Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 31, 1885, Page 2

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BROWN'S IRON - BITTERS WILL CURE HEADACHE INDIGESTION BILIOUSNESS DYSPEPSIA NERVOUS PROSTRATION MALARIA CHILLS axp FEVERS TIRED FEELING GENERAL DEBILITY PAIN iy THE BACK & SIDES IMPURE BLOOD CONSTIPATION FEMALE INFIRMITIES RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA KIDNEY AND UIVER TROUBLES FOR SALE BY AL DRUGGISTS Th: Genuine has Trade Mark and crossed Red nes on wrapper. TAKE NO OTHER. TSN HEST OPERATING, LUICKESYT SELLING AND T GOURLAE ST0VE tomr affered ¢o the noblic wlag e * e vy ,E&RIETSE){ERQ‘! n“l%lsus NO FEE! UNTIL CURED | written guarantee of cure given in eve: A‘llconllull.ll on.l"m.. ani st o Gibeod Sen ‘Do CLARKE, M, D.,180 80, CLARK ST, CHICAGO, Kl Frightful Case of a Colored Man, Tcontracted a feartal cas of blood polson n 1883 was treated by some of the best physioiavs in At anta. Theyused the (d remedioa of mercury and ‘potash, which brought on rheuxatisn and impaired my digestive organs, Evory joint in ms was swollen and full of prin. When I was given up todie, my physiciany thought It would bo s good timo_to’ test o virtues of Switt’s Speoifio. Whon I commenced takiog S. 8. 8., the phys.cian ea'd I could not live wo wooks under the ordipary treatment. He com- menced to give me the medicieatrictly a-cording to directions, which I continued for several monthe. $00k nothing elss, and ¢ xwmenced to umprove from the vory first. Boon the rheuwatism lelt me, my appetito becamoall right, and the ulcers, whioh the ductor said wore the most frightful ne bad ever ssen Degan to heel, and by tho st of Octobor, 1834, I was & woll man again. Tam rtronger now than 1 ever wasbetore, and weligh mare. Ly Mo TLEXDOX. Lem McClendon‘has beenin the employ of the Chess-Catloy Company for some years, ard I know ho abcve statements to bs trae, ~ At the time he be- gau taking Switv's Specifie ho wes in a horrible con- dition. Iregard his curo s almoss miraculous. B. Crosar, Manager, Chesi-Ca-lav Co., Atlanta Division. Atlanta, Ga., April 18, 188 DOCTOR WHITTIER €17 8t. Charles t. Lonis, 3 s T grad " o 11 Prostration, y, Mental end Physical Woakness , Mercurial and other Affo tions of Throat, Skin or fiones, Bi30d Pol and Ulce A BUSTLING MOUNTAIN TOWN. The Metropolis of the Animes Valley in the San Juan Monntaizs, The Produots of the Conntry Around ~-The Beauties and Business of the City—Sketches of a Journey Westward, Correspondence of The Bz, Duraxco, Colorado, August 27— The pretty, musiosl, Spanish name in thehead.line by no means indloates a Spanish village but on the contrary, one of the prettiest and neatest of Amerioan towns, well bullt and bustling, nestled in the Anlmas valley, one of the prettiest valleys In the Unlted States, heading in the San Juan mountains, In extreme eouthwestern Oolorado, I did not drop down here from the clouds, although that would seem to be a very appropriate nat- ner of entering so paradisaloal a retreat; on the conteary, I came Ina palace car, over the great Burlington route-~which 18 by all odds the most delightfal of all the great trans-continents] lines to Colo: rado—making many detours by the way, in other parts of the state, leaving the best wine till the lsat, in accordance with scriptural Injunotion, But I must first tell you of my journey. The Burllngton route passes through southern Nebraska, whioh is the beat portion of the stats, a beautifol, farming reglon, more undulating than any other portlon of the great plilns beyond the Missour], and certaluly a very prosperous sectlon, judging from the fine farm build- Ings one sees along the route, and the im- mense acreage of gralns of varlous kinds. Orchards are also numerons and artificlal groves of forest trees, doubtlsss many cf them set out under the timber-culture act, which has done a great desl for this great, treeless country, and should not be repealed until it has accomplished a still greater transformation, In Colorado, Irrigation Isnecessary, ex- oept In the extreme eastern portion, where large areas are bslng taken up by setilars this