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THE DAILY WEDNESBEE---DAY, MARCH 4, 1885, COUNCIL BLUFFS ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEWS, R “NEW DEAL” Deere & Company, Moline, lllinois TWO HORSES CAN DO THE WORK OF THREE, : TURNED WITH SAME POWER [ ; 24 inches FERETorone REQUIRED FOR I6inches ONE-THIRD THE COST OF PLOWING SAVED. CLOSING DAYS. The 014 Conneil Gives toe Democralic Organ $1,400 of Printing, Misgcellancons Busincss, A meetlng of the olty counocll was held Inst evening. Bills were allowed and the minutes approved with a hop, skip and a jump, up to date, 8o a8 to make ready for the new eounoil, The committee on streots and alleys recommended sundry improvements of a minor nature, Coucurred in, Property owners petltioned that McPherson strect be vacated, except 240 fdot on Vaughan avenue. Referred. Mirshal Guanella’s appolntment of E R. Bates and George Guanella as jallors waa referred to police committee. 8. L. Payne asked the council for 3,000 for damages from a fall on Gray street laat September, Referred, City clerk reported receipts of his office for February as 8720, The bond of A, W, Street, as treasurer of the public library, for 5,000 was ap- proved,r Ald. James exprested his opinion that there should be no treasurer for the I brarg, but that all bills of the library should ehould be presented to the council and thusallowed, This matter was, on motion, referred to the clty attorney. The bllls of Wolverine & Kline and of James Goulden for filling iutersections were allowed at 25 cents a yard, while the filling of slreets was charged up to abutting property at 35 cents a yard. Ald. Keatley offcred a resolutlon that the city enter into a contract with Col. Koatley and the Globa to prepare and print the city ordinances for $500, and for printing $1.50 a page. It wes eatim- ated that tne ordinances would not am- ount to over 600 pages. Carried. The city englneer reported that the strects proposed to be paved this yosr should not be paved until sewerage was laid, and gas and water connections made The supervieor was Instructed that ®hon he used dirt that he take it from stroeta cast of Maln esreet instead of hauling from the bluffs, and also to clean the paved streets, using this dirt to fill holes. A brick sidowalk was ordered on both sldes of Eighth street from Broadway south to the alley. An ordinance was passed authorizing the issue of §6,000 siwer Intersection bonds. The treasurar's report shows a total cash balance on hand of £8,321. The police fund had about $300 in it, and the genersl fund was overdrawn for about the same amount. The council then adjourned Saturday eveniugat 7 « THE GREATEST PLOW IMPROVEMENT OF THE TIMES, THE “*NEW DEAL” WHEELED WALKING PLOWS SINGLI AND DOUBLE FURROW, EAL " s lighter in draft and more easily handled than a hand plow, and cats a urrow 1w lighter in draft, lighter in weight, and lighter in price than its work " Ga nts 24 inches with the draft of a 16 inch hand plow — a #a t. in Iabor. Doca nll the work of a four-horse riding with one lss hors re than half th L. DEAL™ Plows are ALL STEEL, insuring greatest strength with lightest weight. his 18 no untricd and rickety experiment, and these claims_arc not made recklessly to attract n. The sysiem is the outgrowth of careful obsery and experiment reaching over a period , with a ratlonal view of the requirements of the SUPERIOR TO ANY PLOW plows ever placed in the market. sulky plow, of 50 per and little S EVER OFFERED, and the most Call aud examino them. Deere, Wells & Co., Western Agents, COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. THE A. L. STRANG COMPANY, Double and Single Acting Fower and Hand PUMPD, STEAM PUMPY Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fittings at wholesale or reteil. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHULCE AND BOHOOL BELLS, Oorner 10th and Farnam 8t.. Omaha Neh. THE CHEAPEST PLACE IN OMAEA TOBUY Foll=ReN: [T l=h=t Is AT DEWEY & STONES' One of the Best and Largest 8tocks in the United States to 8elect From. NO STAIRS TO CLIMB. . ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOk MAXMEYER & BRO Are now offerine PIANOS ORGANS FACTORY PRICES. The greatest bargains ever seen in Omaha 200 ORGANS!! 100 PIANOS! FOR CASH OR ON INSTALLMENTS Also great reductions in Diamonds, Jew= elrv. Clocks and Silverware. until Real Estate Transters. The following is a list of real estate transfers filed yeaterday in the recorder’s office of Pottawattomie county, Iowa, as turnished by A. J. Stephenson, abatrac- tor, real estate and loan agent, Council Bluffs, Iowa, March 3, 1885, Emma Lovell to R. M, Foote, part nw} 25, 77, 42, $1,733.66, Sheriff to John Parkhlll, se} 11, 75, 41, $4,222 11, George Bruhn et al to Frank Frohrer, e}, nwi and part sw}, sw) and wi, nw} and se}, nw} 16, 74, 41, $6,000. Gaorge Drake to Joseph Cusworth, w} oc} and part ed, ne} 31, 77, 43, £3,500. J. H. Henry to E. H. Anderson, e}, se} 27, 77, 38, $2,800. J.E Cralgctal to L. E, Mitchell. s} ne}, 18, 74, 40, $2,400, = Clara Leman et al to J. C. Blackaby, so} and e4, swi 7, 76, 38, $2,400. acedonla Bank to A. S. Avery, lots 7 and 8, block B, Carson, §2,000. H. Everet to Samuel Benton, sw}, swi, nel, 12, 76, 42, $250. Danfel McDermott to Fred Meirotto, part wi, ned, 8, 74, 42, §1,200. Forrest Smith to Geo W. Eckhart, lot 14, blook 28, Beow sub,, $250 J. M. Palmar to A. T. Eiweli, lot 10, block 20 Bayliss & Palmer's add. $100, C. R. L. & P. R. R. Co. to Cornelius Lynch, nw}, 16, 76, 41, $1,352 50. T. 1. Clark to L. B. Carter, part se], sw}, 27, 74, 40, 8250, H. D. Benton so E. H. Benton et al, se}, sw} and ne}, sw} and nw}, sw}, and o1, nw}, 14, 74; 43, 86,000, 208,93, b O T Officer Jack Cusick has been laid off duly for Indulging too frecly in election stimulant, This leavesonly three police- men to to guard the citv at night, A WOMAN HERMIT, She Leads a Crusoe Life Among the Sage Deserts of Nevada., Eureka (Nev.) Sentinel- 1 was never more surpriced in my life than I was some three weeks,” said Joe Donovan, a sheep herder of Ruby Valley, in Nende's saloon yesterday afternoon, *I had driven my band of sheep along the stde of a range of low mountains bor- dering the western part of the valley, in orderto keep them odt of the deepsnow in the lowlands, and when I got neara cer- tain gulsh which I did notremember ever having noticed before, 1 saw one of the moat hideous objects of humanity it has ever been my lot to see, It proved to ke an old woman with oviralls and a man's coat and hat on, Underneath the coat was what had been a skirt, but nearly all of it had been torn off by the sagebrush and gressewood. The hair on the back of her bead was tied up, I notlced after- ward, with a plece of baling rope, while that on the fore part of bher head fell loosely abont her face. The way 1 hap- pened to spy her was by roms of the sheep which lad the band darting to one eide suddenly ard running as though they had seen a wild be. Not knowing what it could be, I sparred up my bron cho, and with a eix shooter, in hand, ap- proached the frighiful object, 1 don't know wkich of us was the moit startled, b L The most extenslve manufactarers Utah, 1daho, Nevada, roia it offers superior other line, s points of superlor road batween { thi tngenuity can eroate; It ¥ which are models of LOR DRAWING ROO d elegas ARS, unsurpasecd by any sud its widely celebrated PALATIAL DINING CAKS the cqual of whiih cannot be found elsawhere. and Meerschaum Goods in Omaha. ticles. THE 01D RELIABLE and Chicaeo. |Billiard & Pool Tables EUROPE. MAX MEYER & CO. ‘Wholesale dealers in Guns, Ammunition, e CHICAGO ane THE BRUNSWICK, BALKE, COL- RAILWAY. Omaha The only importers of Havana Cisars, Sporting Goods, Notions and Smokers’ Ar- LENDER COMPANY, THE BEST ROUTE