisfied carriago of a man of the world, came down from the Mercan- tilo library yesterday afternoon, says The Cincinnatt Enquirer, hestated a mo- ment at the foot of the outer steps and then took his way down Walnut street to Fourth. At tho corner he was accosted by a brother craftsman, atthough in_a different_branch of the business, He was a writer of stories; the latter wasa reporte! ““How's trade?” said he, in answer to & question. *'Oh, 8o, #0; about as usual. Just enough to keep the pot boiling But I can't complain to-day, 1 have a couple of pretty fair orders in my pocketa.”" He plunged his right hand into the inner pocket on the left side of his coat and drew out a bulky leather memoran- dum book, from which he took a couple of letters, which he handed to the re- porter. The first rea “New York, Dec. 15, 1883, —Mr, —, Jincinnati—Dear sir: Please forward at once a rhymed humorous story of about forty four-line stanzas, which from the tenth stanza onward shall advertise Blank's Balsamic bitters, We want something, of course, which will hold the reader's attention to the end, The arti- cle is designed for use in the rural press, and perhaps a country topic would be best. Let us have this inside of ten days. “Payment to be at the rato of b cents per line, as usual, subject to approval of MS. ' Sincorely yours, The other letter contained seven small pictures, such as may be found in the ordinary Sunday-school book, and was dated at Boston. Its subject-matter was as follow “‘Within please find seven cuts, which wo want you to embody ina book for boys from 9 to 12 years of age. Don't let your manuscript exceed twenty-five thousand words, “We rely on you for something bright, with considerable snap and fire in it, as well as an absorbing plot—the first con- sideration, of course, to be sound religi- ous teaching, “‘We want to issue this book by Feb. 1,as the intention is to make it thofourth volume of **The Good Boys' Sunday Book" series. Respectfully, etc. ‘P, 8,—1In case we sell more than two thousand copies of this within fourmonths after publication we will remit youa bonus of $560 in addition to the original {;nyment of $100. Now let us have your ost: work.” The gentleman smiled slightly as he re- placed the letters in his pocket. ““Phoao religious publishers are up to all the dodges,” said he. *‘You must not for a minute imagine that there is any posasibility of my receiving the $50 addi- tionally promised in that postscript. I have no access to the man’s books, and in consequence can not prove whether he sells two or twenty thousand copies of my work in the first four months.” “‘I thought your work was mainly in the line of sensational storiea?” *‘30 it is. But popular prejudice is killing off the blood-and-thunder papers, and the old field is not what it once was. Why, I have seen the time when a sen- sational story paper would pay men as much as Harper's Monthly, and accept every line that I wrote.” *‘How much does Harper's pay?” “Ten dollars a thousand words for average manuscript. When I got $4a thousand now I am satistied. The Cen- tury, 8t. Nicholas, The Youth's Compan ion, Wide Awake, Peterson' azine, The Continent, Tha New York Weekly and other eastern publications pay from 86 to 810 a thousand words, cash on ac- ceptance of manuscript. Of course the minor jouenals pay less than this, but sev. eral of the daily newspapers give the first named sum regularly for special matter. *‘Asa rule, the roligious press is the very worst pay in the business. It not only pays the smallest sum, but the money comes straggling _in to tho writer very often six months after the publica- tion of the matter paid for. Take this last order as an instance,” and he tapped his pocket wherein the letters had n replaced. “It calls for a 25,000 word story for $100; this is at the rate of $4 a thousand. The story must not only be something simple enough for a 9.year-old boy, but it must be bright, cr racy, of) absorbing interest, and above all things else, it must point a morral. But this 1s not all, It must be so written that the seven pictures which came with the order may be printed in the book, apparentl. as though they had been designed to fit the manuscript, instead of vice versa; in @ word, the