Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 29, 1885, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

2 THE DAILY BEE--THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1885, Worteof Warntng ana Oomtore | TWENTY INAUGURATIONS. : m;l!:vl»(y lv‘nw; .»"n:y health or - 6 Mnp y milmg: or u)'afi‘:n:-f f Tnbon g0 raow An Evo-Titness Tells of the Cerem- ‘g whe, 11 p Bittors Sy o gon nies from Jferson to Garfizld, M you are & minister, and Bave overtazed yurself with your pistoral aulies, or a mothor, %o out See v with care <nd work, of & man of basiness or g b gt AF At 405 ot 1 strattons, He kept his hat off and [e'ntrast to the esgerness ¢f Capt. Armis- smiled at the crowd. ‘Go in, Andy;| ead, who relates tkathe cemsall the we put you there!' and ‘Give 'em fite, | way from Leonardtown, Md., thougy he Audy!' ‘were somo of tho expressions | bad rhenma'ism and hobbled e orutbes, | ment, but I am fally propared to verify nesrd, at all of which the general [t>seo President Taglor inducted into of |1, Bright's disease has no distinotive smiled.” fice. He has accurate remembrance of|symptoms of its own, indeed, it often de Capt. Armistead was at the white house [the lesding occurences of that day, ae velopes withont any pain whatever in the afte- the i augu ation, and he gives a | well as of those which marked the Inaug | kidneys or their vicinity,) but has the lively account of the extrao:dinary scene furations of Pierce, Buchanan, L'ncoln, [symptoms of nearly every other common that wasenactedthere, His ory furnishes | Grant, Hayes and Garfield. But of |complaint. Hund ods of paople die dai. alf (he deaths which ocour in Amer oa are oaured by Brights aisease of 1the kil neys. This may sound like a rash s'ate T ysoy Days ot National Rejoicing. a faithful record of course his reminisconces as to the latter |ly, whese burlals are authorized Ly a work, Hop Bitters will most sutely streng Y - PRESTD JACKSON'S EXTREME DEMO- | events possess no piquant value, as they | physician's certificato as occurtlng from RESIDENT JACKSON'S EXT ¥ — > i y y belong to cotemporary history. ' It wiil | <‘Heart Diseate,” “‘Apoplexy,” ¢ Puraly. If yon are suffering from over-eating | Washington Letter to Boston Globe, CRACY, o X 1o 1 . Tr-2A) A or deinking, any indlssretion or dissipa:| Capt. Dinial Armistesd, n venerable | but he, doubtless, regretted that he lot it kL "‘ “"“‘“‘f“"“i‘:mr';'_’"“ t ‘i‘,‘j iyrpedd] K21 ,P"‘l""l-h Rheumt sm, y tion, or are young and growing oo fast, | oltizen of 8, now living on the farm cf [0 5o far on that day. Hisidea waa thau [ (85, 70 SPAEREME EVEE EHATHO0Y OIMIAIEES; WHYR TE RIS Tt 1 o as 15 often the oase, on, near Fails charch, on the Vir |he was the people s president, and that he | ¥'F1 personal reco e poriod mon compluints, when in reality it is from t— ginia shore of the Potcmac, has wit. | Wanted to give the people a cordial wel- °"k‘)'l‘_'m‘mll\' war and a reorganized re B;‘-lg:nl di auz ;-f the kidueys, Few b your yate o e ATang, (00 undoubtedly au experierlence of which | gsheads of orange punch were monot nous old antediluvians who have |and insidlous nature. It ateals into the ‘iog, simulsting. hout intoxicat- no other American can boast. Moreover | ingly prepared for the crowd ice cream ith r4 1 ht & - btocd 1% I you sre old, the old gentleman has been an accarate | and wino for the lndics, and ev. rybody in. [ ¥oted for democracy with unvarjing in |aystem like a thiet manifesta its p-csence blocd th i and tmpiire, pul Ll coarate | N o st Tave heen 10,010 | evitableness of the dull - thud ““inco the |if at all by the commonest ty aptm *foeble, ne: ves uastesdy, facul 108 obacrver of events during his long life ‘waning, Hop Bitters 18 what you need to i issetion +give you now life, health and vigor.” and his reminiscerc:s are exceptionally days of Jackson.” He mildly confosses | srd fastens itself upon the coustitotion that, like many American citizens, he | before the viotim is aware