Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 31, 1884, Page 2

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P —— TN M NDAY, MARCH 31, 165 N “ - (7 : Al . g AT e A MOB OF MANIACS, [t ffepiemct ke omesed from h i o, “the durned s, mabot [ vay wings are shming themueivn ¢] T Largast Stook in uwmaha, and Makes the Lowest Prices e ORI, — —— grinds me on ono side and tie infornal | would not surprise me in the loast if the pitters and you n not fear sickness. |ureots under cover. The scene during this —Ioe water is rendered harmless and [ memorablo night have been indescribable. more refreshing and reviving with hop | No mob cm.lfi have been less eqnipped by itters i anisation or loadership than Shis one; nor D ot S e os It seem that the military and police have —The vigor of youth for the aged and had any good plan or leadership, 'he prepar. p nfirm in hop bitters! ehioie T edens mado during tie day were r «=**At tiw change of life nothing equals ainst an attack from Sycamore street and Hop bittorsto allay al troubles fueidont | Main stroet wan Ioft cxposed. Witnowsos tay ASarese. that almost no o) position was made to firing take monthly and from which they will | once reftsed to respond to the alarm until rocoive the greatost benefit is hop bit- AN ESCORT OF TROOPS ers,” o/ t. first d it b —Mothers with aickly, frotfal, nursing | was bt wit drawh sotolers” R warni i children, will cure the children and bene- | go no further. Taey oboyed, While a hand- arities of the bowels, cannot exist when IN THE MORGUE hop bitters are used. at Hebig's, One is Dugan, the furnitare man- ufacturer, At the crfly hospital at 1o'clock Atimely| .t . . 180 of hop Bitters wilikoep a wholo family were the (ollovlnq: In robust balth & year at a little cost. Captain Jack Desmond, shot through the - i head; Heury J. Peiser, shot through the head; ohild?l';kl:m‘::“ul :“_l“fi“:;“:"lz:’_p":':l‘: ot Hibbeablibitny RHich Nhrotiah st baRrt. fiop biti s He il Fatally wounded,’ Alfred Hopkins, Charles op bitters cn retiring. > Bloom, J, Camper, Severely, Daniel Christ- —That indxffinn or stomach gas at|man, shot twice in the leg; Lewis Holt, shot night, preventing rest and sleep, will dis- | in the right leg; Henry R‘uddm shot in thigh; appoat by mimfimp bitters. Jool Kraus, shot in right leg; Iidward Rehm, P Paralytic, norvous, tromulous old | #hotin tightlog below tho knoe; Frod Ecker: Indics are made. perfootly quist and | MArb,sbotin right log bolow tho knos; Will- i made perfectly q nd | famm Sullivan, shot in thigh; John Barth, & sprightly by using hop bitters. boy of fourteen, shot in shoulder; Geo, Wise, e | gh0t in left side; John Heckerman was shot It is said that this ball I ted Beer| i i i i iy ) mong the fal mporte OO [ 5, iy, e s iy old boy, now dying; Phillip Raabz, shot in by special train at 2:30 o'clock this afternoon. o 4 ot . * |the troasurer’s office, 'The troops all gath- | Smultze, barkeeper at the Queen City hotel, i " \ —‘The best periodical for lndies to | creiTi"tha juil, and the fire departmont for | has just been shot by & militia man at tho cor* less manager, while you have never care ner of Main and Canal streets, and instantly v Killed, economy. betn provented by a timely use of hoj d K It in still | to destro pitters, f Y . ;l,:}:‘:flm:" ',f‘"y?jlluf,k,,‘:g ,',',‘::; Xillod and | mado, ‘They woro successful in this, and by |in about an hour, and then I'll go home —Indigestion, weak stomach, irregu- | wounded there are. Nine bodies aro technicalities succoeded in practically keep- [ an’ gin my family to understand that cass, Tom Campbell, of Cincinnati, was the jop bitter that never—Fail. square south of Fourth stroot, and by gallant ) i h H S— The weakest woman, smallest child, Chatge, and without Hring s pistel, captured | Digger on the other, and I'm bound to be | time would be about ripe for this sort of : H i 1 itters (Continwed from second page.) A1l (3o guns &nd dispersed tho mob, There | Pulverized. & movement next fall, and you'll - hop bitte: nd sickest invalid oan uss hop . | wore no_casunlties, except from tha use of [ ‘Do you farm?" g hear something drop when it docs come. with safety and great good. e v === | clubs, The police all throuzh have shown re. “What's the use? Nuthin' that I|One very important element is figuring g —0ld men tottering nr}:\lund lr::‘m PELL DEAD. l.nnrknhln hrn\"f_ry and coolnnss |lmlnrhll| c’l_lr planted ever growed. It's allus too [with great prominence all along the line houmatism. kidney trouble Of ANV .4 o o) others wore wounded. At this | Cumstances, This canture weakened the spirlt f ok or oo little rain, and if 1 hire nig: [and giving brains and backbone to the voakness will bo almost new by USING | y5ur there is no cossation of the firing; indeed, "‘k:"'; R ;I'“'"'l'n"f'%""':}':;fi'l!