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Delicate and Feeble Ladies. Those lanquid, tiresomo sensations, causing yo %0 foal scarcely able to bo on your feet; that oon- stant drain that is taking from your system all its formet elasticity; driving the bloom from your hoeks; that continual strain upon your vital forcos, vendering you irritablo and fretfal, can ensily be re- moved by the use of that marvelous romedy, Hop Bitters. Irregularitios and obstructions of your sys- o aro relleved at once, while the special causo of periodical pain are permanently removed. Nono re- elve 80 much benefit, and none are w0 profoundly gratetul and show such an Intorest in recommending Hop Bitters as women. Foels Young Again. My tother was aflicted & fong time with Nou ralgia and & dull, hiavy Innctive condition of the whole system: headache, nervous prostration, and whs almost helpless. No physicians or medicines did her any good. Three months ago she bogan to use Top Bitters with such good effect that sho scemsand feels yotng again, although over 70 years old. We think there is no other medicine fit to use in the fam. fly."—A Iady, ln Providence, Bradtord, Pa., May 8, 1876, Tt has cured mo of sovoral diseasos, such as nervous- ness, sloknoss at the stomach, monthly troubles, ete. 1 have not seen sick day in & year, siuce I took Hop Bitters. All my neighbors use them. Mis, FANKT GRRWN, 3,000 Lost.—*"A tour of Europo that cost mo *'§8- 000, done me loss good than ono Bottlo of Hop 'Bit- ters; they aleo cured my wife of fitteen yoars' “mer- vous weakness, sloeplossnoss and dyspepeia.” R. M., Auburn, N, ¥ High Authority. Bittors Is not, in any sonse. an alshoholle bev erage or liquor, end could not be sold for use excopt o persons destrous of obtalning a medicinal bittors, Grres B, RAv, U. 8, Com Inter] Rev. 80. BLooixaviLL, 0., May 1, 79, Sirs—I havebeen suffering ten years and I tried your Hop Bitters and it done me more zood than all the doctors. MISS 8. 8. Booxn. aby Saved! ‘Wo are so thankful to say that our nursing baby was permanently oured of a dangerous and protract- ed constipation and frregularity of the bowels by tho use of Hop Bitters by its mother, which at the same time restored herto perfect health and strength.—The Parents, Rochester, N. Y. The Emperor Louis Napoleon emoked wame leaf used {n tho Emperor's cigars, s abso- i ‘and is unquestionably tho bost ately pure and gifted dsughter, Anne, in ‘her sketch of Alfrod , in Harper's 2Honthly, tella of her visit to tho great poek. Dushatn Tobaces,sent i by Hon.Jaries e on, James owell, Amarioan Miotster 10 the G thess dayn of dultoraion, t s com. . | tort to amokers to know that the Bull Dur. THE D 1LY BEE--OMAHA, MONUAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1884, . ERAELLS THE MOSHER ESTATE, The Helrs of This Vast Inheritance Organized for & Systomatic Effort to Recover It. A meeting of representatives of over 500 heirs to the estate of Hugh Mosher was recently held at Chicago, at which a great deal of interesting history of tho qreat ostato now valued at £128,000,000 was related. There are a number of the descendants of Hugh Mosher in this state, especially in the northern and cen- tral parts; among others, Dr. G, C. Mosher of this city, The recent meeting was for the purpose of making an organ- izod effort to obtain the inheritance. An organization of the ‘‘Mosher Heirs asso- ciation” was effected, with C. D. Mosher, of Chicago, president; Mrs, J, E. How- land, Irving Patk, IlL, secretary; and Mrs. O. C. Baker, Terro Haute, Ind., treasurer. Ira D. Buck, banker, of Ply- mouth, Ind., also one of the heirs, was said to a bystander, “how I can condense this message to ten words? 