Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 10, 1884, Page 7

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7 SATURDAY. MAY 10, 1884. YMAHA DAILY BEE- JACORB SIMS. E. P, CADWELL SIMS & CADWELL, Attorneys-at-Law, OOUNCIL BLUFFS, I0WA Office, Matn Street, Rooms 1 and Shugart & Mo 's Blook, Will practice In State and eders! .R. VAUCHAN. Justice of the Peace. : Omaha ana Counnil Bluffe, $88Ate collce 1on ageny 211 Fello v savings bant. N. SCHURZ. Jng’g;ge of the Peaes, OVER AMERICAN KXPP,ggs, COUNCIL BLUFFS., - IOWA. M B J NN D, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, h—!_’_l—fi-lfldh B neqway, Council n!uc-. R. Rice M. D. CANGERS, ONIG DISEASES s ey _:gg,., irty years! practioal axperlenco Offios No stroct, Council Blufty ¥, cultation treo CASH TALKS | At the well-known Establishment oF J. P. FILBERT, 209 Upper Broaaway, the PIONEER CASH or other tumors removed without the knifo or drawing of blood. N - GIROCERY Of Council Blufls, Notico our reduced Price List. We give 12 pounds Carolina Rico 12 pounds Choico ¢runcs. 25 bars Buffalo Soap.... tra Teout, per pound .. i at per pound £3238558888882 10 pounds G 40 poonds h 5 gallon kg S: Whito Fis Al kinds California Frutts 8 pound Lusk’s Stacdard 4 for T. T. All grades, nccording to quality, 150 to 80c per pound > carry o full line of fino Shoos and Men's Also a full line . Call on us o , Ladies' and Tu & werd, we ara bound to sell and challengo all laudacle competition in this count J. P NERT . FiL 20090 er Broadway " ROLLER SKATING RINIE. CORNER PEARL ST. ANLiFIFTH'AVE. Qpen 10:00 a. m. p.m and 7;80 p. m., , Weduesday and Friday'eve nlugs. . ADMISSION 2 CENTS. \ o objectionablec aracters will be admitted. . MAR’ - - PROPRIETOR. THOS. OPPICHR, H. M. PUSKY, OFFICER & PUSEY BANKERS. Council Bluffs In 1856 Establisnea - - Dealers la Forelgn and omestlc Exchange an Howa rity Grain & Provisions, BOOGE'S SIOUX CITY HAM: J. Y. FULLER, Commission Merchant 0. 89 Pearl Streot Council Bluffs, lowa, WESTERN 10WA NORKAL TIFIC AND— COMMSRCIAL COLLEGE. COUNCIL BLUFF3 WA Will Open -THE 23D'of JUNE, 1884. and those desird full business couw s practice and gener. nience, short hand, ornsmental tion, German aud mu »mplete courso for te larg ate, cost of living reasonable, For further particulars, ingui BEARDSLEY & PAULSON, Council Blulfy, owa. CANCER Tha developement of the troat zent of Cancer with | Swift's Specifle scems so wondeetl, that all so a1l ted snould write us. | CANCER FOR 14 YEARS. Spartanbure, 8. C., March 14, 1554, I 1 have for 14 years been et from & (unning | %ore on my face that evoryt | have used” over €500 worth o ot four 0 litied ot my \ head, Yours thanktutly, ELIZA TINSLEY, © Me. B. F. Burns, Hope, Atk | yaye, under date of Jan. 22, 1884 1 have S genave. b { Switt's € 10 & 8080 ), ny ‘ten § T have b well man.” el Treatiso on Blood and Skin Diseasos mailed free. THE SWIFT 8PECIFIC CO. Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga, N Y. Offioe, 150W.23d St., bet 6th and ith avs SILOAM MINERAL SPRINGS. Wo wuarantoe the cire of the following named dis seases, orno_pay: Rheumatism, Scrofula, Ulcery Catarrh, & 1 Blood and «kin diseates, Dyepopsia, Liver Complaint, Kidney and Bladder Discases. Non ralgia and Asth Springs aro the favorite ©sort of the tired tad, and aro the FEEBLE LADIKS BEST FRIEND, Good hotel, llvary and bathing accomodation both winter and summor. Locality highly pioturesque wnd healthy. Accessiblo by Wabash railway, # Evonn,or C., B. & Q., at Albany. Correspondene solicited, REV. M. M. THOMPSON, Mann Gentry Co., Mo, Albany, Siloam Springs, ANALYSIS. Spacific Gravity : Reaction outra ce [bolts and STATE-PRISON HORRORS. poses Some of the i An Ex-Convict 1 Brutalitics of the Towa I tentiary at Fort Madison, 10 the F: D me in imagination past the iron locks and bars into the interior of the state prison or penitentiary at Fort Mad Tn the mind’s (7o let us look ison, h 2 unfortunate as