story must be about those seven pioctures, as well as being a read- able religious juvenlie, I will send on the mnumi% for this book in probabl two weeks. When do you think T will get my payment for it?" “That is the idea, exactly, Before Nasby took charge of The Toledo Blade he did literary hack work, and would turn out a moral atory or a Sunday-school hymn in the morning, and in the after- noon would write a blood-curdling article for_some live shoet, with more exclaimers and blankety blanks in it than Bret Harte ever put into Col. Starbottl mouth, Eben E, Rexford is a familiar name in the church hymn-books and the current Sunday-school papers, If you will take the trouble to look over a cats- logue of the half-dime novels that have raken the place of the old yellow-backed Beadlo's books, you will find his there also; his latest story of this class being called ‘Hagar, the Witch,' I be- lieve, *‘Most of the ‘Aunt Fannys' aud the ‘Uncle Johns's who have charge of the hole | children's columns in the religious papers write blood-and-thunder stories quite as often as thoso of any other class. In fact, this very morning I mailed a couple of articles to different publishers, one titled “I'he Pernicious Influence of Excit- ing Tales,’ and the other ‘The Mad-House urder, “I suppose the competition of amateur story-writers hurts your business more than anything else!” The professional chuckled to himself, “You do, eh?” said he. *“Well, I don't mind telling you that the amatuer story- writer hurts nobody but himself and 1he oditor who has to wade through his slush, He isn, g. He doesn't recognize the fact that this business needs to be learned like any other, He expecta his first story to be printed, when, as a matter of fact, o man ought to be satisfied if he can print an article after five years' trying. The order for advertising verses which 1 showed you first belongs to a new class of work in my line which I expect will sired tho verses as an adve Y | who rosently reach the dimensions of a Boom Ttwill not be very long befors the first writers of this country will sell their pens to advertises. Just now more attention in the mnewspapers and other ads,to space and style of type used; but I see indications that before long the the matter itself will receive first atten- tion. The idea is being worked by some houses now who publish a few lines of interesting matter with a taking heading, ahead of their ads.; but their ventures aro only the pioneers. You mark my words, the advertising columns of your newspapers will presently be filled with stories and poems from the first pens in this and other countries, which will hold the reader’s attention to the end, and still be advertisementa.” “Do you think then that Alfred Ten- nyson would write an advertisement for & clothing bouse?” “I do. He sold some verses on ‘Spring’ to an eastern juvenile publication last month, not because he cared for the jour- nal at all, but merely because they de- tisement and were willing to pay him a stiff price for them. Why, one of our Cincinnati soap manufacturers has the first artists in this country at work turning but picture advertisements for him, and artists as a class are quito as proud as literary men, When the time comes the new departure will put money into the pockets as well of the advertisers as the writers, The vorses that 1am to write will cost the advertiser §8. The space which they are to fill will cost him some thousands of dollars, If that space were filled with an ordinary prose advertisement in nine t mes out of ten it would bo passed by, where now it will be read in the same ratio. 