of it. Itis people around the white house,” said —— racy and lntoresting. His own oareer | Lapt. Armi scad. “It was really howl- | ¥ tashd h o c [ ; : _ tar, o o ni from o amerous dis ordal bty ooloted Sareants | AU y. o [ avite mmou [ @ases of the siotnch Of bowels, 1t 18 Yotk stormy, disorderly. About fifty colored servants whig, a democrat, a whig, a knownoting, | Eotire families, inheriting it fron their Hia title of oaptain was won, not at the | were engaged dipping out the orange arejublican and & readjoster. ‘‘But I |ancestors, have died, and yet the none 1t it yo { 8 's mc ch audgiving le s on waiters, " «“, o Kldney di-oase, st b terop. fog doath this primitive hoat, whish, in the early part i . y @ may remark that, in accordance with my | mysterioas power which was removing moment, aad turn lor n—oure to Hop Bitters. of the centufy, he plied from the George yelled. Finally several tubs of punch oy town whatf to Ococquain Falls and fnter. | W o carried outside the house and the 1t you are slok with that terrible slok | mediate landings. Llis first adventure in [ ¢ owd followed, and that wastheonly way noss, Neryonsness, yoa will find & **Balm [ basinoss was as & waiting boy at the an- | the rovghs could bo got.en out of the in Gilead" in Hop Bittern, cient Coleman houss. Then he became | Whitehouse. A THRILLING EXPERIENGB; custom, I will be at the ipavg-ration, it [ them. Instead of common symptome it providen¢e or high water donot pre. [often shows nons whatever, but brings vent,” death suddenly, from convulsions, applexy or the heart disease. As one who has suffored, and knows by i e an amateur minetrel, a liveryatable kecp | ‘‘I'hat was a lively year for bearding bitter experienc Tyt you are s requenter ot redentof 1 ar, ‘an oyater morchan, & doalor in real | house koopors. Many of the poopla who TR T implore. avary ome who. feuh —tem against the scows g of a1l countrins ostate, & contractor and a farmer in auc- | came t the inauguration wero after offi | Romarkable Statement of Personal | these words not to neglect the slightest —Malaria, Kpid ‘mic, Bilious aud Inter- cession. ces, and they staid here for weeks, and . i Prow f symptoms of kidney dificulty. Certsi —mitient levers by tho use of Hop Bitters, All this timo ho has lived at Washing. | some of them for months I R e ony and protale death will be. fhe 1f yon have rough, plmply, or eallow skin, ton, or Falls Church, which lsoulya| The insuguration of Martin Vaa Ba- Eecape, rerult «f euch negl ct, aud no one it 11 give you fair | foW miles distant, an interested witness | ron In 1837 did not crcato ;much excite — can aff.rd to hazard such ¢ aacen bad breath, Hop Bitwe #kin, rioh biood, tho swoetest breath and | t0 tho many scons that have attendua [ ment, though there wes & grcat ciowd The fellow!; hich i healjh. $5. 0 will be paid for » case they will [ the grow h'of the modern republic. He [htre. The procession was the longes ho following story—which ia attraot- not cure or help, was at the second Inavgaration of Ji fiur- [aud most orderly that has ever been seca | ing wide attention from the prets—is so A Lady's Wish 8:m in 1805, and he saw the British burn | io Washington, There was mach more | remarkable that we cannot excuse our- “Oh, how T do wish my skin’ was as cloar [ thO Capinlin 1815, The faces of the fouriosity to see ‘Old Hickory” than Van | o1 oy it va do not lay it before our resd- ‘and fofl s yours,” il & ludy £ fri nd. | @drly statesmen aro’ photogeaphod on his [ Barcn. * Tho two left tho whito houto to. R : ““You can eaily mako it u0,” ‘answered the | memory. Heo saw the southern statesmen | ¢ethsr in a splendid carriage, which had [r#, even though its length would ordi friend. “How?" inquired tho firss lady, turn their backs on the capitol In 1861, [ D2en made fiom the wood of the old [ narily preclude its admission to our lim- i 'Hly ul;‘;:.l( hu!: l.niu-r? ;']m. ;m:;(a‘; pure,rich [ and he has lived to see them return, frigats