apring, in a section where the experience of a fow earlier ploneers has demonstrated that crops can be ralsed without is. The limit of the belt of suf- ficlent rainfall for agricultural purposes, !s to-day, a hundred miles farther west than it was supposed to be, even ten years ago. One's prejudice agalnst {rrigatlon, however, vanishes after talking with Col- orado farmers who will soon convinceone, although it Involves extra labor, it more than repays the husbandman In the en- hanced quality and increased quantity of his crops, to say nothing of thelr greater certalnty, No crops are ever loet under irrigation, by drought or on account of rainy weather during harvest time. I passed through many prosperous and beautiful towns in Nebrasks, Lincoln, the capital, belng the most hopressive and attractive. In a number of places large brick bulldings were poilnted out to us, as this or that ccllege or seminary or uni- veraity, and public school bulldings were most prominent objects in every town, Indexes of the enlightened policy of the people of the stata. Colorado, east of the mountaine, s by no means so attractive a country as farther west. One must go Into the mountalns to find the paradises, although along thelr eastern base are some charm- ing places. Denver is one of the best built, best shaded, cleanest and prettiest clties of ita size In the union. Celo Spriogs is & lovely place with gardens and lawas that would put to shame thcse of many an eastern town, where Irrigation is not a necessity. So of Greeley and its beauti- ful sarrounding country, which twelve years ago was a cactus waste. The frults and flowers of the Denver markets, grown right at home, are almply wonderful. The poleatiallties of a large agriculture are here, although it must neceesarily be limlited to the area of irel- gable land; so that, as a whole, Colorado can hardly be regarde an agricultural state. But owlog to the very fact of its natural ilmitatlons, farmiog 8 here better than in any other sf in the union, reilroad transportation rates for Ksnsse and California fruits and other products, acting as a protective tariff to keep up prices toa high figure, and the miniog camps always furnishing a ready market for everything that can be ralsed. Mining and stookraislng, however, are and must in the nature of things, continue to be the chlef industries of the state, But what Icdustries they are, to whose wonderful profits every town in Colorado 2, | bears testimony in its msagnificent homes 7 |and public bulldings which stand as mon. James Medieal Ingtitute ) Chartered by theStateofI1li- nois for theexpress purpose 'of giving immediate relietin B all chroniic, urinary and pri- vate discases. Gonorrheea, GleetandSyphilis in all their complicated forms, also all diseases of the Skin and Blood promptiy relieved and permanentlycired by reme- dies,testedina Forty Years Special Practice, Seminal t Lossea by Dreams, Pimples on nhood, positively cured. Thero ting, The lgprnpnnle remedy each case. Consultations, per- by letter, sacredly confidential. led- icines sent by Mail and Express, No marks on package to Indicate contents or sénder, Address DR, JAMES,No. 204Washington St.,Chicago, Il A R TR P AT IOWA COLLEGE OF LAW, Law department of Drake Univeralty, Dos Molner, Towa Soad for Catalogue. Addrees A. H. MoVey, Dean o: J. 8. Clark, Sccrolary, care Co o MoVey & Olak, Dos Moines lows m&o dwk and Beast, Mas, Mustang Liniment is older than most men, and used more and more every year, / uments to the galns of thelr owners through one source or the other! The D. & R G. rallway practically constitutes the circulatory syatem of the state, through means of which the bulk of ita local commerce s carried on, A trunk llne extends southward from Den- ver to El Moro, near the southern boun. dary of the state. From Pueblo, the glnt‘mnnuhutnrlng clty of the state of Deaver, the road branches in several different direc'ions into the mountalns, Like the spokes of half a wheel, and these branches branch agaln and again, notably at Leadville, seeking out all the proml. nent mining camps beyond. One of these secondary branches