Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 31, 1885, Page 7

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THE DAILY BEE--SATURDAY, JANUARY 31, 1885. into & rlckety open buggy, drawn by the |gold. A bird somewhere in the distance, A HALLELUJAH WEDDING, of the money-lender, and which has just meager graw horse that had been staked |as the jaded old horse breaks into a e como to light, is an excellent example of near her camp. 1 saw her sottle the stambling trot, throws out upon the|Captains Hooper and Lesiie, of the the methods of some of theec so-called child in her fap. grasp the reins and drive | frosty alr a succession of joyous notes Salvation Army, Married at brokers. The widow of & naval offiser lowly up the long hill that leads out of | that are caught up and answered by an tho Bareacks, who had lost his life during the war ha town At the top of It she paused and |other stili further on. She pushes back been supporting a large famlly for several stood up in the buggy, looking back. Her |her bonnet and draws a long, restful Philadelphia Times years on a ealary of £000 ayearas a clo slender form was sharply defined against | breath, Ah, there is the big (' 1R ARlokL " ... |In the treasury department. In 1881 n the early moraing sky for a moment—I |stone school house and the snug| ‘It ten cnts “”;"&' t," eaid Captsin | of her young sons dicd, She was with can see 1t yet! Then sho sank back in her | little cottages on either aido of the strect; | Condit at the docr of the Salvation Army fout means to give him a decent burial wont, and presently sho passed out of and thero In the low log-house o full last | barracks, en Geriantown road, below fand applied to a broker for a loan of 860 sight. summer of merry laughter,and music and | Berks strcet ““i evening, “There's [The money-lender demanded interest — light—why, what a crowd ahout the jall [€ol0g to be a wedding, & real hallelujah at the ratc of 11 per cont a month, i1 door! Oh, yes, they are there to wel. | Wedaiog. Staff Captain Hooper, division |and in her extromity the widow Tho mountains that had boan wrapped [ come the boys; why, of courae, and how [officer, i8 going to_be marrled to Captaln | agroed to the terms. Sho pald the £6.60 in purple mists when they had sent their [kind! Only sho longed to bo the firat to [ Lieelie, of Bristol, England, She was ex- | regularly each month, and tried hard to swost, fresh breezes Into the heart of |[meet him pected here on the 8th of the month, but | save up onough to pay the principal, but midsummer, stood up blue and cloar| The old horso slackens his pace and [her ship only arrlved from London on |another son, who wasa piga In the sen- against the cold, gray sky of November, | cteeps on:she leans out eagerly, letting [ Mondsy, Ho hasn't scen her in two|ate, was taken slck. o waa ill fora All day long o norther had boen rearing |the lines fall, and clasping her hands, |years, but thanksto General Booth, she's | long time, and finally dicd. Tis eick- down from {hem, twisting the bare, | while the color comes and goes In her |come over to him and they're to be mar- | ness and burisl exbausted hia mother's thotny branches of tho mesquito thickets, | palo cheoks, She does not seo them! [ried to-night. (e y, and the loan remained unpald, A crenking the Timbs of the great, isolated, | Bat then her eyes aro dimmed no doubt | Salvation Hill was crowded with people | few months ago the widow mado a calou- olive-solored liveonke; whistling through | by {he wind and rain and cold. Stand |of allages. There were not a fow real |lation which showed that she had pald the dry grass of the little prairie, striking [ aside there gentlemen! She has come |scalskin cloaks among the crowd andfthe broker £150 in Intarest and atill owed like « solid thing upon the shivering sides | to meet them; do you not understapd; | thrce policemen warmed themselves at the | the $60 principal. She told the money- of the shelterless, gaunt. long-horned| She Is lifted gently down and her fal- |stove. A fow minutesafter cight o'clock flender that she would pay no more