Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 15, 1885, Page 7

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¥ Wlo b fuferme IMPOTENT and EN of all ages, and vitality, nerye early_habiis or SCURE, NO MYRTLEAIN Athome without o | | RENTAMER, | 1ifo and the love and respect of u faith DT tor Retore marriage. " Eroota, testim yAddre YOUNC MEN ! o trified o n terrible \Married Men, or those who intend to marry, The Glimax Medic 1r youthful vigor and pow who are UAING And 1, O B8 S 4 who are wenks Fmarriage. who find their POWER aud SEXVAL ST GTH = weakened, by CESSES, o o and Insting TREATMENT exposure, I L urt nory, suhier symploms mptly removed b 1 strenzth means, health, yigorous W eak menshould be restored 10 Vi luable freatise 0N flm.- will find the RICHMOND STRAICHT €U SUPERIOR th all others, They ars mado feom b most delicately flavo MRATION OF drigh. 3 Cut No. | 1,and highost cost oid lsaf grown in Virg the Genuine French Rice Papor which is made especlally for us, water markod with the name of the oranl, are abolat; tour owa Richmond straight w ench Olgarette, without which noao are genvine. or box of Richmond Straight Cut rette smokers are cautioned thet this is the ol and original brand, and $0 obscrve tnat each Imitations of this brand havo hesn put on sale Cigarettos bears the signature of Manufacturers, a.OAPITAL PRIZE, 875,000, THCKETS ONLY $5, SHARES IN PROPORTION Louisiana State Lottery Company ““We do hereby certify that we supervise the ar rangements for all the Monthly and Semi-Annua Drawings of the Lowisiana State Lottery Company and in person manage and control the Drawings themselvis, and that the same are conducted with dirness and in good faith toward all par- e authorize the company to use this cer- with fac-rimiles of vy signatures attached COMMISSIONERS. Inoorparated In 1683 for 95 years by the leglslature for edu~ational and chariiahle purposes—with a capital of $1,000,0 (0~ which a reserve fundof over 8560 000 Lias sluce been addod., By ar overwhelming popular voto its franchise waa made & part of the present state constitution adopted Docembor 24. A. D, 1870, o only lottery orer votod on and endorsed by the peoploof any state 1t never soales or posty ones. Ita grand eingle number drawings take place monthly. % A BFLENDID OPFORTUNITY 70 WIX A FORTONK, Firmii GRAND DRAWING, CLAKS K. IN TR ACADEMY 0¥ MUSIO, NEW ORLRANI TumspAy, May 12, 1885, 1R0th MONTIILX DRAWING. CAPITAL PRIZE, $75,000 100,000 Tickets at 85 each, Fractions, in Fifths, in proportion, LIST OF PRUES, 1 Capital Prize. 1 do do 10 Prizoaot 20 Prizes)! 100 Prizes of 800 Prizes of 500 Prizos of 1000 Prizes of 9 Approximation Prizes of # ° do a 9 do do 967 Prizes, amounting to . Application for rates to clubs shovld bo madeoly to thootficw of ths Company i New Orleans. For futher information write clearly giving fu addrese. POSTAL NOTES, Exproes Monoy New York Fxchange 1o’ ordinary lottor, Corrency by Kxpress (il s of 95 and upwards ab our oz o) addressed, Lo M. A, DAUPHIN, Or M. A. DAUPHIN, Now Orleans, La. 607 Seventh St., Washingten I Make P 0. Moner Orders payable and address Registered Lotters to W ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK New Orle: IOWA IN PIECES, Keokuk is threatened with the base ball fever. A $7,000 echool building is going up at Pieasantville. A 87,000 echool is" rising on a hilltop at Anamosa. The Cedar Raplds woolen mills are again running. The Boons barb wirs works aro crowd- ed with orders. The Barlington is geindlog out mer- chantable iron. There are 6,000 dispensors of minor justlce in the state. Navigation on the Mieslssippl will have its formal opening May 1st. The Southwestern Dairymen’s associa- tion will meet at Villisca May 13, Two hundred Polish immigrants have recently settlad in Audubon county. The millers of Davenport have added fonr cents per eack to the price of flour. The new soldiors’ monument at Hum- boldt will be dedicated on Memorlal day. Tho saloons of Brooklyn are olosed and the polico find theic occupatlon gone, . Belle Plaine basa little lady twenty years old and bat thirty-six inches in height. The Muscatine military company will attend the Mobile interatate military encampment in May. The Traer opera house, with a s:ating capacity of 800, has been comploted at an expenze of £6,000. Prohibition Injunctlons are nailing up the doora of hundreds of siloons in dif- ferent parts of tho state, A seed and {ree company, withan al- 0% | loged capital of half a million, has bsen organized in Sloux City. Tho Towa commieston at New Orleans calls loudly for more funds. The Creoles aro getting in theic work. Tho plow sactory of Tattle, Noff & Co, at Burliogton, has