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THE DAILY BEE-- THUR P e ————————————— e ——————— “Maryand,My Mar ylond.” COUNCIL BLUFFS. natlonal board of health and many state 98 boards in this country are adopting i t ti latl, to . ADDITIONAD LOCAL. stringent quarantine regulations to pre. e — vent the spread of this terrible scourge THE Y. M, C. A, to our shores, All the eastern cities are cleaning up and dlsinfecling carefully In Review of the Work for the Quarter Ending May 1, 1885, City, and Juse 16, 17 Protty wives, Falls, Lovely daughters and noble men." “‘My farm lics In a rather low and ml. asmatic situation, and “My wife ! “Who ¢ a very preity blonde!” y years ago, became allow ! “lvlvliltlho::;y::d aged!” The past throe months have been by Before her time, from far the most prosperous of any In the **Malarial vapors, though she made no | history of the assoclation in this clty. particular complaint, not being of the| The soclal inflaence is belng felt g{:mpy kind, yet causing me great unea- |y roughout the entlre town. No young A short time ago 1 purchased your |man who seeks the friendship of the boys remedy for one of the children, who bad | will be disappolnted. as the testimonies a vory severe attack of billonsness, and |of acores who have been benefited would it occurred to me that the remedy might | prove. Strangers are cordlally groeted help my wife, aa I found that oar lttle |and the timid ones soon begin to feel at girl upon recovering had home when they enter the sccial rooms “Loat!" that are fitted us so generously for thelr nd looked as fresh | cemfort, aa a new blown dais Well, the story| The gymnasium has been well patron. is soon told. My wife, to-day, has galn- | ized and those who exercise in it regular- od her old time beauty with compound |ly become physically stronger men, The Intereat, and is now as handsome a mat- | gymnasium has also been found to be a ron (If I desay It myself) as can be found | good place for young men to get ac- in this county, which s noted for pretty | qualnted. women And | have only Hop Bitters From the gymnasium to the reading to thank sor it. rooms is but a step, and when that is ““The dear creature just looked overmy | taken the young man is found In a place shoulder, and eays ‘I can flatter equal to | where he may post himself on current the days of our courtship,” and that re-|topics and on those of & heaver literary minds me there might be more pretty | character. wives If my brother farmers would do as| The religious work has kept abreast or 1 have done.” even been In advance of the other de- Hoping you may long be spared tod |partments. The Bible study for young good, I thankfully remaln, men held on Saturday evening has been 0. L, James, roductive of excellent results, prepar- Beltaville, Prince George Co., Md. ng the way for the larger meetings of May 26th,L 883, the Sabbath day and establishing the at- tendants more thoroughly in the Ohrist- Nono genulno without a bunch of green Hops on |jan lifo, The discouraged omes are et 11 tbote nama.* """ #*% | cheered, the weak ones strengthened, e and all are brought nearer the Savior, Tho finest _ton HUSTE‘IT o Mnost %onle | The Gospel service in largely attenied 0. 0. Alvord, a one- United States courts at Goodrich for §70,000, anticipation of Its coming. There Is no disputing the fact that cholera Is due here this year, and as Council Blaffs is the halting place for the thousands of emigrants from the old world, we should prepare at once to stamp out the plagne at the first evidence of Its presence. The germs of this disease may be carried In the olothing and luggage of filthy emi- geants aboard shipa and cara to be warm- ed into sudden activity here by the sum- mer heat and filthy surroundings, and In this lies our danger. In view of this threatened visitation, the city councll have organized a board of health and anthorlzed as health officer to take all necessary steps for immediate cleaning up all streets and alleys, remov- ing filth and garbage of all kinds there- from and dlsinfecting vaults, cesspools, eto. It will greatly aid me in thls necessary and important work 1f all citizens will begln by thoroughly cleansing and disin- fecting thelr own premises. I shall also esteem It a favor If citlzens will be prompt in reporting to me any neglect or refusal of partles to comply strictly with the re- quirements of the board of health aspub- lished In yesterday’s papers, F. T. Sevsert, M. D., Health Cllcer. ——— Stock Shipments, Following are the shipments of stock from the union stock yards in Councll Bluffs: S. T, Hawks, two cars huge, 128 head, to Chicago via R, I. Ryan Bros,, two cars catile, 60 head, mentioned. Rev, Fathor Brazll woman, supposed to be babe, brought the Infa taking care of It, his back was turned the her parcel on a chalr an *‘Her sallownes of Charles Alford, of Emma became possess started on her crusade. loat his footing and fell lives at the Junction. Albgators in Alligators of all sizes long abound in the lak Florlda. swimming slowly along, water, et J. 8. Peckham, two carscattle, 39 