AND Council Bluffs r Dedar Baplds, Clinton, Dixle, Obloago, MUl | oun Hockstrassor Genorsl Agent or Nebraska aa Drask: lot Oregon, Washington and * aren tation Billlard and Poo | Tablosand materls May, Juge and July by first class + oll Bluft, ol he Ui k 1o April, 0 By, boneeh 16 Dator Dert pich thome 11 toe oIk vipuar| BBt T actuslly thought it was the de 0% Northwestorn Ry In Chicago the traing of thir | N UEIAY § for INDIVIDUAL | She is at least 60 years of age, and® she ne make close connection with those of all easters | {PHAVELER looked like a veritable witch. I finslly Lines. For Detrolt, spoka to her and ssked her who she was. N Aboat the only reply she made was of pipping scund, = I then asked her where she lived, and she poioted up the ravine. 1 was determined to find out wore about her, and she finally offered to show me her habitation. But the would every now aud then ask for sslt, Not. withstanding I would tell her I had none, she would repeat the request. She ap- peared almost crezy for eome, Finally I w where she lived, 1t way & tonoel ms 40 feet long and in 1t existed hali a 06 b d o © with waps, containg Bl Ve aborte, CIoRAt | tull parsicalars; by wmai for 10 centa Boston, New York, Philadelphis, Baldmire, Wash. )5 COOK & SON, 61 Broadway, N. Y. ington and all polits {u the East, ask the ticket c ko, Lls, sgeat for tlckels via the NOBTH WESTERY, * 1 vou wian tho hest accommodations ) All ”tlcket agonts sell tickets via this line, M. HUGHITT. Geaorsl Masager, oL HAIR, ox. Fass. Ageat. CHICAGO. ~ ity, all wonknoss ofg enerative systewm #1.Ux wall. J, HoWarner, 2007 State 5t..C dozen goate, & fow chlokens and a broken down shecp or two, st she lived on, God only knows, tor I eould not tos any thing eatable, except a few drisd-up pota- toes and what looked to be a pleco of drled geat. At first the woman talked with conslderable difficalty, but finslly I learned that the former owner of the tunnel had been her husband, and that he had been dead for five years, The old woman had lived with him while ne had run his tunnel, which had protably been a good proepect, and when death came to him she buried him on the hillside near by, snd he, doub'less was the last white man she had talked to. She sald that the Indlans hrd been gocd to her, and wounld sometimes shoot a rabbit, a eago- hen or a coyote for her. 1 tried to get her full name, but all she would tell melt was Henders She said, too, that she and her husband had come from Ut.h hearly twelve years ago. The next day 1 gave the old dame what provisions I could spare, and told her I would proba- THE FAT WOMAN'S CHOICE, Woord and Won by the Madagascar, CHAS. SHIVERICK, FURNITURE UPHOLSTERY AND DRAPERIES, Passenger Elevator to all floors, 1% OMAHA, N Gilant from New York Times, A marriaze of ungsual dimenslons was the tender chject ot pepalar curlority in the Dime wmutcum, No. 210 Bowory, yesterday afternoon, where the Rav. A, 0. Morehouse united Miss Maud Pettitt, of County Tyrone, Ireland, to Charles Price of Madagascar. Invitations to the ceremony were scattered broadoast through the Bowery and adjacant thor- oughfares, and each of the several hun. dred wedding gucsts deposited a dime with the cashler as a guaranteo of good faith when he entered the museum. Tho reason for the unusual interost manifested In these nuptials lay in tk fact that both the kride sand groom are remarkable people. The lady 1s not un konown to fame, having starred with P. 208 and 1210 Farnam Streot, RASKA, ¥ bly do more for her. I told her I would report her to the authorities, but the mumbled and intimated that she would never leave the tunnel. Whether she re- gards it as a valuable plece of miniong property or whether she is insane on the life she is lesding, I can't say. 1 am In- clined to believe she hias money burled somewhere near the tunnel. She spoke of being in Elko snd Winnemuoea, but