Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 25, 1885, Page 2

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THE DAILY BEE-WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1885. the last week. She said that her heart ached to thivk that 1 was in such a place sa this, snd the beggei me snd my hus band to come and make my hcme with The Once Famous Bell-Ringers, Williil | her. We wil: not scoept hr kind offer, Pfiflk and wm} i IHB MmS' at we fear that her circumstances would not wairant the extra expense of our sup- House. port.” FROM WEALTH TO WANT. RICHES THAT TOOK WINGS, In reply to a question ast> how he The Noted Oouple in Old Age—Their|had lo t the large sams of money which he mus: have mede, Mr. Peake sald he had always been a very singular man, snd that he hid never known the vslae of dcllars atd cents. In the days of his . " ’ prospetity he hid lavished thoussnds E = AS‘""';"- N. |‘ l;vl:r"'"t ?;-—d upen his childeen, and the interest ¢n i 5 mong the inmates of the Cortland [ hiy charitable coniributions would, he flE‘:IT TDNIC. county almshouse, at Homer, twenty|thought, be en ugh to support him and i g Tron with pure | mi‘es from the oly, are Mr. end Mrs 1) wi'e ln comfort now. Wile in St pod completely | William Peake, the once famcus ard etlll | pyyl, Minn., he lost 822,000 in a g 14 Iwand Kevers, |rcmembered sinors f the Swiss bell| poca'aticn, and sfierwards rank a much The aged couple have been de- | j5 gor sum /n a theatre at Pike's Pesk, Reminiscences—Origin of Finger-Glass Music. ringers. pendent on publio charity for veatly two ;6 of the mushroom reitlements of the monthe, but the fact of their preeencs at| mining country. Neither he nor his } hendac the institution became generally known | ife attaches any blame to their children ! S oo fca the bood s only a cay or two ago through the visit- | for their present destiiute condltion, bu* the Appetite, aida the assimilation of fo Ing committes appointed by the rtaie oy the contrary. speak of them tn terms Sevea b board of charitie: Your correspondent | f high ccmmendation, For the burn and Belching, and strength s e mnusclaa and visited the a'mshouse to-day, and was|),.¢ fow years they have ap- For Intermittent K medy for Diseases of the T rves " vers, assitude, Lack of Rnergy, Lo, it has no equal given an cpportunity to hear the etory of | 5oved only in small places. In the A ',‘."‘,'.'LZI,"‘?:,T,Z;:".'_"f,",«‘k”..“,".','.'.z" their lives, the wonderful record of their| garly part of last sesson they were burned singe experiences and the sad circum-| u¢'at Wa erly, N Y., and lost a large stances : t pree- [ amount of valusble traveling eqnipment ucf riunate condition. Mra. | Their power to dras left them ling ago. ent ) Peske was found in the wom-|and bad businces has been the conse- en's depattmint. She Is 75 years of age, | quence. Last Septomber they started on with sparkliug gray eyes and countenat ot |, tcur of the villages and towns in south \| s, . (be BUOWN CHENICAL 00 BAITINANY ieading to their which, though ‘plentifully warked whh|gem New York and northern Peansyl the farrows of time, beams with intelli- | yania, They wera stranded about the gercs and atill tetains more thana sug- | iddle of Decomber at Jamestown, and greetlon of its emly attractivineis. She|yeio obliged to appeal to Mr. Murray, wos p'ainly dressed, but, in her cartiage | yuperintendent of the poor in Cortland and deportmeut and much mire in her|q,pn ¥, whore they had lived long enough language, gave ovidence that sho was 8u- | 1o geonre a residence, They reached the perior to the ccnditions in whizh she was poor-house New Year's Day. On the Wttty ddy way from Peonsyl anla some of Mr ““Yer,” the sd, “it is hard to bo here | peake's bert Krench ylastos were broken. The physical discomforts cf the plica are | g fuels their loss keenly, and says he renll; not at all what thcy might seem 0| would b happy even lu his present situa an_inexporicuced observer. Wo o fion if they could be replaced. :;':;u}'plfl::.f;:h(f\:lsu;‘;:uln:l“‘y'el\:a]vls:‘y;li THE OBIGINATOR OF FINGER GLASS PLAY- ated rooms, We ars meaeurably happy, Ll § even as we era, We look for botter days, | He wes the origina or of this form of and we feel in our heatts that the God «f |music and bas for the last eight years : “ ! - ; “\ the homeless aud the friendless will not [ made it the leading feature cf Eis con- ant Ontispated ia the BROAD CLAIN . ‘eingthe | desert us in our bour of necd ” corta. The idea ocourred to him while at A PATHETIC REMINDER OF THE PAST. dinner with some f his friends in Chi- ‘VERY BEST OPERATING, The melodean which the aged musi- | 80, be says. One of the guests scol- QUICKEST SELLING AND clans have uted in {leir conoerts for a | ontally rabbed a goblet with her molat- number of years etands in the siti g ened tingers A beautiful sound was the Wrer offered to the oublic room. Tt Is mounted with goblets, partly | 280lt, = Fanoy called hor farhot's atton GONSUMPTION, X . Ld | roduce from them what hs called “‘the othors comling ooy graded om0 Sl over Bard by 1o and strengely bosntital melody came |2t Of men” It ls uoderstood that & Roating (houyh the apan doorway, bus | Eovement fn on foot for the remowil of censed the moment the unexpccted vis. | MT- a0d e, Peake to the DN tors evtered the room. The musician |- M 8t Almira. was Mr. Peake, Ho is a well-appearing e T} AL soauy pullorer. Give expr “For eccnomy and comfort, every DR. T. A. SLOCU N n, 76 ¥y ) 3. Y ” man, 76 years old, a little under the spring, we uss Hoods Smsaparlila, ¥ medium eize, with silvery locks falling in HAMBURG -AMERI[}AN waves over his shoaldors, and a fine coun. | Sy » Duffale (- ) Lith ek teance set off by a high aud brosd * e ———— PACKET COMPANY. THE INAUGURATION, expanse of forehead, The <ld must Direct Line for Engiand, France cian seated himself at the Instrament, —_— 14 ) and (termany. ‘alxllmm?'hlhlfin“mifi “1’9 '.lw:!'x "“ll ran | 4 Workman Fxplains How a Great ! them lightly over the rims of the glas:es. sastor May Basity H : Tho steamships of this we'l known line are bullt ' The alr chozen was *‘The O'd Folks at Disnst o M0y Pl D RPRL of fron, In wator-tight compartmonts, and are fur- | Home,” Jenny Lind never taog the tshod with cquisite to make the passy - : e aate a4 areeatie ey “earty 'the "Onitad | touching melody with more bewitching | »‘Well, if this Inavguration bsll gets States and Europoan malls, and leave New York | swootness and delicate pathos than that |along without a dissster of eome kind 1 Thuadays and Saturdays for Plymouth (LONDON) | ;) 1oicertod in the phyf“g f this Cort. | shali be surprised,” ssid one of the werk Cherboug, (PARIS and HAMBURG. 380 2 o aras e Hamburg 310, to Hamburg | land county pauper. Another favorite | men at the new pension building to-dsy. i ¢ Do you anticipste an accident?” I in— 'l[”‘? '0“'": ““Id‘l -’"“ ‘]:lr"‘lb f'-l;'“:(‘"" "’;- selection entitled **Sweet Dreamers” was | 3 oory Pundt Mark Hansen, F. E. Moores, M. | giyen jn the ssm» effective style. Justss|quired. Tolt, agents In_Omaha, G & 8 hoentgon, | & . b ¢ g i agonts i Councll Blufls. c'.“l;wmcngAuDT 5‘:‘3’. 1he last streins were dying away Mrs (_)h, not especlally, rephu:l the me- Gen. Faes. Agts , 6L Eiwulw-y. N. Y. t'nu.wx . | Peaks entered the room, Glve us the | chanic, 88 if to recall bis statement. minski & C:., Goners! Wonlorn' Agouts, 170 Wash | ey be o “To dle’ dust,” sald one of the | “*But,” pausiog agatn, It looks t> me as 8t., Chi , Tl L i paupers, and with ready compliance the | though it would be very essy to have a M aged muicians pliyed the air. The old | dissscrous fire in the ball-room. —Hayve 4 155 ton to It and by practice he frund he of Fronch, but m sly «f Ameriaanmn | goy'd mako o key bourd of glassa acd & N , 8L T have a positivo romody for the Above disease; by 1is ‘tiie ‘worst kind and of fon inits ofticacy, togethor with oxpro gentloman then gave a plece of his cwn | you seen the design of decoratlon?” recent compostng and entitled, he laagh. | I had not. 2 ingly eaid, *‘Over to the Hills to the| ‘Well, continued he. “‘there is to be Poor House.” flags, snd buntirg, and drapery, and ce- dar until there'li be no end l(ubit.l l:ma how do you suppoee 1t will all be_lighted “How did you native Americany ocome | g7 !e’s, thul;P will be aluclrlcilyg; out to adopt: the titlo of the Swiss familyl” | (ere wili be thousands of gas-jets, too, 0, that waa done solely foradveriaing [ 4]] right tn with this very inflammable purposes,” said Mrs, Peske, ‘“I'he