in- cattle. and sweeping with a moan into | tering steps are supported as;she moves | the still, chill air wasalive with the dis | terest, but would repay the loan as soon tho atreots of the town. The little town | blindly forware. The pitying crowd parts, | cordant sounds of a key-bugle, several fasshe could save it out of her salary. itself, all the warmth and color blown |two of three men rise hurrledly from the | tambourines and some men’s and wom- | After annoying tho women almost daily out ot it, looked dcsorted, for it was | things that He whito and stark and rigid [on's voices, decidedly untrained, Then fin an effort to forco her to continuo psy e The Mechanical Boy, A marvel indead is the diligent bee That doth the fleet moments employ: Yet still a phenomenon greater thén he Ts the lively Mechanical Boy. & HAS. SHIVERICK, E'uvirniture UPHOLSTERY AND DRAPERIES, With jackknife and hammer from morning till vight He fashions each ude littls toy. And no other pleasute gives equal delight To the lively Mechanical Boy. I'ASSKNGER FLEVATOR TO ALL FLOORS. | 1208, 1203 and 1910 Farnam Sb., Omaha, Na e e e . e e e e e e e e+ When school houra are ovet he comes rush ing in, His countenas ightaned with joy, And soon will the kitchen resound with the vim Of the lively Mechanical Boy, With bow and with arrow, with pop-g and kite, His parents he'll often annoy: very indu'gance is claimed a8 a right By the lively Mechanical Boy. But urge him to labor, thongh ever 8o light That instant hes stapid and coy; Jut when for the cupboard he goos for bite Ho's a lively Mechanical Boy. The sham battle rages with neighboriog bo, The skirmishers quickly deploy; That naught in creation can cqual the noise OF the lively Mochanical Boy, G Ul pJgeisy | ING CAREIAGE FACTORY Though oft you remind him that ten-penny | Sunday, and every men was housed with | upon the ground, a procession of Salvation soldiers marched | fng the 11 per cent. interest, the b W aonblacthise pobkeots Nesttoy his own in the glow of his hearth fire. M\\;)eug Well, the meeting is over.—[M1. [t *h\mr fl"l"} : (l' recently went to tho secretary of the ho birch is the final reaort that avails As night fell the wind grew kecner, | M. Davis, in the Current. o e s L AR UG session of | treasury and urged him to compel the { Catalouges Furnished bR oA e with a suggrestion of tleot upon 1t The e the raised platform at the cud of tho hill, | widow to psy tho debt at oncer undor| 1409 AN 1411 Dodee St { e Eptoni } Omaha Ne ————— old stage lumbered in, arousing the dogs A BELATED TRAIN, In a few moments this plsiform was oc- | penalty of _dismiseal from her poeition. | == . — = ————— — JIW'S WIFE as It passed, bt preacntly these dropped v 4'(I||\I\'ll by soven men in scarlot jorseys, s}?mm:y McCulloch, after invostigating s into stillness sgain, Tbe lights behind | A Remarkable but True Story of the | A4 1 equal number of women in poke | the matter, has writton to the money- R the windows began early to disappear, Rail, L bonnets, decorated with red ribbons, ~ the | Jender that the treasury department will EESEIID. . G‘RAY, I and ono by one went out, except in a l;""xl"sl<“l-'r*“* ”ln' key-bugle, the key-bugle | not lend itself to assiat in recovering such (SUCCESSUR TO FOSTER & GRAY) -4 1tselly the tambonun o house far down in the hollow, where the about a dozen old [ a elaii, Aol hour ot s woman was approaching | Dee Molnes Leader. A ladies also in poke bonnets and a big bass o ———— : L] — there only twinkled all night the feeble The Rock Island traln on the Keokuk |drum. STOP THAT COUGH i diviston did not arrlve in this city yester-| On silence being_obtained, Captain |By using Dr. Frauer's Throat and Lung Bal- \’ rays of a lamp. . 