how long ago I did not learn, I am go- ing out that way again In the course of a couple or three weeks, and 1 will then learn more about her’’ ———— President Arthur's Fature, New York, March 2. —After the inau- guration of Claveland a temporary retire- ment to Fortross Monros will be made by Chester A, Arthur, This will be done for the benefit of his health, which s dobilitated by dyspapsia, due to mental anxlety. This assertion is made on the word of Pollce Comm'ssicner French, who has just returned from a viit to Washington, where hls Javghter has been spending a month with tne presi- dent's family. ““At no time in the four years which he has almost served,” says Mr, French, ‘‘has has beer so annoyed and badgerad by office-seekers fromevery part of the union a8 within the last month. They {mpor- tuned him In droves daily to give jobs to them before his succeesor came into pow- er. This constant onslavght, at times of the most influential character imaginable, has tited him out, broken him down com- pletely, and pnt him in such a condition that abeoluta rest is essential. He will stay at Fortrers Monroe untll he feels somewhat restored, and then will proba- bly go on a long crulse south in asalling yacht. After that, when summer shall have come, he will spend & month or two at the watering places. He will not re- turn to his Lexington avenue residence, in thla city, until fall. If at any time he has regained his old-fashloned vigor he wil re- sume the practice of law. He will, not, however, resume his former place in partnership with Kuevals & Ransom, but will work by himself. Bejond this conclusion, he hasmade no pnsitive plans for the future. His physicians and in- timate friends have advised him to live quletly for at least six months, and es- peclally to avoid excltement or annoyance of any kind. He has saved but little from his ealary as prosident, and I don’t believe he has more than $75,000 to his name to-day.” Mr. Franch’s soclal and political intimacy with Mr. Arthur makes this statoment credibloabove all « | to 4o on the stage the different reports that have gone out 2s to his intentions. ———— PILES! PILES! PILKS! A SURE CURE FOUND AT vLAST! NO ONE NEED SUFFER, A sure cure for Blind, Bleeding, Itching and Ulcerated Piles has been discovered by Dr. ‘Williams Sln Indian Remedy,) cnlla{ Dr. William's Indian Pile Ointment. A single box has cured the worst chronic cases of 25 or 380 years standing. No one need suffer five minutes after applying this wonderful sooth- ing medicine, Lotions, instruments and elec- tuaries do more harm than good, William’s Indian Pile Ointment absorbs the tumcrs, al- laya the intenso itohing, (particularly at night after getting warm in bed,) acts s o poultice, gm instant relief, and i3 prepared only for iles, itching of the private parts, and for nothine else, Read what the Hon, J. M. Ooffinbe.ry, o Cleveland, says about Dr, William's Indian Pile Oointment: *‘I have used scores of Pile Cures, and it affords me pleasure to say that T have never found anything which gave such immediate and permanent relief as Dr. Wil- liam’s Indian Ointment, For sale by all drug- sts and mailed on receipt of price, 50c and . Bold at retail by Kuhn & Co, ©. F. GoopMAN, Wholesale Agent, - —— The Instinet Strong in Death, Napa (Cal.) Reporter. A few days ago Mr. Steve Jones of Capelle Valley, in this country taok his r.fle and started out over his sheep ringe in quest of wildcats and coyotes, which have become unusually numerous &nd troublesome of late. While proceeding over the bills he suddenly came upon a Jarge lynx that had just pounced upon a young lamb and had set its teeth into the lamb's shoulder. Mr. Jones raised his zan and fired, bat as the Jynx did not re- linquish his hold he surmleed that he hid mlseed his aim, and fired again, with the same resnit However, a third shot was fired and thistore off a large