1 must make the verses readable, or they will not be paid for. *‘In writing poetry is it not nccersary to wait for inspiration!” *The man who waits for inspiration in writing prose or poetry is behind the times. His educatton has been negleeted. With a rhyming dictionary I will build my forty-four line stanzas in from five to eight hours. I will use short, easy meas- ure, with single thymes, and g0 long as thereis asmcotarh ihmar d an intenesting story inmy work I won't care particularly for polish.” He jingled the bunch of charms that hung from his watch chain, and with a a population of two men, & mulo and & burre WESTERN NEWS, e The enumeration is authentic with the excey DAKOTA. [lon of a dog that war sccldentaily ovo The Yank o vo adopted 1 | 1ooked. = This city is the terminus of the 1 kbt g soro and Carbonita mail route from Red O ) » won 1 Ono would imagine, for the size of the plad, h:";':rrn expended 367,720 in improvements | sne mail service would be amply suficier, but we note that it is of sufficlent importans to have a second regular mail route fron Crested Butte via Glenwood Springs, capacity of this glorious country 1 mail contracts is nothing if not monumentl. CALTFORNIA, Thero are seventeen school houses in /he Santa Ana valley, Los Angeles county. During December 145 arrests were mad in .08 Angeles; the majority wero for pett' of- fonses, Tho Ashton artesian well iy 025 feat deep and flows 200 gallons per minute, Sevonty-fiys thousand dollars worth of im- provements have been mads in Canton dur- ing 1883, The business dono at’the Mitchell land of. fice business the month of December amounted to 868,705,156, Filings wers made December 31t in the Devil's Lake land office on 15,000 acres of government land. The local statisclans wnys that 50,000 peo- plo have actually settled in the Huron land fistrict during 1883, The books of the Huron land office show that 3,000,000 acres of land have been taken up during the past year. The Blemarck telegraph office last handled 102,200 messages, and sent 1, words to the newspapers., J As near as The Deadwood Times can lourn, thera wero 204 deaths last yoar in Lawrence ~144 males and sixty fomales, The Aberdesn mmili has named one of its brands of flour Ordway. The flour has no sale in the Yankton market. The Sioux Falls pork packing house is kill. ing 250 hogn & day; and her Queen Bee mill has on hand 90,000 bushels of wheat. ‘The receipts of the Bismarck land office for six months have aggregated 80,000, The business of the office is rapidly increasing. Clay county has no indebtedness aside from its university bonds, and a one mill levy is expected to pay off these in about eight yoars, A Chicago man_proposes to give Aberdeen $100,000 as an endowment for a university to cost 810,000, if the Aberdeon people will build it. The Citizen figures up the cost of Scotl improvements last year at 1,420, | Ziebach, the editur of The Citizen,has a house in the list costing 1,800, The Sioux Falls Press says there is an old man in that city who has swallowed over 300 pounds of soda i the past three for sour stomach, and still lives, Mr. Paul Page, of Davison county, it is ro- Y"nml has the finest stock farm in south Jakota. The buildings, aside from his large herd of short-horns, cost upwards of £30,000, Yankton's Congregational society has out- grown its present facilities and about con. cluded to eroct a new church edifice. The church has & membership of 263 and the Sun- day school membership is 250, The fourth year in the life of Mitchell was a hills north of the new railroad depot itL.os Angeles for gold. Solid progross s in avery department of in Calitornia o ing the year 1888, ment on Mare Island have been laid . dopartment havo also been dischargad. Cave City ixin the eastern part g Cala. veras county, towns till at present the ‘“city” hotel, #aloon and a haystack. SONTANA, 000 during the past year. The output of ore at Butte yoar is estimated at £9,000,000. of Boston,” The regular Butte city tax swell the sum to 80,000, and's the line of the Mandan and 1 gaton, ty for the year 1883, is estimated at wout 21, 0,000, "Of this sum the Hecla company, a dale, is credited with 1,000,000, inal Mining company, € Butte, their twenty-eighth rig id share yoar, The assay off 792,17 in gold and 3 t Helena repors 0.46 in silver ‘e “Woll, good-by, old boy,” swung himself up Race street, perluct{y satistied with the world and everything in it. Well fed, well dressed, portly,and respectable, he was probably mistaken by nine out of ten passers-by as & well-to-do merchant, when he was, in fact,only a modern Grub street author. e ———— Cuarrn. The remarkable results in a diseaso so universal and with such a variety of char- acteristics as Catarrah, prove how effectu- ally Hood's Sarsaparilla acting through the blood, reaches every part of the sys- tem. A medicine like, anything else, can be fairly judged only by its results. We point with pride to the glorious rec- ord of Hood's Sarsaparilla has entered up- on the hearts of thousands of people it Dnas cured of catarrin. REMARKABLE CASE, A Man Once White Becomes as Dark as ajNegro—A Medical My- stery. From the Cinclnnati Enquirer. Mvu Ind., January 11.