4 D 3 o e D+ tho equaro stono jail |48y until 1:40. Tho delay was occa. | Faith Jeiley, “the Plymouth Jaflbird,” sam—tho ouly sure cure for Coughs, Colds, : e e A ansod sl | sioned by the englne throwing a mdorod |od tho seevices with & bymn, batwoon | Hotrenses id Soro Threuts and il diensed LIME ARD OEMENT. out from light and alr. Tormately bnthe hall below, aud in _the |eaet of Eldon. Tho train was moving at [each vereo of which sho requosted her [congh, ‘Tt may. provo fatal, Seorts and 1t was midsummer, and the broad |cclls above the prisoners shivered on their the usual rate of spced at the time of the |audience to behave themselves, Among |hundreds of grateful people owe their lives to accident, but fortunately the rod was on |the performers were Lieutenant Lizzie | Dr, Frazier't Throat aud Lung Balsam, and street that ran down the open plazalscanty pallete. 140 [tHera d o Abeeier bhie | FoA 4 Cantilh “Dutshi’ Ak no family will ever be without it after once i ) i Down the long hill, close upon mid-|the downward sweep, and struck the | Foster and Captaln *‘Dutch,’ Abery, a|i@ B ol gin: around which Comanche is built, was g P ground Inatead of comihg up through the | young woman who sang a hyu‘m In Penn. | Wing it; and discovering its marvelous power, N ight, into the midst of this stillness and i s L ::“l:uh""i?tdn]“' ux;d Alw‘dyh‘“"“tfld :l:%(:n;, :o;e t:v:y“ac:re”und“:nore of men. | cab and interviewing the englnecr. The [eylvania Dutch and apologized for her jeisputup in large fumily bottles and sold | RICHARDS & CLARKE, l W. A. CLARKE, ck the hot glowof a scorching sua, A for th i price of 75 " i d , Grim, silent and pitilosss, with faces rods were disconnected and the traln |accent as ehe had ‘“only been in Readlng flrK::’h;m&n oA 7“1-?“;‘:“”'0"10 e Proprietors, Snpennnndan although it was yet early when I drew back veiled and belts bristling with weapons, | pulled to Eddyville with the engine three weeks, but so many speak Dutch —— the curtain that draped my little window o ah I r n w rks e D and they came like phantoms feom some | working on *one side.” At Eddyville | there I had to learn it.” In the middle In some villages in Colorado, Kansas and looked out, on the morning after my | " - heavy thud of a pondcreus beam | chango of engines made, the crippled | the door of the hall was thrown open and led over paper to dry tho Ink, it is sald 0. P. RAILWAY, - 7TH & 18TH STREETR 1 never saw his face, nor hers. DBut [ sometimes saw his hands, long, thin and white, with that pallor peculiar to plants grown in tho dark and human beings shut unknown Dark. the east bound traln was met, and an ex- | of the prayer from Captain Thompson Ltk B0 ik DL arrival. The heavy shadows of aa im- |, oon the door of the jalll The 1s|one belng attached to the Keo-|Captain Hooper and his finance entered the natives would not know what blot- guards ce entered | - \ monse llvo-oak cooled all tho front of tho | yeack to thoie fact, Tho prisoners grasp |kuk traln and sent back |and marched up the sisle, Coptaln |!inEPaper was were it not forthe Insur- low, frregular byilt log-houso Into which | each other with a hush of expectation in- to the shops for repairs. Some|Hooper did all the blushing, thesea air|%7°¢ 88C0E. o4 3 st it the | to which craeps tho hopo of deliverance. |lively running wvas done between Praivic [and many a fight in England having 1 had come as & summer guest, bub the |G B0 a% 0 1 %o il sound mingles [ City and Des Moines, Passing through | tuken all the blush out of Captain Lasllo. big, square county jail, nearly opposite | with he ever increasing roar of the wind | Altoona, the gait was of that character | They were followed in a few moments by atood naked and baro to tho light, ab- {and dash of tho rain. Then thero ls the | that ave tho telograpl poles fhe apear- i By, T l:‘lorm. of the n 4 i o | crash of splintering 1and a rash like [ ance of the teethin a fine comb. A keg | Jefferson street Methodist church. i Meodi e el whito some | e alowe and mighty, up. the [of nails and a tub of butter sitting on the | Tho wodding coremony was begun by Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, walls and casting it out again In quiver- | "I stajrway, with the white and [P at/orm were lifted from their moorings | Bugler Whetmore, who snnounced that|™* °* — e Ing rayos that thrilled all the breathless [ 41ickon guards driven on before. Deliv- by the suction of the train and followed [that he had some questions to ask the| A