Constitution and pretented to|jted space. you ol sorve, 8 Mealth Tedid formeas| - ief wag present at tho second inaugura. | Pretidart Jackson by “"0 democrats of | "y 3 Waitor Rochestor (Now York)|roduce and truths which I can sub New York, Olay and Webster were in | oopoorat,—Sir: On the first cay of June, | Stantis'o to the loiter. Tho welfare of %, Nono genuino without o bunch of green [ tion of Juffirson,” said Capt. Armistead, : ) 2 Hops on the white labal. Shun ull the vile, [ **but I must admlt that I do not recol: | the procession, and were conspicuous at 1881, I lay o my resldence in this ciy [ those who may possibly be suffercrs such surrounded by my friends and waitivg |#9 I was, is an ample indusement for me poisonous, stufl with *Hop" or ‘“Hops"in |lect much about it. I was then only 8| the inauguration ceremonies, but neither bl years old. I went to the capitol with my | Uslhoun nor any of his friends were| =" 0h ™ B O only koows ths ago. [ to take the efcp I bave, and if I can suc- Hostettor's Stom: are. peli: pal Huba el lEn’sm Titers 1 thoay. | {ather. I remember Me, Jefferson when | thete. There was u strong fooling agaivat |,y 4 o ondured, for wirds can never | cessfully warn others from the dar g rous I am aware that such an woqualificd statement as ths, coming’ feom mo, known as I am throughout the entire land #8 & pracuti ner and lecturer, will aronse the surpriee and posiblo anim:s- ity of tho medioal profession, sni as tonlsh all with whom 1 am acquamted, but I make the foregolg statements bused opon facts which I am prepared to ticle {ryoultsilu [ he came into the scnate and took the | Ualhoun at that time. | The Jackeon dem-| Gl ibo it And yot, if & few yoars pre. Path in which T once walked, I am will- CELEBRATED Intes tho tailog en. ocrats called him *‘Caaline,” and after | o o any one had told me tifat I was to [ 10g to endureall profes ional and personal the body . ‘oho-rs | 804 ho spoke ko low that the paoplecould | the inauguration a crowd went down|y 'y okt so low, and by so terriblo a | conrequence. J. B. HENION, M. D, themiu’, It enablea | not hear him, I know 1 got o tired I [ Pennsylvania avenue joining in the chorus f gi. /oo °F'yhould have scoffed at the idea, | Roomester, N. Y., Dec. 80, o e Bebqitating | Yent to sleep, and my father aroused me | of & song, the exact wor:s of which 1p}h ' dieave heoa unoommonly strong affects cf unduo fa- | by & thump on the head, may po’ remember, but It was something [ 37y 0) Bo "hud woighed over 200 lize this: pounds and hardly knew, in my own Iates the faitlng en- | cath, He waa dressed in brown clothes, ——— FISHING KFOR LUSTOM, CHAS. S;'MYERICK; EFTurnituare UPHOLSTERY AND DRAPERIES, PASSENGER ELEVATOR TO ALL FLOORS. | 1208, 1908 and 1910 Farnam 8., Omaha, Ne GERMAN D, WYATT. LUMBER MERCHANT. flgmé “ 9 9 ?QENE ga CUMINGS AND 20TH STS ” OMAH,A. NE DR. CONNAUGHTON, 403 BRADY ST., DANENPORT, IOWA, U. 8. A, Establlshod 1878—OCatarsh,| Deafness, Lung and Neryous Diseases Speodily and Pormanently Cured. Patlonts Cufed at Home., Write for *‘Tur Mebroar-Missionany,’ for tho Poople, FREE Consultation and Correspondence Gratis, P, 0. Box 292, Tolophone No. 226 HON. EDWARD RUSSKLI,, Postmaster, Davenport, says: _*Physiclan of Neal Ability and Marked Success.” CONGRESSMAN MURP Y Davenport,| writes® *‘An Honorable Man, Fine Success, Wonderful Cures,”—Hoars 8 to b, o Baw 10 Gel il 98ta Ducal Brunswick, Lueneburgh, Lottery, G<rmany. 100,000 TIGKETS and 50,000 PRIZES Capital Prize, mark, 500.000, 300,000, 200000, 100,000 80,000 3 60.000, 50,000, 40 000 down to 250 Drawing Commences the $th ano 10th of February, 1885. Whsl Tick- ets 818.; Lalf, 89.00; Quarter, 4.50. CHAS. F. SCHMIDT & CO., 62 W. Congress St., Detroit. Mich, “.’;}"i’;’.’.