well as criv inal con vict as they toil and suffer| as they live and die, in this borsted model prison, where the dearest Tights of helpless hu manity are crushed beneath the iron heel of a cruel and. corrupt administration, In this age of free thought and gression, 1 beliove 1 have a right to to-day God,breathing the free ait of 1 workings of that sheol on earth, that hot- bed of crime, where, despite tho boasted philanthropy of this the nineteenth cen- tury, brutality reigns rampant amid the groans of despairing humanity. But enough! To come to the point, T am not lecturing but pen-picturing. There are to-day,as during the year past, about four hundred inmr confined in this prison representing all ages and con- ditions, from the youthful murderer of fourteen to the grey headed rapist. The ordinary visitor unless he bo a close observer sees littlo to romark as he en- ters tho arched gateway and goes the rounds of the prison. Being hustled from one department to another_ in_short or- der, he notes the strict discipline and Alumiia. Organicand Volatil Total solids per gall §T. LOUIS PAPER WAREHOUSE. Graham Paper Co., 217 and 219 North Main St., 8t. Louls, WHOLESALE DEALERS IN } PAPERS, (Wil BOOK, NEWS, WRAPPING ENVELOPES, CARD BOARD ARD PRINTER’S STOCK £arCash oaid for Rags ot al * " IMPORTANT —TO— Buyers ofall Classes. CANNON BRYS*& CO., Have estabhished t ral brok 4 of wonls cuselves in Omaha to transact nd business. We will buy all wholesale or retail, and guarantee ch trust 1xious to be ridof. We will also prompt “tention to selling anything entrusted ous, and goons consigned to us will be carefully oked o, solicited. % 24T Referen ional Bank,” Moo To'sBank. h St K5 OF EYE & EAR J, T. ARMSTRONG, M. D., Oculist and Until offi lAurist. are repaired from result of fire, off ker, Room &, Creighton Block 15th Pioneer vrug Store ! 8. E. COR. 13TH AND JONES STS, DR.F. 8. LEWIS, - Prop’r, AGENT FOR Ohio Oil Co.’s West Virginia, Cylind and other Oile conatantly on hand. Railway Time Table. COUNCIL BLUFFS. of the arrival and CIICAGO, BURLINGION AND QUINCY. LHAVE. ARRIVE, £:35 p m Chicago Express 9:00 & 1 9408 m Fast Mail, 00 p KANBAS CITY, KT. JOB AND COUNOIL BLUVFS, 10:05 8 Mail and Express, 8205 pn [ press, Expross, Express, CHICAGO, ROC AND PACIFIC, Atl X pros, *Des Mo Mol dation, *At local depot on ly. *WABASII, KT, LOUIS AND PACIFIO. 0:55 A m 4:45 p 450pm 11316 2w 6530 m 6:50 pm 945 am 9:46a m m 0:00 6 m m 8:60 p JUNION PACIF 500 p m Westorn Expr 8:36 8 m 1100w m I 3 440 pm 7:40 4 m 12:10 & w incoln iExpress, *At Trausfer only. b m. Anive 10 min: D. M. CONINEINL. UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER ! Metalic Caskets and Woodin Coffins of all Kinds. ELEGRAPH ORDERS PROMTLY ATTENDED TO, OPEN DAY AND NIGH WNo. 14 N. Main St., ouncil Bluffs. Call and see them before buyix JOHN EPENETER, elsewhere, COUNCIL BLUFES, *GAVLVANIZED IRON CORNICES, Fine Mantels and Grates. LYMANS GASOLINE STOVES. Stoves and Tinware, 07 BROADWAY, 10WA. FITCH BROTHERS' Perloct Fitting, Best and Cheapest. WHY DON'T YOU GET 8)ME OF CUSTOM SHIRTS? Fine (anen Collars and Cafts, No. 716 Fourth Street Council Bluffs, Iowa. flatters himself with the vain thought that here at least crume is being checked and that the criminal is becoming re- formed. After entering the walls the first place submitted to the inspection of thestranger 18 tho cell house,along, gloomy, building er corridor, whose whitewashed walls en- close the cells which riss tier upon tier three stories high; there are three hun- dred cells. In the solitude of these dun- geons the inmate ponders on the evil er- rors of his way or as inclination may prompt him plans new schemes of devil- ment. As the visitor casts but a glance on this bastile his attention is called by the guard and the line of march takes him to the bell house. Here he is bland- ly introduced to the deputy, an alleged Capt. “Jack Townsend,” if you plense, who graciously opens the books of record and shows the astonished visitor that this is not only a self-supporting institution, but during the three years past has re- turned to the treasury of the state nine thousand dollars. Nine thousand dol- lars! forsooth does he tell you at what a terrible cost this grand achievement has been accomplished; does he speak of the corrupt, soul-destreying convict contract system, say nothing of the wounds, cuts, bruises and hunger gnawing at the vitals of his victims, But enough, I will speak of him when I describe the punishments. Passing to the rear of the Hill House through the dining room we enter the kitchen where the guard explains the steam arrangement by which the food of the convicts is cooked—tasting a morsel of good bread always on hand, a sample for the occasion. We again take up the line of march and enter the lowa Tool Company’s shops, where one hundred and tifty convicts are employed in the manu- facture of hoes, rakes, pitchforks and such like hand instruments for use in the garden oron the farm, look at the convicts who forge the steel, which eventually bright and clear comes to the citizen's hand as a_sample of the useful trades to which the criminal is supposed to be educated. But alas, the greed for gold is great and the stern shy- lockism of the ages, represented by a grasping contractor, knows nomersy and mocks av reform, For instance machine- ry takes tho place of ingenuity and the poor convict young or old becomes an instrument a necessary brute forco with- out which it would be impossible to fat- ten the wallet of ye Gods the contractors, Hence it is that the convict under the contract system learns no trade, but sim- ply a branch; for instance, some draw ofl the molten metal, others place it under the trip hammers, others temper and polish, and on his release what does your criminal know of a useful trade or branch of industry? Absolutely nothing. He is behind the age, so to spoak, Ho can- not eater a shop and compote with the workmen on the outside without friends and witbout money. e criminal inmate of somo and yet your blatant legislators point to the politici calls it a paying institation, are mutterings on the night air, murders and arson. Crime increases and the bursting bubble of reform leaves but an ewpty name to mark its progress. Thesame description as regards the ben- efit derived from his work shop experi- institution Still there it-—Let me ask tho indulgent readers of your valuable papers to follow n pro- be hoard, ex-convict though 1 be, and here treading the free soil, and, thank y adopted state, Nebraska, 1 shall speak the truth without fear or favor, as regards the Amid the dust and smoke begrimed with soot let us He again becomes philanthrop istic V3 figures yeo blatant reformers! think'of the increase of crime, While you boast of the progress 7 pulled out his wallet, “Has my advice | profited you " you have made in reform, T denounce| “Stranger I can't take your money," ¢ | your practicos as vain, as & fraud—age, | replied tho hoy “tisworte! By the living gods, tis rank | *Why Yours, ete., Wit Grivern, C— IN AN IOWA TOWY, hypocriey! LOMANC I Marcies the Sonfof the Man Whom Her Mother Forsook oh the Eve of Marrlage, | Dubuque Special to the Chicago News. A quaint hittle town west of this city is the acone of a romance in which an o [ hieiress to a vast estate appears aftor a quarter of & contury and marries the son of a man from whom her other fled on tho eve of marriage. A Twenty five years ago a young Lnglish man of happy ways and good domeanor landed in the httle town. Two weeks later he entered a store of general mer chandise, where his politeness attracted a largo patronage and made him a favorito with his employers and rural socicty gen erally. Among his customers was the handsome little black-eyed daughter of a farmer who had made a half million dol lars in tho silver mines of Colorado. The clork’s attontions were opposed by the la- dy's father, and clandestine meetings fol- lowed. Tha young lady was soon sent to a boarding-school near Chicago, a stipu- lation of her attendance being that the principal should inspect all her lotters oxcept those bearing a certain mysterious which ended in his discharge from the store and consequent disgrace in the neighborhood. He walked to this city. Heo overcame his malady, and, getting a situation in a wholesale house, soon won the confidence of his employers and was promoted to positions of importance, Five years had gone since he had scen or heard from the little girl he loved, when ho was sent to the town tn_which he met her Ho called on his old employers, and in a conversation learned that within two weeks a grand marriage was to be consummated between a wealthy mer- chant ot the little place and Miss ——, whose father had become rich in the mines of Colorado. The lady was his old sweotheart. Her name rekindled the ar- dent affection he had borne for her when they were young. A clerk in the store carried her a note and waited for this reply: Dear Grorae—I have received long and anxiously awaited note. Come at once. Yours, as ever, J AN George went. He promised to return again as soon as he could go to Dubuque and resign his situation, A week later, and within less than that time from her marrioge, the lady disappeared mysteri- ouely and was never afterwards seen or heard from by her parenta. Three months ago a young lady arriy- ed in Jackson county, lowa, *‘to seok her fortune in the Far West,” as she called it. She procured a situation as teacher in one of the country schools. Her ef- forts were attended with success. She was accepted into the society of her pat- rons, and two weeks ago was married to a rich young farmer. He is the son of the wealthy merchant whose betrothed had forsaken him a quarter of a century before. On her bridal trip the young la- dy visited the home that her mother had abandoned, and was given a brillisut re- ception. She remembers the story of her moth- or's,elopement, The young commercial man roturned his samples to the store at Dubuque, and, drawing all his money, bought u wagon, in which he traveled to the home of his sweetheart. She met him in the outskirts of the town at the time he had appointed. They drove to Wisconsin and were married, His mon- ey was soon exhausted, and' he sold the rig to pay his way to Chicago. Ho and his wife obtained work in an old hotel that stood somewhere on Clark street. They saved enough money to take them to New York. His knowledge of com- wnerce helped him into situation as bro- ker’s clerk. Private speculation increas- ed his income until he had sufficient money to go into business on his own ac- count. His deals were not successfu', and within two years bankruptey and drink made him wholly destitute. His father was an English nobleman and the young man's early training hadimpressed a character which rebelled against such life Ho drowned himself i tne East River. His wife and child were thrown upon their own resources, and for two years lived in misery. The mother dicd m grief, and the child sold papers: for a living until she was picked up by the po- lic She was sent along with many oth- or waifs to western New York., A well- to-do farmer adopted her and gave her a ood education. She went West to earn her liviihood, and until ecircumstances aided her recollection she was not aware that her new home was the birthplace of her mother., Her identity has been es- tablished to the satisfaction of her grand- father, and he will mention her in his will. ence may be said of the toiler in the s A the shoe shop, the chair shop &c. They Poison learn but a branch of a trade and to be | In tho blood will nearly always show itself in plain they do not learn that thoroughly, | the Spring. If it dons’ not coma in the shape They are slaves sold for a dollar, the bond of the contractor like Shylock of Venice, is good, ah! 80 good, that their hearts bleed with grief that is born of despair, when thoy realize ss the writer has often done, that his strength was not equal to the task imposed upon him, and the punishment that followed revives in this free country the deep dark memory of the inquisition, In the rear of the cell house under the enst stairway there a rope and simple in design, but terrible in signifi cance. This, good people of Towa, isjthe modern thumb screw. Here the poor convict who nas broken perhaps only a simple rule s dragged, his thuwbs are placed in two leather coverings. A steel clamp is then screwed around the middle joint of each thumb, and the helpless victim of *‘man’s nhumanity to man’ is hoisted until, with staring, bloodshot oyes, he hangs sus- pended between Heaven and earth, shrieking, raving, But I cannot describe it. Language fails to picture such terri- ble suffering as I myself have endured, 1 leave it to those who have read of the dark ages to imagine, if they can, such deeds in this age, among such people, with such laws as we are led to suppose exist in the state of lowa, An illustration, and T am through for the present, Once it was my luck, or rather iisfortune, to see and hear the cries and agony of another, a young man, a negro whose name is Willisuws, well known to many people of Omaha, and he stood begging the deputy for mercy shall nover forget tho brutal reply. God sake, captain, please do not string me up.” “God Almighty has got nothing to do with the inside workings of thisin- stitution. There is no limit to the pu ishment we may inflict; none whatever, Ponder on it, yo legislators! and you, pulley | ¢ of blotches, pimples, eruptions, ete,, it canses a dulland heavy feeling, indisposition to ex- ertion, loss of appetite, ahd a general lotting down of the system. Nature at this juncturo requires some assistance to help throw off this wson and clean up the organisw for the try- i summer weather, For this there is noth- ing better than Swikt's SrEcIyic, Lotters from twenty-three (23) of the lead- | druggists of Atlanta say, under dato 1, 1851 “We sell more of Swift’s thian any other one remedy, an three to ten times as much as any other blood medi- Wa sell it to all classes, and many of familios use it #s & general hoalth From the Detroit Froe Press, T'wo or three weeks ago, a pedestrian who was passing & house on Riopelle Street, heard the sounds of a terrific sl going on, and as he looked in at the front door a boy about 13 years of age, who sat in tho hall, quietly obser- ved ““1¢s only the old folks, having a lit- tle row, stranger.” Do they have 'em often?” asked the man, “Almost every day.” “If I were in your place I'd stand at the door here and charge ten cents ad- misgion fee. It's worth the moncy to sce & family riot like this, and you wight as well make a few dollars as o let the chance slip.” he boy said he would think of it, and the pedestrian waited untal the man had choked the woman as black as & plum and then passed on, Yesterday Lo pas- ‘ud that way sgain, and there was anoth- er row going on, aud the same boy sat on lthn door-step. “1' vee nrw show,” said the man as he Jecause I'm & gquare boy. For a week or 80 every fight in thero was as squaro as & dice and werth the price of admission, but as soon as a crowd began to come and the gate money began to run up to eighty or ninety cents, dad and mam began to hippodrome on the public, That blood on his noso was put thers half an hour ago, and mam's black oye in three woeks old. hey viant mo to stand in with them a1, decieve the puby lio, but I ean't o it, Lot the best man win or quit the business, is my motto Pass o, siranger, for this is a put up job t0 gull the confiding public.” e CONVINCING, Tho proof st the pudding 18 not in chowing the string, but in having an_ opportunity to tost tho Article diroct. Sehroter & Bechty the Druegists, have a froo trial bottle of Dr, sanko's Cough and Lung Syrap for each overy one who is afflicted with Conghs, Colds, Asthma, Consumption or any Lung Affection. e SIUDE'S LIGHT." A Curious Apparition Which Comes from an Old Slave's Grave, ATuaNTA, Geo., April 20, The Con- stitution to-morrow will publish a curious story told by Alonzo Lyon, and vouched for by hundreds of the best citizons of mark, The young couple who had ex-|De Kalb county, concerning what is pected to earry on secret correspondence |called *Judo's Light.” Me. Lyon was were baflled, and, while neither could |raised in Do Kall county, Ga., four hear from tho other, they reverod an|miles from Lithonia and about thirteen oath that they had taken to remain trup | miles from Atlanta, one-half wile from to cach other. After a year the young|Macedonia baptist church, on tho Stone man bocame a victim of melancholia, [ Mountain and Flat Shoals road. 1t is in a quiot rural hamlot, on a farm form- erly owned by his grandfather, Edmund Bunt, deceased, then after his death bought by Mr. Lyon's brother-in-law, Mr. Hartman, and now owned by Mr. David McWilliams, that “Jude’s Light” takes its regular appearanco. About forty years ago a man named Reid owned the farm, and he also owned a negro woman by the name of Jude. Reid had Jude punished for some offence by placingher in close confinement and on very short rations. Mr. Lyon's mother, who now resides with him, was a young girl, and says sho remembers slipping some food to poor Jude, and will never forget the cagerness with which tho fam- ished woman devoured it. Jude finally died, it is believed, from the oftects of cruel treatment and’ deprivation of food. She was buried in the woods on a hill- sido, across a branch, about 300 yaids from the house occupied by Reid's fam- ily. No one else was buried there, and the grave to this day is a solitary one. Soon after the burial “Jude’s light” ap- pearod emanating from the grave and wandered about tho house and premises at all times of the night. The *‘light” manifested 80 much intelligence and struck such terror into the hearts of the Reid family that they sold all their pos: sessions and hastiiy loft thestate of Geor- gia. The light has continued to ap- pear freq iently from that time to this, but never seemed to inspiro terror and uneasiness in the breasts of others nor visit the dwellings often. After Edmund Bunt, grandfather of Mr, Lyon, purchas- THE CHEAFFST PLACE 1INOOMAHA TO BUY Foll= Nl Tol=Ref Is AT DEWEY & STONE'S., One of the Best andjlargest Stocks in the United States | to [select from. NO STAIRS-TO CLIMB, ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR. HENRY LEHMANN | JOBBER OF Wall Paper and Window Shates. EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, FARNAM STREE . 11 OMAHA NEo PERFECTION Heating and Baking n only attained by using i—, CHARTER OAF Stoves and Ranges, WHIT WIRE GAUZE OVER DOOR = Fer sale by :g. MILTON ROGERS & SONS i (YMAHA FRED W. GRAY, (SUCCESSOR TO FOSTER & GRAY.) L.UINVIIBEIR, LIME AND CEMENT. ed the Reid farm Mr. Lyon lived soveral years with him. He saw the ‘‘light” probably a thousand times, at all times, at all seasons of the year and in all kind weather. So also did his mother, broth- ers and sisters, Many of the neighbors have been present occasionally and watchedit. The Reid dwelling is situat- ated in the fork of two small streams which flow together and form Poll Bridge creek, a short distance below the house. The bottom land along the creek is here very broad and extensive, and cover with a dense growth of cane and bushes, A tield has been cleared between Judge's grave and the dwelling, so that the grave could be seen from tho house. “Jude’s light” always seemed to come straight up out of the grave, eight or ten foot high, and keeping about the same distance from the ground, it would float slowly off up or down the swamp, or to- ward the house, or up the hill through the woods. It would often glide about for an hour or 8o in sight, then suddenly 20 straight down out of view, At such times, said Mr. Lyon, he and others had started for the grave with the intention of beating this *light” there in order to see what it was, if possible, hut none had ever succeeded in doing so. By the time they had taken ten stops in the direction of the grave they would see the *‘light,” returning toward that point with railway speed, reach it before the would be in- vestigators were fairlystarted. 1t inva- riably paused an instant over the grave, then drop straight down and disappearcd. Avisit there immediately afterward re- vealed no phosphorescent, or other lights. Mr, Lyon described the ‘‘light” as about the size of aman's doublo fist, of & somewhat reddish tinge, sparkling somewhat, but not very brilliant, and only slightly illuminating the bushes and troos in passing along. Tho nearest Mr. Lyon was eyer to *Jude's light,” was about the distance from the dwelling to the small stream in the direction of the grave—say 100 yards, His brother-in-law, Mr. Hartman, who owned the place after Edmunhds Bunt's death, and lived on it untill 1876, was once within six or eight paces of it. That night his wife and her sister,Mrs, Thom- as Maze, and himself were all awakened from sound sleep just after midnight by some nysterious sensation, and on look- ing out into the yard thoy saw a very urusual illumination, Mr, Hartman opened the door, and there in the yard? was the familiar ball of reddish, Bparkling light. It remained stationery a fow seconds, then slowly glided offin the direction of the grave. ~ Mr, Hart- man said he was not particulary scared, nor were the ladies, but each felt thoy had been awakened by this unusual ap- proech of the *‘light " “Jude's light'" differs from the phos- phorescent hights of tho swamp in many respects, 1t is always about the samo size, always keeps about the same dis- tance from the ground, and travels avainst or in opposite direction to the strongest winds, It also appears in the dryest and hottest, as well as the coldest and stormiest of the weather, It rarely appears, however, in stormy weather, which might be taken to be another in- dication of intelligence, Phosphorescent lights, it is well known, can only travel with the wind, and also vary greatly in size and appearanco. Mr, Thomas Mize, of Atlanta, a broth- er-in-law of Mr. Lyon, was present when the foregoing was related, and confirmed it in every particular. Heo lived on the Reid farm for two or three, and believes he had seen ‘*Jude's light” at least 5C0 nights during the time, The “light" is not seen in the earlier part of the night, but both Mr, Lyon and Mr, Mize though it could be seen ai some hour every night if a watch were kept for it. —— “My Mother - B IV O A 1 S T © a liver romody, and fnds them very effic- 9 clous.” Chas. L. Ainsworth, 41 Vance Blogk, Indisnapolis, Ind, Office and Yard, 6th and Dougles Sts.. ~ Omaha Neb. 1 RICHARDS & CLARKE, I W. A. ULAR.KI&:, il l Proprietors. Superinendent Omaha lron Works 0. P. RAILWAY - - - 17TH & 18TH STREETS ‘ | 1 % i w¥ P e e MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS IN Steam Engines, Boilers WATER WHEELS, ROLLER MILLS, Mill and Grain Elevator Machinery | MILL FURNISHINGS OF ALL KINDS, INCLUDING TEE Celebrated 'Anchor Brand Dufour Bolting Cloth BTEAM PUMPS, STEAM WATER AND{GAS PIPE BRASS GOODS AND PIPE FITTINGS ARCHITECTURAL AND BRIDGH [RON. 43TI08 TIICEO ‘We are prepared to turnish plans and estimates, and will contract fo the erection of Flouring Mills and Grain Elevators, or for changin Flouring Mills, from Stone to the Roller System. §@ Kiepecial attention given to furnishing Power Plants for any pur pose, and estimates made for same, General machinery repairs ntande to promptly. Address RICHARDS & CLARKE, Omba, Neb 2 H PATMER, 14 Main §treet, COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA,

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