1 don't wish to pay anything extra” This is what she had written on the ‘blank: “‘I am friendlesa here; I have only a dollar left. Send some money.” The unimprossion- able narrator looked her squarely in the face and found it charming, but not to a delusive degree. Tho palor was artificial and the dolerous expression was mimicry. Every day for a week she had written that samo message, without ever sending it over the wires, but with more or less sucoess in exciting lucrative sympathy, i, Many cosn from time I tive for blot or wale by dr B ROLLING AROUND IN PALACES, Magnificent Boudoir Cars - How Ade- was made chairman of the executive com- mittee, which consists of five members from as many states. This history of the estate is as follows: During the sixteenth century Ezekial Mosher, of Manchester, England, had uired a vast property by manufacturo and trade. 1In 1620 his three sons, Daniel, Hugh and John, were driven from the country by the persecution of their sect, being Quakers, and camo to_this country, choosing Providence, R. I. for theirhome, ~Their father soon followed them, but did not long survive the voy- age. In 1636 John, who was a bachelor, and Daniel, with his family, were mas- sacred by Indians, thus leaving Hugh the sole to the estate, then valued at £32,000,000 sterling. He died in 1660, and his children, although the,&mw up in partial knowledge of their father's in- heritance neyer made any claim for it. He left five children whose descendants are scattered throughoutthe New England and western states, In 1737 the English government took charge of the property and leased it to rivate parties for ninety-nine years. his lease expired in 1836, when the ostate was sold under the hammer and the proceeds deposited with the money laced there by Ezekial Mosher, in the Emk of England. In 1837, the English government ad- vertised in America for heirs of Fzekiel Mosher, and they, including Phillip Olark Mosher, at that time a prominent contractor of the conatruction of the Mi- ami & Erie canal, the father of ex-Au- ditor G, 8. Mosher, of this county, ap- pointed a Now York attorney named Allen to go to London and investigate the case. Allen failed to report, and it is supposed he, by some means, gained a rt of the estate and appropriated it to his own use and romliuevf abroad, The next attempt to get track of the estate was made when the late Presi- dent Fillmore started on his foreign tour. He was commissioned to huntup the will of Ezokiel Mosher, and was suc- cessful. The copy of his will is among his papers at Aurora, N. The claim was not ecuted further at that time. The present movement is to be a systematio lina Patt Travels—Sleeping in 4La Sonnambula,” Chicago Herald, Two palaces on wheuls can be seen on a switch track immediately gouth of the Union depot, they are boudoir cars for the use of the stars of Her Majesty's Opera company, and appropriately named “La Traviata” and “La Sonnambulla.” A third car, ‘‘Adelina Patti,” will arrive to-day and complete the most magnificent train of cars ever seen in Chicago. The two cars first mentioned are alike in the iuterior appointments, and they are in- deed palaces of mahogany, amaranth wood, embossed leather, plate glass and mirrors. Each car contains eight cor- partments or state-rooms, half of the number arranged for four and the other half arranged for two occupants. On one end of the car is the gentlemen’s toilet, smoking-room, kitchen and lunch-room; then lnfluw the state-rooms, a library, and the ladies’ toilet. An electric ap- paratus connects all compartments with the porter’s room. The framework of the cars is of black oak, elegantly painted and frescoed, while the interioris finished in the most elegant style imaginable in amaranth wood of natural color, with panels of embossed leather in bronze of antique design. Large mirrors of the finest quality are placed wherever suffici- ent space could be found. The kitchen and lunchroom contain a splendid set of able service of the finest china, cut glass and golid silver. The state rooms are upholstered with mauve-colored Turkish plush, and laid out with Brussels carpets and Persian rugs, Thereisone doublecompartment, which, by means of sliding doors, can be divided in sleeping partment and sitting-room, while