“ffi."’:&fl: “‘I have a lively reccl ection of = o There was a gallant eater of blazing fire; 5 ;! = , Whi e 1 digost on, av VAUG 3 oR ok al ke hite Doughnut D |n|.ul IKont O arauses | THE INAUGURATION OF JAMES MADISON | s was a noble blower and bragang nullifier; ::;;enenmb ‘:I'“ F"n of 1 L "‘:’ e L3 mn]: ':ml LGS LD i) tive,renewa the jad. [ in 1809. The whole population turned [ He'll d mgle at the end of a twisted hempen Lo AR B0 S L | R — v % od appetite, anden: [ o1c to witness the ooremonics, Mr. 1ike: will read this statem nt realize at times | Chicago Tribune, ! By courages healthtul orted fo tlomonies. | U1 | Ho came from South Carolina and his name is | that they are unususlly tired and canj| *“A b wlof cofiee, two doughnuts, and Toposs. It ngueds. | Madison was escorted fo the capitol by & et g santa; " wh i enta arosafo, and it batallion of cavalry, and he was constan ly Gedlie, e Y eyl eSSl pAlEw | ocioing for oL g‘(“:"d',!:‘;,"'fi"‘ i STOMACH ored:n lals, ' which B ATl a o4 i 5y G s | 10 various parts of the body and do not | hung from BITTERS o et | o o e o, Jarcl. or | o tri b preak the unfon of theso florlous | gy dorptand it~ O they are oxosedingly | causcd soveml loafers {0 wonder what sons of every clans | ¢}, cnpit’ul and there was such a pressure | PIOtDE traitors Aud assassins were his wor- [ hungry one day and entirely without | caused the manager to offer such induce- sneloty, are most convinolag.for salo by all Drug. | ¢ AR e VL R W UG M: Madi. thy mates, appetite the next. This was just the[ments Kooy ‘attered customirs we o gists and Dealera renorally i nlc\'oml m"m‘a el But Ulc(ll]::::: with his sword, called the [ way T folt when the relentless malady | enjoying the coffee and doughnuts when w. re somo fights between 1owdies. After [And that was the last we heard of the ban- :"‘“h "“g l‘fi"f“l‘} "‘;“ UponmoRaNG [Roportey ;‘“”l%“l to inspect the plige. 1t the inaugu ation Mr Madison iried to ithed Cataline. egan, St thought nothing of it;| wasnot embellished to any great d gree, get aw y fcom the crowd, but thoy fol-| “In spite of this feeling, h that probably I had taken cold which|but the su roundings “were pe fecily T6TE S hb oAt HALS tb th kits h‘mifl i “‘g"’% this feel fng. owever,there | would soon pass away. Shortly after |adapted to the class of patron- ge. h cheering L iavo noer boand s | a8 no disorder. 1n fact, all the pe'p ¢ [this I netloed heavy and at times| ‘Competition is the lifc of trade,” said steh choering 1 have nosee_beard since. | hiere seemed to be Jackson and Von Bu- | neuralglo pain in one side of my head, | the manager, “and the one who offcrs the The president wes diessed in homespun, | rom demoorats, and they had everythi. e pi \/ » BEaLy i aIe ho/offers the At s Erea EaTe TeR LA G alrer U htis R 8 y y £ ] but as it would ccme one day and be gone | best ndncemeutsis the man who is to i b A e th'l!;r own way. - |the mext, I paid little atention to it. | walk off with the products of the bakery.” R T e b ‘gthfl inauguration of Gen. Harriscn | Then my stomach would get out of order| Do you find it a paying business?” e e a2 1841 was, according to Capt. Armls~{and my food often failed to digest,| ‘“Since I introduced the coffes and el een b e Rl o et Eadmatiall tead, RS LT causing at times great inconvenience. | doughnut scheme rrade hasbegun to boom ATt AE L s An At e THE MOST EXCITING EVENT Yet, even 85 a physiotan, I did|—fo ty beds, all full last night. There is Montgomery, wh;ryb 1En ;1:(1 PR ‘,‘.m of that kind which has yet marked the|not think that these things meant |any amount of ten cent lodging houses, m“u;vi“ B e e il w“/ histary of this counfry. Thero was not|anything serious. I fancied I was|butt ey don't th ov in any inducements; e AT that Madison 1ad ouhy | # much rowdyism as marked the coming | suffering from malaria and doctored myself | but the coffee and doughnut sch-me will to be Ing. - The crowd used him prcity [0f Jackson in 1820, or the hood.