title|yinff, The way they will be located it was fairly come by. We took 1t from | wi)] require the very greatest care to pre- our predecessors In this bell-ringing| vens a nre. And the reof—it will be of spectality some thirty-five yoars ago and |canvas, There wili be fireworks sll we have contnued (o use it ever since. | yround the building that night. and it Our home was in Medford, Mass., just | will be next to impossible to keep them out of Boston. We both developed early | off tho roof. 1 life an ardent love of music, aud en-| " «W;li tharo not be precantions taken joyed, considering the times, very fulrop | againet fir 1 portunities for 1ts cultivation, Aboat Yes; but what gord can that do? Not forty years ago tho great temperance |any, Ifa fire breaks out it will burnlike crusade was ab its he'ght in Now Kig 4 tinder-tox, and precauticns will do no land. John B. Gough was just coming [ good, Then'it is going to require the to the front as the apostle of total ab. | yery preatest pressure of facilities to heat stinacce. He and his wife were frequent | the room. That will increase the dan- guests at our house and our musical ser- | yer (f firo, and wo may be blown up vices were in Jively demand at his meet- [ too » 2 ings. It was through him that. we start- S will go In and eee,” I remarked ed in iho businees. Trlumph followed | tyrnng toward an entrance. 2 trivmph in rapid succession till our names | wGan'c got in here,” sald & man at the became a household word sll over| g, 15 o) Imported Beer | i b vord il Sl i our card 8 o ” LK BOTTLES. ) A ean il ey Henry, has a card from the committee. i Fanny | «wiat is this order for at eo carly a T sy T 7Ty and Jalli—went with us, The couatry | day 7' I asked. Culmbacher, .. ++..Bavaria went wild and pecple by thoussnds| “Dop’v know,” was the repl U TR, | flocked o sca ur, Year sfter year tho| «g, BT BT Pllgner. faiide R EEneriat y Avything to see in there? KRiBOr.sesssse sosoe.cos.Bramen SOME REMINISCENCES. W Treatior for ew Only,” 1 g referouces aud proot. Melled,ealed 1n piain e Adireas €O.. BUFFALO. N. Y. @ ook frem | SLNE M. R. RISDON, Gen't Insurance Agent REPRESENTS) Phanix Insurance Co., London, Cash Assots, ; Woman's Fund, Cavita. 1.989'000 . furor costmu d. Wo used to play fr| «Nothing, weeks and wevks at a time In the larzer| Do many come with orders from the DOMESTIC. cities. About cighiecn ycars sgo we di- [ aecrtary ot the committec” Budweiser +ss+.8t, Louis. Anhiuser.... —— . 8t. Louis. lie taking the terr.tory wes: from Ohio | have something to do with the fixings.” Sohlitz-Pilsner—. .. ..Milwaukee. | two yourgest members of the family,who [ «Wal),” . plied the doorkeeper. o*‘1 Wine. D. MAURER, after the division of our compavy I made | want 10 say anything.” ifficully in making believe that I'fihay,om willlkely be very uncomfort- vided our forces, Will'am Benry snd Ju- | wNot many; s few who are golng t ¥ &nd the rest of playi: g in the eastern and [ “Have you hosrd an p Best's.... vevsees Milwaukee. | s uthorn states, Eddie aud Lizetta, tho | one, cxeept ho has busincss, chn 6nior 1" Krug's it +..Omaha | bad by this time become members of the |} . b have heard n good deal of comment. and Ale, Porter, vDomeshc and Rhine | company, remasined with me. Not long ha\fi my oph.'.‘.m; that's .“‘:, B:t“l duu"l. 18 Farnam St. | ® Western tour aud fouud my son Wil-| “iih fupression is that there is adoubie __ liam’s name on everytody’s lip. Thad|parposein all this. In the first place, ORIGINAL gred LE HAV myself, and not he, was the original bell | 4ple, and it is desired that 1t be not - alngv{- It wes during this trio that we | kaown that it isnot a sultable placs for a GOULD & CO'S. 1scovered Sol Smith Russell. Jady to spend an evening untll it s too 18 CONDUOTED BY SOL SMITH RUSSELL. late. Comments upon the place are es- “ h clally fearsd by the committee, And, Boy:io E"“:.nl'm‘i?f:f" over b was oni of the best boye that |secondly, the danger the place will bs to us birefooted in Springfisld, 11, and subjected to it iy de-irt)d to keep & re- Drawn at Havana Cuba, |asked the privilege of peggllné our ills, | oret: A fieroegalecf wind might blowthe that kind of work being then his only roof away, Causs & pavic, and greatinjury. Every 12 to 14 Days. means of llving, He was very bright Then there is much fear ot fira and a 1I0KETS, #3.00, + + - HALVES, 9100 | 8nd I became so interested in him that 1 | pumber of accidents of different charac- Babjeckto 0o mantpuiaiic, cob oontealied by ke | adopted him into the troupe. He was| " parbles in intorest falrest thing in fke ¢ B It appesra that there s much more ia existence. nothing cf a singer, but his dsficiency iu | gn4pysiym over the ball in the country o €0, 12 Broad: | this respeot was more than made up by | iy in Washington. Here the undesir. 