passed into the hands ot a recetver. Dall trade. Fifteen ealoonkeepers at Marion re- plenished the treasury of the disirict court with $15,000 recently. The twenticth annual conventlon of the Iowa Sunday School asgociation will be held at Newton, Jasper county, June 16.18. Davenport_bas subscribed $2,000 to- ward defraying the expenses of the state JOHN NAGLE, HASTINGS & NAGEL, Wholesale Produce, And Commission. No. 368 Holladay St, DENVER, COL So.icit Consignments and guar- antee quick sales and proxpt re- turns. Give usa tria, References—Bradstreet’s or Duns Agencies; and German National Bank. Denver. HICAGO, Milwatkee & S Paul RATIL WAY. THE SHORT LIN And BEST ROUTE. FROM OMAHA TO THE EAST. TWO TRAINS DAILY BETWEEN OMAHA AND Chicago, Minneapolis, Milwaukeo, St. Paul, Cedar Kapids, Davenport, Clinton, Dubuque, Rockford, Rock Island, Kreeport Junesvillo, Clgin, Madison, * La Crosse, Beloit, Winona, And all other Important points East, North- oast and Southeast. Ticket office at 1401 Farnam street (in Paxton Ho tel). and at Union Paciflc Depot. d tbe Finest Dining Cars in un on tnomaln lines of of the compaDy. A. V. H. CARPENTER, General Manager, Gen'l Passenger Agent. R. MILLER, GEO. F, HEAFFORD, Ase't Gen'l Manager. - Ass't Gen'l Pass Agent. J. T, CLARK, Gen'l Buperintondeat. Ridge's Food willfind the 81.76 the 'M"b -a«num;;'ml #ize to Y. ruggvals WM should keep it, ot [ 0w cannut 'procuts this size of your Drug. yist send the amount with full address to " Woolrich & Co., Pal- mer, Mass., and they orward @ san, e St. Charles Hotel. O STKEET, BET 7th and 8th, - - LINCOLN, NEP, Mre. Kate Coakly, Proprietorese, A9 Nowly and elogantly furalshed, Good sample ¥o0ms on first floor, 47 Torws 91,60 40 82 per day, Bpecial rates eiven members of the I-M:‘urp: b BOV10-1m e E. 8. ATWOOD, Plattsmounth, « - . Nebrasks AD¥E OF ¥40ROUHEARD w HEREFORD” IND JERSEYRATIL: fireman’s tourasment to be held there June 9th, The Grinnell barb wirs factory ls ruu- ning eightsen machines night and day, and shipping two to three carloads of wire per day. The late Frank Robinson, of Dubuque, died intestate, leaving a fortune of $250,- 000 to bo divided among his wifc and three children, Hon, M. V, Gannon, of Davenport, waa serlous]y injured in' a rallway smash. up on the Milwaukee road ncar DeWitt on Tuesday night, A Des Molnes woather manufacturer clatms that it has snowed in Iowa every 8th day of April for twenty years, with only three excoptlons, TheDes Moines jail birds who at- tempted to burn their way ot were put on adiet of bread and water for eight daye, The effect was soothing. The uneasy masses of rock ollnging to the faco of Dubuque's overbanging bluffs bave loosened by the heaving frost, and are tumbling and erashing iato the straeta, Mrs. Hampson s about to bogin a series of rovival meotings in Cedar Rapids. She is described as *‘a noted Eoglish evangelist wonderfully blessed of God.” Silary not stated. Prof, Parvin, of Cedsr Rapids, degree Mason, advertlses J. G. Baker, o New York, sud H, M. Yoaston, of Min- neapolis, as organizers of fraudulent and spurlous lodges of Masonry. J. W. Dudley, the abscondlng Cedar R-gdn express agent, has been captured In New York and taken to Chicago, Dudley’s troubles arose from a delusion he hugged that he could gamble, Tim Flemmiogs, a 15-year-old Oska looea youth, ruptured himself while try- {og to gather a handkerchlef from the rink floor with his teeth. He was gathered to his fathers next morning. Messrs. J. F. and Kd.” Charles, iongv tlme citizens of Cedar Raplds, have pur- chased several hundred acres of land in Florids, including an orange grove of sixly-three acres, and will make that semi-tropical clime thelr futare home. John Watson, & boller maker of Clin- ton, went to Oedar Radids a few days sgo where, notwithstanding the sfrrocco of grohlbmun winds prevai ing in that town, .J;ut glorlously drank, and was run in and fined & substantisl $50 and costs, Scott Bagley, » young traveling man of expensive habits, and in the employ of a Cedar Rapids firm up to January last, has been arrested for embezzelment. The shortage was discovered after the young man's decharge, and amonnted to $200. On a three days' acqusiatance Belle lkerman, of Eldora, married Edward Ellis, a steolllog juggler, After five weeks of marrled lifo Bello came In con- tact with another womsn who outranked by date of commission Belle's title as wife by two or three years. Ellis pawned Belle’s clothes and skipped, leaving mo:;f ltnnTeu in a penoiless, half- asked condition, to make her sorrowful way back to her parents, THE DAILY BEE---WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 1885. THE TEXAS COWBOY. His