Russian peassnt, a membor of a alr. eranco! The solid key groans in the [in its wake until near the next station, |happy pair before they could bo jolned In | Biblo reading sect, has been sentenced Everything was %o still just at that mo |lock; the smoky lamp throws a ghastly where the keg struck the ground with | wedlock. Was the captain, he asked, | to fmprisonment for three years and nine ment; she hersclf was so motionless stand- R * % % % Premature decline of power in elther sex, however induced, speedily and g}ermnnemly cured. Consultation Free. ook for three letter stamps, World's glaroin the cold ccll. * * % And [great violence and th s were driven |undertakiog this solemn step with the | months by the Odessa criminal court for s | . | prosently emerges into the froez'ng night intention of upholding and furthering the | having preached against the image wor ing thero in the middle of the strect with | 4ir g Jong, double fileof men, whose faces intorests of the Salvation army! To this | ship of the Russian church. 4 the child lifted in her arms, his little bare | are hidden, but whose clenched hands tally | the groom replled, with tears in his eyes, et s 33 sl wiite betray too well a lack of mersy; and in |pulled wnder the rear conch, “until it| that ho wae, ~Tho lady sald sho was also. | Hood's Sarsaparilla, acting through the the midst thereof walked two barefooted, :d on the truck frame and wmelted [ Then Dr, Morris went through the usual | blood, reaches every part of the system shivering, half-naked creatares, with ths [away on a hot box, When near- | marciage servlce of the Mothodist church, |and in this way positively cures catarrh. ropes already knotted about their necks. |ing Fairmount, the engineer being | hesitating every time he addressed them, And o silently hurries this ghostly |on 8 long stretch of stralght track, saw a | whether to call them captain, Mr. and procession up the wind-swept hill and | cow crossing within'the corporate limlts, 28 the barron heath, that not even the | four miles away. He gave the stock side, while the butter w inst her rusty black drees, and his head almost hidden beneath the faded yellow sunbonnet that cdvered her face; the sky was of so deep and strange a blue and the shadow of the sin- gle soi > beyond her lay so sharp and, that 11 e looking into a picture. But only for moment. A clattering group of he men, booted and spurred, rode past; she moved a step or two out of their may, stooped and placed the child upon the ground, then stood erect and lifted her - — h 8 Whilo during the entire month of No- Miss, and conciuding by saying, *‘Mrs. | vember, 1790, but 113 persons from the x Hooper, I congratulate you.” The eve- | outside entercd through the twalve gates atch-dogs are aroused from their slum whistle, called for brakes, “‘put her in |ning's entertainment was not considered | of the Prussian capital, the number of bers. Ono old hanter, indeed, lifts his |the back motion,” and “attempted to|complete until the bride and bridegroom | strangers now arrlving per month reaches head from his pillow, with the instinct of [avold injuring the cow, but only suc- had made epeeches. These consisted in|an average of upward of 30,000 danger upon hiw; rises upon s elbow ceeded partially, as the steam chest |a shower of blessings on the spectators e —— and listens to the soughing of the wind, [nipped her tail off close to the vertebra, | and an announcement from Captain Con- The Human Bellows, while the glow of t ink fire reddens |and she was In a hurry, too. A lady on dit that a free lunch would ke distributed | The lunga furnish the air. They keep the barrel of the riflo swung above the | the platform at Altoona I{!