417 Walout 8¢, | b fo o ol et 343 | by S5t meuld e Dot ok 82 ablo and dissgreeablo sldes are s> well ansas Ofty. Mo i would practice for hours and bours to- known that but little interest 1s shown in gether befora a glass, appealing to me t) the preparations being made A FINE LINE OP tell bim how it looked and keepivg me el . the while in & fit of lsughter! ~ He re- | Mr Henry Becker, 264 George St, wained with us, I think, for ten ortwelye | BW/timore, Maryland, suys that™ Miss years, and during that time ha was a|F iz Schall, living in his family, was model in every rerpect. I leained to re. | comvletely eurid of s sivere chronio wo, gord him almost as & chi'd of my o cough by one bottle af Red Ster Congh —AT Cure, and experienced no bad effects and A SCATTERED FAMILY, no return of the cough. “William Henry when he was heard R —" y from he waa in Auctialia, He was un-| The Canadian government s being succesefal and had & larg oompuug on | urged to take entire control of the te'e. THE ONLY_EXOLUS\VE 0 his hands. Fanny was married to Joho | graphle systems of Canads, and leglsla. Fitch, & wealthy s-utherner, sometime | tion to such effect is bei before the war, She is with her son and B M0 A% 1 SALAE Do IN OMAHA NEB For tickets 7 o SHISEY & ay, N. Y. Cit MOLL & €O, & Louis, Mo, or M. VITENS daughter In Jamestown, Dakota, whers she has an interest in a large hardware store and io a lumber yard. We have not heard from her in wore than & year, Julla fs in Californts. She is M ve be he sullala io ONltarala, i now There have bean 900 deaths among the v ~ husband is a| Roman Catholio po,ulati %...... %Q-FIGO speculator and a fine musician. 1 had a | since the b.»giumfi: of .:l::';a:: Mol it Hatitiet 90 2 e ek Tt i ¥ dred.) Dou't diszust everybody by hawking, blowing sud spittiog, but use Dr, Sage's Catarrh Remedy and be cured. lollsrhhum them a few months sgo. 1 - ve had & letter from Wiliam Henry's A Rt X S S tama wo Wife, who lives at Niles, Mich,, within Austria has voted to spend 7,000,000 florins establlshing elestric tramways, IN THE EARLY DAYS. — Stcok Raisigin T x-s B fore the Big Syndicats Era. 81 Hough's Experfence with the Com anches and Morm An In- dian Trail Too Closely Followea — Ool, Hitson's Big Run, Globe-Democrat, Las VEGas, N, M., February 18—Si Hough, one of the oldest westerners in the whola westorn country, is now livivg i this city, and was met te-dsy by the writer. St a war reccrd sbout whioh he does not care to say much, but enough wes learned ir m him to ¢s ablish the fact tiat 'way back {n the sixties he was tho c«pain of a Texas oavalry compa \y, and wa+ about as tough a customer a8 the Lone Star etate turned out ia the breczy days of the repellton Si's tougue was unlimbered this morn- ing by an unatinted app ication of *‘cow- biy's delight,” as hecalled if, audioa reti od correr of an unfrequented © nb- toom, he unfolded 10 the correspendent | come fragmontary chapters of his life's romance. I esked him to tell me some- thing about the cattle busmess in the caly days of Texas beef-ratsing—long be- f ro the trade was systematizod and con- rolled lke it is to-asy. “Well, you mast know ycurg wan, that in th 'm aays baef was beef, snd it a good stayer to thiuk « f running a bunch of cows. Iujuus was awful bad then,and we had to scncme night a: d day to keep the bunch in the vounty, for like as not before the next eun they would be run way «ff iivo another county by ths Comanches " “I remember we had a great ‘scrap’ with them fellers once—meo ana George Raynolas Know him ~ Well, he's now a pretty big gun and ts president of the tirat Natlonal ksnk at Albavy, Texas. It was just after the wah, and mo and George, we just thuught we'd go into