‘;;‘{”'I‘,'I';;‘ gors they don’t stay.” iuss, 1 mean what is eouberpionily R LY i 5 dlor, and is accounted for by o rally again during night. - R . e! what J 1 - °P Sy wifo and danghter, were mado | the satement st the moh have procurod |12, tho piack on, Powells rn siots Me| - (R YGUIPGURT | 1oty o mulo | olitien, By Tor the press mejoriy of DRAPERIES ANC MIRRORS, 3 " Jr's order to the Fourth dod o I do. politics. By far the grea$ majority of ealthy by the use of hop bitters and I |ennnon, Col, Harper's or Tt direct loast threo men. One account says he killed th a hundred dollars f th X! 4 N t h t been given. Tt directs the wuth a hundred dollars fur one wuth | college-bred men I have over met are ( ’ H A na B E= B S E:'l's :@::a:god ::ammmn'emvle»—Mflh b e ki i men ity up Fourth soven. sixty you kin call it speculation. Say, [active and intelligent froo-traders. 1 : isf man, sreet to Sycamore; thence up Sycamore to QUIET RESTORED. let’s licker.” can’t recall one who is a protec- J i 4 F i Bing in thi ki ok ¢ gosd dostor 1t . 1 disp shatover mob may be in , x 3 00,8 -0 ) e . i P ust received am assortmen’ far surpassing anyiing in this mar ot, comprising mm,-‘.':c‘:é‘w'{:u S ;»:m“yfl,r‘-m"dm :)‘:a il n"d,.:‘,.]z':l‘i"c:":-u‘!n ']_'“ln She othier Lu\l«_ att, ‘Mnrxh zv‘ J’I’h B \mlrln» I declined, and he never shed a tear as | tionist unless his personal interesta are at f the latest and most tasty designs manufactured for t#is spring’s trade and covering 8 Way, bu . parative quiet s restored, 16 mob has dis- his corn-juice went down, stake. That sounds 1 e ™ On earth. troops now in the jail. Tt tells him that the | S0rla™ 'y ol 4 are still 1ying in the stroots | i ) S X s like a bold state- | a range of prices from the Cheapest to the most Expenvive. —Malarial fover, Ague and Bilious- | troops thore will bo looking for him. ~ Tt will | U inity O ‘thie conflict, and » afo esti- | . »L tell you, 8 poor man hain't got no fment, but I've been careful to investi- - ess, will leave every neighborhood as }.,m,,,;’h‘:" 'Qi';’;fimfifi' order can be carried ")mf" o ,,,“, illed ‘,; ;myh,,, ,;,‘,,,,,,ly‘,fiv,l, _n%ht:' rm:lndg'grfi, n‘ul he' nllmln lumund ,l,ngq, }Tnv;’vlh‘:\mtulm-z} and skilled pro- — = — - oon as hop bitters arrive. nto effect. g Only a small portion of them have been fdenti- | into the dust,” he observed, as he en- | fessional thinkers are forever at work. ] —“My other drove ths paralysis and nllvm.l!\‘nvl'vt:Ttl.‘v':hr‘i.v e {1;;1‘(.;],":“ mos. proserved. Tho rumor about {?rged u.a Ifm}:s.m tll(l:dtug ri: hl:hhn‘t 8 | proscauting their_independent inquiries, Parlor .Goods Draperlea. + euralgin all out of her system with hop mmmu-wfi:-fi:g R eet | Oklivare ybes fonnil Ve 1 fulie. . Thie wers | 3o © a0 OF HAtF GOHIIWELR B LFoag nlnd putting th'o m‘;lu in condensed and | Now ready for the inspection of cus-fComplete stock of all the latest Itters.”—Ed. Oswego Sun, . Ing resistance. The mob at this timo seems | no casualties in the jail. The colonel of the | ™.y sl eyt clear shape for the common voterto| fomers, the nawest »oveltics in styles in Turcoman, Madras and —Keop the kidneys healthy with hop "{hemd Wt the corner of Main and Ninth | regiment Is not yet able to collect bis men, Uiz S lihotit Joaa g f digest, and by keeping as neatly as may Suits aud Odd Pieces. Lace Curtains, Ete., Ete. but Colonel Chureh, of the governor's staff, is | ‘‘That's a deception.” m to join the rest of the command. ““But you have a nice climate and can INNATL raise most everything.” 1 S March 30— The Firet battery| - Then, what ails me? Why hain't Ta ey, with shotteds guns, loft here | S0uthern nabob? Why don’t I ride a 8 al hoss an’ wear good clothes and hold of- fice?” BARKEEPER SHOT. “Because,” 1 answered, determined to CrNorsyatr, March 30, 8 p. m.—TFred|lig to him, ‘“‘your wifo is probably a care- TROOPS FOR OI) fully studied the foundation principles of BERNER SPEAKS. “Stranger!” he said, as he rose up{nnd CoLuynus, March 30,—Berner said to a shook both hands at once, *‘you've hit 1t pross reporter that ho was induced to make [ plumb center, and you are the only man fit themselves by taking h i dai- | to-hand fight was in’ progress, tke police now | his confession of deliberate murder by parties | who ever has! All tho rest of 'em say R on LT EL i thon "miade a dash for the crowd and ar. | around the jal, who told him if ho confessed [it’s 'cause I kin do more loafin’ and s ted ber of , taking them into | he might get free. This was before he had [ gui i i —Thousands die annually from some m:“‘m" "?:'g" r‘o’lm’::l"::'giv‘a R e oo e | éngeged & lawyer, Afterward he had four drinkin’ than any man in the state of forp of kidney diseaso that might have | eveiy instance. Many of them were wll | attornoys, Thoir chiof aim in th trial way | Alstama. Stranger, writ them words the effect of the confession he had [down fur me. T'll git the hang of 'em ing the confession_out of tho evidence in tha theyvve?‘w to buckle right down to econ- iggina! Let's feading lawyor of tho four, To his efforts | OmY oF hunt fur other diggins! Let's Tiio tha fact. that Bornoe was convicted | destroy about three fingors of the juice! only of manslaughter instead of murder in e ————— tho first dogree, ~Caricatures of Campbell, of | Young Men,Middle Aged Men and All Men a nature to arouse prejudices and incite in- | who suffer from early indiscretions will find dignation_against him, were circulated in | Allen's Brain Focd, themost powerful invig- Cincinnati yesterday, and have beeu posted | orant ever introduced; once restored by it in Columbus to-day. Berner's associate in [there is no relapse. Try it; it never fails.” $1; the crime, the negro who has not been tried, | 6 for 85, —Atdruggists. is one of the prisoners in the Hamilton county jail, i A REAL FREE TRADER. THE DAWN OF SUNDAY. HOW THE CITY LOOKED AT DAYLIGHT. OiNcINNATI, March 30.—At daylight this morning an Associated Press reporter walked through the quarter of the city whero the stormy scenes of the previous night had been | New York Special to the Clneinnati Comm: reial-Ga- enacted. The dawning wi peacetul and | zetto. J. Sterling Morton Not Satisfied With the Temporizing of Carlisle and Morrrison. IN BOTTLES. breast, SRVEN DEAD MEN Bavaria. hy are now at the Anzieger office on Vine and .Bavarin. | Ganal stroots. Throo dead mon wore at Court . Bohemian. ;‘nll Vine lh’al:h zlmltofluld ho:hbe rlu:hl:d. umors are abundant, amon, that +«.Bremen. Golone] Funt and Ticat ;i"o; ‘Omear, of the police force, were led in the jail. This DOMESTIC. Sauot be verifad at this e, aa comtaninon. Erlanger,.cceees Culmbacher, .. . Pilsner Kaiser. . Blidwaiisr. St, Louis, | tion with tho jail i dificult, 18. | 5 olook a. m.,—Tho good that Anhauser 8t. Louis. | the erowd has ail gono ‘from. tho vielnity of Milwaukee. | the court house, and that the fire engines are : laying on tho fire at the carriage factory. %flhhfibp ilsner-..... M‘l‘(;““kl‘:e- Teh fire 1t soema han boen extinlshed by Tug's R - -Omaha. | thomob, The Fourteenth rogirant has not Ale, Porter, Domestic and Rhine | yet reached the court house, but will have no S difficulty in getting there. Col. Harper has Wine. ED. M{\U#ER\ 4 | Suss renatved tho following talssram: X214 Farnam? Corymnus, March 20.—Col. John U, Har- er:—1 shall remain at the wire in General o ——————————————— anager McCrea's offico all nivht, if nocossa- ' ' 1y. Gen. Finloyleaves for Cincinnati on the @ m | first train, Keep mo posted until the mob is supprossed. COOK'S GRAND EXCURSIONS loave New ork | RS o ey securing . r LMMBUS, Marc] . —DBerner was lant travelersin EUROPE, by a'l routes, at reduced rates. | in the penitentiary at 8 o'clock to-night, ac- HODOK z%figfimfi: IA:""‘ maps gnd full par- | companied by a strong guard of specials, He s 0N, 4 Bvoadway, 1, ¥, |bas had tho most eventful experience and es- N. CY S wwd. capes in the last thirty hours, tor sunplnx LTI irony cho train ast aight ho wadavod ovet o country, keeping in. s o 266TH EDITIDN.PRICE $1.00 % {in‘lllly:lrl; ;‘l‘[“ nl:)u{u{:a'n a ;lt?lnl;.tlll‘ near ) %, when he brol for the wi N BY MAIL POSTPAID. Ho was oversaken about. 10 o'clock by Dopu- tlon Moses and Devos, who kept up tho chaso with buggles. They had diffioulty in keeping him coneoaled durjog the day, and foally drove ¢ Foster’s Grosing, the noxt station / beyond Toveland, whero they fad proviously AT meat 50me newspaj correspond- “':18 They had 7 voed L2 KuowW T“ELF. CHANGED BERNEN'S OLOTHES, ¥ b and put a Derby Instead of a soft hat on him A GREAT MEDIOAL WORK. | (04 Fud fin'so changed that o one. would ON MANHOOD |isverecogizd bin from tho descriptions. . o _.. | They turned him over to two correspondents, Exhausted Vitaity, Norvous o Physlonl Dobif™ | and then claimed that thoy ad falled to find Decline n an, Krroraot Youth, an o | their man. Thoro was quitoa crowd at the man, young, middie-aged | P1ace, however, and before the traln arrived, younk, middlo-aged | ot 4 o'olock, the evle suspected them and ‘whioh ia invaluabl | called for Berner, but they got off safely. ance,tor, | Bornor was at once taken futo n cowed axprots 0 1o | car by the journalists, an e officers were in 2 ey hptidIny pages, bound n boautits | ¢hg coaghes, pretending to be en route to the m:%::.. In o moossedcovers, ull gt guarasteed | o ifal for advico and aid, Thoy kept the “erary aud professionnl,—than any other work soid in | Kovernor advised by the conductor sending +hls country for §2.50, or the money will be retunded | dispatches from every station, The governor 2 fnstance, Fricoonly WL08 by mal, pot | tho traiuy stopped balf o mile from che A lepot, close to the penitentiary, when Berner Swardedthe suthor by tho National Modios |y taken in on tho run, There were crowds Do pend by the youns farinstrao | a6 a1l tho stations making inquiries, and ettet, e il ‘benoat | multitude awaited the train in and about tho R0 fasmber. of soclely $0 whom s book ?,lty h.am, lul: Gflhley wur.’ iven '_:h’l slip. A lotachment ef fifteon police and a large num- usetul, whether, youth, parent, gusrdias, | ber of prison guards had been quiotly located Madal Tngittute, or Dr. W, | 86 the suburban crossing whore the party inch Streos, Boston Mase., who lllal;ml. They made double quick time | ance when opportunity offered “Why, no; it is dictated by what they. all discnses’ Yequiring skill and | with the prisoner to the gates. Berner was BOARED NEARLY TO DEATH. Ho was the first man Warden Thompson | ¢y light on the subject, This was the | to be passed, it will be so emasculated by: over saw glad to got behind the walls. o e e hiels o talkod: " "Tia | amendmont, that nothing consistently. eat batteries ords the penitentiary. MISTAKEN FOR CINCINNATI MURDERERS, " When used s a proventie b e rere sates of we il rolund the mon. | officers. At the rioo by tmall, postage Rl bt ol ahonindd Arsal it diiculty thit the wob wero provany nouncement has made to the mol RS are government prisoners, Civcinnati this evening, A BLOODY FIGH1 EXPECTED. 2:20 o, m,—The startling factis just di covered that the mob have three cannon s tioned at Fourth and Walnut streets. 1t is | an to mule to see if Icould establish a|nearly 50,000 majority, In Nebraska, said they obtained them froma Musio hall ;l'hl:-xu:rn;vgnmyl’::w -T‘t:'dm;b:: :’Nfi.{: straightened up and sdd: can in 1881 by over 800, went demo- expocted momentarily, Instead of the fight [ ‘‘Stranger, ye ain’t/goin’ to settle in fcratic by 1,100 in the following year, being over, it looks now as if the soldiers an. . and & chance to rest. After | yyich this londership and with th tives, in i i DR. FELIX LE BRUN'S supper ho relatod his trip. Ho is elghtoon | iy, e Sy o ot o coi| 122 be, linfortunate in ita lendership. ot old and sentenced to twenty years. Ho | i {n heaps in the treasurer's office and the opes to outhye it. He retired oarly, and will | 3o, iod. As this was done the silly | Jacks the drive and magnetism needed Froidie attend chapel to-morrow. Governor Hoadly e e, e s To e srowd | o capta, Frank Hurd, in my judg: to Chy not to leave gLy tho Cincinnae! dopot unioes abrlutely nocce- sary, utant-General Fioley is en rout \ X ! PREVENTIVE AND OURE. Clivcinnath, - Tho governor 1 sa6ting up, Wait: | choly svents of tho night, the killing of Capt. | make an invincible array. ing to see the night through, The excitement | John Desmond. He had been apprised of | g, ¢ ¢p h Iibathhan (s & ron EITEER snx. has abated here siuce Berner was lodged in ‘h:l purpose to burn the court house, St i:’ lo:yl'a.nyd h ;l““ wghich“m 0‘: n::ni Daviox, Ohlo, March 20 —Four United s tyo by olther sox. it o ems wore. Drdught up from Clu. | through his hoad. ™ At the same \ime Private | what ho says. o contract any privi cinnati this nv-nh:s'ln charge of government (Continued on fifth page) £ SOk N e DMkl . poe Bom o B | oo thoh atlacked. tha aa thay wors Whiat Atled Hiny “Very decided. W are just gotting transferred from the train to the jail, It .::5 Detroit Froe Press. the thing o ed now,, by free trade from accomplishing purpose, The ve with his chair ti Dl' F elixLeBrun&Co. prisoners are "“"{n'fi‘ in the juil and “fi'\fli an awning in front of & sabon, hat down | they are the only localitios where the is 8OLE PROPRIETC] '&r Goodman, Druggist flufi&&w "'ho Fourth regiment, of Dayton, left for | sticking through his boots/ Out at the [ results have been tremendous, IKansas Driliack s ovor soon, - Againstan oxquisitely | «Yen,” said Sterling Morton to-day, tinted sky in the the broken walls of the | : burning court houso were distinctly defined, | ‘1 attended the free trade dinner at Del- with its_crumbled window openings looking | monico’s, and let me tell you what I like rude wounds, Over J\n ruins of the [ thought of it.” treasurer’s office, in the northern part of the| Mr, Morton is the Nebraska member bullding, of the national democratic committee,and THE RUDDY GLOW OF THE FIRE one of the most pronounced and vigorous waa still visible, while from other portions | free traders in this country. It is chiefly thin, white colored smoke and steam was ris- | under his ‘‘missionary work” that the I:{;"“‘“ water thrawn by the ‘“{‘““” foll | anti-protection movement has developed into the burning contents, Last night whi H tho nun wont down the. occupanta of tho SUCH strength in the northwestern states. treasuror’s office Were sitting at the open plata | *‘Well,” he said, ““there were only two glass windows smoking cigars and reading | speeches that hit the nail on the head. the accounts f the previous night's attempts | One was made by Prof. Summer, of Yale, on the jail. There was no thougut that in |and the other by David A. Wells, I seo six hours those windows would be broken and | o+ ‘41 N the acoumulated wealth of the contents of RIS pOCt ADPGAL 0. Borae: that groat building in rulns., ~ But this build. [ What charmed with the utterances of ing, grent as its loss, was merely property, | Speaker Carlisle on that occasion, espe- Other losses in that locality were of human | cially with his statement that he favored life. reformation in the tariff, not revolution, ONLY FOOLS OF BLOOD, It is & mere picce of resonance,and means here and there in the trampled dust, or on|nothing, If the doctrine of free trade the brick sidewalks, wero to bo seen. Only |is right it is all right; if wrong, it is all aniour bofore, onl Syoamore sireot, below | wrong, ourt, Iny four or five dead bodies of drunken [ " < ;i or veruresome men, who, in spito of the po-| ' Lhere s mo chance for neutral licemen’s warning, had gone beyond the limit | 8round. The speech of Carlisle in sub. permitted by the militia. When they fell un. |stance was about this: ‘Yes, I believe der the fire of the militis, no one dared '-ofw in virtue; women shall all be chaste; but and tako them away until the mob had dis [ when you find a fallen woman, don’t try persed and tho stroets were clear. Only two |t reform her too abruptly. You. might hours before, at 3 a. m., when a small crowd A S s athorod at the drug store ut the corner of | defeat the end in viow. ~First make a ‘ourt and Walnut, a square west of the court | Mistress of her, and so lead her up by house, to see the patrol wagon take away e | easy and gradual stages to a plane of re- doad man, the militia, mistaking this for a spectability. This sort of argument is ronewal of tho mob, not the stuff out of which.successful cam- FIRED A VOLLEY, p“gm are made. killing one and wounding & nephew of the| ™ ¢In Sumner there was something mas. roprietor of the store. One ball struck the | oyi ke hi B AT D e R gtide GRS UE hiithe ablsts snanduy crashed through the glass door near the head | America on this subject. ilo his lan- of the propristnv, who was using the tele- | guage is terse and plain enough for a phone at the time. Passing from the north | child to understand, the style is always sido 0'00‘": on Wl}"‘“‘ a “‘flksnh‘llk fodha. wonderfully alluring. The conatitution was presented. ero, apparently, the : (HEE, - Woundod had taken shelter bohind a protect. | <5SO¥1i408 no P“'t“"l-‘l.“ :1" }""m{;‘]““: by ing bullnllw. or perhaps the fatally wounded | Which monay, not strictly for pubhc pur- had crawled to die. Pool after pool of blood [ Poses, can be raised. So far Sumner dyed the ground along the curbstone, Along | and Carlisle agreed admirably together; the street bat when Mr. Carlisle began to plunge SIGNS OF BLOOD s‘ru\md in the surplus he lost himself. were visiblo and in a hallway three squares | The surplus is a necessary incident of distant on Main street the floor was smeared | protection, and instead of “being reduced where some unfortunate had crawled to dress | by the Morrison bill, it 18 more likely to s wounds or die, The burang of the contt | bo inoreasod; just as roceipts increass on ouse was wholly aimless and malicious, ex- | 1 cept that ono might find excuse in tho feeling “;“;‘ of travel, when yan ‘t‘;“"" "'“l‘ IRA that tho crowd was avgered at the place |Of fare. But the size of the surplus has where » failure to do justice had been so |nothing to do with the principle at stake marked, It did notaid at all in getting at|in this question. Every dollar of itis the prisoners nor doing harm to the militia. | highway robbery and should be knocked: It way purely wanton, Nor was thero any | o » axcuse for failure to protect this property. | ©';, % thi Tho crowd was permitted o go to the very | - ‘Then you don't think much' of the windows and break thom in without resisi- | Morrison compromise eall policy, which is a polite name for SOME DEVILISH COMMUNIST, X cowardite. By the time the bill is ready who glorled in pure destruction, suggested to will be the Parls of America sure enough.” | democratic will be left. The party seems. Morrison is a good, clean man, but he cheered and yelled ment, has by far the ablest command of “RURN THE D—D MILITIA OUT.” the facts and philosophies of interna- Just here oceurred one of the most melan. | tional trade, and groups them so as. to bo abreast of theso scholars, the people are leaving the politicians in the rear and = —— rapidly acquiring an independent and original power that ‘wil ovontualy cary | Elezant Pasgsenger Elovator to all Floors. hom beyond party barriers, judg- )| ment of the presettt condition of things 1 CHARLES SHIVERICK. that a strong free-trade party is getting 4 Y itself together for business—tho symp.| 1206, 1208 and 1210 Farnam Street, = - - - OMAHA, NEB toma are in the air. For a time they will encounter, like the early abolitionists, the tempt, but if its leaders hang on likegrim death, and display something like the ) utter lack of cowardice that distinguished Wendell Phillips, I have no doubt in the world of their final triumph. Courage, and not policy, should he the democratic | ] watchword of the hour.” THE NEW HOUSE OF There are few of the old oil men whose Fine Havanw, Key West and Domestio Cigars. All Stanéard Brands Tobacoos. connection with the exciting life of the | Trial Orders Soiicied, Satisfaction Gnaramtegd, { 1807 sarmam st., catama. oil regions began on Oil creek that can- not recall the interest excited by the ec- centricities (as they were supposed to be FRED W. GR AY'; then), of a well on the Buchanan farm, at Rouseville. It was the first flowing (SUCCKSSOR TO FOSTER & GRAYY) well ever struck in the oil regions, and it developed a peculiarity of ceasing: to flow g at 12 o'clock Saturday night and starting again on Monday morning that gave it the namo of ho Sunday woll LIME AND CEMENT. It was located on a lease ten rods % i 1 d e e att ot ot o aner | Office and Yard, 6th and Douglas:Sts., flmaha Neh. Rouseville was afterward put up on: the gaue wha;‘e the well was. Drilling was one with a spring pole. Drive-pipes " wore used to reach the rock, for which Henley, Haynes:& Van Arsdel, $25 a point was paid. On January.12, 1861, the well had reached a depth of —WHOLESALE— 191 feet, and was on top of the first motiey e o vesesn NOTIONS, HOSIERY, GENTS' FURNISHING: pumping, and all drilled wet, as was Mr. Curtis’ also, A hard a‘linell was struck on —AND— the top of the first sand, on which they rilled for a long time)| theilight toold'of Fancv Groods, those days making very little impression ou it. At last it was broken, when the| LE06 Farnam Street, - - - - - - OMAHA, NEB oil suddenly began whfluw. Not expect- ing a flowing well, there was no tankage up, but the pllnkL were on the ground M. HELLMAN & co., for it. In those days square tanks were built. The well flowed ° strongly, and 1 ° large stream ! of oil ran down the creek. M Efforts were at once made to obtain bar- EI{anath ojtacic fasl pushocliitofloom 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREE1 CAR. 13Th pletion as rapidly as possible. To save the oil until she tank was up a large | “MAHA. - 5 hogshead was obtained and placed in the derrick. A plug was made out of a scantling and driven into the top of the y drive-pipe.sA hole was bored through the center of the plug and a lead pipe insert- od in it, and bent over into the hoge- JOBBER OF head. Men were then employed to dip 3 the oil out of the hogshead with pails and pour itinbo barrels through the old- fashioned broad eider funnels. No one it suggested that the surface-water be shut i 3 i off; and in fllo:fl days 1; was not :?ol\ixght (] ‘of. The novelty of a flowing wel rew large crowds !ov{h spot, fl;ld for many EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATEDY it was the topic of conversation 3 :’;:]l‘llg,l:il n.:m. 7 W FARNAM STREE - OMAHA NEH The wall.1 mwed into htho hog_uhe_ud through the pipe without tubingin - it,.forg several wee‘lzu, or until a tank | g oould be built. After the tank was up | cwmmy one jointof two and one-half inch tubing was put into the drive-pipe, and extended (o CJ up into the derrick through the bottom | e of a common. oil barrel which was _fas- E tenod there on a scaffolding. The single joint of tubing was all that was ever put | === into the welks '©Old clothes and waste were packed-evownd the tubing inside the drive-pipe, ond braces-put on them and _“ J against the sides of the derrick to pre- N vent their heing blown out. The owner eatimated the best day’s production of - the well at siaty barrels, or possibly sev- = - 4 enty-five barrels, though others put it as high as one hundred barrels, Oil wos i sold from this well in the month of Janu- i { ary at $10a barrel. 5 After the well began flowng into[the, |1A|]9 M } flfldflfl st.. { un:lxmm‘g{:‘gn.m UM“HA. HEB barrel at the end of the tubing, peblebs B o could frequently be heard rattling in it and one flow forced the head of the bar- FSEiE o Dy, CONNAUGHTON it was discovered that the bottom of the L] N ] barrel was filled with pebbles which had | B403 BRADY ST., DAVENPORT, IOWA, U. S, A. Established 1878—Gatarrh, been thrown out to the depth of neazly a ness, Lung and Nervous Diseases Speedily and Permanently Cured. Patients foot., ured at Home. Write for “Tre Mev1aax-Missionany,” for the People, Free, After being turned into the tank for ‘onsultstion and Correspondence Gratia. P. O Box 282. Telephone No. 226, four or five days the well began flowing HON. EDWARD RUSSBLL, Postmaster, Davenpozt, sa: “‘Physician of with the greatest regularity. 1t fowed | @wea antuvy ana Marked Success,” OONGRESSMAN MURPHY, Davenport, four times a day, and so regular that for | f§ #=ites: **An rionorable Man, Fine Success. Wonderful Cures. Honrs, 8 to 5 & number of days the flows did not vary B4, 10 DoSTeisg vith ad of mili: i t: “tr‘y’“‘-n‘:l pu: .L;lx:lt tl‘:o no:.‘, presume, that he has the brains to say The mob fired on him and a ball crasted | what he thinks and the courage to mean “Has free trade developed much strength in the west?” Down in a town in Alabata I found a |olubs in , Iowa and Nebraska, back under [Out in Frank Hurd's Toledo district, on his ears, eyes half closed, and his toes |sue has been squarely made, and the hitehing &)Oll was a fadedpld mule, head | has a democratic governor; Iowa elected down and eyes closed, ayl the mud of | five democrats to congress, and a repab- last fall not kteen cleaned off his lican governor scraiched through by a skeleton frame. | wis looking from | plurality, in a o that gave Garfield L | hain of evidence, vhen the native | the capital connty, which went republi- d | this kentry?” which accounts largely for the symptoms Fmp wolice will be overpowered by the mob. The [ *Ng," of uneasiness, on rome subjects, betrayed arth ent has been placed in front of i ' Vi ok M o ment Las bees plac .ku:a.m’lfh:y 9 ]‘: ful glad to hear it, Let's | by Senator Van Wyck, are keeping the crowd back, but are pelted ( 4F¥ with brick-bats and occasionally & PISTOL BALL I8 FIRED. Licutenant Rigget has been wounded in the leg. The police are worn out, and besid {8 08 00 0pe wikh She m: 8 t's the matter?” bers of our committee, twenty are sub- wre insufficlently lurflifl# fil: ¢ rth | shaks cha 8. eparte ot 1he depot g ke | TR0 SN AN m. No slgn yet of n} “You will wi a protty sliff plank, 1 declined, and Jo took fifteen cents | then, at Chicago?’ worth and came bk and said; “Yes, and when the people have a “Stranger, this (s a powerful bad ken- | chance to bo heard, will be pretty likely —powerful baf.” to getit. Outof the thirty-eight mem- No chance fur a poor man—nof a|stantial free-traders, but they don’t want Let's drink.” too much revolution at once, like brother T declined, ayd he ook his usual dose | Carlisle. They wish us well, and all that a minute. Its time of flowing besame 8o well known that men would come with | thair watches to time it, and amuse themselves by regulating the time of day by it, On the second or third Sunday after being turned into the tank it made no oil. This was reported to Ir, Curtis, || the owner, and also the fact that on the next Sunday it made no flow. On the following Monday morning, finding the same thing bhad occurred, Mr. Cuaxtis ordered a gauge to be teken the mext Saturday night at 12 o'clock and another on M morxing. This Was done, and the gauges showed that not 2 drop of oil had been put in the tank. This ocgurred each Sabbath for a long time, causing great interest and wmystery in the minds of the peoples At that time there was considerable discussion con- cerning the breaking of theSabbath on oi) MANUPACTURER OF OF SYRIOTLY' VIRST-OLASS wells and this well served as aguod text . . against Sabbath breakjng After some n study Mr. Curtis discbvered shat this ec- centricity was due to l!lnnnlmcam‘ ul‘l‘la! S “gfll “a fl!flns There were many pumlfimnll:;; w).uu. , LA y A e R were shut down Saturday night at mid- ;Ii.‘f“ldwhhl. (;:;'dx :h-uf. :d“ not Ih:’lt AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. off, and this e producing sand. 1819 and 1380 Harnoy Street and 408 B, 183b Bdvoet, On Monday morning a\.’pumping wells | Ulustrated Catadogio fiirished fres woon svblicatinn ! IMANA, NEE. were started again, and as soon as the p—————— e ——————— scattered, and when Colonel Har isfacti i i i hausted the Sunday well be- order with a sigh of faction, sort of shing, but want to drive us with a | Water was exhausted the Sunday wel DG% r-:lnnd:l- u"»flc::d mfl:fi'&"fl&fi.‘{“fi"fl Look at me!' he said as he returned | ourb bi %ou can just J;u'. it down, |gn flowing again with its accustomed evident that the mob must be permitted to | to his chair. *I'm n livi' evidence of | though, as an already settled factor in regularity, only to close when Saturday k enter the jail or the power of the state must | the fact that this is the wust kentry on ua.‘?gm. that the people are way ahead | night cam around. be put forth with much greater vigor before | garth fur a white man who honestly de- | of the politicians in this business. The; When tho oil was exhausted in the| 1024 North RBighteenth Street, Omaha, on Street Car Lin the ond of this trouble is reached. & i | B L g t y - 2 lig \ \ ine, sires to break hia back in ltnral | are taking an independent grasp of the | first sand, after the well had produced ava b i i . V. DI COIN, D FOWDE, pursuits, I've bin goin' down hill as }subjeot in their minds, and will take anthreo or four months, it was drilled by O1Ne1ssaTy, March 80.—3 8, m.~The mob | stedy 88 clock-work fur tholust twenty |inde ent grasp of it at the polls be-{steam power throu h the third eaad, o WHOLESALE AND RETAIL ut secmed to have had ne der. T) v jed that wy whi i heard some ular part) aniza- or the second or third sand, and it wero trylug € secure some. Thoy had e 1:'3.}::”.“ he 1:.“:; i'.f'i:m; tion."” " P Laulom o was abandoned. Moanwhile, the price aiter, and e, morlug . Vourth steeet |14 SISMECMNLE 10i0, ay/ho got bia ohin] 1 chink tho people do, From the}Jauusry 2 20 cents @ barrel P R A e A TR R Jnn-dun of the cannon at Fourth and |y'ar. S er, Wet your whistle" fore long, unless they can got themselves ldn&'.h 500 feet. No oil was found L . . : : unber, Lime, Lath, Doors, Windows, Bte. 4 e g of ot b e ntoud of w7 R GRY ““Then you contemplate a boltt" of oil had declived from the $10 point in s ) y ) s .

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