head, | have beon very much to Chicago via Mil. W. V. Bristow, elght cars sheep, 509 head, to Chicago via Mil. J. R. Aldear, three cars cattle, 55 head, to Chicago via N. W. L. F. Lawyer, one car hogs, G4 head, to Chlcago via Q. S. S. Brinton, one car cattle, 28 head, to Salt Lake via U. P. L. Anderson & Co., one car cattle, 17 head, and one car hogs, 51 head, to Chl- cago via N. W, Ripp & Co., two cars hogs, 119 head, to Chicago via N. W, W. E. Smith & Co., elght cars cattle, 160 head, to Chicago via Mil. T. C. Howks, ten cars cattle, 199 head, to Chicago vi i1 Hostetter's Stom- | and 18 not vold of happy results, This CELEBRATED ach Bitters, which | meeling of song, short talks, prayer and In eures pertect W1 | testimony is attended by peoplo of all tion, and the active | creeds ana by those of no creed. Imme- M -t ) githelt | diately at the olose of 1t a half hour meet- erand bowels. As |log for young men only is held in an ad- - :z\: :)";!'A;r‘r:g;‘r‘r\n!:l\;:-_ jolning room and all young men present o A et | 8t the gospel service are Invited ' to ro- med cine, the nerves | main, Traveling men and strangers are O DT . | 81Ways among the number. aches cease,sndthat | Two conferences with the Omaha asso- -nfil‘t:': clatlon were held, a number cf the boys 5 A\ land, and that was In t! nameless One evening, just which is L AT | from the Bluffs going to Omaha first, R BIOMALY s ‘ll)v:n':];gtlnpcl'lxnfil- then the return visit by the young men TTE fainexs Foosablish | from Omaha. The work of tho sesocla: jorant. For saio | tion commends itself to all classes of men, those who are christians and those who are not, if they carefully examine into it and find out what Is belng done. The Increased attendance at the llter- ary and rellglous meetings has necessi- tated the change of location to a place where more room can be secured. This chargs s now belng made and the loca- tion heresfter will be corner of Maln street and Broadway, in the room form- erly occupied by the Odd Fellows. Here many people can be accommodated, It is hoped that this change will prove ben- eficlal. To all who have alded In the work by money, influence, sympathy, newspaper advertisements and in other ways the of- ficers of the associatlon snd the young men extend their heartfelt thanks. The outlook for the future is most promising, but to meet success means hard work, and every member and friend 1s urged to do his part toward pushing forward the enterprise. We append the following statlstics: Requests for prayes two feot long, I caughf when it made a vicion toundation, uee the peerless lnvigorant. by all Drugglsts and Dealers generally. droppod_ it. Real Estate Transfers, The following are the transfers of real estate filed In the office of the reglstrar, and furnlshed to the Bee by A, J. Stephenson, April 20, 1885: E. R. Hicnkley to S, A. Sleeper, lot block 4, Hinckley’s add, to Walnut; being killed by them. Eliza Newton to M. A. Jennlogs, part lot 35, original plat; $600. Tbomss Parsons to Michael Fox, e } se }, 34-7 5 8800. ¥. D. Fanner to Dodge & Henry, part block 21, Neola; $880. Total sales $2,354, water in pureult edge of the ecrubwhich for certain that nothing IOWA IN PIECES. Fort Dodgers have quit skatlng. Deaths and divorces outnumber mar risges in Des Moines. The prohibittonists of cleaned out the saloons, The Catholic church owns $200,000 tls, probably the same new. 19 Young men’s bible study (average attend- .20 Albla have ance .. Gospel se g Young men's after meeti ndance) 1108 fendance). e of property in Des Moines. site In the bow with a Literary and ndance.. . Thos. Murphy, Davenport’s clty an- Secretary, | glneer, is serving his seventeenth term. The new Q. route tfrom Des Moines to St. Joe will be opened about May 10th. Hugh Frazer, the third victim of the C., B. & Q. wreck at Burlington, died Satarday morning, The Western Land & Cattle company with a million in sight, has been incor- porated in Des Moines. The city council of Des Molnes has de clded to build three brldges over the Des Moines river to cost $50,000. Charles Scott, an employe In the Kan- ras City yards at Boswell, fell from a frelght car and was cut in twe. The Chlosgo, Burlington & Quincy rallway unavoidably killed $25,000 worth of horaes, cattle and hogs during 1884, @The Muccatine rifles have gone to Mo- bile, Ala., to take part In the encamp- ment and drlll to be held there beginning May 4., 0. E. Elllott of Kncxville, was robbed by two bold pickpockets who purposely jostled while enterlng the cars the depot in Des Moines, He is out $70. T. S. Holmes, the defaulting manager of the Creston Telephone exchange, has been captured and returned to the bosom of his deceived friends and the grand jury. Twenty toughs were rounded up and sent to the rock pile in Cedar Rapids last week. At the present rate of free labor the etreets of the town will soon be Macadamized, . John Gaonon, a Burllngton, Cedar Raplds and Northern railway brakeman, was crushed to death Saturday at Oasls, a small station twenty-five miles south of Cedar Rapids, Followlng the mad dog scare In Des Molnes last week, the