the osttle business, cn our own hook. We di-n't own a hoof of beef in the world, but that didn’t discourage us. George was plucky, and I waas plucky too, ko we mounted and rode over into the Staked Plains country—great waste of plains and Injuns in them days. We mauaged to pick up a couple of hundred head of them Texas long horns, and was drlvin’ them up into New Mexico for to find good water range.” THE USUAL INDIAN VISIT, ““We got up to Duck Oreck with the drive all right, but had some fears all ’long about them Comanches, We went into camp there, and the cows they was a foedin’ roun’ as contented 88 dary stock., Pretty soon we saw & band of the Injiws a comin’, and we knew we were in forit. So we didu’t give them no welcome, but just peppered away away when they got up close enough t» command respect. They had arrows and we had guns, army carblnes, that would shoot like old sin. “We kept up the fight with abont even odde, when I saw a buck a crawlin’ up clore like in the grass, and jist then I saw him twang the arrow right into Raynolds. Struck him right below the siwmach and went clear in., Raynolds te just sat down and pulled the atrow out, but I was so mad I took after that back. Heran for ths chaperel, and I after him, a-shootin’as 1 went, Pur'y soon the buck fell down with bia back tarned op toward me, kind cf defiant like. I peppered him full of hcles with my six-thooter, and then I saw I had done him up. *80, just like an Indian, Tcut cff h's top knot, and took it back to Geurge, “““There,’ says I, throwlig down the scalp, ‘is the skank whoshot you. Ain't you gl.d I nipprd him?' ) put George (n a pack mule, and got out of that camp mighty quick, you bet George wasn't dead, but he di-n't feel justaight ins de of bim, and complained some before I got him to Fort Samner, 200 mlles away. “Dy you know what ailed him? Well, when he pulli d that stick ocut the arrow- head staid {uside, and it kept a-botheriog him for years avd years, Two yests sgo he wen' up to Kaasas City, Raynolds ¢id, and hs rold the dcclors he wauted them to cut a lump cut of his back. They cut 'er opan, ‘and there was 1hat arrow-heed, lcokin’ black and rusty- like.” The writer lecarns frem other eources that the story abcut the arrow-hesd is true as told by St Hough, to 1t is reas n- able to look upon the whole yaru as truthfal. Si had bad Juck ever afterward. Oae seaton he took a herd of 1,900 head of beeves up to Uwh torell tothe Mcrm-na, He hadn’c any more than gotten into the territory when a tevere snow et rm set in and Sis cat/le diif ed sway int tre liva bede, where they starved to death ordied from cold and exgposire. He lost the whole bunch, and hus never since been able to retrieve his fcriunes, ANOTHER COMANCHE RAID, An old-tlme pioneer in the cow Indu- try was named Chisholm, and he used to fecd his flocks on a thousand hil'e jug be'ow the Staked Plains, E. J. Wilcx, who is now 8 weal hy cattlewan, with a ranch down the Pecos, this side of B. sque Grande, was employed by Chisholm as & cow-puncher, 85 was also & dsring young fellow named Bill Moorhead Wilei x says that it was along about 1868 when the Comanches deliberately rode up to the old man's corral one night and drove off every hcot of cattle held therein, Ab ut twenty stockmen from the ranch thereabouts got togerher In hot haste a- d started out to recover the stolen stock, In three days and a hulf they had cov- ered 200 milea and were close vpon the cattle thieves. They went into camp abodt two miles out from the mounth of Caoyon Blanco, Onisholm told Wile x and Moorhead to go out and scout the lay cf the land while he preparaed supper. They had no idea how msny Iudans there were, but supposed the number to be small, The cowboys rode te the bluffs vver- lookirg the canyon, but they rode can- tlonsly. Wilcox dismounted and crawled up to the edge of the abyss to get a sy peep One look eatisfied him, and mo tloning Moorehead to do the same, The Iatter took oue look, and jumped back, exclaiming: Two thousaud of them)” “Jump ana ride for your life,” said Wile x They were both in thelr saddles the eame inst:nt Chisholm saw them com- lng, aud ran out a few rods to meet them, *‘How many are there?' he asked hur- rledly. “If thero's a pra‘rie deg in Texas there'’s 2,000 li%hl‘n‘ bucke of them," T guess we don't want any supper to- night,” Ohisholm to lhn(tfigr fel- lows, *‘The Ivjuns are after us.” Wi will we do with the pack horeesi” asked one of the party. “D—n the paoks, Let them go. Every man to the saddie.” 