|accoralngly. But I got no better. I next|become uni-ersal befo clong. You seo, a roughly, googi gout an eye and brcuking | 1mism that ushered In Polk in 1845, |noticed peculiar color and cdor about |lodger generally wantsa bowl of some his nose, - 1 saw that s fellow. bacdl | but the popular uprising was unprece. | the flaids I was passing—also that there |kind of stimulant in the moring, and disfigu:od at the second. {nauzaration of | denteds and the vistorlons demonstra- | were large quantities cne day and very |though a bowl of coffeeis not just the Madison v i tions tremendous. The day recorded the | little the next, and that a perslstent froth | thing, st1l, aman pre'ersit to water. ““I'he i}nilinh having barneditthatcanls reatitution of the whigsto power, and tae | and scum appearcd upon the surface, and | Some & ould rather have whisky, but they Imported Beer . i British taving bamed tho eapl-|iiayust of tho overthsomn demoseacy was | a sediment.sotisd. And 3ot L did mot . dy'ng of. " N ool 1817 took place in éon asithall well typified in the undignified conduct |realize my danger, for indeed, seeing| *Wha . kind of coffee is it?” X Hitinuiuraliasecleas nugo from an | Of the outgoing Vaa Buren, who refused | theso symptoms continually, I finally be-| “‘It's not Mocha, L1l sssureyou; butit's YX BOTTLES. ivated 2 Intfovfix pet ey ltol, | to appear at the inauguration, or to meet | came accustomed to them, and my sus- | invigo-ating as well as strengthening.” oeoessors BAVATIR, | which was then being sebuilt. My Moy | Haerison, picion was wholly disarmed by the fact| ‘I doughnuts, I presume, are flex- Culmoachor, co oeoee . eee.Bavaria |roe rode in a “"if o drawn by two|. . The day was tho lovellest I ever saw | that I had no pain in the affected organs | ble?” Pilaner ) ....'..Bohemian. o Rits heraes lullowgd' B iaa inKnanas in Washington,” sald Capt. Armistead. ‘‘1 | or in their vicinity, Why I should have| *'Y.e-s: the're of the army cracker Kai A8 B i B processlon. A TRatsErere lywa bacterios of | 738 0pposito the rasidence of Col. Seaton, | been so blind I cannot understand. kind, invulnerable to tender gume, but e e e o I 1ia. Thore was a brilljant | ditor of the Intelligencer, when Harri- I consulted tho best medical skill In|when osked In the coffse ara palat- DOMESTIC. acono yn - the. sonate chimber.” Mamy|son came out with him and mounted his|the land. I visited all the famed mineral | able ” Budweiser.ooees + 8¢, Louis. | richly dressad ladios occupied chars on | PiIk-white horsa, Ho was a megnificent [ springs in America and travelled from | *“Of course you have feather-beds and Anhanser, St. Louit. | the senate floor, the senators standin looking man on horse-back. He took his | Maine to Califoraia. Still I grew worse. | alr-cushion mattresses?” T T R & ) 8 | place in a hollow square of cavalry and [ No two physicians agreed as to my mala-| *‘No, sir, you're mistaken; I'm not W. WUPPEIMAN I mPOADwaAv. ¥ ¥ Erianger,. Bests..... «Milwaukep, | All the foreign dignitaries were there, N that b 3 L ¥ ) ; & = 2 B y to the capitol. Flags were|dy. One siid I was troubled with|running the D’almer house. The beds Bohlitz-Pilsner—... . ..Milwaukee, | 4bd tho suptome oot judgos, dncladin | i “und druma beating overywhore. |spinal {rritation; snother, dyspopsia; aro of the soft-plank order, with horeo «+.Omaha, » Ted | The vast multltude checrad constantly, |another, heart disease; another [blankets for covering. There are no rxfi,“[’orter Do ik o andiiice the oath of office. Arter the ceremonies h ) s thera was more artillery firing than 1 Wine. ¥D. MAURER, have ever heard at any other inangura- 1213 VFarnam Bt |tion. Thore was a perfect roar in the and all the church bells in the city rang|zeneral. debility; another congestion of |electric bells or Turkish tath-rooms in merrlly. The procession was as gay as a | the base of the brain, and 8o on through | this house, eiiher. I'm running on the carnival. Open barouches held beauti-|a long list of common diseases, the symp- | salubrious plan, and wy guests are all fully dressed ladies. The horses were|toms of many cf which I really had. In |healthy men.” covered with flags, Whole companies of |this way soveral years passed, during| ‘‘Arcyou open all pight!” SMT o’.