‘ndn some | to-day at one o'clock. blowing, blowlng, blowing, all day and e it b e door, laughs contentedly as he hears | pleasant remark to Conductor Tom Riley, ———— —renmeos | Dight. Lungs must be sound if health sl o i [ othing clso an drops back into. dream- and before that paste-board puncher SPEECH RESTORED, Is expected, When lung fever comes, L [} Ji n Do and. could replace his cap after bowing he there Is danger. The Rev. A. W, Whit- saw for the first time those long, pallid | *#1¢ . ulit5ana Kicasalt Grailinet at Torcdilad o ger. LA W, 5 hands folded about tho rusty iron bars ! Behind, the jail doors are left wide|} g at a colored 1ady | gepange Case ofa Lady Who Retusea |10V ofiHinghar, Wis., had lung fover T drooped the curtain and turne open, but [the other prisoners, fro- | 12 gsst Des Molnes. The ahiadow of the to Converso with Any One, SudjwebiiaicisatdeRfcom e mulptland be smothered in morning ki as the|zen with horror, crowd back into their g o pastoral duties. He writes that after a ’ Shiildrenit (glowing)| [so8y; " came | cells and pray did not arrive until five minutes after the long sickness ho ueed Brown's Iron Bit- i 0! Globe-Democrat. Fmeth e 1 Andout dec il i finished; ugnchea stopped in Des Moines. 1t takes " ters and galned strength and health, gping o i il Lkt | And ot ondoe e work o o | RO SR Ol e teon | Bractows, Lancasoscounty Pa. Jan- ke Lol -« WATER WHEELS. ROLLER MILLS, e uary 28.—An account has already been| There are In exietence more than forty of the victims, indeed, begs for the life of - 3 » " [l ) EDUCATICON IN RED AND BLAOK. | published of the sudden death of Mrs, | Egyptian obelisks, the smallest of which ' Geo. W. Sensenich, of this place. An|ls the Lepaius, in the Royal Museum at ral eva n ac Inerv L} his young brother, and the other prays that he may be shot. But this is all. - But Negroes and Indians Tell of the|inquest was held over the remains by Berlin, two fect one and a half inches in Beauties of Christianity, Deputy Coroner A. G. Seyfort, of Caern- | height and weighing 200 pounds. MILL FORNISHINGS O ALL KINDS, INCLUDING THE e e— just over beyond the bright sweep of | White and cold already, before death has opon prairlo sot about the little town, [lad time to freczc” the blood in their AR Do L QU arvon, it having been deemed necessary, An Now ¥ otk Joutol. since no one was present to witness the| Mr. W. H. Mathieson, Dee street, Delebr&tggEAM P§£g§ BT%deVA'Inggg; GAB:]iinl?Eg OIOth and the mesquite groves upon the hill- | veins, they are left swinging to and fro it joyously. The wonderful lapls lazali veiled phantoms of the night mount the Bl en i Orow i Tndianatand doath but Mrs. Sensenlch’s daoghter, [ Invercargill, New Zeland, ~ writes, “My s MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS IN out upon the vine-hung gallery. A glad, life-giving wind was blowing down from the great, purple, flat topped mountains, slde were tossing thelr feathery heads in | in the frantic gusts of wind; while tho blue sky was flecked with white masses [horscs and ride swiftly back into the un- s f Lot ¢ | who for twenty—five years has refused to |apprentice took very ill with neuralgia B o atng slouds, ono of those Taid | known dark from whenco they cumo. | Srored Prothren, Qualias and North Car. | talkcto or with auy one but her mother Bl hesmol 18l cus i Sonaral rem i s half the village equarc fn shade, in the| The littlo town sleeps peacefully on, | {1 ‘:ul’ hoi -“;0 A B[;“”! e .("fl):r;la and two sisters, snd upon this rests one | were tried without effect, then he tried midst of which I could see the town woll, | and midnight has not yet sounded. '\'xLlcrdE\ T lm;l}’ gl of the etrangest and most remarkable [ St. Jacobs Oil, and after ono application with its broad stone curbing, and the| It isstill the Lord His Day. {h.- GAG “qu"“d S *t | wonders of the age. Georgo W. Sensen- [ got immediate relief.” knot of men and boys grouped abouvt it, . 