is to be extended from R)d Cliff, down the Esgle river to the Grand, and dowa the Grand to the Utah line, opening up an almost virgln conntry, off to the west and northwest of Leadville, including the White River ccuntry, the scene of the Meeker massacre of 1870, and this branch will o130 send out a shoot up the Roaring Fork of the Graud, to Aspen wh'ch ir, at present, the most Eloperonl camp In the s'ate, They call the mining towns, “‘camps” out bere. Aspen has from seven to ten thousand people, but {t s sthl » ocAmp. /| Tll:u branch will also make the wonder- ful Glenweod Springs sccessible, which are {n the Grand River valloy at the mouth of the Roaring Fork, where nature has provided cvér a hundred hot eprings of varylog quality for the healing of the na- ttons, Some of these springs rise in osves which they convert luto na‘ural vapor bal ‘foey are already grestly sought by Oclradeaus, for the cure of rhenmatlsm and skin and blood disesses. One of them, It Is asserted, will restore helr to the baldest head, 1f this be true what a procession of bald pates will put lo an ap pearance by the firet tralo! Already there is atown of teversl hun- dred inbabitants there, which supports s newspaper, or rather has one publishe THE DAILY BEE--MONDAY, AUGUST 31, there, which may be quite another mat. tor. This is a great state for newspspers, A town that hasn’c one by the tlme it is a month old, at least, is consldered a slow good-for-nuthing place. Although the state is prolific In newspapers the climate doesn’t neem to agree with them 2o well as It does with invalids of nearly s, At least 1t doesn’t ocondace r longevity, They are, one might sy, almost unlversally short-lived; but one genera'ion only makea way for an-|Il other which treads apon the heels of its unfortuns' e predecsssor, almost before it 18 decently burled. It must be the *‘light alr” t> which all abnormal pbenomenas are here riferred as a cause, that makes #0 many people hanker after a newspaper carcer In this country, The newepapers a8 a rale t:oug , are bright, wide-awake, ets full of vim and force, ys of grammar, Glenwood Springs Is Iald out on the plan of Colorado Springs, with wide streets aud some double avenues, with two rows of trees down the center, as well as n row on elther slde, and is one of the ‘‘b)ag” towns of the state, As its oltitude Is no greater than that of Denver, the winter climate Is not se- vere, and as coal fields exist not far dis. tant, it is thought that that 1t will ulti- mately be a smeltlng ocentre for Aspen, forty milrs distant to the southeast, ata much higher altitude, as well as for Oar- bonate, a comparatively new camp which has attalned some reputation, located twenty miles to the north. There is talk too, of the Barlington road belng extend- ed westward and followlng down the Grand on its way to Salt Lake Clty. In fact, several surveying partles are already in the field, All of these places are just across the continentel divide or the ‘‘Snowy Range,” au it Is generally called, which is the rsnge bounding the Arkan: eas valley on the west, up which valley the D. & R. G. R. R. ruus from Paeblo to Leadvllle. The latter clty lles on the western slops of the Park Range which bounds the valley on the east in this portion of its course, Loadville commands a magrificient vlew of this range, the grandest on the continent, belog on the other slde of the valley but a few miles distant. ‘‘Mount Massive,” rechristened * ‘Mount Garfield,” a few years back, Is directly opposite the town, with lts three lovely *‘Evergreen lakes” nestled in its slde near the base, and below another with little cascades tween, the upper one being fed by a simi- lar cascade that comes tumbling down the mountain side. *‘Mount Elbert” Is a prominent object to the southwest, near whose base ars the celebrated “‘Twin lakes,” two lakes of larger size, slmilarly eituated, on whose waters a small steamer plles rendering it the highest navigated water In America, the altitude belog In the neighborhood of 10,000 feet. The atage road to Aspen peeaes by “‘Twin lakes.” The econery about Leadville is grand and inspirlag