Life on the Drive, in the Camp and at toe Roned-np, Stirring Scenes at a Stamperde—Men ‘Who Daily Risk Their Lives - How Accidents Occur. Pittsburg Dispatch, “Do I know the cowboys? Young map, 1 think When you bave worked with them, camped with them, lived with them and been among them for yearson the drlve, and on and off daty, you might eay you know them.” The speaker was Honry Exall, a Texas cattleman, who had been apending sev- eral days in tho olty at the Ssventh Avenue hotel, “The Texas cowboy,” he continued, “Yis the most thoroughly misunderstood man outside of the localities whore he is known, on the face of the earth. I know him in all his slleged terrors, and a8 a class there are no nobler-hearted or honorable men in the world. Brave to rathness and generous to a fault, if yeun should be thrown among them you would find them ever ready to share their last crust with you, or lio down at night with you on the tame blanket. “Why, young man”, soe here, and the Texas man twitched his chair around un- til he could put his feet upon a_window sill. “‘Say that I have 10,000 cattle which I am about to eend overland from Texas into Montana to fatten for the market. Those cattle will be on the drive from the first of April until the middle of September. They are divided Into three herds, with a dozen or six- teen men to each herd. 1 entrust those cattle in the hands of a gang of cowboys. For six months I know absolutely noth- ing of my stock. I trust their honetty to the extent of many thousands of dollars without a oontract, without a bond, with 10 earthly hold upon them, legally or morally beyond the fact that I am paying them $35 or $40 a month to protect my interests. And there are the men plc— ture in the east as outoasts of clvllization. I trust absolately to thelr judgement in I do. gotting those cattle through a wild and unbroken country withoat loss or injury. I trast as absolately to thélr bravery and endurance in the face of danger,” MUST BE BRAVE MEN. “Danger?”’ “‘Danger! Yes, Indeed. A man to be a cowboy muet be a brave man, For {n- stance, we aro on a drive. These slab- sided, long-horned Texas cattle ara as wild as deers naturally, and being in an anknown country are as nervous and tim- 1d as sheep. The slightest noise may startle them into a stampede. We have been on the drive all day and night is coming on. It is cold and raining. Wo have reached the polnt whero we intend to round up for the night. The men commence to ride around the drove, sing- ing, shouting and whistling to encourage the animals by the sounds they are famil- far with and to drown any noise of aun unusual charac'er which might provoke a stampede. Round and round the cattle they ride until the whole drove is travel- Ing in a circle. Slowly the cowboys close in on them, siill shouting and singing, until finally the cattle bacome quiet, and after a time lio down and com- mence chewing their cuds with apparent contentment. Stiil the vigllance of the men ecan' not bo relaxed. At least half of them must continue rlding about the resting herd all night. A stampede of cattle is a terrible thing to the cowboys, and it may be brought «n by the mcst trivial cause. The slightest ncise of an unusual nature, the barking of a coyote, the anap of a pls. tol, the cracking of a twig, will bring some wild-eyed steer to his feet in terror. Another Instant and the whoie drove are panting and bellowing in the wildest fear. They are ready to follow the lesd of any animal that makes a break. Then the coolness and eelf-poscession of the cow- boy fs called Into play. They still con- tinue their wild gallop around ‘the fright— ened drove, endeavoring to reassure them and got them qulet once more. Maybe théy will succeed after an hour or two and the animals will agaln ba at rest But the chauces are that they cannot be quicted £o easily. A break fs made In some direction, Here comes the hercism of the cowboy. These cattle ars as blind ard unreasoning in thelr flight as a pair of ranaway horses. They know no dan— ger but from behind, and If they dld, could not mtop for the surging soa of maddened animals in the rear. A rocky gorge or a deep.cut canyon may causo the loss of half their number, Those In the rear cannct ses their danger and the leader cannot stop for those bshind, and aro pushed on to their death. A precipico may lein their way over which they plunge to destruc- tion, It mattora not to the cowboy, If the stampede la made the captain of the drove and hismen ride until they head it and then endeavor to tarn the animals in- to a circle once more, HOW ACCIDENTS OCCUR, “A hole in the ground, which catches the horae’s foot, a stumble, and the hoofs of 