mortality smong the canine family has been o great that the long-drawn howl of the lonesome cur 15 & tradition, Cedar Raplds put a traveling quack ———— The Mayor's Na; Judge J. C. Reed, Thos. Officer, E. 1. Woodbury, J, W. Rodifer, L. W, Tul- leys, I, A, Miller, A. B. Walker, Jos. Knotts, R. T, Bryant, N. P. Dodge, Geo. Keellne, D, C. Bloomer, J, D, Ed- mundson, addjothers: Gentlemen: Your petitlon has been carefully considered by me for a month, as well as by a republican council. In looking over the large list of signers, I see that three-fourthsof the petitloners are republicans and as the prohibitory law was passed by a republican leglslature, 1t is very natural for republican voters to inelst upon its enforcement. I bellove the law an enemy to temperance, that it will not prohibit; that 1t will drive from oar state; people who belleve the making and drinking of wine and beer to be harmless, that as the prohibiting of the farmer of Virginia, from growing tobacco would Injure and damage that state, =0 the Interfering with the growing of barley and hops in Tows, s a direct Injury to our farmers and the commerclal Interests; that we have thousands of acres of land in Iowa, and pear our clty, which is better adapted to the ralsing of grapes than any other product, and that millions of dollars could be annually brought to Iowa for the purchase of native wines that most now go to California or elsewhere on account of the probibltion laws of the state. 1 believe that the only way to manago the temperance (uestion is by state and city license, and by having competent inspectors of the artlcle eold, as to its purity, and a jury trlal for habltual drunkards, with a county 3 1 or state workhouse where the convict mfln lc fl GII oan work out a sentence, the state or ) |county to pay famlly, if marrled, for hls tlme of service, or laws similar to those suggestions. While in New York last week I talked with Judge l)lllm:l s;d other prgln;lnont attorneys in o . regard to our prohibitory law, and es: | doctor calling himself Dr., McFadlerson, nulway T[me T&ble. pecially in regard to the recent “‘njunc: [at work on the stono pile. After one tlon declslon” of our supreme court, and | day’s labor he was glven the opportunity COUNOIL{BLUFFS. ‘!iron: n:g l‘nv‘;lflgnhon 1 feel 11!:!!0 fmm:- to sklp, which he Improved. £ 4he arrival and de. | d€N a e supreme court of the = oreas o i b Sobhral sandasd Sine. st he | United States will roverso the declsion | oy e v ! £h oAD wuc ocal Trains leave bransfor depol Wen 1la- | of oup state supreme court, and that| S a e, o o wtos earlior and arrive ten minutes Iater, Individual folal migh Bluffs transfer thieves and not be robbed an lngivi or offiolal might get| oy pe an available candidate. for gove the boat along as noiselessly as po: fflE BEST THING OUT FOR ‘Washing & Bleaching In Hard or Soft, Hot or Cold Water. Bavms Lavor, Tium and' SoAP AMAzioLy, and gives universal satistaction. No family rich or poor should ‘be without it. Sold by all grocers, BrwaRx of imitations well de- signe i to misload. PRARLINE 18 the ONLY SA¥N lubor saving compound and always bears the above sym- ] belad PAMES PYLE NEW YORK. ing through its head fro as possible. when well mounted. sometimes give a little range Is 85 close’ it 18 Think Men they know all about Mustang Lin- iment. Few do. Notto know is not to have, ally too sick to do more their tails till sll in the down. thelr eyes shine just as as one twelve feet, pHEE=Avictim ofyouthifal impradence Promaturo Decay, Nervous Debilt e e 7, Lost every known 5 0f solf-oure, follot ors. 8, 43 Chiatham St.,Now Yorks J. L. DsBEVOISE. ambition 1s about the sl pike, they fight a good deal and that the old ones They are often found lege and semetimes mi; No. 607 Brosdway Councll Bluffs, be on alligator's nest In ecrub near a large pond. high In the middle. shell greatl, turtle's egg, from the remains, the DEVART, been nearly s large as Fort Dodge, Jane 9, 10 and 11 for Sloux The clrcult puts up $7,000 In purses, of which £2,600 will be hang up at the Sioux Olty meeting, Davenport man, has been sued in the was the owner of the ‘“Golden Wonder," one of Colorado’s fabulous mines, snd, it Is alleged, let his frlend Goodrich in—on the ground tloor—for the bagatelle above that she must convert the world and |retaln all thef ho had not rallied sufficlently to allow |00 thing, when I lived in Al amputation, and it was lelred’ the nery-|f¢® an entire Kolosh village suffering ous shock might prove fatal, They are to be seen in summer and often their whole back; out of the Here, in the lake reglon, they have greatly decreased in numbers within H the last threo yoars. Though thore aro | ity o still plenty to be seen ;n a warm day, they are very wary, and it is seldom one b cmyget IR SIE Ay ArAN O SN BRS where the lady of his heart is cooped up fore they sink. There are always plenty | frjand with him. of tracks to be seen along the shores, but | sonds word to hls inatsorata that ho Js Ihave only once found one on dry |pear and would wed. than 300 yards from the nearest water. Itrod on what 