1t was hardly necetsary to issue such an order, for evey man was alrosdy mounted, and in an iusiant Ja'er they wers away, And not a moment too soon, for bask at tho mouth of the canyon they could see an army of warrlors flockiog out and heading rapialy for them. “Did yei get axay all righti” asked the writer of Wilcox as the latter was telling the experience. “Night was all {hat saved us, for we rode herd, and soon left the bucks be- hind. It to k ua three days and a half to ride to the canyon, but we g t back to the ranch In less than two days and & half.” ©OL, HITSON'S BIG RUN. Alter the affair at Cany n Blanco the Comanches had things thelr own way, and they went into the busines of *‘run viag ecatt'e” Int) New Mexico on the wholesale principle. At last the Pan- handle and Siaked Plains stoskmon saw that they must do something to stop the high-handed plundering or they would have to retire iut) bavkruptey. A brave frontisrsman then named Hits n—Col. Hitoon, I think, he was exled. To Lim the cattle growers ag peated, and finally pro'ed their fn eres's in eending Hitson out on his own_ prepo sition to recover the stock. He was friendly with the Indisns snd went to them with & quecr scheme. He wanted fifty of them torad the Mexican ranch- men overin the Pe o's ¢ untry and re- cover the sto k that h:d been sold there, aud at the eams time run off as much more as thoy could pick-up. The filty bucks agreed {0 the plan snd went with Hiteen, la those days there was no mulitia pro‘esiion, and Hiteon's g ng hed t ings their own wry. It was & regular fillbusterirg expeditin and the eatire country south of Las Veyas was stripped of 1ty osttle. The rancheros counld mnot help themselves. Hitron took the cattle—more than 15,000 heed—to -Colorado. ‘aud having power of an attcravy with him, sold out all the steck to ranchmen on the Arkan- 8a8. In returning to Texay he lost his trunk contalning the collateral, and to this day the men who original'y owned the etock have never becn psid their dues. Nor will they ever gst what is due them, for aboat a y: ar ¢g) Hitson fell from a oar- riage on the street ¢f Denver and broke nezk. ——— MATRIMONIAL ANNOUNCEMENT, Miss Nellie Gould to Wed Mr, Wash- ington K. Uonnor. New York, February 21 —Miss Nellle Gould, tie charming 18-ycar-old daughter of Mr. Jay Gonld, has given hir heers to her father's bachelor par ner, Me. Wash- ington E. Ccnuor. At firstit was re- ceived wi h incredulity, the young lady'’s youth, the fact that ehe has not made her cebut in society, and th.t Mr. Connor was almost twentytivelye s hersentor,and had withstood the tender and fascii a ing endearments of several of New York's famous b lles, all ended to throw an air ot doubt arourd the report, but like a tiny pebble dropped iuioa brook, the soy that Mr Connor wes to forsake his ¢lagant ‘hough lovely apart- ments at 14 east Forty filth street snd be- ccms a truly go d bene’ict, With Miss Gould as his~ Beatrice, gsthered forcs With every rcpet.ton, and yesterdey little else was talked of oa the street, Ex charge snd in the Urion Lea.us, St. Nicholss, Union and other up-towu clubs. Counor refuced to confirm or deny 1hs repert, and when this betamo known many {mmadiately accept. d it a3y true. Mirs Nellie Gould is one of the brightest end swectost lirtls Jadles in the city. She has ben finely educatedand is highly accomp ished. She is sn ariist of no mean ubility and her collection f bric-a- brac, whicn has been adoroed by her pencil avd brush, has been greuty ad- mired. She dresses plainly but richly, aud when in town can be recn any alter- noon criving through the park with ber brother George, and ‘‘Wash” by ber s'de. She has attended one or two pri- vate germane, but caunot b raid to have entercd the gay soclety walrl. Sho is quito recerved and to a certun exrent retiring, iratts strongly chiracteristic of her father, the king of Wall S'reet. She is prb- ab'y the richest heiress in Amerion, snd «n ner father's deah will come in for $£20,000.000 or $30,000,000. Mr