—Yesterday closed the history at Middletown, sixteen miles south of this city, of one of the most remarkable cases of disease known to medical science, and instances of which there are but few on record. Isaac Maddy was a man aged thirty-one years, a highly respected citizen of Middletown, and a son of Andrew Maddy, an equally well-known and esteemed gentleman, and a nephew of Mr, James Maddy, of this city. About eleven months ago Mr. Maddy became afilicted with a cancer on his breast, and he has been troubled with it ever since. About five months ago, how- ever, he began to turndark, until,inside of three months, he became as dark as a negro, and, indeed, would net have been suspected of being a white man_save by those who knew his hintori and family, the purity of the latter being so well known as to preclude all possibility of natural causes, His hair is straight and the whites of his eyes are of a brilliant | 7 poarly white—the two only characteric- tics, save the pure Caucasian features, which make him differ from the veriest negro. The face, neck, legs, arms—and, in fact, the entire body—are a deep bronze or brown, and peculiarly 8o in those portions particularly marked in the race named. No physical disability was noticeable in connection with it at first, further than what was considered attri- butable to the cancer from which he was a sufferer. But he gradually sunk away, became weak and dibilitated, and on Wednesday died. Before his death, however, he was sent for by a prominent physician in this city, seen him and who suspicioned a very rare and mysterious malady, known to medical science generally through medical reports only, aud iu the presence of a fow noted physicians he was examin- od and his case made the subject of dis. cussion through ~prominent medical works, when his disease was pronounc- ed Addison's disease, from Dr. Addison, o:lGuy'- hospital, London, who discover- ed it, This disease, according to the Suyden- ham Lexicon of Medicine and the Allied Sviences, the latest and best authority upon the subject, is a tubercular infiltra. tion of the supra-renal bodies (which lie just above the kidneys), usually charac- terized by discoloration or bronzing of the skin and grfirflivu asthenia, which is ultimately fatal, first described by Dr. Addison in 1865, The connection between the disease of the adrenals and the discoloration of the skin and the fatal asthenia is as yet a profound mystery to the medical frater- nity, as so few cases have ever been known that a practical knowledge is almost unobtainable, The cause of the skin coloring is in an excessive deposit of pigment in the rete mucosum, and it has even been discovered in the blood, "I'h:ldiulu is always, as in this instance, fatal, Mr. Maddy was a man of good intel. lect and much refinement, and his remarkable and unpleasant change was keenly felt by him long cre it was feared it would prove fatal. The phyeicians here were not notified of Mr. g(uudy‘l death until too late to ask for a post-mortem examination, and are sadly disappointed at not being al- lowed the opportunity to aid science and themselves by the valuable knowledge obtainable by the investigations which such an operation would afford. M, Maddy was buried to-day, Will It Really Cure Rheumatism'? We answer, honor bright, it will cure rheu- matism, and the severest cases too. Dr. Thomas® Felectric Oil was specislly prepared for the rheumatic and lams Notioo lettors from the people relative to its merits in nearly overy paper T 'she country, prosperous one, Nearly $500,000 wont into | d new buildings, including thirty-five business houses and 200 residences, and that, the popu- lation of the place has nearly doubled during the year, bringing the present population up to nearly 4,000, Peoplo who live in Spink county ought to feol encouraged. In 1830 tha county’s assess- c nuary, silver §1, Tho Helena land offico is overwhelmsd with work. The pressure of the homestad class in muking final proof and of locatos under the desert and_other land acts in cowding forward their filings are without pricedent, 1 valuatio vas $23, ;i 81, 3 ’s twi ‘]‘;‘xr_,‘.