1 at frst thought was a snake; but seeing it was an aligator about and to judge from its small sharp testh, might have given a nasty bite if I had not Last spring a man | ynt1] and Indi flod told me that, when wading out to a small Ry Ls o el it island I ono cf tho"lukos uoar thls, an slligator about elght foot long rushed at Pl L il Yo AraA 1oL ABaealsfof hisTgarTatit| o on e bewhen L Lved{inthetarH] and fled without walting to see the result. A large one used to live in a pond near bandoned my house, and on one ocosslon left the | " Tpars oindoned the praotlco, of two children | Alaskan Indl ot who had gone there to got water and to::lbnb‘:a nh lg:}‘;:d,,fiil:g. renibegln followed them up the bank to the This may be an exaggeration, but I know small boys to draw water there again. Some time after that, a large alligator was killed bevween the pond and Lake Har- the pond falllng rapidly from the long drought, determined to seek pastures The distanca between the pond and Lake Harris Is a quarter of a mile. Tho only way to hunt alligators with any chance of success Is to go on a dark, stiil night, three or more in a boat. One man fixed on his hat to shine on their eyes and armed with a rifle or a shotgun, Number t i R0l At clogel ‘bepted (i withn and thus fall to {do their duty for thelr harpoon, and number three paddles | ¢hiyhathing rite themselves, but dole- speaks, as they are supposed to be able to hear t;:hfl least whisper, 1 H man with the lantern ‘‘shines” one, he dizeote the! paddler’ by sigus, and the| bopeisy resultaof tho other, boat 1s sent steadily toward it, and a bul- let or a charge of buckshot is sent orash- | ;pla- withal. Number two then takes the gun and hands him the harpoon, which he drives in the alllgator before 1t sinks. It Is then hauled alongside and the head is taken to be afterward burled and al- lowed torot till the teeth fall out. are good ivory and make good ornaments before they are quite dead, they will to miss, and after a shot they are gener- A great deal depends on the man who pngdlel,!cr 1f ha does not make a straight coarse—a difficult thing todo in an un- wieldy flat bottomed boat--and,if the light 1s taken off the eyes for a second, or the least splash is made, the alligator will go There are lots of emall ones from a foot and & half to two feet long, and more annoying than to find, just as one 1s golng to fire, that the object of your One night last summer I saw about twenty In two hours, and on get- ting close found they were not worth the powder and shot. I have heard that Last summer I found what I supposed to some twelve feet round and one foot It had been broken into probably by a skunk, and blta of eggshell were scattered all round, The resembled that ut were coarser, SDAY, APRIL 30, 1885, SIX YEARS IN ALASKA. [tems from a Government Employe's Nat=Baok, Chlecago by A. E It seems Alvord [ Beavers Damming the Stroams—Mos- quitoes that Wonld Make Jumbo Tremble—Habits of the In. dians, and 18 for Sionx time well-known of Des Moines, was_made the unwillng custodian of a | NeW York Times, motherless babe the other evening. A *‘I baven't been In Alaska since 1876," the mother of the | sald a former government employe who nt In a basket to | was statloned in that country for several the priest's house and Insisted on his | years, “‘but from all I can hear the occu- Ho refused, but while | pation of the land by increasing numbers mother dropped | of white people has not bad the effect of d disappeared. changlng the customs of the country, in Religlon made & maniac of a servant |some pertions of it at least. to any great glrl named Emma BerrF in the employ | extent. 8, The Indians still belleve in evil yette county. |pirits that inhablt the water, hold their ed with a manla |slaves mnrczl{, practice polygamy, and r soclal and religlous forms She was arrested |and ceremonies. They have thelr sor- while attempting to convert a nelghbor's | cerers, repudiate all relatlonship on the famlly with a carving knlfe, While coupling oars at Paclfio Junotion | 414 under tho rale of the Russlan, Thers Sunday a young man named Joho Grady |*™, mussels and specles of fish in Alaskau father’s side, and live generally as they and the wheel | Waters which have atrong and sometimes passed over his right leg balow the kneo, | fatal toxlo qualitise If eaten, which they Ho Is a married man with children, and | 'f€0ucntly are. Slckness always follows euch Indulgence, and It was no uncom- At last accounts 8, to from its effects. It is this tradition opon wll:k:h“ the bulltlall In the evil spirits who live in the water and spread Florida, slckness and diveaso lmongp the up to twelve feet | people 1s founded. They profess to 8 and rivers of hold communication with these spirlts through thelr sorcerers, but they offer them no sacrifices and use no means to propitiate them. Marrlage among these Indlans is a pecullar institutton; in fact, shot down, and [there s no marrlage—simply the taking ‘When a young Indian wants a wife he goes to his mother and tells her 8o, If she gives her consent he goes to with thelr heads, in her father’s house, taking his best Through the Iatter he If she has a lean- he woods, more | ing toward the sultor she returns word to him by tho friend that she is 1inclined to dark, |join her Interests with his. He then takes presents to her and her parents, and having delivered them enters at once t it by the tall, | {nto the possession of his bride. There nap at my hand, | ars no farther ceremonies, excopt that a day later the couple must visit her rela- tlves, and if she then has no complaint to before They are very partlal to|make to them about her husband, they dogs and pigs, and some people say to ne- v 4 ) groes, but I Have nover heard of any one e (i wedalngRie over. This may be repeated indefinltely, doin wives as a Mormon elder. Polyga- my was practiced even by the £o called tory, and their evolution must have been rapid, from what I remember of them, if “‘Dried salmon is the luxury of the The way they bring up children out there would hardly sutt in this region. The mother carrles her child about from the time it is born until it is able to creep, no mat- ter where she goes. Until that time she keeps it wrapped Ina sort of fur sack. The moment the young one shows a dlis- position to crawl she yanks the far off it, and then begins the building up of its constitution. ~ This s done by giving it & souse in the sea or river every morning, and the chorus of yells that greets every villago during this interesting ceremony is something terrific. The cries of the young onesare plteous, and, for fear bullseyo lantern | i1,y tholr materns] breasts might not be proof against these appeals for mercy. borders the pond. could induce the one, who, finding offspring, the mothers do not perform shore No one near ssible, gato some brother or sister to do the dousing. These consclentious aonts and uncles vary the switch with the bath, in When the | gy attempts to make the one overawo “There is one thing noticeable among these half-civillzed tribes, and s credit- Thelr old and dlsabled members are carefully attended to, and orphans become a common charge and fare the same as the most favored child- ren with living parents, These Indlans are original crematlonists. Thelr dead ara burned as soon as death ensues; thelr ashes are Interred on the epot, and a rude monument erected over them. They have orude ideas of immortality, believing that a man has a splrit that lives forever, but they know nothing of fatare rewards and punishments, Thelr heaven isa place where the spirits of chlefs congregate in one place—the com- mon people by themselves, and slaves, if there are any, have stlll another dweli- ing place, unlees a_chiof's slave should die with him, and then his spirit will be in oternal attendance on his master. It was formerly the univereal custom to kill the slave when the master died to insure the latter’s spirlt proper attend- ance. That custom was abolished by the Ruseian government, but it was still kept up In isolated places, and cases where it has been followed were well-known as late as 1876 “Some of the Indian tribes, notably the Kanaltze, travellng from place to place hunting or fishing, have the very excellent hablt of leaving behind them when they break camp a quantity of kindling material at each fireplace for the use of the next travelers whocome along, and who may possibly not be oversup- plied with this very necessary item in thelr outfit. This kindling consists of some plteh pine and some dry moss and sticks all wrapped up In a curl of biroh bark, The traveler who uses this and does not leave some for the next one who comes along s sadly deficient In the etl. quette of Alaskan travel. ““This {s 8 curious country, traly, In ‘s trlp I was treated to three of slghts I ever saw, One of m as short range They When harpooned play; but, as the almost impossible than splash with boat are soaked. large and bright I know nothing 120 of an ordinary with each other eat the young, with only three nus halt the tail, » belt of palmetto . 1t was & mound of the To juige eggs must have the swan J these was the watching from behind a o040 and woRTIwEITIRY, themselves lnto serlos trouble by | T or'or the atate If his adoption,—[S, e —— | rock of & tamily of beavers at work fell- 925 A M Mail and Express causlng the destruction of Individusl a “What Fools These Mortals Be,’ ) # o Andy Martin, & deck hand, fell from . . |ing timber and bullding dams, Issy a g Eeproas - om proporty, 1 do not suppose that an al- |\ mer Mary Morton at Davenport | BOSI0%: April 20.—A dispatch from Corin: { (Zi)y. but thero must have boen two ' s ub 00w 1, e s v Porlive | L% van badly lojured by belng strack | b Maive, sates that forty or fitty peorle| hungrod of thom, overy ono working 225 A x Mall and Express 08y u :lbl:‘n“'lc 'i“fi,"';’l:::d © Pf}"h with the wheel. Sevoral ribs were | there expect to go to heaven today. This ex-|away like mad, I had been making a 73 A % Accomoation &8 | MbINCR law Ny oraltettle etk | proien, a couple of them penetrating his | pectation is based on tho belisf that the things | trip to seo soms of the country back from DM R o SR ;fi",‘l:k';'“;:'v:: hd h" Taw ank | lung, 'His racovery ia doubtfal. related I the sccount of tho vision in the| the ses, aud was surprised (o seo how 9:907a ¥ Ma'l aud Expross o350 | ag the councll ‘wiil have to vote the| The Algons, Southeastern & Northern Zfif,;ci;"-“fiffl.,‘:'&'kf:;: ‘,Lgu'f.’,'.;?"l::j"xixi; hfllvll‘;v%ud;d, Wlll{lplffi"elfidl: was. é ] Bspion 06 4 M| money to pay the speclal police that I|Railway Compsny filed its articlesof In-|they expect today. Female converts have | ¥&® E: o4 by & h";""l b ";; '“1 RIS, MMM A3 SRS should have to select, to find the places | corporation with the secretary of stato on | made ascension robss in which all converts | long before we reached tne lake where 204 ¥ ol and Bxorem i “rupning In violation of law,” with a|Thursdsy. The company, with a capltal | ae now clad mg are waiting in their taber- | saw the beavers I wllu}mzzlud at thlof wanasm, o7 J o your petition, 1 must, therefore, have | from Alg e directions K o 1 I From Transfer only, ir 00 i The richest man In Oregon began life | among the trees, coul 130 r 8 BhLouls Ex:r- 246 ¢ M ::‘;::.:: m":’:,_f.t? ::fl?v]g ‘;::':0 %‘;“: R"bbd“‘fi"' l“;"""f“:;“" '“?h hold ‘llti.l by buying on credit a calf skin, tanning | bardly believe the Indian when 70 r ¥ Oblcago Kxp via Pooria 9110 4 4 | %00 fiver T and thag 1t should :f:"" AR MRS NgAaY 1D, Eae ?:fim it and seliing it for §10. ge sald mw trow_ wore linln ;:u:dt:, KANAAS GIYY, BT, JOB AND OOUNGL BLUFYS. 3 a - eavers. en we came In sight of the 10,00 A N Mail and Expross 00 v ¥ ““Qi’?:.".. z;:;l‘f ‘b‘m"::l‘l’::}!’ i s xo | fally gashed with kolves In ‘the hallvay| The Empress of Austrls recently |lake and the hills about it I no longer S0y " Baaw e ey R A ey e ) [ Tg:';;sx.lo';lm::{::d;; _l;arl;t- The | walked elghtecn miles in one day In Eng- |doubted. Scores of the busy animsls acure, » | moti N “ o T:20 A M Mall for Sloux Oity 6:50 ¥ | I shall do a0, even 1f thelr lustractions itchell, . h had. ———— wore geawlog down the tre thers » Albert Mitchell, recently sent to the were trimming the branches off as neatl, 730 v M Exproes for 8¢ Paul b0 & trary $0 mY OwB vi 8 i i UNION PAOIHIC, o ] 3 ] Mayor, |Anamoss “““‘l‘"I l“"‘" fl,l“'T | Back Alehel?‘ Hunt's }hmc;iy :‘lllcél‘r: e it could have been dune with anax; 11:00 A Donver ¥xpress 48 n b J * | tence for the murder of ex-convict Thum | pains In the back or loins, fem o - |others were chopping the tlmber Into Taewu ey SR Oholera! Clean Up! at Oedar Rapids in March, 1884, proves | oases, nervous prostrations and kidney | the proper lengths for use; others rolled to have spent a good portion of his life in criminal confinement, this being his fifth term in priscn, The dates fixed for the races of the “‘bob tail” circult are June 2, 3 and 4 for diseases. DUMMY TRAINS YO OMAHA. Aslatic cholera has reappeared with the warm weather in Egypt and will doubt- less revisit France and other European coantries within » few weeks, The FTETR E 1146 p.m. Leave Oniaha—0:40—7:6¢—8:80—10:00 —1L1 & W, 1260-3:00—8:00—4:00—4:66—b:60 —1L10p. m Liver] Remedy, Slck Headache! Piles, billous headache and dyspepeis, are ali|ldly laylng up a wooden structure of speedily cured by Hun! lf the pleces into the water and floated constipation, | them to the dam-workers, who were rsp- Kidney and | which the most expert of human work- wen might well be prond. I watohed e THE OHEAPEST PLACE IN OMAHA T0 BUY Foll=Rs =[] ={=R=E Is AT DEWEY&STONES’ One of the Best and Largest 8tocks in the United States To Belect From: NOISTAIRS TO CLIMB. ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR SOUTH OMAHA. The Advantage of Settling in the New Town The title “‘South Omaha” doesnot mean the sonthern part of the aity of Omaha.but is the name of the thrivine town commencine at the Union Stock ]lrfl’ on the south, and extend ing for a mile and & half north, nearly connecting with thecity limits of Omaha. The company have again concluded to put on sale 1,000 lots, and let the purchasers of the rame realize the profit which the enhanced value of thess lota is sure to make. It now being an assured fact that Sonth Omaha is destined—in tho near fature—to be the largost live stock market west of Chicago, there can ba no doubt that this property fn a fow yoars will ba worth five or ev on times the amount that it can be bought for to-day. Some may ask: If this is so, why do not the company keep it and realizo thia profit The anawer is, that in order to make lots valuable, thero must be improvementa on or sur rounding them, and as is the case in all new towns, special inducements must be offered first to et the psople to take hold and build, Thero are probably more such inducements offered by South Omaha than were ever pu forth by any new town. The large business dono by the stock yards company aud the ime. mensoslaughter and packing houses togother with their susilaries are no small featuzo n the aggregate of events that are destined to make South Omaha a large place. Again, the town is not an addition to Omaha, and is not liabtle for city taxes, although it enjoys all the benefits from the growth of Omaha that it would if it were just INSIDE the city limits, but being just OUTSIDE, only county taxes are collacted, which are merely nominal. The town owns and operates its own water works, which furnish an abundant supply of pure spring water, Dam- my trains will ron on the B, & M. and,U, P. railways every hour, stopping at the north end of tho town site as well as at the stook yards, The Thirteonth stroot horse oars will run to Hascall’'s park this spring, and to the stock yards at no distant day. The high altitude makes the location a healthy one. Of courso there are those who do not believe that South Omaha will amount to much, This kind of people didn’t belisve Chicago_would over bo anything batter than a cranborry bog, that Omaha would evor outgrow her village clothes, that thers never could bo any fruit raisad in Nebraska, ete,, ete. Who made it win? The sceptics, or those that had an abiding faith 1n the onergy, intelligence and resourses of this great country? For information, maps, prices and terms apply at the company's office, 216 8, Thirteenth street, Merchant’s National Bank Buuding, first floor, M. A.UPTON, Asst. Sec’y and Manager. the beavers at work for an hour, and [ mor that indicatlons of ifs existence had then lsft the spot reluctantly. That [baon found somewhore away up tho bed night, by the way, 1 had beaver meat for|of some mountain stream, beyond the supper, went to bed on beaver skins, |head waters of the Kenal river. If toat and coversd myself with beaver fure, | was true, subsequent developments must and bad beaver again for broakfast. I|have been indefinitely postponed, for I had never eaten beaver meat before, and | have never heard of any great amcunt of 1found it good. My guide told me that | bulllon coming out of the reglon. the lake where we bad seen the beavera waa one of a chaln_of seven, and thatit] o "p " UM Ointment, Oures was tho great Indian trapping place. |y by magio: Pimples, Linck Heads or Grub They trapped in one lake one year, in| Blotches and Eruptions on the face, leaving another the next, and so on, thus giving | the skin clear and beautiful, - Also oures Ttch, the beavera an opportunity to increaee in | Salt Rhoum, Sore Nipples, Sore Lips and old, the waters which were not disturbed. | Obstinate Uleers — Sold Ly dreslataiioe One of the other cur.ous sights T eaw | Raho s Oound 0, B Goodmen ™ 4 that day was a grizzly bear fishing for salmon, That was a funny sight. They have the common brown bear and the B e e beothor of thn Seazel? | A thorough tnvestigation of tho ehip- mountains and.just as tough. Long be-|ment of oranges cast shows that tho fore we came to the spot whore we saw roads are fairly well satisfied with the tho grizaly fahiog we saw Lis {racks' n |Sount «f traflic done In that liue. the soft margln of the lake. The marks | APqut forty cara of orangen have gone to of his feet measured sixteon Inchos across | St L:ouis and Chicago. The rate is $1to and were neatly taloo as long. Sudden: | the former and $L.25 per hundred to the 1y my guide made me & sige and. drop |1atters ~An intelligent ratlroad man ex- bed "down behind arock. T did the |Préssed his opinion of the trade In Same, and, looking ahead nob mors than | Ora0Eos and the effict of tho reduction in threorode, I saw the largest wild animal |Tat2 ae followe: = P Oty 1 had ever seen in my lilfe outside of a I 1D D) hP 800, JRIIOIERCy 0 managerle. I knew It was a grizzly. shipment n!t] such a large quantity of The great brate was lylng on the top of | °£308e8 to the east has kept up the prices a busk in which ho had scooped ant a |Of Oranges in thia state. Oranges have chute down tothe water's edgeat s been dear here all the season. I do not sharp angle. The bear's eyes was fixed think California growers can compete tntently on the water, and he had not\ With Florida growers and keep up the heard our approach. Presently he slid | Price at the high figure of this season. down that chute with astonishing velocity | ¥'lorids oranges r" be put down in Ohl- and plunged head first Into the water, |9 chesper than Callfornia oranges, When he arose snd backed out he had in | ¢7®® at the present reduced tariff. And ono of his great paws. an cnormoas sal. | L 94 inform you that the §20 a ton for mon, which he took to the top of the freight does not more than pay the roads bank and proceeded to make a meal of, hl: "“: T"mm::‘l“m:)l As Ho nover finfshed it for both my guide | th® ransportatlon. =Orange-g and myself sent two rifle balls into his |20 ke to_hear theso opinions and do gigantio carcass, Ho aroso to his feet not often credit them, but I have formed Sl a rour ko o lion, tured about twe | them feom a purely railroad standpolnt, or throo times as f to soo whence the |23 I think Tam more disinterosted in deadly fire had come, and then fell {o ““;,;““gf' than the (Rt ey the ground and was soon dead. This heiabovo opinieniis:worthy of conald. fishing for salmon fs a common method of | r8tion: At any rate, Oalifornia oranges securing cholco morsels of food by both | have mads thelr way remarksbly well in oS et L the east this year. The 400 car-loads *.The third str.nge olght T saw that| that have been sent to St. Louls and Chi- day was towardevening. 1t was summer, | 380 and other points are not much more and wo came to the mouth of a mountatn | than asample. ' But the samplo has at- {orrent, near where wo were tocamp. As | racted agreat deal of attention, and has Wontopped by the shore of the stream u | Prepated the market for a much larger berd of relndeor, at loast twenty of them, | 4emand. The inoreascd demand for Cal- came out todrlnk. They woro not thirty |i'0Fnia oranges will do much to keep up feot feom s, and raised thelr gront antlony | th Price to the present profitablo figuree. sndstood looking at us with such apparent The raliroad linos say that they stand contidence In our good Intentions that|F€8dy to improve the servioo in trans- 1 would not permit the guide to abuse it, porting frult if t}:a growers make heavy asho was on tho polnt of dolng, slthough | thipments, A ffveen or elghtcon car- it was a bitter task for him tokesp his | (1% OF fruil wexe shipped o day to rifle from his shoulder. The deer finally | Chicago better rates could be given. Bul o ——— SKIN DISEASES CURED, —— Shipment of Pacitic Fruit, San Francisco Call, what would be tho effect of lanoing fif- sionpedand Sian, and o pappenred | {oon or eightoon car-loads of fralt In the upon us, Chicago market In a slugle day? It § i Ight break the price snd prove more “You wonld herily think there wore |™! v P ea you have probably formed of the natureof the country, but of ll the vivid higher rates. The companies have msde memories I bave of the tereltory, those I retaln of the Alaskan morquito are the most vivid, Icamped forsomedsys one summer on the Kenal river, near Lake Skolaks, of which it isthe outlet, and of all the polsonous, insatiable peststhat ever lived I found there in the form of mos- quitoes and black flies, The mos quitoes resemble those we have east, but, to correspond with everything else in that land of wonders, they are a built on a much grander scale, They have a pro- boscis that I will wager could drill, saw, and chop a hole through the hide of Jum- bo in lees time than the most expert and able bodled Jersey mosquito could tap the cuticle of a toree-months-old baby, The moment the Alaska mosquito lights on you you begin to itch and swell, His bite on me was so poisonous that after an hour’s experience with him 1 was taken to camp ill, and for two days I was unable to getaround, The Indlan who was with me burned some native herb which had a pungent odor and anointed me with some kind of oil. The smoke kept the mos- quitoes away from me, and the ofl re- moved the polson, The natlves du not seom to mind those pests, and I suppose if & white man coold live in thelr midst long enough he might becomc in & meass ure indifferent 1o thelr sting, The black flles ssem to have stingers all over thew, for when they get a hold on your flesh they bang on like & wood tick, ani when you do get them off you—you will find a spot of blood where every one of them clung. They say there kes in Alasks, but Jf there are I W Bny. I was there slx years, and when I first went there a great many white adven. tarers were trylog to get ¢n the tra)l of an alleged gold mine, of gold reglon, which legend sald had been discovered by tome Ruesians In 1850, When I left that country there were men still looking tor that gold region, and there was a ru-, 102 ber pet dog to sl e — Don’t hawk, hawk, blow, epit, and disgust everybody with your offensive breath, but use Dr, Sage's Catarrh Remedy and end it. A Chst With Benator Sherman, Chicago Tribune, Senator John Sherman arrived at the Grand Pacific last night from Mansfield, O, on his way out West, In conversation with a Tribune repor- ter last night he sald that the silver ques- tion is one which Is creating a great deal of excitemenv just at present, There are two remedies for the evil —one, by in- creasing the value of the dollar; the other, by dlscontivuing tne colnage. The Sena- tor expressed himself as being in favor of the former. The Government, ho sald, is gullty of 8 epecles of dishonesty In meking the people pay & dollar for 86 cents, If by reason of the balance of trade belng agalnst us the guld should be drlven out of the country there would be a still great decline in sllver, and gold would be prasticallydemonetized, because people would hoard what little they could et u In OLio the subject of the Scott law was exclting some discussion, The peo- ple there seemed to be In favor of a law which would eccomplish the tame results a8 the Scott law, but ln & more practical WaY. A CAR 0 all who are suffering from £10 and indigestions of youth, nervous weakness deosy, loss of manhood, eto. 1 will send & that will cure you FREE OF CHARGE. This vemody was_discoyered by w missionar to Amerlca. — Bend solt-addressed envelope BaY. wru T, A Station D * New York —— ne Indlana Is among the richest states n the union in limestone of o superlor building quality. e —— A Brooklyn woman ls ea'd to be tralos ® on rollers,