Con- has been a parcuer with Me. Gould sivce 1876 While ha cannot be placed in the cataloguo of handsome acc ety men of the city, ho has a siogularily at- tractive face, bright blue cyea and mcs: engaging manrers. He owos the fam us steaw yacht Utowara, snd is & momber of the American Steam Yucht club. He wag birn in Spring ttrest and is 8 Now Yorker in 118 truest scnco, He is very abstemicus in his habite, ard is rarely seen in socicty, Young Georgs Gould is his chum, end betwieu them the s neer- est affection exists Mr. Connor can draw his check for $200,0(0, and 18 a recognized Jeader in Wall street. M-ny have had the ¢rronecus impression that Mr. Connix's success and his present wealth have becn due t)a great extont to his clote iutimacy with Mr. Gould. This is a great mistake, Mr Connor's pres- ent postion has been secured by indom- ituble perve, financial boocr, and a Reo Stan mAn:\firmnK‘ OUGH@URE Free from Oplates, Emetics and Poisof A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE OURE For Coughe, Sore Thront, Honrscncas, Tnflnenza, Dolda. 18 1a, Croup, Whooping Conghy ¥ sending ong dofiar (o THE CHAREES A, VOGELER COMPANY, Sole Owners a1 Manufacturere, aryiand, T8 Ay Haltimore, Swift's Epecific has cired my cancer which was verybal, Lamnow in fine hesltn; never better The remarkable growth of Omaha Have gained 25 pounds since 1 began taking_Switt's the last fow yoars ia Speeific. R. 8. Bravy wb, Tiptouville, Tenu. RS, during y » mattor ol great astonishment to those who pay an rvant has | occaslonal vislt to this growing elty. The in ver | development of the Stork Vards—tho necensity of the Belt Lins Road—thae finehy paved streeta—the hundreds of new ences and costly business blooks, JANCER FOR MANY beon afflictod for many yo nose, which resiated all forts cured entirely with Swift's Specific. Jonx Hity, Druggist, Thomson, Ga. NOSE FATEN OFF. town bad an eating os stroyed hisnose snd was oating toward his eyes As Iast resort T put him on Switt’s Specitic, aud it has cured him sound and woll M. F. CRusiLEs, M. D., Oglethorpe, Ga, T have sceh remarkablo resu'ta from the uso of | REOWEh, the business activity, and the Swift's *peci ~\n. cancer. 1t has cured soveral cases [ many substantial improvements made a under my own eyes, W3V, 3. 11 Caurmast, Cojumbun, Ga, | LVely demand for Omaha real estate, and every Investor has made s handsome Switt's Spesific lsentirely vegetable, and seoms to | profit, cure cancers by fo civg out the impuritivs f:om the Sinoe the Wall Street plfllfl H., blood. Treatiso on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed | with the subsequent cry of hard tlmu: freo. The Swift Syecific Co, Drawer 3, Atlauta, Ga, | there has besn(iau demaud from specula ot 160 W, 854 8%, Now York, tors, but a falr demand from investors A young man near thia on his face which had de- taking advantage of low prices In bulld. ing material and are securing thelr homes at much lesa cost than will be possible ® year hence. Speculators, too oan bup Quron! ASeapet: real evta’ » cheaper now and ought to take [Patabitanod 1651) ‘lvrflla.n guarantee given advant e of present prioes for future B Send wo ntaim s for CeIEbrated Medical W orke: Address, F. CLARKE, M. @., 166 Soutk pro ta. Clark Street, ChiicAGo, ILt. The next few years promises greaten NEBRASKA LAND AGENCY F. DAVIS & GO., fivs years, which have been as ge we oould reasonably desire. New man- [(Succrssors T0 Davis & SNYDER. GENERAL DEALERS IN ufacturing establishments and large job- bing houses are added almost weekly, all add to the prosperity of Omaha. 1605 FARNAM STREET, - - OMAHA, E There are many in Omaha and through- but the State, who have their money in the bauks drawing a nominal rate of In- tereat, which, If judiclously Invested In Omaha real estate, would bring them much greater returus. We have man bargalns which we are confident bring the purchaser large profita In the near future. ‘We have for sale the finest resi- Havo for gale 200,000 acres carefully scleoted lands In Fastern Nebrasts, at low price and on easy terms Tmproved farme for sale in Douxlas, Dodge, Colfax, Platre, Burt, Cuming, Sarpy, Washington, Morrick, Saunders, and Butler counties, Tax-s paid In all parts of the stata, Money loa. ed on tmproved ‘arms, Notary Public always in office. ~Correspondence solicited DOCTOR WHITTIER 617 St. Charles St., 8t. Louis, Mo. Ay papers show and 211 ola restaanic Smow; L2 01 Lo Nervous Prosration, Debility, Mentel and Physical Weakne: Mercurial and otner Atec. "lnflné of Throat, Skin or Bones, Blood Po ‘ AU Rcientite prineiplen: Ka able prices on Sherman avenue,17th, 18th, 19th and 20th streets. West on Farnam, Davenport, Cuming, and all the leading streets in that direction. The grading of Farnam, Califor- i i sopariieind | DiB and Davenport streets has made Arising from Indiscretion, Excess, Exposure or ladulgence, which produce some of the et e, L A it o et e 2 i accessible some of the finest and e cheapest residence property in the Tendorin Ermanently aurcd. e, 2 Vealed eovtiopo, f o0 city, and with the building of the ultion fice o by mail fre Wrlto for questions. A Positive Written Guarantee given o all cursble casen, Modiclnes aens every wher, Pamrvh'ets, Engli or German, 64 pages, de cribing above diuoases, in maie or fomaie, FRES MARRIAGE CUIDE'! 3511 bindln e i beck iuiaites ot Uealls. Senste street car line out Farnam, the pro perty m the western part of the eity will increase 1 value We also have the agency for the Syndicate and Stock Yards proper- ty in the south part of the city. The ! developiments made in this section { by the Stock Yards Company and | the railroads will certainly double the price in ashort time. Wil pariry the BLOOD,Tegir taty the LIVER an T KIDNEYS 1K FOU x‘f"‘m'“ We also have some fine business SUT! lotg and some elegant inside resi= dencer for sale, Parties wishing to mnvest will find stme gocd bargaims by calling 1 4 i St giddrens (o ha 1. Harter Med.Co (\l.l‘m’.u. Mo, for our "DIEAM BOOIL. Frilof strangs und areful 1{0rmataop. free. shewd and vigllant determination to giasp all oppor ' ivien off, red him, — PILES! PILES! PILKS! A SURE CURE FOUND AT LASTI NO ONE NEED BUFFER, A sure cure for Blind, Bleeding, Itching and Ulcerated Piles has been di-covered by Dr. Williams (an Indian Remedy,) called Dr. William's Indian Pilo Ointment A single box haa cured the worst chronic cases of 25 or 80 years standing, No one need suffer five minutes after up[}:l‘ymn this wonderful sooth- ing medicine, Lutions, instruments and elec- tuaries do more harm than good, Willlam's Indian Pile Ointment absorbs the tumcrs, al* lays the intense iwhinwyuflculnfly at night after gotting warm in bed,) acts as a peultfce, Slvu instant reliof, and is prepared only for iles, itching of the private parts, and for nothine else, TRead what the Hon, J, M. Ooffinbe.ry, of Oleveland, bout Dr, William's Indian Pile Oolutment: ‘I have used scores of Pile Oures, aud it affords me plaasure to say that I have never found anything which gave such immediate and anent relief as Dr, Wil- lism's Indian Ointment, For sale by all drug- fite pod mailed an recipt of price. 00 sad 1. Sold at retall by Kuhn & Co, 0. ¥. GoonMan, Wholesalo Agent, ——— The Sclentific American has an illus- tration of & toadstool received from a New York corretpondent, which hes a remsrksble rosemblince to the profile of the g cat Duke of Wellington as he ap- peared in later ycars, The shranken mouth aud lips and the priminent nose are strkiog'y reproduced, a— Chicago hss incressed the pumping ca- pacity of her oily water w. ks from 134 000,000 to 150,000 (0 gallons per day. e — There are more thau 7,700 Morse tele- graph instruments ia use in France, & DA, REAL ESTATE BROKERS. 213 South 14th 8, Bet veen Farnham and Douglas, fint | P.8.—We ask those who have i it Geii | property for sale at a bargain to give WUPPERMANN, BOLA 431 us a call- We want only bargains &1 BiiodDWATY. ¥ ¥ We will positively not handle prop By the we of@rty at morethan its real value. Hostetter's Stomaoch Y tters the ha; gard phe-ranco of the countenance andsal lowness of dyspep- tics are supplanted hier look the food | of heb d 4 substance Appetite I3 1estored, a0 the nervous sys tem rofrothed with much ne:dod slum ber, through the use £ o ' tris i edicine, w' ich is also n isl te person of & h ETOMACH rheumatio t-ndency !Rn g‘fl snd an inestigablo ¥ 2 R preventive of Yever i ue, For sal o Dr glote aod Dealers geperally. * o

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