‘s“‘.‘]“‘,"d;"‘;‘l‘:nfi ffi\‘r:?. s S 0000 | Bonton st hnukymm strong wd pros- | Office and Factory S, W. Corner 16th and Capitol Avenue, Qmaha. hundred thousand acres of 'land were under | Porous institutions, The Kirst Natbnal has vital and a reserve of $160,000; eposits ,000; loans, $275,000. Northern Montana has of $150,000; deposits, $27 cultivation the past season and 1,000,000 bushels of . wheat_raised. Thirteen nowspa- pers are published in the county. “The business of the land office at Fargo, during thopast year was as follows: Declara: tory statoments, $3,113; final proofs. $2,996; homestoad entriea, $2,072; timber culture en: tries, 81,161; soldie aratory statements, otal, $10.450, Thess an_area of 1,672 500,000 cres select- ed by the Northern Paciac railroad company, gives a grand total of $5,272,640 acres of land disposed of by the Fargo land office alone that year, Tho rovenue derived from this by the Rovernment amounts to 403,510 32. oans, $304,000, IDAHO, ing excursion to death on Christmas, A Coeur d’Alone correspondent wrtes that away up. Flouris $40 a barrel, sugar and 25 cents, of Prichard and Eagle creeks., It has mor WYOMING. The legislature Isin session. A wheelbarrow wman has taken a tie pass be- n Laraniie and Cheyenne, Bud Man Taylor, a_desperato_cowboy, was shot dead by a saloon keeper at Hartville, Philip Oben, a private of the Ninth infan- try, was found frozen to death a fow miles outside of Cheyenne the other day. Since the new year business at the Cheyenne United States land office has not been so brisk a8 just before the end of 1883. The first week however, shows a record of 320 acres; declara- tory statements, 1440 acres; desert entries, 1602 acres; homestend entries, 810 acres;Pcash entries, 820 acros, coal lands, 659 avres. tal, 5,601 acres. The Leader tells a story of the demo- cratic legislature, The meniber from Bitter Creok deaired to show off in_the presence of an eastern friend whom he had invited to a stick at. tw Pocatello, and so severe was tho storm thaf hours, At first the wind blew with such forc that the train men momentaril; see their cars overturned; and over the grade, the snow piled up bohind is. - —— All Admire a Handsome Face, A pure, clear skin will make any face hand. some. and enriches the bloo whole person. ‘o- will direct] All eruptions of the skin dis Tie or absorig A number of persons are prospectin the s Tho Post has been nade ductive entoprise All the workmen in the construction dpart- large number of men in the steam engisering It once contained 1,000 inhab. itants, but on the failuro of the erave mines the population diminished as in other mining consts of a Madison county assessments incresed £500,- during the past Prof. Sullivan’s titles multiply as he as- conds the mountains, In Butte heithe “Earl will aggregate about 37,000, and_the spocial firl tax will he gold, llvar, and copper ontpt of Sum. it Valley District for 1883 is esimated at 2,960, as against $6,200,000 fe tho yoar It is ostimated that there are 4,00 hunters angaged in slanghtoring deer and butalo along Northern Pacific rond betwoen The output of the mines of Beaverhad coun- [ swcessive dividend last month, of five cents a aggregating £3,000, and $3(000 last ed o the establishnont of , 1877, gold 88,701351.42, The Yank of capital andreserve Billy Robins of Ketchum, while ona hunt- Little Wood River, froze to there aro 350 men wintering there and as way be imagined, the prices of everything are bacon 40 cents, tobacco, 81,50, and whisky— home made —warranted to kill at_forty rods, Eagle City is located in the forks saloons and faro games than you can shako a Of the recent Oregon Short Line blockade The Wood River Times says: The road was blockaded by snow near Montpelier, east of the train which left here Christmas eve was blockaded on Squaw creex for_eighty-five expected to but for the hoavy sleaper at the rear, and the heavy loco- motive in front, the buggage, mail and pas- senger cars would undoubtedly have gone As 500n aa the traiu stopped Manifestly anything which strengthens affect the Has the Largest Stock in Omaha and Males the Lowest Prices. CHARLES SHIVERICK, Furniture! BEDDING AND MIRRORS, Purchasers should avail themselves of the opportunity now offered to buy at Low Priczs by taking advantage of the great inducements set out by PASSENGER ELEVATOR i[:HAS, SHIVERICK, 1206, 1208 nd 1210 FarnamSt To All Floors. 