{r*wm = yard and cannons boomed in the public grounds opgosite the capitol. men wore coon-akin caps and other gro- | which time I was sicadily growing worse. | *“Yes, but if you wanc a bed you would . % count of the Impressive scene at the : m . = it i 3 " 7, - i harncssed 1o & car, on which there was a | The slight symptoms 1 at first experienced | rush. Doing a big business—very.” The Largest ILine im|, qaox or soux quisey apaxs spinning-jenny in fulloperation, Other | were developed into terrible and ccn:|» The reporter bid the marager adieu, . dent, nad Olsy. w1 ker of the h. , | cabins and hard-cider barrels. An im-|reduced frcm 207 to 130 pounds. My e Selling Gon. Jackaon. whe had bacora omety. | mense log catin on whecls was drawn by |life was a buiden tomys:It and frionds. | _ SKIN DISEASES OURED, wor for the prélldency. was also present, e , A ByDrExsussdaslonOlotmeny SOmey and excltod grent wplauso by his pablie | Tl yeterm obuervor of political | and lived wholly by llfiecklonl. T wan o | ik songio: Thmpioe, Biack Heads or Grob 9 | congratulation of Mr. Adams. cha’ ges has a huge serap-book of cam- | living mass of pain. My pulse was un- | ¢ho'lin clear and beantiful, Also cures Itch, aTResatiEnt ISR ARTARETE T 5 ght into the y of ca ly presidential | foll to the floor and clutched the carpet | Obstinate Ulcers by druggists, or the City toll you thore was plenty of rowdyismn on | c3nvastes. The campa gm po ¢ has cor-|and prayed for death. Morphine hadliitle | mailed onrecsipt price. 50" oanta, Sold by came forward and shook hands with M, | fe'son. He was especially lively in the|paln. For six days and nights I had the e JOHN HUSSIE’ Adams, a men in the crowd waved his | forties, and his poetry was as wretched | death-premonity “hiccoughs constantly | Jonathen Onsce, who suceccds the late Jackson,” Ho was very diunk, and|There is one song with the appalling num. | albumen, I was struggling with Bright's | (), ,ker, He has been in the house TAGELT there wero plenty of dranken people who | ber of twenty- ix verses said to have beeo [ disease of the kidneys in 1ta last stages! | Joutly four years, Ho was serving out wen were s> noisy that the police had to | tion. _lirco of these are given, to show | frm my pastor, the Rav, Dr. Foote. o' | e, + Ho had dechned a renomination, take them out of the capitol, and the con- | that Pegasus must have been turned out | that time rector of St. Pai Episcopal | Hy'{s a successful cotton manufacturer. Capt. Armisioad gises & graphio wo-| poon brappings, Six white horses wers | My condition had really bscome pitiable, | better tako it in advavce, for I cxpct s the City. Not in 1825, Calhoun was then vice presi- |Wagons wero loaded with mniaturo log |stant disorders. My weight had been [and promited to call Jater. thirteen white horscs, L could rotain no food on my stomach, | By Dr. Frasier Maglo Ointment, Quro 41 have never 8 en any account of it,” | Paign clippings, wh'cl ford a curious in- | controllable. In my agony I frequently | Salt Rheum, Sore Nipples, Sore Lips and old, But Cheape than Any Store in e Bold that day. Why, when Gen. Jackeon |tainly been abroad since the days of Jef-lor no effect in _desdening the|Kuhn & Co.and 0. ¥ Goodwan. Y e e ca T and called out, ‘Three cheers for [ then as now, and even more voluminous. | My water was filled with tube-casts and | ganytor Anthony in the senste, is a H . g flflmasflu cheered for Jeckson. About & dozen |sung on the day of Har ison's inaugura While suffering thus I received a call | piy second term when ¢l cied to the sen- fusion wes terrible, That night, while | to grass at that time: Ohurch,of this city. I felt that 1t was our| g, hag never made any polnt In the de- 4 the inauguration ball was in progress, (Giood bye to brave old Hickory last interview, but in the courso of con-|jytey in the louso, as he has none of the ¥ crowds