3 S Ich was the propristor of what |Is e e—— thelr hats off and foreheads bared to tho known as Sensenich’s tannery, on the old [ Ejight men, all of whose names ended wind. A cowboy In picturesque costume Downington turnpick, between the town- | with the same letter, recently men in a came riding across the sunlit half of the ship linc of East Earl and Cacrnarvon. | restaurant In Jackacnville, Fla , without n Bcrosiihe : miles” away, that Sunday morning,. a |that stretched back te the doo Wlen quite young he was married t ; i Plaza, and his goy lauch loatod on vo e[ elonder littlo woman lud cltmbed into an | A now policoman tried to broak up the | Misy Worst of Salisbury. Sho ied sov- | Do R Tociz, Foie D pesis = old rickety, opon buggy, 1 have tola |mecting because “rouge cb noir” is a for- ferl years afterward, leaving as the only | Beive, Deots, and Sehtatz, = r off in the distance., It was a protty| 2 : % bidden game, but nothing else marred its | qrs 8 J g as the only| Britz, Pcetz, and Schmidtz, aoene, and 1 atood reaching for the flower |70 that I never saw her fece, but I J othing else marzed IS offypring an_infant boy, who is now K. s o i f|face beneath the faded sunbonnet was [ A quartetio of colored Hampton col-fgumeon of the castern end. Several OAPITAL PRIZE $75,000 2 gl“t‘_“m';“"t:"“;,‘;fi:’“i‘:fl“’;":Ld‘"{,’:’c'; boautiful, o lovely light, as of first youth | Iro s:udoats sang some weird plantation | Ceaty succceding the death of his first | Tickets only s in Proportion agaln, nntil it foil suddenly upon & black | 24 first_love, _played over th lonely dittlies. Cold-day-when-he-gota-left, 8 |iifo Lo married Miss Elizabeth Krutz, - 2] shown and a bonny smile parted her lips [ #ith them, and explatned that they viv—qron all daughters. Lydia, the cldest I . o sho. loancd forward and gathered up | 91y recalled the war whoops ho was wont [y yudricd o James E:..?i»,v,"..f éllilm:r\y? the reinsand started the bony, slow- | to utter before his conversion. riet is the wife of Levan Wenger, of journgy. For “the boys” bond had | Hampton college, told feelingly of his|giocop £ this sketeh, has lived wi been signed. To-murrow{hey would be | strugale for an education, how for mn|luI {ieRke s Ted iuhe et frocfor m timo. at least -and a re.|months and months he had denled him- to look beyond the overwhelming glad- c‘nnld save his money to buy Ollendor's et ¢ ) ness of tho one thought that tu-mogrrow German reader. . this time never spoke to anyone but her f;z'.‘«‘xlv,:&/-‘:r:; 'fi'fl':'h"ffi%fl',f;cfi"‘.fi'."x“&'l'u they —he—would bs tree, and she would Noah-La. Flesche—which is Omaha In- | mother and two sfsters until her mother | (ffate, with fao- ':itf,ulwv wignatures atisehis i life and air and life! and a half. Hels asturdy son of the|ago. She afterward related the clrcum- trudging down tho sandy road, with the forest, orect as i i : & s o A ey N a primeval sycamore, stances to several Iadies and has since 7 P () i p) i1l e child in her arms, toward her dreary| Kifty miles, why, that is nothing! “I"am married,” maid Short Talk [spoken to many others, When a child Wo aro prepared to furnish plans and estumates, and will ccntrack foe ARCHITECTURAL AND BRIDGE III. ety in behalf of Negro and Indian tion, and they formed a pleasing A, but over yonder, more than fifty foreground to the numbers of pai spot in the street clos e by, and I realized with ashock that she wasetill there. The child lay at her feet, apparently asleep. a little white beap in the dust; the hands had disap peared from the win- dow bars above, but just whero I had seen her first she stood, straight, slender, silent, motlonless. The flower fell from my hand and the heart seemed all at once to go out of me. Shoe was alwaya thero. When 1 lifted my curtain In the wan gray of early 76 do Reredy certiry AGH we auperoiso the ki iengemends for oli he Monthly and Sewt-Anucl e , S e Drawngs of the Louisana State Lottery Compan, SPEECH RESTORED BY A SHOCK. and in percon manage and conirol “The Draaingi “kemaely CDELL ROLLER MILL, "TIHW "YITICE TT a0 that swung above my head, and letting make no doubt that at that moment her [31¢ W. Sensenich, a well known veterinary pallor of hor cheoks; her sunkon eyes |Sioux chief, seomed particularly pleated | £ which union there were three moving horse on the long and wearisome | Mr. W. H. Daggs, a negro graduate of ille; Emma, the youngest, and the Louisian Stut Lotey Company spite meant everything. Noneed now |¢lf hoe cake and watermelon so that he She is about 30 years old, sud during e, and that the some are condusted il my curtain o the wun geuy of o881 |y hore to rocoivo thom onco mors fnio disn for Short Talk—spoke for an hour | foll over dead in her prosence, a fow daye | ¥ 8% t. Across long and lonely reaches of , ) the erection ~of Flouring Mills and Grain Elevators, or for changin, po;)my after day the pltiless August sun whero the old horse ploughs his ;t;::;::{l-&‘:fr&?w:_dn gus of dml :‘:‘ :"“' “’,“’g"“l' b“; refused to ‘i““" Flouring Mills, from Stufa to the Roller System. 