portion of the varmint's skull, scattering the brains in all directicn, The lamb and the dead Iynx rolled down the hill together, and when Mr., Jones went up to them he found the jaws of the lynx still firmly set in the flesh of the lamb, ~ What still further aetonished him was the fact that an examination showed that all tbree of the shots had taken e having gone clean through and through the body of the Jynx. The animal was without doubt a game one, and did not allow trifles lke rifls balls to cause him to let go his hold on his prey. et—— Mary Anderson's Age, The vexed questlon of Mary Ander- son’s age seems to have been definitely settled, In the office of the clerk of the olrcuit court at Loalsville a reporter of the Qourler-Journal was recently shown the officlal record In the case of the adoption of Mary Anderscn—or her step- father, Dr. Hamilton Griffin, who in the character cf her agent has unconsciously fornished much amusement to two con- tinents. The papers are dated December, 13, 1875, and described the ‘‘Infant’ to be adopted as 10 years of sge. They alto prudently provide that she sball be the heir-at-law of the sa'd Hamilton Griflin, The explanation of the proceeding is that Miss Anderson was at the time preparing aod Dr. Griftin hsd expended all his means, and even mort- gaged what llttle property he had, in cr der to provide her with a wardrobe. Her mother was not in good health, and im- agloed that she was about to die. In that case her broiher, a Catholic priest, who was much opposed to the daughter's going on the stage, would have become ber guardian, It was to prevent this that it was declded to baye Dr, Griffia adopt the g'rl. T'his document would make the lovely Mary “‘rlsing” 25 years of age. Huron's Cardif giant onst for ohaBge of climatefand repmios " *¢” I. Barnum as leading fat woman, acd reglsterivg yesterday 496 pounds on a hay acale. As an artistehe ranks at the head of her line in the profe:sion. her talent for obesity fairly mounting to the sun-bathed height of geni The gen- tleman s no less dlstinguished, po ing, as he does, the dual attractions of being at the ssme time a glane and an albino. He stanés 8 feet and 4 inches on a dry goods box, and o'ten 1'ghts hls cigar without effort at a street lamp, He combs his lovely hair a la Pompadour, so that it stands on end like a fractared halo, and glimmers like a tin roof on a moonlight night. Mr. Price is about 050 years of age, and his handeome Eastlake features are marred by a siogle defect, his left eye having saffered a total eclipse, leaving his right single to the charms of the voluptuous Mies Pottitt. Miss Pettitt, though a maidin of 42 har winters and a late tpring, has been deaf to all wocers until she met and loved Mr. Price. He, on the other hand, has been warried, but s'x years ago his wife eloped with a fat boy, and the sympatheti courts granted him an absolute divorc and gave him the custody of his children. His daughter is at present earning fame as a suake charmer in a Balumore muszum. The couple first met in the musenm where they are at present pr tleing their respective professions, and the giant wooed and won his bride under the same roof. The delicato taste of the couple led them to decids that the wedding ce mony should take placo upon the stage of the museum, and there it was conso quently performed at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon. All of the east side popula- tlon that could gat into the auditoriom was presont. At the appointed time G Ul pqesy THE LEADING CARRIAGE FRCTORY 1409 and 1411.Dodee St. Mnsmiaion -} Omaha Nee TRY YOUR. LUCK! And Don’t Lose This Chance. For this YTear Onlv. The best opportunity ever offcred to try your luck in these hard timies. In order to the public in general b WL vt biite LR KR VaB O money, to par ticlpate 11w oAl Germab Mone Lottery, guaranteed and sanctioned by the German govern- ment, we offer five whole orignal tickets which we have made into 16 difforent numbers of the Hamburg Lotiery, in club plays and sell eamo for the small smn of £ as long s we have some on hand. The:e ticketa are good for the last three principal drawings which com- 35, and terminate on Mu\{ 13, 1685 i tory has been 3 has one hundred thou hich is over one half the actual amount of tickets the drawings, the Original Liste, also the smount of the prize if wo 6 different numbere, that every ticket holder, on receipt of the satisfied with the result, The capital prices ara 0.000, 50,000, 000 70,000, 50,000, cte.. the smallost | t 15 of oives, Wo hope, ns we ning lists, 200,100, 100,000, and tickets will o forward at one Brunswick and Saxon, conetautly on hand, D e 2 T R T o Malt Whiskey. Abrolutely Pure and Unadulterated. Entirely Freo from FUSIL OIL, the tall form of the glant was : T S I seen towering aloft and bearing vou know what it st Ask your Physician ¢own upon the stage, the blushing bride gist and he will tell you'that 'r'l.s A !LEAN.Y PNO S tion, Bron: Wastin clinging coyly to his arm. The reason o M they entered from the front of the house waa that the gir h of the bride prevented e orstd’ by over 3,500 TONKC in'Typhoid i 3 o % Dinrrhaa, and all low forms of Discasc. ~ THE RECOG er Ingcess by the stage door. A stout s ANTIDOTE FOR CHOLERA . == palr of ateps was produced, and the lady :: rwfe are umdm:ly concern in ”‘f Ulni:«}] s‘;‘:l.-« “;;n are ‘h‘nlll k.."" s:qunglrlnlnn . ofessi ) Ly hsol ely ro Ma Vi y. one tha S jrea bauted and shoved over tho foof- | e KUSTLL OXL, Audchasis not ony fon S %he et fauies 6 ights, followed by the glant and the Rev. | %% Sountry- bot als i the "phs Mr. Moorehouse. A moment later a X3 R. ARENDT, the floral towel rack was handed up and |%eof your PURE MALT W 2 iod mostly by cxtract n *e Malt Whiskey, i ‘f“l'ifid a nawtbnau"y :)0 the llflfl'w- “;0 % fermentation and distillation, is entirel e from fusil oil atal moment arrived, and the couple o3¢ similarly obnowious alcohols which are so ofien Jound in_whi stocd eide by side before the minister, | $ef COMMEND IT TO THE MEDICAL PROFESSION. the expression of the groom’s counta: ekey: TEROW 1 o bo wholcsome, nance glving rise to the inference that he was standivg upon a carpe’ tack, though it was explsined afterward that the an- gulsh depicted upon his features was o ! *otete’s’ X0 ¢|lotte, and a large threng watched her the first two P due to his appractation of the gravity of his sltuation, The lovely Mra. St. George Huseav. attired in the costume of an Irleh emigrant, in which she had just appeared on the stage, gavo the bride away, and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Wilson tock the parts respectively of the best man and bride's mald, each holding a boquet of rcses, and Mr. Wilson sufferlng badly from lla has boon prepared especisl stage fright. Everything went off har- E“"bfi.flr M‘Kfl'}.‘ l% 2 HttieRLellen moniously, and the only fault that the | Ss Allapiispren: ailonpia) lx'-i( taken f ot T Soneplouously peom: most captious critic might have found | st hmy bonin Mo il and o 16 rosy I, was that the bride had neglected to | $e; the drooping spirits re n]l’lhulu‘\llxt'lvfi'l £ tho be uig then the have before the ceremony. There was ra stronger and ket D batore.. Tn other wond, gasyeive Y cher blood than they had been before. In other words, y enthusiaetic applanse when Mr. Prici rbon than the disease can exhaust, thereby giving nature the up; kissed the new Mrs. Price, who was attired in pink silk en traln, cut decol- IN FACT, IT IS A BEVERAGE AND ME T0 CONSUMPTIVES, & ¥t o WE WILL on r la INE COMBI ith HEMOR K "a*4%4 %% % %% States (I%ast o cane (thus avoidin PUR O & . . 's! press Charges prepaid a containing SIX Quart bot iting. and under the Seal MLPTION and oth ! OO WAS' L+ rmula has been prepared especially for usby the great( Ofl ek slizht,_gxpe) b o) h R e ., weeks fill up and assume iof a 5 suppl jand in the contli in the United States (East of the Rocky Mou charges prepaid on receipt of BL.RG o C0. > Quart Bottles sens. to any add rely packed in plain case, Lxpre MALT WHISKEY ascend the stairs, afterward takiog her place next to to the tartle boy in the exhibition rcom. The happy couple made a bridal tour to Harlem in a streat car later in the evening, B S — GERMAN D. WYATT. Lumber Merchant Cumings and 20th Sts., Oinaha, Neb. EFREID. W. GriiR.Ae . (SUCCESSUR TO FOSTER & GRAY), LOUMVMIIBER, LIME AND CEMENT RUEMPING & BOLTE, The Congo River, Boston Journa! Stanley eays the length of the Congo rlver is 2,100 milee, and that the Miseiss- ippi and the Nile together would scarcely equal its tribute of water to the ocean From the mouth of the rlver a steamer drawing 15 feet can steam up 110 miles, at which point a land journay of 52 miles 1s taken on account of the rapids. Then another steaming or rowing voyagze oceurs, which s succeeded by a land journey of 95 miles, Afior that it is pos- sible to steam up another 1,060 mlles. Along this route thirteen stations have been constructed emong peaceful tribes, The banks and people upon them are now well known, The river marges show wide belts of foraste, in the of which clasters of villages li while close at hand are ticlds with a profuse abundance on thelr ~MANUFAOTURERS 0¥ — surface, and stores of mineral wealth, it is believed, within their bosoms, There are spacious lakesalso; In fact, a known area of lake waters, in additlon to lake ‘anganika, of 30,000 equare miles in exient,which will probably beincressed to d of 40,000 after more definite ex- ploration, &c. T, Irom and Bls Falals, Wisdow Oape, Iron Orestings, Motallic Bky-Hghts, v/ 310 Boukd 154b 8i Omabs Nobrosk Orange Blossom Flour WHOLESALE BY L A STEWART & CO, 1013 Jones Btieat } ascvorx-oross. | OMAHA NEB Richards & Clarke Harte did not propose to deposit his work M” chuner ty &b astin ,Q s indefinttelyon a sholf nWallack’s theatro | I ONZ(Re T2 M Neb. and laristed upon an sgraoment to s it . on the stage some time this season, in Q—W%___D AUTOMATIC ENGINES, lien of which €1,000 should be pald Wallack signed such & contract. si- n]eu;u be\en precarfous all w;nter rhh BRUSH MACHINES ELEVATOR CUPS, the New York thea'res, and nowhere | §§ c 2 PPy eI XTI W | SL/0L VALVE ENGINES, — SmuT MACHINES, ELEVATOR BOLTS, n,l:lugsl of policy have at length deferred | RdRLL LI/ 2N SEPARATORS, ARCHITEC TURAL WORK. the production of *‘Gabrlelle” beycnd the | RISV M7 T7IRN d stipulated tlme. Therefore the forfelt b lp”” SHELLERS. BNIAGF: (RQN, has been pald; but Harte would grestly | RELLRCIZITIEN CORN CLEANERS, WROUGHT & CAST IRON, STEAM PUMPS, BOLTING CLOTH, REPAIRS OF ALL KINDS, ENGINE GOVERNORS, CENTRIFUGAL REELS, BRASS CASTINGS, WATER-WHEEL GOV'NORS SCALPING REELS, SASH WEIGHTS, HEATERS AND FILTERS, LEATHER & RUB'R BELT'G WELL AUGERS, ROLLER MILLS, o — A Oheck for Bret Thers were malled on Saturday from New York to Francls Bret Harte a draft for 1,000 which he will be displeased to get, notwithstanding his chronically straiteved finances, He 1s the United States cansul at Glasgow, but expects to 'oose the office soon after the change in our presidential adminlstration. Antlol. patiog a return ‘o the United Sfates, he underwook to do eo as the playwright, and to that end devoted several arduous months to the authorship of a drama which he named ‘““Gabrielle,” and seat to Lestar Wal'a k, who accepted it. Bat Harte, chance of becoming a popular and well remunerated writer for the stage. o *I have n petite,” complains many ufferer. Hood's aparilla gives an sppetite and enables the atomsch to per- form its duty. prefer the promised royalty of $26 fer each rapresentation of the piece, with the BRICK YARD CASTINGS, " SHAFTING ‘PULLEYS HANSERS & BOXES