walked along the streets und sang And Van, his plisnt tool; versation Dr. Footo defalled to me the| ity f an orator, and until he came to W Jackson campalgn songs. Several pistol W cclobrate the victory many remarkeble cures of cases like my | gopyresy had given but little attention to : shots were fired, The saloons were kept That brings the people's rule. own which had come under his observa: | pubiic afilrs. Heis 00 years old. He open all night and there were any num- We've log cabins and wa've cider, tlon, by means of a remedy, which belgges not wear the fall Qaakerdress. He ber of fights Youug desperadoee, sons And of coonskins, plenty too; urged me to try. As a praciiclng physi- | re(aips, however, the coat of the Quaker of farmers n the neighboring countics, And there's our gallant rider, cisn and a gradaate of {he schools, Ido | yniform, This cost ls made of black Who won at Tippecance. rided the lden of any mediclue 1ouuicx.a Broadoloth in the ahahe of . a dreas 00M el AT RS the reguiar ohannels being in the least | with the exception of the square cat upon S pkinls tatiiading boneficlal. So_sclicitous, howeva, was | the hip, Mr. Chics's coat follums the rode around the town alt night, shoating and singing, At Georgetown there was a general row in a barroom, in which brass knuckles, clubs and knives He's not & man for rows, Dr. Foote, that 1 fi,n-lly promised Ilourve cf & swallow's wing from his throst were used. Seversl persons were But he fought atTlppecanoc, would ":;" “’a’ p;"é“dl”'f 5 h'g“llsg.:' to the bottom of the coatin the back, badly hurt, bat, fora wonder, nobod, i use on the Hurat day o une 1861,1 whore the right and left curves meat waa kUL Tha next day it was'reportey| 1° bis acoount of the scenes at and took 1t scoording to dircc | This givesa very yoluminous skirt. There that Henry Cluy had been shot at white | THEINAUGURATION OF JAMES K, voLK, |tlons, = At first 4t slckened |, provably onough cloth in the skirts of on his way from the inauguiation ball to| Capt. Armistead substantislly agrees |me; but this I thought was a good #ign|ths coat to make a full sult for a his room, bat I think 1he rumor was | with the writers of that day, thav the |for one in my debilitated condition. I|,an d-essed in ordinary style This odd i Newapapers had not then begun | democrats were 80 wild with joy over the | continued to take it; the sickeniog sen-|jooking coat ‘s the only outside evilence to make much of such things, svd very | expultion of *‘coonery” from the white |sation departed and I was finally able toof cccentricity about his slim, round- NewWoodwork! NaWA'tachmens |little was sald about these disgracefal | houso that they made t'e cohoes ring | retain food upon my stowach. “In a few | shouldered, narcow chested New Eng scenes.” with hoofs aud yells, “Richelicu” was | days I noticed & decided change for the|junder, His face has the look of Quaker Warranted 5 Years.| ‘butnothing oconrred in Washington | the caustio correspondent of the New |beiter, as also did my wife and friends. | yildness and serenity combined wih an . Y PAYMENTS, that would equal the scenes that took|York Tribuve, ever sinco known as|My hiccoughs ceased and I experlenced |air of business shiewdness, Hiscomplex- {80LD OF BN * |place st the inauguration of .Jackson in | **Richellen” Robinson, and now & mem- |lees pain than formerly, I was 80 re-|io is very sallow, His face is thin and A ha. |1820. 