11200 OMATA, NEB, SIMPSON, G, TCDATSTBISE | kil A 1409 and 141 Dodge St., 1 ING CARRIAGE FAGTORY on .\ppl(m\fll\vll £ : OMAH“. NEB. ITHEL A.EL.IDATI.EXY . MANUFACTURER OF FINE Bugzies Garriaces and Soring Wagons My Repository onstantly filled with a nelectfatook. Best Workmanship guaranteed. N Y DHEIE, e 1)} t 1 o ¢ e MANUFACTURER OF OF STRIOTLY FIRST-CLASS Carages, Buges Road Wagms 1910 and 139 Harmoy stecet and 03 8. s sweer, 1 QM AT A, NEB. Ilustratod Catalogue furuished free upon spplication. nm AR? h:i thekmhls!. ufT a dubnt{zduua and Sppeas w,ll;n;n Burdock I:md llmffilnm'nm» B h said, ““Mr, Speaker.” The presiding ofticer | Ployed. They are a vegetable remedy of in- - {0id hot recogniao him at first, when o again | estimble value. Anheuser-Busc said i loudor tones, “3r. Speakor.” Bei — — recognized he proceeded, ‘‘Mr. Speaker, A Taove the previous question. . BVith a. dis: [0, . L rure of Washinkton dainful air the speaker shouted out: 0, sit | P : ; ", down, you darn fool. That motion was car- | Tho secretary announced the following R, vied on the first dny of the session.” inquiry from the office of the port col- 2 \ The west bound train between Green river | lector of New York: and Grangor,ou the Union Pacific, rcontly | “It is the opinion of the Limo Kiln e encountered & band of 1200 or 1500 antelopes, y . iy snow was o deap anddittd i places ol thas ithe tart ot mhitomaghing has CELEBRATED aud the antelopes wero on the road bed, ing that the ensiest road to travel on. When they were first_encountered many of them were killed, and the engineer, sesing at once that the train might bo dorailod unless it was slowed up, decreased the speed. Tho avte lopes kopt ashort distance ahead of the engine and were strung along tho road for & quarter of amile. They would occasionally get some distance from the engine, and then they would stop, turn around and watch the head light until the engine was fairly upon them. Thoy dlolaved tho train hallor thro-quarters of an our. “It am not,” responded Presiden Gardner; ‘on de contrary, whitewashin’ has only reached de boy hood state. n vi n' fur a 3 century order in de parlor—but de nex five will bring our art in direck competi century hence de world will wonder da COLORADO, The atate law library contains 4,000 volumes, "The Ruby mine at Leadville was recently sold for $200,000 cash, The state stock growers’ association will es- tablish a stock exchange in Denver. The ordinance licensing railroad ticket scalpers has been declared illegal in Denver. ‘Waeld county congratulates itself on having ceilin’ twency feet squar’ kin be white LG Twenty-four Hours to Live. nounces that hals now in “‘perfect health,” w have the following de art of De lag' five y'ars have wit- d many improvements—sich as pur- erspective in kitchen ceilin’ an’ arrangin’ fur a freize of de fourteenth shun with landscape work. A fifth of a men ober paid twenty dollars for a steel engravin’ do sizo of & house doah when a washed in de Venetian order for $1.50. From John King, Lafayette, Ind., who an- t Keg and Bottled Beer This Excellent Beer speaks fcr itself. " ORDERS FROM ANY PAKT OF THE STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, = SEUI5 MO~ Promptly Shipped. * ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE TO THESTANDARD, OfOurG-uarantee. g F. SCHLIEF, Sole Agent for Omaha and the West, t o| Cor, 9th Street and Capitol Avenue ““One year ago I was, to all upper rances,in the last stages of Consump- ! tion, Qur beat pysicians gave my case up. # 850,000 court house for 830,000, at Greeley. | 1°g,11y" got o low that our doctor said I M. HELLMAN & CO Park county claims a gold product of over | could not live twenty-four hours, My friends . 9 Wholesale Clothiers! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREE1 COR. 13Th, s NEBRASE 000 4l bl bullion output of nearly | then purchased s bottle of DR A fly bum named Hayden s in jail in Den- ver for shoving gilded nickels for five dollar gold pleces. It took four engines five hours to haul six cars over Marshal pass one Sunday night re- contly, owing to tho snow. Gilpln county han twenty-aix stamp mills of 879 stamps,of which seventeen have been rua- uibg in 1883, with & capacity of 612 stamps. The lead product of Colorado for 1883 reaches the immense quantity of 000 tons, Thosn figures give s clue as to what is the matter with the lead market. The sunual meeting of the state grange as- siderably benefitted me. took nine bottlos, T am now in having used no other medicine, DR. DEWITT l'TE\'ICLL]NGEH‘H LINT: and for promoting the growth of the Hair, vent disease, | —— Plans have been made for a new Catho. sociation in Denver was largely attended, 100 | county. It will be one of the largest delogates being present. The association iv in | buildings in the state—170 feet in length a very prosperous condition, numerically and by 65 in width, with a steeple 175 feet financially. high. The Leadville Herald says: Itis likely to bo somo years yet bofore Colorado will “look back upon that stage of its history when its mines produced over $26,000,(00 annually “‘with sumething like contempt,” in spite of the progress shown in its agricultural interests duriug the past year, The U. P, attempted to do at Kobiason what the B, & M. tried at Grand Island crossing tracks without consent. Fifty armed AL \ AND IVV.\LLII"-'I IN ouwiNg Epileptic Fits, Spasm, ¥alling Sickness, - Convul- SAMARITY) NERyINE wen und two Moyul engines spoiled thegame, | gone 8, Vitus Dauce, Alcoholism, and the Grand Inland precedent was success: | 501 5 14 d fully worked in the courts for an injunction. | Optam Eating, Seminal Weakness, Im- potency, Syphilis, Scrofuls, and all Nervous and Blood Diseases. §F7To Clergymen, Lawyers, Literary Men, Merchants, Bankers, Ladles and all whose sedentary employiment causes Nervous Pros- N alaritics of the blood, stomach, bowels or kiducys, or who require a nerve tonic, appetizeror stimulent, Samaritan Ner- vine ls luvaluanie agree that there is wore snow ou the C UII“Thnu-«undu J coh, Mo, Vo e tineutal Divide fr Ouray to the College | proclaim it the most ADG ATCKABEY SCRG Fiamp, (18) More Cleveland capital is invested in San Juan county thau in any other mining dis- trict, and more will follow if the investors are fairly treatod and their mines yield well, No lews than sixty-five claims are held by compa- nies or individuals in that city, representing an actual cash outlay of fully one willion dollars, The report of all the miners sud hunte er r grouls than was over known beforo at this se- | Sondorful #on of the year. In the Chetoga and Monarch districts there wve at the least caleulation ten foet. This will make a late season for work- ing the minos and prespeeting, but it is an au- surance of plenty of water aud consequent vod crops to all the ranchimen of the valloy. The town of Gresham, Gartield county, has ant that ever susi ed a sinking eys $1.50, at Drug:l The DR. §, A, RICHMO! 12041 WM, HALL'S BALSAM FOR THE LUNGS, which con- T continued until T perfect haalth, L.dey's Carbolle Troches cure colds and pre- MENT is an ivfallible cure for Rheumatism, Spraius, Lameness and Diseases of the Scalp, OMAHA, lic church at New Vienna, Dubuque [ ‘BURLINGTON HOUTE" (Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad.) e 728 W WY T _GOING NORTH AND SO Bolid Trains of man Palace Sles d | from St Lo 4| Burlington, T AND WESY, Parlor Cars, with Reatia TH. b Re. cgant Day s and Pull Cars are run daily to via Hanuibal, Quincy, Keokuk, fia rliogion Xapids and ‘Al o 8Lt o Paul and Minneapolis. Pavior C: clinjo” oiide. (hioago, Bt Jo- | Chairs 10 AN Trom St Loty aad bba o Only through line be- |and from Bt Louis and_ Ot Denver. Through cars | chango of cars hetween [ Indianapolis & Council Bluffs via Feoria | Moines, lows, i {1 connoctions. made in Union hopots.1i s Celorado kuown us the great THROUGH CAR 1t 16 universally admit ied to be the | Finnst Equipped Railroad in thn World for a T. J. POTVER, 84 ViceL'res's and Gen' Manager . @KRCEV 4], um”',:‘.:r,"u

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