4} Rl beat down upon her as shekept her sta- painfully |hrml|gl]n heavy muull mn]mh. B e, i g“lng‘}‘ BDe A (B9Y (0800 A8 s;::];’fe x::,";:‘:fi’;:g: ::s 339~ Kspecial attention given to furnishing Powder Plants for any pur tlon beforo that gloomy facade. Some- | ling every now and then upon the shin-{ ey, estanity “for it teaches that one wife | acquired a very fair education, She at- pose, and estimates made for gome General machinery repairs ‘nttensed times, but not often, she sat down prone roots that twisted their loose, ugly in the dust, but always in the same spot [ knots over the road; through bits of —the spot whence ehe best could see | br¢ ry prairie, where the uncer- those slinglng hands. People went up | tain whecls creak over great clods of black and down the street; the tide of labor earth,” lumped by the cold into sharp back and forth; men recde in to the vari- | masses as hard as a rock; down into ra- K ata and ol ont agaia; wagons | vines deep-washed_out, whero the shad- [ j1aG0 a2 & 7 on overwbelmin ool X creaked by, covered with v‘v‘}aim'un‘:h, ows lie heavily and where wild things, his intention of becoming & minister of |men, Many a one thought that she | Jiocks'pectmber 1d. 4. D 1679, s r W N th el ‘White G e Vi s meaeth whih the. cuclows epes of | ith eyes that shine, croop stoalthly fram | 50 8°8be), wad White Ghost, culef ofthe |must talky and mad v efforts to el i, i o788 snterd by SANDER, HOWE & CO,, [t never oy ) 1 3 sallow womon and eliock-headed children | crevice o crovi © gy bottom- 0 oonld fnduce him to loave his father— | small her father tempted her with gold wale st Sl poered down at her, But none of these [ lands, strown with wrocks of over-loaded | g% o oally Major Glatsman, the Crow | ploces If she would speak one word to| 14 grand single number drawings taks OFFICES., enough for any man. I bullt a house |tended church regularly and was a con- for my wife and children before I left my reservation, and when I return I'm golng ndod kb rogulbely and waa promptly. Aadress stent member at Bridgoville, 8 went into society, and seemingly enjoyed it| Iasorporated in 168 tor Toglsiatrure RICHARD & CLARKE. Omaha,Neb to put a roof on it,” very much, but when spoken to the only | {97 edtostional and chariiable purposes—nith u cap george Bushotter, a Sloux Indian, |answer the speaker would recelve wni """“‘m'm""'mh e (3 o o 4 Bl ded. made an address in which he announced [smile. She had a special abhorrence for ming .:ovflh' vole W4 franchite things seemed to enter into her conscious: | freighters, where the crows caw in the big | creek government sgent—that his fol. | hi Iace thonthl) A " o o ~h Liat - | him, but it wai e8s, e touc ness; she looked neither to right nor|cottonw oods and discuss angrily the pale lowoni‘lre tired of r‘flnlng the denlo:, “‘;d her 'lnlllxer d'l:(i""‘.',:l" s “fg::'z;'fi;n;i? A SPLENDID OPPORTUN ITY TO WIN A FOR. — —— loft, and the weeks wearing away found | passer-by. woro 0w rataln ATV L et TUNE, BECOND GRAND DRAWING, CLASS B, IN , i o A ring that fillness tant] - 3, i 3 hor with face still turned upward to tho| Fifty miles, why, that is nothing! TR DA AR P Sttt ol kbl ] 1T REC R S LR G T LY long, narrow window, patient, qulet, | It is cold and the wind stings her face |° My brethren,” said White Ghost,. in | not one word would she speak to him to | PRAWING: fixed, and the child always beside her, | like so many needles; her bare hands are | the beautiful simi i > ) 7 mate and motionless as herself, Some | blue and stiff and her feet are numb, But J':ju::; b,‘:;:ml]le[.,;: :.I:ym;:,::u;:ffleé g?:;ogzefl:'r‘m::d 'xlhz:m g;“:::‘;:d::‘ CAPITAL PRIZE, $75,000. g ) i a second palr of hands grasped the|do you