1¢ ssemed that eyery bully and|bercf the houss, though he long ago|iviced at this improved condition that,|umn oth shaven with the exception of a desperado in the United States had sud- | abandoned Awerican politics to engsge | upon what I believed bat a fow days be- | (Lin line of black whiskers under each SHORT HAIND. |ty comets the capitol, - One half the | in the occapation cf pinching the Britian | {ore was my dyiog bed, I vowed, 1n the|e.r. Eis cyes are da k and decply. set men had thelr trousers in _iheir boots, | liow's tail. “Richelieu” wrote that the |presence ofmy famlly and frlends,should | ynder a broad, high forchead. His nose and smeof them wore pistols in full |scene was the most ‘disgraceful” ever |l recover I would both publicly and pri-|is wiuall and nealy staight while his view. Washington was smell thap, and | witnessed at the cap vately make kaowa this remedy for the | youth is u thin line of qusvering smia- A wachine for short- | the hotels and boarding houses would | ““There's one thing about Polk’s insuz- |800d of humanity, whenever and where: | Lility and reserve His black Lair is thin hand writing,welght | not hold the crowds. It was the biggest | uration,” said Capt. Armistead; *“that's | ever I hadan opportunity, and this letter | iy spots and combed down in s raight 3 bs. swar of people ever seen here, most of | the only insuguration day on which it|is in fulfllment of that vow, My Im-| o Jel lines. He is quite angular in his the visitors b.ing from the south and |everrained in Washington, There was|Provement was constant from that tlme, | 1yann, He is known a ] over the re west, Tennesseo being especialy well[snow on the geound when Plerce was ip-[88d in less than three months I had | ublican side of the house as Unele Jona represented.” augarated, in 1853, but no rain. Polk |gained 26 pounds in flesh, beeame en-|ihan. He isa man of bigh charac er and “‘Kvery mau carried & hickory stick, | stood under an umbrella and read his ad. | tirely fics from puia and I belleve I o%e|unimpeachable honesty He p opably and some women wore necklaces of smali | dress, There were 20,000 ladies out [y lifs and present condition wholly to|ywill never be heard of in the senate ex hickory nu's fanolfully paloted. One|'hstday, but the rain diepersed many of | Warner's Safe Cure, the remedy which I [ cop: on a roll-call, laly had a bonnet made of bickory |them.” used. el & leaves, and several horses in the pro It was Don Pistt who once testlfied | Siocs my recovery I have thorough!, 1 was afilic ed with kidney disease, and cestion had hickory-bark bridles, Fuch | that he had been In Washington st four |ra-investigated the subjoct of kidney dif- | sutfered intensely, [ was induced t try yelling you never heard. It was lke s | icaugurals, but felt so )i tle interest in|ficulties and Bright's disaaee, snd the| Hunt's (Kidney and Liver) KeMEDY, and whole tribe of Indians let loose on the|the displays and cerewonies that beltraths developed ~are astounding. 1[before 1 had “used two bottles 1 was Send for olroulars, Stripe & Miller, [streets of Washington. Gen, Jackson|did not leave his room to witness |therefore state, deliberately, and as |entirely curid, Richard Henshaw, Agents, 1517 Harney strect,Onaha, Neb. "seomed to enjoy these outlandish demon. 'them, Such apatby is i3 strikiug ' physician, thet | believe more then cn2-' Providence, B, 1, To prevent lors it Is urgently requestsd to make all romittances by posta note, money order chack in vegistored letters or be eAbress. RICHARDS & CLARKK, W. A. CLARKE, Proprietors, l Superineuden Omaha lIron Works 0. P. RAILWAY, - 7TH & 18TH STREKIs MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS IN Steam Engines, Boilers WATER WHEELS. ROLLER MILLS, Mill and Grain Elevaior Machinerv ! MILL FURNISHINGS Ow ALL KINDS, INCLUDING THE Telebrated Anchor Brand Dufour Bolting Clotk ETEAM PUMPS BTEAM WATER AND GAS PIPE, BRASS GOODS AND PIPE FITTINGS ARCHITECTURAL AND BRIDGE = 0 ODELL ROLLER TR 421708 T1 ¢ We are prepared to furnish plans ana estimates, and will ecntract fex he erection of Flouring Mills and Grain Elevators, or for changing Flouring Mills, from Stona to the Roller System. . 137~ Especial attention given to furnishing Powder Flants forany pur pose, and estimates made for some General machinery repawrs atten ed oromptly. Aadress RICHARD & CLARKE, Omaha,Neb =5 Orange Blossom Flour WHOLESALE BY L. A STEWART & CO, 1013 Jones Btieet }) as vosssocwose. {| OMAHA NEB

Other pages from this issue: