Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 25, 1884, Page 5

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oot AHA DAILY BEE--WEDNESDAY JUNE 25 1864, 2 b & GREAT ' RURLINGTON “ROUTE- TON ’ GOING WmEST. PRINCIPAL LINE FROM CHICAGO, PEORIA & ST. LOUIS, BY WAY OF OMAHA AND LINCOLN TO DENVER, OR VIA KANSAS CITY AND ATCHISON to DENVER Connecting in Unfon Depots at Kansas City, Owuha and Denver with through trains for SAN FRAINCISCO And all points in the West GOING RAST, «Connecting in Grand Unjon Depot as Chicago with through trains for NEW YORK, BOS TON, And all Enstern ( ¢ Indianap. At Peorla with through t olis, Cineinnati, Columbus, points in t is with through the South.Enst. At St, points Soutl, arlor Cars, with Re. 1 s free), Smokimg Cars with tevoly Pullmin Palace Sleeping ars and the famous C. I & Q. Dining Ciire uly toand from Chicago and Kansas Cit L0 AN ouncil Blufts: Chicago and D Moines, Chicago, St. Joseph, Toy without chan, Tunning theix own Lincoln and Deny ity AND SOUTH, it Day Coaclies and to plolia Tr ‘IIIIII_IIII\ PalaceSleoping Cars sire run dail and from S8t. Louis; a Hannibal; Quis Keokuk, Buriington, Cedar Rapids and Lea toSt. Paul and ‘Minneapolis: Paylor Cits W Reciining Chairs to and from St. Louis nd Peoria, Only one chiangoe of cars 1 ouis and Des Moines, Towa, Lincoln, r, Colorado. t i3 ulso the only Through Line beiween ST, LOUIS, MINNEAPOLIS and ST, PAUL. It is known as t) gre: X TINE of _\mt-l'l:s,l"‘ B tod to be the Finost Eqnlpfei Railroad in the Werld for all classes of Travel, Through Tickeis via R. R. coupon ticket office e CAR and'is universally adiit: is line for eale at ait inthe United States PERCEVAL LO Manager. Gen Pass, VELL, X Chinabr DEBILITY Uit Geucratio organe quickly cured by ' the METHOD. Adopted in 1l the HOSPITALS NCE. ~ Prompt return of VIGOR. Simple cases, §3 to €6, Severc oncs, §8 to §12. l"nmph\u! Eroa.” Clviale Remedial Ao, 166 Fulton 8¢, New ork. Notico to Cattle Moen, 900 CATTLE FOR SALE. 180 Head of Stoers Threo Years Old, 200 Iy o “w W0 203 Teiters, Two “ 150 Steors,” Ono (D 220 Teifors, Ono “ Tho above described cattlo are all well bred Towa cattlo, straight and smooth. Theso cattlo will bo sold in Tots to suit purchascrs, and at reasonable prices. For furthor particulars, call on or address Waverly, Bremsr Co., lowa. « THIS BELTor Kegenrae tor is mado expressly for Ry the ctire of derangements NQof the generativo orgons, Thero is no mistake about RlCfie A :, this tnstrument, the con- tinuous stream of ELEC- TRICITY permeating through the parts must ros- tore them to healthy action Do not confound this with Electric Belts advertised to cure all ails from headtotoo, 1t is for the ONE spec- iflc purposo, For circulara wiving full information, address G ovor Eleotric Uele Co., 163 Washington .. Chiacen' Agents wanted for authentic adition of his life. Published at Augusta, his home. Larg- est, handsomest, cheapost, best. By the renowned e Col. Conwell, whose life of out:xold the twenty others by 3 ook ever published in this world; many agents are selling fifty daily. Agents are making tortunes Al new b ginners euccessful; grand chance for them; $48.L0°mnde by a lady agent the firetday. Terms ‘mast beral Particulars free. Better send 25 conta orp tago, etc.,on froe outtt, now ready, includ- g large prospectus book, and save valuable time, Jo10-1w ALLEN & CO., Augusta, Me, 600 CATTLE FOR SALE. 500 Cows and elfers. 00 One-year Steers. The above deseribed cattlo aro all well brod, na- tive Nebraska ard Towa. Theso cattlo will bosold 1 lots to suit purchaser, For further particulars eall on or address, L W. PLANK, Albion OCTOR WHITTIER aseliy 7 now Nervous Mental _and Physical Weakness ; Mercurial and other Affece 1ions of Throat, Skin or Bones, Blood Poisoning, old Sores and Ulcers, aro trested with unparalleled O e o tateas selemiiiie prinelpice: Kaely, Privately. Diseascs Arising from Indiscretion, Excess, Exposure or Indulge Sonbwing crceta: uerto r by mal free, A Positive given fo all curable cases, Medielnes scnt everywhere. Famphiots, English or German, 64 pagos, de- #cribing above dlseases, in male or fomale, PREE. MARRIACE CUIDE! i &ilt binding, This book ul of luguisitive want to of great. tuteress to all, - Heaitt, Boauty, Tnow, A" book Hoppiness a0 prouaeied Ly i aAVIce: ] Northeast Nebraska ALONG THE LINE OF THE, Chicago, 'St Paul, Minnapolls and OMAHA RAILWAY. mn. now extension of this line from Wakefleld up o BEAUTIFUL VALLEY of the GAN through Conoord and Coleridge TO EARTINGTOIN, Resches the bost portion of tho State, Special ex- cursion rates for land teckers over this line to “Wayne, Norfolk and Hartington, and via Blair to all principal poluts on the SIOUX CITY & PACIFIC RAILROAD Traing over tht C,, 8t. P. M. & O. Railway o Cov ngton, Sloux City, Ponca, Hertington, Wayno and Nortolk, Conncct at Blaixr #or Fremout, Oakda ¢, Neligh, and through to Vale entine, £@r For rates and allinformation call on F_P. WHITNEY, Geners! Azent, HAMBURG-AMERICAN FPaclzet Company. DIRECT LINE FOR ENGLAND, FRANCE AND GESMANY, The steamships of thls well-known line are bullt of iron, in water-tight compartments, and aro furnish «od with_every requisite to make ¢ sage hoth safo and agreeable. They carry th ed Biater and European wails, aad leave Ne ks Thu “lays aud naturdays for Plymouth (LONDON) Cher bourg, (PARIS) and HAMBUMG. First Cabin, 365, §70 and $30. Stecrage, Mark Hasen, F. E. Moores, M ha, Gronewiog & Scl cll Bluffs, . B: RICHARD 4 61 Broadway, N. Y. Chas. Kozainski & Co- al Westean Agonts, 107 Washiogton St., Chics Rate: CAPITAL PRIZE $75,000 . Tickets only 85, Shares in Proportion' s “Wo do Meredy certify that we supervise the & rangements for all the MontAly and Sewi-Anniuai Drawings of the Louisiana State Lottery Oompany, and in person_manage and control the Dra thomaelves, and that the same ars conducted. i Aoneaty, fairness, and in good aith toward all pae taw, and s authorise the company to use thia oo ioate, wi ac-similes of our ¥ gnaty intta advortisomentes ¥ P T Couwtsstonxns Louisiana State Lottery Company, n:n.‘:molrh:i in AS: lr‘l“ {1.1',-" by the legislatun uoational an arital irposes—with & oa) #al of §1,000,000—t0 which & Iz‘vm fund of lw!pl 650,000 has since been added. i, An overvholmin Popar vote the_trandhice ‘made of 3 state constitubion Vopted Dectmor 2, 4. D. T879: The only Lottery ever voted on and en- dorsed by the people of any State. 1t nover soales of postpones. Its grand single number drawings wlll take place mo:fifly‘ A splondid o) qmmlnlté to win a Fortune, Fifth Grand flrnwl lass (i, in the Acad: emy of Musio, New Orleans, Tuesday, July 15th, 1884—-170th Monthly drawing, OAPITAL PRIZE, $75,000. 100,000 Tickets at Five Dollars Each, tions, in Fifths in wx\nrtlom LIST OF PRIZES. Frao: 1000 do APPROX 9 Approximation prizes of $760. 9 do do 600 9 do do 50 not found in medical or surgical works. A man cut as was Salisbury has never been known to live longer than a few sec onds and but for his courage and presence ogdmind he would now be beneath the [ ted for in this manner. before the accident young Salisbury and his fathor were talking at home about hemorrhage and were telling what they an inquest on the spot, the verdioct of the jury being that the deceased came to his death from suffocation caused by in- haling foul air while at work in the place before stated. Manchester was a young man about 25 oars old. He has a sister residing on North 23rd street—just back of the High School, who is now lying at the point of death, Ancther sister is in the western part of the state, but her address could not bo learned. The deceased had been living with his employer for a_short time past in Shel- don’s and Isaac's addition. The remains are lying in the coroner's offico awaiting interment. FROM DEATH TO LIFE. Melvin Salisbary, Who Was so Fearfally Cut, upon His Feet Once More. A Wonderful Case and one Which Can Hardly be PAccounted for - {Salisbury's First Day Out, Yeatorday, for the first time since his frightful injury Mr. Salisbury was upon the streets of this city. The occurrence of this fearful accident is still fresh in the minds of the readers of the Ber. On the 8th day of May Melvin Salis bury was engaged in removing a large pane of glass from the front of the old Paxton building, corner of Fifteenth and Farnam streets. The scaffold on which he stood gave away, and he was preoipi- tated to the basement with the glass upon e — TPostoflice Changes, Postofico changes in Nebraska and Towa for tho week ending June 21, 1884, farnished by Wm., VanVleck, of the postoflico department: NEBRASKA. Established—Glendale, Antolope Co., Frank A. Black, P. M. Penbrook, Cher- ry county, Theodore H. Tillson, P, M. top of him. In the fall ho was terribly | _Discontinued—LaPorte, Wayne coun- out in the neok, and all hopes of his re. [ty. Verdigris Valley, Knox county. covery were given up. Postmasters appointed-—Bainbridge, Harlan county, Cnas. J. Delahoyde; Emmet, Holt county, Miss Maggie Mal- loy; Inman, Holt county, Clayton Troth; Monroe, Platte county, Geo. W. Alver. son; O'Connor, Greeley county, Charles Russell, It seems, however, that his time for death had not yet come, for physicians were called and the wound was drossed and Salisbury lives to-day a monument to medical and surgiocal akil One week ago last Friday he sat up for the first time since the accident and yesterday, the forty-seventb] !ay since he was hurt he visited his attending physi- cian, Dr. Stone, in his office. To say that his recovery is wonderful does not T0WA, Kstablished—Henness, Mahaska coun- ty, John P. McCrea, P. M, Postmasters appointed—Dublin, Wash- ington county, Samuel 8. Calhoun; Gol- inventor of the process of making coffins from prossed sawdust and of trimming them with stamped paper to imitate satin, 1 can furnish the prettiest casket you ever lay dewn in for about §6.” ““That's dog cheap,” “Of courso it is. Before this panio I had the promise of eapital by the million. Public confidence is gone, and no ore wants to risk a dollar _even in a big thing, Thinkof it! Twenty pounds of sawdust pressed into a casket warrantod to fit_or no sale, and this trimmed up in beautiful style for threa conts apiece? Not profit, 600 per cent, Cash ecapital roquired to establish business only £4001" TURTL! IGHTING, Pastime that as Much Excitement as a Dog. Fight, Now York Sun,' A Staten Islan Affords “Talk of bulldogs fighting,” said a sporting man yosterday, ‘‘why, they're not a marker to what 1 saw the other night in an old fashioned tavern, near Clifton, Staten Island. A countryman brought in two snapping turtles, which he said he had caught that afternoon. ““What are you going to do with them,” I asked. ‘Fight 'em,’ he answered. I laughed. ‘Guess you'ro a stranger in these parts,’ he said. ‘If you're willin’ to pay for a little fun, I'll show you a better fight than two bulldogs ever made.’ I put up a stake and the ocountryman put the turtles close to each other on the floor. They were au still as two empty shells for an instant, Then two nnnfle- liko heads darted out, and the glittering don, Delaware county, Albert Miller; Pleasant Valley, Scott county, Wm. Rogers; Truvo, Madison county, lsaac Holmes; Wert Branch, Codar county, Wm, T. Bonsall, A WONDERKFUL ISLAND, The Curiosities to be Seen on Queen vUharlotte's Island. half express it. It is simply a miracle. It is a case, another such of which is His life being saved is largely accoun- Only a few days From the Victoria (B, C.) Colonists, Probably no other group in the wide world carries more ourosities, natural and artificial, than Queen Charloite Is- 1007 Prizcs, amounting to. +o000+.8205,50¢ | would do should they see a man cut in Chate : : wptimten i o b ouh | the areet, Voung Salisbuty and | (Lot xiont of apuntry. Tho fooles or tarther information write clearly giviog fay |ho would plungo his fingers into |pigt “tho mineralist the botoniat, the ar- e eake F: 10 Monsy Orders payable aad | the wound and staunch the flow of blood [Fier 14 the agrioulturist may each of W ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK, New Otloans, La. Postal Notes and ordinary lotters by Mall or Ex pres (all sums of $5 and upwards by Kxprosa at our expense) to he would do for any one else. his fiugers into the wound in such a man. ner as to partially check the hemorrhage and ran with all the speed at his com- mand for a physician. nately was soon at his side and in a very short time Drs. Rebert, Ayers and Loe wero present. went to work to save the young man’s M A. DAUPHIN, orM. A. DAUPHIN, Now Orloans L3, 007 Seventh Bt., Washington, D, C. ==THE MILD POWER CURES.— UMPHREYS’ OMEOPATHIC: ‘ SPECIFICS. | n use 3) yoars.—Each number the sp geription”of an eminent physician Bimple, Bafe and Sure Med! LIsT t lic, or Teething of Inf a of Children or Adults. ar) ‘oothache, I'nceacho, folc Headaches, Ve ililous Stomic fact that one of the veins was cut off ti i violent coug] Physical Weal ti Talplatlo or sent by the Case, or sin- thorge NO POISON ety eIty 2 anhogd, Debllity, &, EERS1AT oRNEY, 166 Futn . Wow ECRET MALADIES ind radical cure by m method, based on recent s entific researches, even in the most desperate cases without any trouble to the functions. [ cure equally the sad con- sonsequences of the sins of [ a a by potence. E DISURETION GUARANTEED. Prayer to send the Exact description of the Sicknest. DR. BELLA, E'i"kiflg. d'l'ho left SAEReE uf[hi:s1 mu!uth ocean’s caves, ho will find & myriad - Soientific Bocieti rops down a triflo fand thon | throng of these denizens of the deep— Member of Several brmnmmhnm?tleu. his tongue is protruded from | ¢ho black cod. P 6, Place de la Nation 6,-~PARIS, | thy mouth it goes to the left side. With| On these islands even the moralist BpmedEnt a)l these little inconveniences he is 1ot | will find something in his line, Let him IN THE PASTRY IF 2 FLAYOR THEY STAND ALONE. PAEPARED BY THE Price Baking Powder Co., Chicago, Hil. A 6t. Louis, Mo, Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder Dr. Price’s Lupulin Yeast Gems, Best Dry ¥ Weast, SALI GRCCERS. WE MAKE BUT ONE QUALITY. FOR §1, LOUIS PAPER WAREBOUSE. could not see him, Graham Paper Co.,|sone who went down the ludder in search of Manchester. 217 and 219 North Maln 84, 8t. Louls, WHOLESALE DEALERS IN W) PAPERS,{Vilih WHAPFING KN VELOPES, CARD BOARD AND PRINTER’S STOCK &arCasa pald for Ragsof a1¢ and then press upon the arteries from which the blood was flowing. received his injury he did just as he said of the external carotid artery, both jug- ular veins upon the loft side of the neck, parotid gland. ries to blood vessols to tio both ends of the arteries and veins, but this was ren- dered impossibls in this case, from the close to the skull and the great carotid- artery and the internal jugular vein were cavity made by tho glass was deep and large enough to receive the wholo of two flow of blood. This cavity was filled with compressers and the great danger was that they would not be suflicient to provent a later flow of blood or secondary hemorrhage. the patient escaped the perils of secon- dary hemor:hage and;}blood poisoningboth of which were greatly feared. VARICOCE I_ E :p very rapidly tho terrible loss of blood and he did not have an unfavorable symptom, except three or four hours of fever one night, during the whole of his was seen beneath the ear, ured two and one half inches wide and one and threo quarters inches in depth, showing at the bottom a bone called the styloid process. mortal surgeon ever saw that bone upon it is on the ligatures still remaius, not yet hav- ing given away. oudl SR gslandl having been cut the patient is unable ‘o youth, nervousness and im-|froym with the left sido of his forehead. will probably cause him a great deal of annoyance and will be greatly woakened by the dust as he canuot clean it by distigured so as toattract attentionin any way. in any way. side, Otis A. Manchester Suffocated by In- lahorer at work for L. C. Gordon, a well digger, was sent by his employer to re- pair a cistern on Thirtyfifth and Seward streets which they had built but which had from the poor cement used in it be- come leaky. down into the cistern, which is about twelve foet deep, upon a ladder. is, heard a man groaning shortly after he ly went down around Manchester's body drew him to the top. but breathed only a few times after being { helped out. tab ] Coroner Maul was sont for, and held | *“Well, I should remark! I am thallippi will begin to run up-hill, them find a wide field for research, while the antiquarian, the theologist and others of that ilk would be highly inter- ested, In their strange and wonderful sea margins, in their not less wonderful cav- erns, in which nature’s work in long past ages is written as plainly as on the pages of a book; in their rocka, whose volcanic contortions smite the beholder with amazoment; in their shells, which as fos- sils are found deep down in the seams of its anthracite coal, while near Capo Ball the same sort are found aliveia the sands of the seashore; of these the geologist could write volumes. In their quartz ledges, which have been traced from shore to shore, in which gold in plainly visiblo in conl measures and other materials, a wide field may yet ba found for the mineralogist. The various kinds of planta belonging to these islande, the tiny flowers in their natural beauty peeping out from behind the melting snow-drift on the lonely mountains, the modest lupins and the luscious strawberries, nature's gift to men, and even the broad-leaved bush- grass—all these, as they follow in the wake of the receding waters of Queen Charlotte's stormy seas, would yield an ample store for the botanist. Among the snow clad mountains, *by the wild torrent and the gentle river, by the lights and shades reflected by their sunset hills in autumn’s shortening days a boundless range is offered for the pen- cil's magio ekill, while the broad acres of rich allnvial bottoms aud the unlimited extent of land whose nutritious grasses, waving inthe breezo, would lead the far mer to say, *‘Oh, if these lands were mine and any flocks or herds ranged over the luxurant plenty they afford.” To the antiquarian, the ethnologist and other scientists the rich carvings on the col- ums and the quaint old legends they de- bict and the legendary lore of the peoble would afford & vast untrodden field. Even the chonchologist would feel at home on the abalone shell-covered shores of Pillion Bay and on the rocks of North Island, To the piscatorinl disciples of Izaak Walton an unlimited amount of sport is furnished by the streams. In them they can find the silver ralmon and the dainty little trout of the mountain rill, 1f tired of these and wishing larger sport, let them go to tho grenter doptha of ocean, down to where the stormy windsof winter are never felt, to whoro, deep in When he He put Dr. Stone fortu- The feur physicians then ife. The" injuries received were the cutting ho facial nerve and laying wido open the It is customary in inju- ied two inches below the wound. The numbs rendered necessary to check the After the operation had been performed He drank normous quantities of milk which made onvaiescence. Whenthe compresserscame way about the fifteenth day a vast cavern which meas- 1t is thought that no living man, “This great cavity bad flled up so that [y a depression to-day. One of We can now sce the esults of the injury. The facial vein {e is unable to cloeo the left eye and it seok the descrted villages and linger in their ruined halls and study the works now crumbling to ruin, left behind by their ancient inhabitants, The tall, carved column pointing heavenward,with its wmystical hieroglyphics from bottom to top. Here is one whose eleborate cry- ings bear the image of a manon top wearing & storied head-dress. It is three circles in height, and each circle is twelve inches above tho other; these cir- cles show the ruins to have been the dwelling of a chief. Let him force his way to the door of the house through the grass and elder trees which hide the 4, e 'nlncientl pu'.]hwnyn:l. H;finfi rfi‘f}mdgthu ouse let him decend the half-rotten DEATH FROM CHOKE DAMP, stair down to the body of the house among the intrusive elder bushes, and there note what he sees. - Piled in one corner is & heap of iron, remains of some unfortunate ship, What are these box- es, mildewed and moss-covered, piled in yonder corner! These are the family boxes. Some held the oil and other food they used, while others held their clothes. These he will find, but where are the people! Where are the women Capt, Dixon writes of [ fair, when washed, as English milkmaidsi Where are they or their de- scendants! Call thom, and echo, through their ruined halls, in wailful, mournful numbers replies: *‘All are gone.” Ask those mortuary columns on every hand, and the answer is still the same: ‘‘All are gone.” Ask thelndians who may be along with you, and their answer is: *‘All aro dead.” Look among the empty bot- tles scattered in large numbers all over the floors of the the deserted houses, among the long grass and to the boxes on posts among the green bushes, and you will find the mummified remains of all that is left of these people. Public Confidence Gone, Wall Stre “You can't His articulation is not impaired Tho tying of the arteries on the left side of his neck gives him no pulsations of the arteries on that During all this trying ordeal he has not exhibited the least sign of weaken- ing but on the contrary has been very courageous and bas had a firm deter- mination to get well. Ho has only lost about fifteen pounds in his weight and the entire community will be pleased to hear that he is now on the high road to permanent recovery. baling Foul Air, Coroner Mauljwas again called upon yesterday to hold an inquest upon the re- mains of one who had come to his death by other than natural causes. This morning Otis A. Manchester, & Monday he was engaged in pumping out the water from it and when that had been done built a fire in it to prepare it for the work which he was to do yesterday. Yesterday about 10 o'clock he” went Mra. Waddell, near whose house the cistern went down, but looking into the cistern She ran to Mr, He was found but the choke damp forced Jones to loave him and come to the top. He final- begin to realize how this Eno matter, and Fish matter, and the Peun Bank failure, and the Grant & oyes scemed to tako in the surroundings at a glance. Then tho hoads were drawn in and thero was a period of quiet. ““Then ono of the turtles put out a fore flipper, and the other snapped at it viciously. The other responded by im- bedding his teeth in tho neck of his an- tagonist. They held on for several min- utes and then we shook them apart. For an hour and a half thoy kept this sort of thing up, The favorite hold seemed to be on the hind flipper, and when such a hold was obtained, the biting turtle dragged his viotim around the floor until we forced him to give up his hold. 1 never saw anything equal to the quick- ness and fercoity of the turtles, Their heads flashed in and out like lightning and their teeth closed like vises upon every exposed bit of flesh, even though it was unguarded only for an instant At the end of an hour and a half both were o8 full of fight as at tho start and the countryman had to break their lusthold with a stout stick." e —— An Exciting Buffalo Haut, Bill Nye, in New York Mercury. Not yery far back in the history of the Laramie plains buffalo were as common as antelope are there now, and on a good day you will seo 300 to 500 antelopo in a ride from Laramie City to Last Chance and back, Now, however, the buffulo have taken their flight from southern Wyoming and drifted to the northwest, whero they can still be slain for a few more years, The have only one buffilo cign dudes who come gain their health and margyour heiresses. Wo were rather st one day in Laramie by the howl of “‘buffalo” on the stroets, not long ago. Inquiring into the mattor | found that the gamo had seen sighted across the river, not over three miles from town. Everybody was wild, In ten minutes tho livery stables were empty and every man with a team had a load of excited men moving toward the herd. It was a grand exodus, and for a mile or two it looked like a mass meeting. there were two or three guns and perhaps twenty rovolvers in the party. Some of us were in expross wagans, some in drays, and some in carriages. Wo hurried on excitedly until the advance guard set up awild yell, which meant that the game was in sight and that no one in the crowd had ever seen a buffalo before. Everyone's eyes were strained to got a glimpse of the herd, Every one held his breath, waiting for the thunder and dust of the stampede, I had just decided that the whole thing was a sell, when one of the party pointed out, at a little distance, on the foothill to our right, a buffalo bull. This was our prey. Ono hundred and fifty of us, like an army with team- sters, had come out hero on the plains to slaughter this melancholy brute. He was trying to eat when wo hove in sight, and was doing as well, perhaps, as any buflalo could withcut teeth, Ho had worn most of his hair off when the coun- try was new, and it had neglected to grow again, His ears had been gnawed by covotes and the ravages of time il they had a fringe on them over an inch deep. His back looked like one of those old-fashioned hair trunks, and his little five-cent tail had about as much hair on it as a_ramrod in full bloom, never saw such a sad-looking face, 1t had an expression of deep seated woe and pained surprise, such as a man has when a five-story brick warehouso falls on him, e had the same grieved, sorrowful look of reproach that a man might wear if ho were to leap a nine-rail fence in the solemn hush of the night and fall into the embrace of a bull-dog in the prime of xvincu for the for- our coasts to ro ifo. The old bull raised his head in a solemn way and tried to snort as he used to in the early history of tho country, but it was a failure, Ho then tried to raise his tail and lash his sides with it, but the effort was not crowned with success,” His tail had forgotten its cun- ning."" 1o then tried to flash his eye but it wouldn’t flash, Ho turned slowly around, afid, as well as the poor old ‘founderéd brute could, ho tried to amblo - Then a brave man from the . cultiy enst, wearing a new suit of buckskin day is not distant, Lfear, when we will [ _ The Largest Stock in Omaha- and Makes the Lowest Prices’ Furniture. DRAPERIES ANC MIRRORS," 7 CETAMBEXR SETS Just rocolved an assortment far surpassing anything In this market, compriaine the latest and most hltl designs manufactured for this spring's trade and mp"dn, A range of prices from the Cheapest to the most Expensive, Parlor Goods Draperies. Now ready for the inspection of cus-|Complete stock of all the latest tomers, the newest noveltics in stylesin Turcoman, Madras and Suits and Odd Pieces. Lace Curtains, Etc., Ete. Elozant Passenger Elevator to all Floors. CHARLES SHIVERICK,, 1206, 1208 and 1210 Farnam Street, = - = - OMAHA NEB. = e W e IMPORTER, JOBBER AND MANUFACTURERS' AGENT OF Grockery, Glassware, Lams, &e. 13TH ST., BETWEEN FARNAM AND HARNEY, OMAHA, NEBRASKA. OMAHA NATIONAL BANK U, 8. DEPOSITORY. J. H. MILLARD, President. WM. WALLACE. Cashier. Capital and Surfilus, $450.000. ONMAHA SAFE DEPGSIT VAULTS Firo and Burelar Proof Safos for Rent at f m 85 to 860 per annum. Greorman ID. Wvatt: LUMBER MERCHANT - - U: - Boes g oo S gl Sy R ‘EREBEEREERE a §“°m§ A S NG CARRIAGE FAGTORY Catalogues turnishod } " umflha, N sh on Applioati n. = ([ ] D [ = . = 7 G, T poIsTeISE A ). THE LEADI 1409 and (411 Dodge St., Dr. CONNAUGHTON 103 BRADY ST., DAVENPORT, IOWA, U. 8, A. Established 1878—Catarrh, Deafness, Lung and Nervous Diseases Speedily and ¥ ermanently Cured. Patients Cured at Home. Write for *“T'ne Mepioar-MissioNary,” for the People. g (Consultation and Correspondence Gratis, P. O. Box 202, Tolephone No. 26 HON. EDWARD RUSSELL, Postmaster, Davenport, says: ** Physician of| ea Aplitty ana Marked Success.” CONGRESSMAN MURPHY, Davenport, An rsonorrble Man, Fine Success, Wonderful Cores.”— Hours 8 to b. North-Western Elgctric Light Go. S0LE AGENTS FOR NEBRAEKA AND OPERATORS OF CELEBRATED WESTON AND U. 8. Eloctric Arc and Incandescent Lights' Adopted by the U, 8, Government and moat of the leading steamship companie) and Hotels, Regarded as the PUREST, WHITEST AND BEST LLECTRIC LIGHT PRODUCED. For Rales Inquire at office, N. W. Cor. Fifteenth and Farnam Streets THE BEST THREAD ror SEWING MACHINES WILLIIVIRIV IO Willimantic Spool Cotton is entirely the product of Home Industry and is pronounuflo experts to be the {est sewing machine thread in the world. FULL AgBO TMENT CONSTANTLY ON HANDi‘ an y Omuha, Neb. that he had just bought, rqdg fearlessly up to the old bull and filled him ' full of buckshot from the muzzle of & second- hand shorgun, The veteran of the plains fell with a half bellow, half groan and died, He would have died in a few days anyhow. 1t was an excititing hunt! The man who assassinated that feoble old bull was at once named the Buffalo Slayer, and he had to go somewhere else to get work. I don't know why it is considered such a big thing to kill a buf- falo, Itis far more difficult to kill a good, able-bodied elk or deer, 1 saw an Englishman at the Palmer house last summer who had, no doubt, failed to find a buffalo docile enough to stand still and be shot, s0 he was carrying home to Merry England the pleached and de- caying skull of a buffalo killed fifty years ago, perhaps. Yes, sir, ho was carrying that thing five thousand miles in ashawl strap. —— Two Contingencies, 8t Louis GGlobe Democrat, again and putting rope | Ward case have affected public confi- dence,” he said as he sipped his living | tea, “llhvs they?” querled a man across the o, Manchester was still In the opinion of tne New York Sun, ““four months of common sense will give the democrats the victory.” It may be observed, also, that when the law of gravitation shall be reversed the Missis- for n:Ls by HENLEY, HAYNES & VAN ARSDE. m MANUFACTURER OF OI. STRIOTLY FIRST.OLAEN g, e fad Wagm 519 and 1820 Haraey Btreod and 408 8, 134b Sireed,| }omaha. Ngb 1 ustrated Oatalogus furulaned (ree Ugoa applicatios

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