think she feels on her forchead i % 100 000 Tickets at 85 each. Fracti i aoae 4, bogond i of s grsaped 00 o, you Sk i Loy o ok Sooitiond | mdnlo masd aud rod Kaana) undeeciobioe | sha cosieed conaidorable money, Some ™ tpoion, o 1 | 2115, 13th St Teleghone Noi 563, told me. “It's nigh abont|a blinding rain, as she sits far forward on [ knows when he 1s well off, Ugh!” dence of A. G, Soyfort whOh & n:'".;; /l”nh]“ Stflck Ya[d IB‘ h “ fi'{fi ears senso they drop- | the seat and urges the old horse along General S. O, Armatrong complained | parsonsge of tho Bridgeville church, | 14 piaas e A ) 1EIEpHOnE N, a1, or man an' twan't cool-| A mule rabbit, with long, pointed ears | of the small salari Jooded murder nelther, Thoy've tralled | and gliitering ooat of fur, gathers Blmelf | tninc saents wrs morne yubrd f2 about God knowe how and He only knowa | up at the side of the road prepared to | and honest men found difficulty in living when, keepln' out'n the sherifl’s way, |specd away, but aware of her unsecing |on them. After the pow-wow the audi- During this legal transaction her mother acted as the second person, but not in i s s RO Omaha, Neb the presence of any one. The awful a 3 and wherever they've went she's went|eye, settles himseli comfortably in his|ence departed, shock of her mother's sudden death was ¥ 00, X leeral Advances On conSlgnmentfl. A t blow to ner, and it was feared too, and sence they've becn here she|bed of dry grass and stares out at her s gron ) comes In cvar{. little while and staye | couple ul{lger, tawny and sleek, lying in t ] u“r':"‘h" would cllhmdhn;: roason, bul::he round like this yer. Jim's her hus-|the shelter of the hollow, lift their hoads | Crocodile farming is rapidly becoming | o5 lre,_li‘xulu and she now speals to band, yeu know,” Ab, as If I didn't|and drop them again as she goes by, The a leadiog industry in certaln localitiee, | ARY one. 'he case is most peculiar, and kno fow horsenien she meets pass her by with- The lacgest animals sre killed and|ls the talk of the eastern end of the do d 500 ! A ey My heart ached for her and I used to | out the customary salutation, awed into skinned, their flesh being used to feed county, — mL long, yet dread, to seo her face. But I|ellence by the N aian o of ek gazo; yet | their descendanta, One dealer last year S oo SO x ° ran e ossom our never did, though once she removed her | turn to look afterward, remembering the [ *2PPlied a Bt, Louis tanner with 5,000 A Wasbington Money-Lender. 5on Sor 1ases o akot Shomid e e ey faded sudbonnet as she passed me 1n the | joyous smile upon her lips. skins, Washington is infested with a| ¥orfurihor lntorwation wrile clearly giving fal dlm twilight, golng down to the camp In )" "And night falls and those awful phan-| =~ v~ S—— class of money-lenders who grow rich by :’,J"",;‘:‘f;';:,;“u'l;?; Exprom Mooey Orders, o1 the edge of the thicket, where she and |toms are somewhere velling their faces!| Berlin contributes to its local unlver-|extorting outrageous rates of interest | by Expross (ail o e e Ry WHOLESALE BY the chlld slept at night under the dark| The nextday Is well worn when she |sity 811 of the 5,000 students who are | from all they can get into their clutches, | Pense) sddrossed sky with its solemn star, But it was so|crosses the low flat and ascends the hill | reglstered for the winter term, writes & correepondent of the New York forM. A, pAvPHIN, ¥ :i-némmi. late that 1 could see only a lonely pal- | at the foot of which nestles the town, It ———— Times, 18 known to a good many govern £07 Soveath 84, Washington D. C. J lor and sunken eyes that seomed not to|is still cold, but the clouds have broken The Japanese have & new dictionary of | ment clerks and others who L A STEWART & CO, and @ sudden flood of 1ight bathes the | the Chinese lan, comprlsing mo their viotims, A case in } Totias i valley, and |urmuths(;vindtu l: cu.:)pu; th:n f‘::lyuvolugz‘g., s uflulloni'lmu-b’-"‘" Bow Orloaas 1013 m'fim( by as roremoonoss, { OMAHA NEB o —— oo Qae morning, at last, I saw her climb ~

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