in the other rooms the seats are utilized as sleeping berths at night. Each room is provided with a folding table, which is 8o arranged that it can do ser- vice as lunch table and as card table. The library contains a fine selection of stand- ard works and the novelties in literature. The ventilation of the cars is perfect, and efforts to determine the exact status of the case, and in doing this the committee is engaged in correspondence with a great many rer-onl in this country to find a copy of the advertisement in 1837, and also in Englaud concerning the will of Ezekial Mosher. The matter which has for half a century been subject for spec- ulation among the members of the fam- ily doubtless soon be decided. It is a difficult matter to obtain possession of ‘property after it has reverted to the crown; but the heirs are making a vigor- ous attempt to gain the inheritance. Angostura Bitters donot only distin- guish themsolves by their flavor and aromatic odor above all‘others gonerally used, but they aro also a suro proventive for all diseasos orig- inating from tho digostive organs, Boware of R S et iy (&}f‘o’"ée"k;".fi': niusc‘x’u."mnm."sfi.-{d By D, 3. . B. Siogert & Sous. DON'T, A Few Buggestions of Value to All ‘Who Heed Them, Don't go to bed with cold feet. Don’t sleep in the same undergarments that are worn during the dfiy. D]on't ¢leep in a 4 KRYOUS room that is not well ventilated. on't » Cures FavEIcAL & “Bh"m sit or aloop fu u draught. Dou't lio on Wi OF MANLY VIGOR, Spormatorr the left side too much. Don’t lie on the Wetding it Casé, Or gin- ‘Rook. Il e ew York. CREAT ENGCLISH REMEDY. er reme: | haok to kul) from snoring. Don't try to ttle, fow |get along with seven or eight hours sleep e the quantity, 85 By ex | out of twenty-four. Don't jump out of 70, 4 immediately on awakening in the GAL INSTITUTE, Propriciom, 718 Olivo Stroet, St mufinin:‘rj‘ llwn'ltl ltzrxo: to l;l_b dyu!l,n}»lf Ress. e well with & crash towel or hands before -u%"mm".‘g ":m"i dressing. Don't forget to take a drink ‘wunesitatinglyondorse 1t as & remedy morlt | of pure water before breakfast. Don't SRS R i ) iy |take long walks when your stom- ach is entirely empty. Don't start i d ' k ith ~ DR.HORKE’S ELECTRIC BELT | cting a gooa broskiast, " Dot s oy eating a good breakfast. Don't eat any- Lol gure Nervoumen, | thing but well cooked and nutritivus e liia, eiatica, | food, Don't eat_what you don't want ?“"' just to save it. Don't eat betaveen meals ‘s | nor enough to cause uneasiness at meal 5. '}»f1 v:x.lm patqney )cimn].l Dun’t.‘ ;ut tl:ne -nfi)lle:t'mom}‘ un- G Etecteitity and wa | loss , if well. 't try to keo waih | yp on 34 or alooholio -umulz\h.whos nature is calling you to sleep. Don’t and | Stand over hot air registers. Don't inhale 2. . oa Alloed ' with t:t :r.:t !;nnu o: any acids. Don’t fill - | the ‘With soot,sugar or anything else o """‘.EL""""‘ w.na‘-‘t :h;&-fl:w;rhz: whel{ m? out 163 ol YONS. .| yourself,but bring the parts together with postofioe oom & Svin: | atripy of ‘ndhesiveplaster, Don's woar thin C. F. Goodman's Drug Store, 1110 | hose or light-soled shoes in cold or wet i weather. Don't strain your eyes by read- ing on an empty stomach or when ill. Don't ruin your oyes by reading or sew- STAR LINE, [ing ui Gusk by o dim thi wn Hick et i candle or when v Don't sing or flan Royal and,U,8.fMail Steamers | holler SAILINGREVERYJSATURDAY YORK AND ANTWERP, W, Jtaly, Holland and France] when your t is 80re or you are Don't drink ice nmo: om you are vory warm, and never a glassful at a time, but simply sip it slowly. Don't take some other person’ cause you are similarly aflicted. Don't bathe in loss than two hours after eating, Don't eat in less than two hours after . Don't call so frequently on ou » from our sick friend as to make your com nci rl% m‘fim {Meonumdonl bore, l)an‘t m:k.uni wan, §10 0 to Ex practice of relal ting scandal, or stories caloulated to depress the spirits of the sick, Don't forget to cheer and gently amuse invalids when visiting them. Don't call on a sick friend ufi advise Wiight & Boan, Geu. Ast. 56 Bosdway ther dootor, eat more, eat loas, it oth.hlkhlmh'dud\ before you think of In alking or other exerciso, learn fo keep your mouth olnud.nnTh entirely through the nose You can walk as far with far less ue and without out of breath, 'InT‘yw breathe through the mouth. he beat threo medicines in thio world are warmth, abstinence and repose, A Bwindle, Now York Sun. Tho newest swindler discovered is Bhe was in & hlbznphofiuvr(:- cloige. e wars iikiogly naat cheap. ““WAll you please tell me,” she icine be- | and, decimumad assures not only an even temperature but prevents dust and cinders from entering the car. ' The air, on entering the car, passes over large blocks of ice and through filtering material, then enters the closed furnace-room, and is thence distri- buted in the car by a system of radi- ators. The car ‘‘Adelina Patti,” which will arrive hero to-day, is built on the same principle, but centains a large drawing- room, di ng-room and sleeping apart- ment instead of the eight state-rooms. The interior finish of this car is still more elaborate, and the cost of this magnificent rolling structure is not less than $60,000, All these cars have double walls and the interstices contain ground cork to deaden the train noise so that conversation may be carried on in an ordinary voice. It is not truo, as stated, that the car *‘Adelina Patti” is built for the great prima donna's omelumive wovs ALl (hrey calS 8re Lo propart{ of the Mann Boudoir Car com- pany, of New. York, who run similar cars on two of the eastern lines, and aim to have them introduced more generally. The whole of the cars can be rented, as in this instance for the use of the Maple- son company, or by compartments to smaller parties or couples if the cars are attached to regular trains, Doing a Greav srva /0t Good. Mrs. J, Borry, of Portland, Me., writes— HENRY'S CARBOLIC SALVE s doing a ¢ deal of good, Some of my friends ve been groat benefitted by its use, I think think it is the best salve I have evet used. Boware of counterfeits, PARKER'S PAIN PANACEA cures pain in Man and Beast, For uso externally, and internally, DR. ROGER'S —\_’E\}ETAHLE WORM SYRUP instantly destroys Worms and re- moves the Secretions which cause them, DR, DEWITT C. KELLINGER'S LINI- MENT is an {nfalliabla oure for Rheumatism, Sprains, Lameness and Disease of the Scalp, and of promoting the growth of the Hair, Denton's Balsam oures Colds, Coughs, Rhenmatism, Kidney troubles, ete.' Can be used externally as o plaater. e —— ‘TheStory of Two Brave Men. Now Orleans Times Democrat, In that desperate battle of Murfrees- borro, or as some call it, Stone River, on the 31st of December, 1862, a gallant and daring charge was made by Breckinridge's brigade on the masked batteries of Gen- eral Rosecrans, so placed as to do fearful work. The charge was one of the most desperato of the war, and among the fore- most in it was the First Louisiana Regi- ment. In this regiment a brave soldier and intrepid officer was Lioutenant J. B, ‘'rist, of this city. Manfully he went forth to the terrible ordeal, and while ! men was struck down, mor- lally wounded. It was impossible to withstaud such a rainstorm of missles, d, and torn, Breckinridge's brigade was forced hack, ' The Federals swept over tha field, which was covered with the dead and dying, and while the bloody work was sti 0 on, one of their number, Sergeant Geo: Wy Kent, who was afterward First Lieutenant of Company B, Eighty-eighth Illinois Vol. unteers, saw poor Trist fast sinking from his wounds, Jying on the field. Sergeant Kent went to the side of the dying southern licutenant and gave his puog.d throat a refreshing draught of water from his canteen, and then, to pro- tect him from the cold, carefully wrapped him up in some blankets picked u?won the battlefield. In such a bloody hour such brotherly attention met with & suh- ful response in the heart of the dying man, aud, taking off his sword, he pre- sented it in almost his last words to the succoring Kent, The war went on and Sergeant Kent became lieutenant, He treasured the sword dearly, and when the contest ended he Lieutenant Trist’s name, date of battle, ete., en- graved on the scabbard, intending to preserve it as a souvernir of the war, } months ago. thinking that rela- tives of the dead lieutenant %dflfi to recover the tenant J. F. Bergesch. F. P. Fosdike. T ELER Fred._—Sunder. OMAHA CARPET COMPF ANY. JOBBERS AND RETAILERS " WILTON S ¢« A () pe | L 7] (1)) pem } e m S Q e — APESTRY BRUSSE Will open to-day, at 1511 Douglas Street, with an Entire New Stock! COMPRISING ALL THE LATEST DESIGNS IN EHigh ArtPatterns. Upholstery Goods, Lace and Turcoman Cartains SPECIATTY. put in communication with him. A few days ago the sword reached this city, and the brother of the gallant dead officer, Mr. N. B. Trist, received it, twenty-one years after the battle. Lieutenant Kent, of Gridley, Ill., will ever be remembered here with sentiments of the warmest re- gard. ————— Young Men,Middle Aged Men and All Men who nut{er from early indiscretions will find Allen’s Brain Focd, themost powerful invig- orant ever introduced; once restored by it thero is no relapse. Try it; it never fails. $1; 6 for $5,.—At druggists. Why He Limped, Clnolunati Times-Star. As Jimmyson entered the post office this morning he hobbled, while at every stop a look of pain shot across his face. “‘Ig it a bunion?” sympathetically asked a little old man, who had just succeeded in pasting with mathematical certamnty a stamp on the upper right hand corner of an envelope, Jimmyson only started at him “When I had buniens,” continued the old man, and his features seemed to radi- ato with kindly interest, ‘‘I used to walk just that way. Painful, isn’t it?” *‘Painful! Great Moses!” “Vae, yosy I luow,” and tho first speaker cut Jimmyson short, ‘‘Makes you wish you could swear in forty- seven languages. Bunions aro a mighty mean thing to have, now ain't they? You ought to soak your feet in hot wa- ter.” #0h, soak your head. I never saw a bunion,” and Jimmyson was growing sav- e, 'g“Oh. not bunions! Corns, eh! I had corns once so awful bad that I thought I must have a corner on the market.” “Corns be blowed,” shouted Jimmy- son, “‘I received—" “So it was, I see, now. Wounded in the late war. Always hurts this kind of weather. If I was in your place I'd rub myself with—" “‘Look here, you old fool, I wasn't in the war, and I'm feeling mean enough to knock your blasted head off if you don’t stop,” ‘l"l was_mistaken, But I know the best remedy in the world for rheumatism. This sort of weather,is frightful bad for people—" . “For people that don't keep their mouths n{:ut‘ You blamed fossil of an idiot, I havn't bunions, corns, wounds rheumatism, lockjaw or anything else. I came down those post-office steps twelve rthen put her in the cage with the birds, at o time and struck the hardest place at They shot holes throngh the oil paint- the bottom. That's what's tho, matter [ings, and frescoed the statuary with ink. with me, and if you've got asything to[Then they commenced on' us. say about it, go on.” But the old man meekly mailed his)lage, and poured the contents of thescus- letter and was silent. The standard re-turulive—e‘;})eoidly in casos of mnervousness — is Samaritan Nervine, §1.50. ““I am perfectly cured,” said Jas, Cor- bin, of Washburn, Ill,, “‘thanks to Dr. Richmond's Samavritan Nervine.” At druggists* T A Practical Joke, “‘Heard a queer story at Columbus the other day,” said a traveling salesman, as ho opened his “‘grip” and took out a pair of elegant slippers and proceeded to elevate his foet to the American standard of comfort. ‘‘During the recent senatorial contest there the Payne men and the Pendloton men were watching each other chtl.y close, and to do it properly called s fow detectives. It seems each side had sent to Pinkerton for a good ma mgl one night