3,000 cattle have trampled the sem- blance of humamity from him, He kuows this, A guloh or a gergo lies pn | their path. Thero {s no etcaplng it. There is no tarning to the right or the left, and in an iostant horse and rider aro at the bottom, burled under 1,000 cattle, Bot what of 17 It is only & cowboy, and they come cheap. Bat his- tory records no instance of more unques- tlonable performance of duty In the presence of danfer than those men un- aergo on every drive. Should the stam- pede be stopped, there is no rest for the drivers that night, but the utmost vigi- lance I8 reqaired to prevent the recur- rence of the trightened cattle. This way nsppen hundreds of times on a single | & ve, “I remember one instance, which, from the friendship in which I held the victim, has made a lasting impression on me. Two brothers were together on the drive. Both men hsd been edacated in an eastern col'ege, but for some reason bad drifted to the cattle plains of Texas and had become cowboys. The elder was the captaln of the drive. Sitting about the camp fize one nigbt, the younger was very down-hearted about something and finally said: ‘Oharlie, let's throw up this drive. Tdon't want to go. 1 feelthat one or the othor of us will never go back. 1 am ashamed of this, but Ican not shake It off.” His brother was impreesed by his seriousness, but could only say, ‘George, here are 3,000 cattle in my oharge. I could not leave them if 1 knew that I would be killed to-morrcw,’ ‘A stampcde!’ crled one of the men. In au {nstant they 11 at their acimals, saddles were adjosted snd away they weat. Thecaptan galned the hesd of r)the drive and had eucceeded in turalug them s little when his horse stumbled. In another instant hor rider could bardly have been dlstlogulshed from one another. So you msee there s some responsibility upon the men. These wild cattle away from homes are ae variable as the wind, and when fright. ened are as Irresistible as an avalanche. The slightest thing stampedes them, For instance: We have rounded up the drive and the cattle are lying down. I am one of the men detailed to ride around them. Finding them all quite I got off my horse to light my pipe. Relleved of my burden the horse rests himself by a shake. The whole drove Is on thelr feet in an Instant Ystening to dlscover from what quarter the nolso came, No one can foresee which way they will make the break, and only the utmost self-pos- session and good judgment on the part of the men on duty will prevent a gen eral stampede. That Is the class of men cowboys are made of, and I never knew of many Instances where they falled to do thelr daty.” WHERE THEY COME FROM. The enthusiastlc Texan had now warmed up to the subject, and when asked *‘Where are the cowboys recruited from{" replied: “From all parts of the world, Some from the plains, where thelr toys in In- fancy are the minfature lariat and shot- gun., Some from Mexlco, with many of thelr half Indian charactoristics, and many from the east. I know a dozan college graduates who are cowboys, and have become 8o Infatuated with the lifo that I suppose they will never leave It nntil the final grand round-up. *‘There is another interesting period in the life of the cowboy,” continued Mr. Exall, ‘‘and that {s the spring round-up. In the fall the cattle stray away, and in working away from the storms they rome-. times get awsy 100 miles or so. Each cattle owner has his own particular brand on his cattle. Well, the ranchmen in some nataral division of the country will organize nd round-up in the spring. The cowboys will drive the cattle all in together In one big drove. Then the captain of the round-up will dlrect the owner of ranch A to ‘cut’ out his cat- tle. One of A’'s most experlenced men will then ride Into the drive until he sights en anlmal with his brand on. Deftly he will drive the anlmal to the outer edge of the herd, and then with a quick dash runs the beast out away from the drove, and it is taken In charge by others of A's ranchmen, while the cutter goos back after another. After some fif- teen or twenty minutes A’s cutter will be taken oft and B’s man glven a chance. This will be continued until each ranch has its cattle cut out, If any cattle are found without a brand they are killed for the aso of the men on the round-up This ‘cutting’ s a work requir- ing great skill and experlence, and frequently requires the ume of the lariat, Often cattle with a strange brand are found. If any one recognizes the brand, ranchmen liv- ing nearest the owner takes charge of it and notlfies the owner. If no one recognizes tho brand the captaln of the round up advertises it, and if no owner ts found, it is sold at auction for the benefit of the Cattlemen’s association. WHEN THEY BECOME RECKLESS, “‘Theee things will go to show the reaponsibilitles resting upon theec men. They have to be men of integrity and reliability, and their labors are such that you can readily see they cannot be very disslpated. 1 will tell you how they get the reputatlon for recklessness. We will suppose these men have been on the drive for six months and have finished and been paid off. Thea they are just ltke any other body of men. They go In for some fun, and on their lark ride yell- fng through the streets of some little town, shoot a fow stroet lamps out, or get in'o & saloon row. It 8 no more than a band of college boys at Harvard, or Cornell, or Princeton might do and frequently do, but some fmaginative correspondent im- mediately sends it to eome eastern paper, where it comes out headed ‘another cow- boy outrage,snd giving a wholly ficti- tious account of the battle between the outlaws and the citizons. Now, I know hundreds of cowboys who never carry a revolver, and If you should go among them to-day your life and your pocket book would " bo as ssfe as in the city. They have strict {deas of honor and they stand upon their honor. You won's find any of them who would be ssfe to impose upon, nor will you find any of them who will attempt t, impose cn you, They are off dufyalot of big-hearted, rough boys, but they ara not outlaws or out- casts. They are not the class of men who rob trains or hold up people crossing the plains, and I beliove that, taken for allin all, the American cowboy will com- pare favorably in morals and manliness with sny similar number of cltizens, taken as a class.” ——— Thoroughly Prepared. New Nork Sun, ““Young man,” said a revivalist tolemn- ly, *do you feel tha’ you are prepared to acswer tho summons at any moment? Do you reallzo that when yougo to bed at night you may be called befora the morn- ing dawns?” *Oh, yes, sir. I'm night clerk in a drug store, an’all you've got to do s to keep on ringin’ the bell until you hear we heller,” Try Now to Oatch on in Good Time ! It may rain and it may shine, but the Draw- ing of The Louitiana State Lottery goes on me on the second Tuesday of each month, On March 10th, at the 178th Draw- ing, Fortune rewarded her votaries in this fashion: the first prize, 875,000, went to No 85,847, 1n one ticket at $5 to Geo, A, Spear, & clerk in Bay City, Mich, 000 to No, 84,980, sold in fi merce, Memphis, Tenn.; another to Hugh Nell, Mayfleld, Ky, , collected through anhattan Bank of Momphis, Tenn., and tho othor fifths elsewhere. The third of $10- 000 to No. 14,810 sold in fifths at $1 each; one to Louis Hinz, No, 438 Turk St., San Fraacls. ©0, Cal. one collected through T, R. Ro cashier State National Bank, New Orleans. L ; auother through Messre, Lowis, Johnuon Co., of Washington, D, C , ete. The fourth, each of $6,000, drawn by Nos. 4,558 and 77, 884, nold in_fifths, among others—ons to S1i- san Fegau, No, 402 Hayea St,, San Francisco, Cal; one to J. Hirshfeld; another to L, La: lond, both of "Frisco, eto.; until over $205,000 was kcattered where it would do the most good, The whole thing goes over again on May 12th, at the 180th Grand Monthly Drawiog, and M’ A, Dauphin, New Orleant, La., on application will give full information. Try now to catch on in good tim —— They Were Both Half Breeds. “‘Yes,” bossted an Eoglishman In the Waeet, *'I have Tudor blood In my velos from my mother's slde of the family and Plantagenet from my father's,” “le that #0?’ said a cltizen. ‘My blood ls a litle mixed,too, My grand- father was o Jersey tenderfoot an' wy grandmother s Digger lndian squaw, We'ra both half bieede, s/ ranger. Shake!” e ——— JAMES PYLES PEARLINE is high- ly indorsed by housekeepers aud others who have tried it. No sosp is required, and cleaning {s done with a saving of much tlme and laber, All housekeepers should nas it, — Track-laying has bsgun oy the eighty four miles of road graded west ul~ anenune,' ON A SLEEFING OAR, The Pecunllar Experience of a Pall- man Porter on the Panbandle Pittaburg Dispateh. “Yes, wo do have some pecullar experi- ences,” sald an intelligent Pullman car porter on the Panhandle road at (he Union depot lsat night. “We run up agalnst all sorts of people, I can tell you. It was on this same train, Panhandle No. 4, and we had just run Into the station at Mingo Junction. A well-dressed young man, who looked as if he was sick or in trouble, came up to me and wanted to know if he could geta berth. Weil Ihad nothing to do with lotting him have a birth, but thero was but one parlor car on the train and that was fali. So I told him that every birth was taken, and that it would be impossible for him to get s place. He turned around and walked away aboat fifteen feet stopped saddenly and palled a revolver from his hip pocket, and before anyone could stop him ehot himself through the head. He lived a few minutes, He was out of his mind, evidently, for he kept moaning, ‘I didn’t marder him! 1 didn’t murder him!” We found out afterward that his name was Frank Leighton, and that he lived in St. Louie, where he had relatives of high soclal standing. He had become diesi- pated, and in some club qaarrel a man was killed. He was never charged with the crime, but he got the Idea that sue- pleion rested on him and_he disappearcd from home and his frlendas did not know where he had gone untl they had heard of his salcide. “‘Another cate T ehall rememberas long as Ilive. A young New York Hebrew, named Nathan, dled cn my car. He was broken jdown {n health and went down south to get well. He spent the winter down in New Orleans and Galves- ton. He dldn’t get any better and in the spring time started home. He knew he was going todle, and was terribly down. hearted. I had to be with him most of the time on the way up. I made up his berth early In the evening, and he went to bed, I helped to undress him and tuck him In. Two hours later, when we got in Plttaburg here, I looked into hls berth. and he was dead. Well, he was taken out here, but we did mnot know any of his friends, and could not tele- graph them, They were waitlng for him, though, when wo gat to Jersey City. They didm’t know he was dead. His father, a white-haired old man, and his slater, a beautlful girl of not more than 18 yearsold, were at the depot, and were almost the firet people 1 saw when I stepped down from the car. I had an idea they were his friends as roon es 1 saw them, and it made me feel shaky, I can tell you' *Is Mr. Nathan with you, porter? asked the young lady, looking kind and anxious. = Well, I just looked at her and then at the old gentleman, and I couldn’teay a word. I couldn’t bear to tell them that he was dead, and ro I just aid: *No, ma’am, he got off at Pitts- burg.’ She turned as white as a_sheet, and eald: ‘Why, was he worse?’ The old man was go nerveus that he just clung to the Iady as if ho was afraid of falling. ‘I don’t know ma'am,’ 1 managed to tay. Just then a young man came up, who | took to be her brother. I called him to one elde. I tnoughtit would bs better for him to let them know thsn me. Well, sir, he was so badly broke up that ho just blurted out, ‘My Gcd, my broth- erls dead.” 1t was the hardest thing 1 over saw, I thought the girl would go wild. They couid bardly get her away to the carrisge. The brother came back to Pittsburg and tock the body heme. I never heard from them again. ““One of the funniest cates I ever ran across,” he continucd, “‘occurred this| winter with a newly married couple on their wedding trip. He was a young army or navy officer, I don’t know which, His wife was a bashful, blue-eyed litile girl. not a day over 17 years old. About 11 o'cleck at night I saw her stick her head out of the curtalos and lock up and down | the lsle to see if the coast was clear! Then she slid out and pottered up to the water cooler to get a drink. When she started back ehe forgot her berth, and| her bashfulness only made it worse. She got hack to what she supposed was her berth and piled in. Well, I heard a swear and a scream, and then the little woman, frichtened half to dcath, shot out of the |V curtains and up the alele to the state- room, when I met her. You see she had climbed fn with an cld gentleman and lady from down in Texar, whose berth was next to hera. The old man was a cattle dealer and a rough old fellow, and his wife was a nervous, fidgety old lady. She just ecreamed and yelled ‘thievee, murder,’ till every passenger in the car hed his head out of the curtains, The young husband woke up and micsed his wife and he was almest wild, and came running up to to the car to where his wife was crying in the stateroom. She just fell in his arms and pretty near fainted. Ho couldn’t understand what had happened and wanted to go back after bis revolver and shoot some one, 1 just then locked them in the ataterocm and then wont backand explained matters to 90 Texas piir and got them quieted down, Then Itold the other passengers that there was nothing the matter and they pulled n thoir headn. The young fellow and his wife wonldn’t go back to WARNER'S “SAFE” CURE Or, Warner's FE Kidney and Liver Cure (its former title), SOLD TO FEBRUARY Ist, 1885! The highest Medical Authorities pronounce it the only known Specific for Kidney, Liver and Urinary diseases; that it has no equal as a BLOOD PURIFIER, and that it is tho best safe- guard against contagious diseases, both acute and chronic, keeping the Kidneys and Liver—the great organs of the body— in healthy condition, disease then being impossible, We can fu sh over Hundred Thousand voluntary ‘Testimonials flar to the following. Read them for the good of yourself. your family and your friends. X Note the following, showing how this vast number of bottles was distributed, as evidenced by our sales-books. 2,181,520 Boston, - * - 936,842, of Louisville, . LARRABEE, , 49 Chester| ! e, Boston, Mass., in 1870, was given “When my up by several prominent Boston Physici- ge she was ans as _incurable from Bright's Discase.|m|seriously attacked by extreme kidney dis- e took over 200 bottles of Warner's Sarr| = order. ~ She recovered temporarily, but a Cure, in 1880-2, and Oct, 6, 1884, wrote| & [year ago was again prostrated. ~ She was that the “cure was as permanent as|a swollcn to twice her naturalsize, had fre- surprising.” & quent headaches, nausea, and other dis- . - | B |guised symptoms of the disorder, ~All her Providence, - - 128,941 Louisville physicians agreed that she G. W. FULTON, Esq., Fulton, Texas, ccould not recover. Her case and treat- ment_were telegraphed to a New York suffered for ten years from serious blad. der disorders and lost from 25 to 30 pound: specialist, who said recovery was ime possible. st August we began to treat in 1881 he used 14 bottles of Warner's| S, Cure, and recovered his naturall her ourselves, and now, wholly through the AR it and said, ‘I consider myself well influence of Warner's Cure, she is parently as well as ever,” November, for a man of 75.” December 20th, 1884, he wrote, ‘I have had no symptoms of 1884, he says, ' M¥ daughter is apparently kidney disorder since 1881, and it in perfect health. 1 should rely upon Sxre Curer” | DBAMOM, - - @ma“d» MB., i 33”.829 M, punodu THE REV. ANDREW J. GRAH (P. I.), Grand Island, Neb,, in 1881 was pronounced fatally sick with Bright's Dis- X-GOV. R. T. case, His condition he says was desperate Ky. In 1882, durin, and he could get no relief from physicians. health gave way and prost | m|He then followed Warner's SAFE Cure severe kidney troubl, flesh. Used Warne and June 23, 1884, writes enjoyed better health, ner's SAFE Cure.,” Bal. of N. Eng., ‘PI0DIL IV[IWIS B MOUS UHD [1IUD U treatment, and July 7, 1884, he wrote, |*“All locai troubie has disappeared. cn no medicine for nearly a year,"” Lost 40 pounds of| SA “ure in 1882, 1 have never owing to War- 331,315, Milwaukee, - - 344,171. S, F. Rochester, N. Y., the o manufacturer, three go took twenty-five bottles of War- ner's SAFR Cure for liver disorder, and 2 |August 20th, 1884, he reported, ‘I con- |sider myself fully cured, )"E"wholly due to Warne mpaign manager), of Wor-|g , was pros- trated by y c: by the pas-| age of gravel from the kidneys to the blad- Ilc then began using Warner's SAFE Cure and in a short time passed a large stone and a number of smaller ones. De 10th, 1884, Mr. Plympton wrote, **T have. had no recurrence of my old trouble| = since Warner's SArE Cure cured me.” New York State, - 3,053,080, B. MOULIN, 2411 Mor-|§ , St. Louis, Mo., in 1882, wrote, | = ‘“‘Ihave beenindelicate health for many years; but Warner's SAFE Cure made me the picture of health” June 23rd, 1884, she wrote, “ My health has been good, | 1,400,362. for the last two years.” Pennsylvania, - 1,365,914./Bal. N. W States, IF IT IS HARD TIMES WITH YOU Resort to the Remedy that Nine-tenths (9-10) of Sufferers Require, thereby Saving Continuous Debility and Expensive Medical Attendance. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. St Louis, - - 1,222,895, ERWIN, Methodist ter, West Eaton, N, V., was long and sick . tg‘\ seriously ill with inflammation of the pros- He spat blood, was tremendously bloated | ¥ ¢ate gland, (a very obstin and seemed to be beyond the power of the| ™| 1882, he begran the use ¢ best physicians.e He then took 60 bottles| § [Cure, and June 25th, 18 ) of Warner's SAF) hrestored him _frdi\f obtained two years ago proved per- 16 health. January 1st, eight years| = manent ; physiciaps express great sur- afterwards, he wrote - 538,395 cester, ) 8= = Minnesota, - - 486,013. HAMILTON, Milton, Santa ,» Florida, December 15th, 188, £/ wrote that ** four years ago my wife w = suffering with liver complaint which re- |duced her to a skeleton. = : of Warner's SA & |Cure, and has been in perfect health ever since. Shenow weighs 180 pounds whe & [formerly she was a skeleton. Warnes SArE Cure will make a permanent cure + |always if taken by directions,” never enjoyed| @ prise,” 1| | better health inmy life than I donow, and 1 owe it all to Warner's SAFE C I sider mysclf cured of Bright RS Chih . , Lockington, O] Cincinnati, - - &Sent. 20, 1881, stated that for oty gen — = ——| & he had suficred tortures with dyspepsia, B. J. WORRELL, of Ellaville, Fla, in g as entirely cured by the use of 1879. as prostrated with Bright's Discase| |y s SAFE Cure, Dec, 8th, 1884, he of the kidneys, and under the best treat-| &y, *1 took 2a.0r 25 bottles of Warner's ment, grew worse. _ “On the advice of| 2 5w Cure, and it has never failed to stop Governor Drew's sister, I began Warner's| any symptoms of my old complaint if they SArE Cure, sixty bottles of which restored | &, appeared ; my health is good.” me to full n ire of health. T have now | & ——— 2 " States been cured about four years, and my cascl 2 is regarded as miraculous,” Govemong Bal' sw N. B. Drew of Jacksonville, Florida, April zoth, 1884, says ** Mr. Worrell's case and cure a8 very seriously sick of ex. give me great confidencein Warne i y der and rheumatism, |which gradually grew worse, Physicians being unable fo assist him, his last resort Cure, and I unhesitatingly indorse i their berths for about an hour untfl they wero sura evoryone had gone to sleep. 1 managed everthiog, so that no cns bat the old couple ever knew anything about it or what it was that ralsed the disturb- ance, When they left the car the next day he slipped 810 tn my hand, Thelr names! Ob, no! I couldn't give you that, ‘I had another experlence, though, that floored me once. There is a pretty little black-eyed boy who lives over in Allegheny, who firat saw the light of this world in & Pallman car of which I wi porter. The boy is three years old now, and he end his mother and father went down over the road with me this winter on thelr way to New Orleans, e ——— Real Estate Transfers. The followlng transfers were filed April 13, with the county olerk aud reported for the Bex by Ames’ real estate agenoy: Mary Hansen, execatrlx, to John M Bronner, nej,nwi, sndnwjinwi, and s o } n w {, eection 8, 14, 11 e, deed The city of Omaha to the county of Douglas, lots 6 and 6, block 118 city of Omahs, q cd. Johsnna Mockbee and husband to Eucled Martin, lot 1, biock 10, Koun'zs & Rath's additlon to Omaba, wd, §3.200, —t—— Bad Accident at a Fire, New York, April 14,—At a fire in Hiovor's Pisno factory this morning the second floor gave way precipitating six members of the tire depertment inte th were ploked out as quickly as possible snd carried to the Hospital Mckirl no A CARD,—Toall w sulleriog from errors and indigestions of youth, nervous weakncss early decay, loss of mankiood, ¢te. I will send & receipt thas will cure you FREE OF CHARGE. This great remody was discovered by » wmisslo nar to Bouth Auorics. - Send selt-addrewsed eovelope Kav. Jo- suru T, IxMax Station D New York. Bal. Ohio, (State,) - 414,869, A. CLARK, Y, 881 was utterly used up with constitutional and female complaints of| the worst kind, Been sick ten years, and i ing. In November, 1884, she wrote, arner’s SAPE Cure cured me four years ago, and has kept me well,” Southern States, - 2,725,513, ROBERT GRAHAM, 77 Penn street, Brooklyn, N. Y., suffered for six years, from inflammation of the bladder and stricture, Six physicians, specialists, ave him up to die. In 1883, he began Warner's SAFE Cure and its continued use, ne says, effected a complete cure, Under| date June 25, 1884, he says, ** My health continues good ; have used no medicine, since April 30, 1883," nited States.” 1,175,868, Lanada, - Bal. Pacific Coast, - 624,231, All the Testimonials above given are from persons who were PERMANENTLY CURED several years ago and remain so. THE CHEAPEST PLACE [N UMAHA TO BUY oljafirfs e oo fef DEWEY &STONES’ One of the Best and Largest &tocks in the United Sta'es to Belect From. NO STAIRS T:0 CLIME, ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATO was Warner's S, Cure, and June 2sth, |1884, he wrote, ** My health is better than {for two years past, and in some respects is better than it has been for five years, When |T catch cold and have any slight kidney trouble, T resume the medicine .’l{:nin and therelief I believe is permanent,” San Francisco, - 932,210, JAMES M. DAVIS, 330 South Pearl street, Albany, N. Y., superintendent of Jagger TronCo,, in 1881 su}fered fromvery serious kidney trouble; he weighed but 160 pounds ; he used 18" bottles of War- ner's SAFE Cure, and December 8th, 1864, he wrote, ¢ That was fully three years ago. I have had no trouble since, and I feel first class and weigh 198 pounds, I would not go back to that time of four ears ago for all the dollars in the £~ "1enba ou suy 1 SAPRF NVINIPP jo [

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