these chaps, fim.h in di uise, met in the room of Colonel Oliver 'ayne, where the heavy work was carried on. Dotective No, 1 was introduced as the Hon, Mr. Smith, from Oleveland, and No. 2 as Colonel Jackson, of Cincin- nati. Neither recognized the other. Colonel Payne, who likes a joke pretty woll, and whoso quick eye had penetrated | rich, the disguise of the other and realized the situation yon can bet they were the two worst beat detec- tives in the country. Payne's doings,’ said one; ‘a man with as smart a son as he is déserves to be United States senator.’” ‘It's all that Old THORNBURG PLACE! e —— A good name at home is a tower of strength_abroad, Situated in Weat Omaha only two blocks from the proposed line of Ten times as much | the Cable Cars, with the Belt Railway Crossing one corner, aud only three Hood's Sarsaparilla used in Towell aswell | quarters of a mile from the present Street-car Line, at the prices we are any other. e ——— Journalism in Pierre. asking for lots. PRSI st R T P e et PR e P L BN, Mitetantiaig - , 'endleton agent, | The Dlerre Recorder. We are generally at home, and those who wish to revel in the oriental magnifi- cence and splendor of our editorial bou- doir are led by serfs to divans as soft and yielding to the pressure of a human figure as a mud pie. Their hunger and thirst are assuaged by delicious viands and wines of great ra- rity and good quality, having none of the clements of nightmare or deliri- um tremens concealed about their clothes. The twittering and purring of canaries, Malteso cats and other tropical birds, and the musical sound of our pen as 1t glides cross shect aior wilt- ©dged papor, leaving a trail of information clothed in tea-box hieroglyphies in its wake, and_ the gleeful shouts of the gold fish playing tag and copenhagen in the aquarium are the only sounds that frac- ture the solitude. Hers, indeed, can our friends find bales of peace and happiness. ‘We say our triends; we are never at home when our enemies call. Two of them intruded upon our sanctity last Sat- urday. They were bad men, and they did not care who knew it. W of take your cards, please,” they paused. Then one pulled a jack of spades and a tray of diamonds out of the side pocket of his coat, and deposited them on the silver salver. The other drew a bowie knife and sliced an ear off the serf, and then kicked him through the skylight. After which they opened the door of the sanctum and entered. They said they wanted to see the edi- tor. Of course he was notin. We told them so0. One of them said the last issue of the paper had made a very facetious and playful allusion to him, and he had just dropped in to show the editor that he appreciated it. With permission they would make themselves at home. Wo hope they enjoyed their visit; wo did not. They scalped the cat, and They shampooned our silken tresses with muci- pidore down our back. After spitting tobacco juice into our eyes and smearing our face with paste, they rammed us head first into the aquarium. Then they left. Such episodes as this tend to mar the hely happiness and serenity of an editor's existence, making him more cautious and cruel. For you can bet your cerulean old-gold, seal-brown, or any other hued socks that the next stranger who crosses our portals without first giving the coun- When the serf at the doorsaid: ““Iwill | 5 No other .Addition OFFERS SUCH INDUCEMENTS TO BUYERS EITHER FOR RESIDENCES OR SPECULATION. Lots in Thornburg Place are bound to double in vaiue during the coming summer. Now is the time to get the nicest lots ever placed on the Omaha market. ~Prices $150. to $250. on monthly payments. We have a few nice lots lett in Parmenter Place, $325. to 8400. each—Easy terms 5 O elegant lots in GRANDVIEW, ust south of the U. P. Depot, $175. to $300. monthly installments. BETLT.ATR. Beautifnl 24 acre lots 3¥8250. each. 25 beautiful lots in Prospect Place $200 to $300. each, 815. down and > per cent a month. 15 lots in Lowes addition $175. to $300. loug time. 8 lots in Boyd’s addition, $175. each. 12 lots in Patrick’s addition, $350. to $500. 6 lots in Plainview, th~ finest ones in this addivion, $475. to $500. Lots in Barkers Sub-division and the following additions: Tsaac, & Selden's, Redick's, Millard and Caldwell’s, West Omaha, Kirkwood, Oma- ha View, HMawthorne, Pike place, Credit, Froncier, College place, Done :k- ens, Park place, Parkers, Capitol Hill, Hartman's. Plainview, &c &c. Several choice acre tractsia Gises addition, Hawes addition, South- Omahaana West Omaha,: A choice 5 acre piece in Tuttles Sub division 8 acres'in Okabama, 5 acres on Cuming street. 3 one acre pieces on Sherman Avenue, near the fair grounds, alsosoma verp chorce business lots on Dodge, Farnam, Harney, Jackson and other streets. We have the finest market garden pieces to be had around Omaha, Feur, five and ten acre tracts on 16th street, north of the fair grounds, $400. to 81000 each on monthly payments. A few nice acre corners in west Omaha, at less than half the asked for adjourning land. Two lots, containing 13 acres each, in Barker's a'lotment, south 10th street $800 and $1,000. Easy terms. 3 acres, south 13th strect, $3,000. Will divide. HOUSES AND LOTS In all parts of the city. price We have some great bargains in residence property. "J. 0. PRESCOTT N. P. CURTICE J. 0. PRESCOTT & CO, IWholesale and Retail tersign and grip will take a sudden lea) avuml.‘ll\e battiements into the sweet luhiz sequently. e ——— Staunton Coun'y Land. Stanton Register. There are thousands of acres of good farming lands in Stanton county for sale at prices ranging from §6 to $10 per acre. The man who desires to possess himself of a farm can here find tf:: best of chances, and with but a small outlay of ready cash, Lands are sold on long time and at low rates of interest. The man who wishes to enter into the stock growing business can here find suitable tracts having ali the advantages of run- ning water, abundant hay, wide ranges of pasturage. man who desires to settle whispered to his man: ‘Say, that Colonel | down among a good, industrious, law- Jackscn over there is him to night. Watch him' close.’ And 80 one of handling some | abiding people, can do no better than Pendloton funds; I want you to- follow | select Stanton Gounty, Do you think of coming west! then delay not. the morning the shadowed part d- | ed thousands to this state and land has od ho had ‘stood 1t Tong sneugh i | rown Amadingly b valas. within a briof iod, turned savagely upon th, ith: *What do_you !Ixaal:u, -ir,«h;m::ll:"i‘:é we around all night ko 4 dagy nations of What better inducements can tanton county offer than cheap lands, Expla- | abundant crops, cheap corn and hay the usual slick charaet for hogs and cattle, a healthy climate, made by the shadower, \'u: it vlu"u): :;; good ou‘!nouh, andal . a home among an in. sacred relic, t wrote to the tion of thejas for the other, igent, sociable, and industrious class sanocis n;.wr{\’lun they th'ull;u fw‘,::m .;; o“;u]:.‘s:::u.mu iy 0 Army of Tennessee, and the family was ok =1 and Get my Prices before baviag elsewhere. inkerton’s men spent t of | abundant crops for the past few years, the rest of the night alndowing another | the suooess that has attendod stock-rais: of Pinkertou's men. About 2 o'alack in | ing, and the healthful climate, has attract- PIANOS & ORGANS! Music, Musical Instruments of all Descriptions, OREAPEST AND MOST RELIABLE HOUSE In the Stato. CALL AND KXAMINE OUR STOCK OR SEND ¥ R PRICES, LOUIS BRADFORD, DEALER §IN = Lumber, Sash Doors Blinds Shingles Lath ETC.; LOW PRICES AND GOOD GRADES, Yards, corner seh atastich and Dovglaw H, PHILLIPS, Merchant Tailor! nla ll # 1804 Parnam 8t., Next Door to Wabash Ticket Office. 6078 ab examination of his fiie stock of WOOLENS. A speciaity ma < NE SUITS A +D OVEROCOX'SS. " Also # full lin of Livsincas Sultings and Trowseriugs. — All gatmen 10 be “iade ln the stest 8tles aud with the Lest triumings. CALLAND SEK ME and Donolus,