in the extreme. It Is still the most Interesting town In the state and although the wonderful boom of the early dsys ended with the collapse of 1880, it has largely recovered from that catastrophe and its minlng output is greater to-day than ever before, and although wild rpeculation is at an end and outside capital has to a large extent lost faith In the place and its mines, de- velopment goes on apace and proporties considered worthlesr, four or five years ago, are now good paylng mianes. The leaslog system has had much to do in restoring confidence and placlog {he camp on a firmer baals of prosperity, the leasers belng for the moat part Leadville men, who have put home capital into many mines, whose owners lecked either the plack or the means to work them, and proven that ‘‘the bottom” hasn’t “‘fallen out of Leadville,” by any manner of means, many of them having made in- dependent fortunes for themselves, as well as for the owners of the properties in the way of royalties. y to Leadvllle, one pass through the ‘‘Grand Oanyon” of the Arkausss, which beglns a little above Canyon City and extends for a distance of twenty miles, it one count both the canyon proper and the gorge beyond, which is almost as narrow. For six or seven miles the train seams to be sweep- ing through a rift in the surface of the earth, a very tortmous, narrow rift at that, from which one looks up at the rib- bon of blue sky above, between bare and rugged rocks ritiog abruptly for a dis- tence of over two thousand feet on elther side, with less abrupt mountain walls be- yond, towerlng to a helght of three or four thousand feet. A natrow shelf beside the rashlog tor- rent, blasted for almost the entire dis- tance from the rocky walls, sometimes forming a corridor as it were, with the rocks overhanging, serves as a roadbed. Men tad to be let down by ropes from above in mary places, to drill the holes for the blastiug powder, durlng the con- stroction of the road, there beiog no foot hold at all and no ible way of de- scending, ‘Where no human being had ever trod buta fow years back, the adventurous raflroad now bears the hundreds dally. In one spot the walis 80 precipltons that the whole mountain side would have had to be blasted away in order to make a passege, Here instead, a longltudinal fron bridge Is swung from {ron trusses snchored in the rocks above on elther eide of the stream, 1t!s diffisult to im- agine a person 8o slolld that his heart would not be stirred with awe In travers. ing this mighty chasm, The Salt Lake division of the rallroad ) the westward at Salida In s valley crossing the ‘‘snowy range” over Marshall Pass, where the scenery is especlally fine, and paming through Gannison Olty with & branch to Created Bu.te, where there are extenrlve antbraclte ool fields, snd beyond, thran}h Dolts, Montross, Fruita and Grand Junction, centers of & fine agrl- onltural reglen, to Salt Lake Olty and Ogden, conneoting at the latter place with the Central Paclfic railrosd, for Qalifornla, Theline down the Grand river will probably connect with th!' at Grand Junction, which is on th '] stream, and may when completed be used a3 the through line fcom Denver to Utah, inst2nd of the mora southern route, as it will be considerably shorter, Bat it lsths Sin Jusn country that ploazes mo the bast of any part of the state, perhsps beosuse it is the most beantiful. To ¢ me over here one takes the Ssn Juan branch of the *‘Baby Road,”as the D. & R, G. way dubbed for many yeare, becsuseit s & narrow- gusge, the ficst narcow-gusge road ever constructed {n this country, so bullt o the first {nstanca becauss of fts better adaption to the short curves necessary in a mountalnous country, but on sccount of 1t grea‘er cheapness of construction, as well &8 of running expenses, now pre- ferred on general principles, by mavy railroad compasles, even on level ground. This branch diverges at Pueblo, or to be literally correct, rather at Cuchare, a tew miles south of Paeblo; but Paebl is the starting point, nevertheless. The scenery on this branch is the grandest of apy on the line, with the one excaptlon dlof the *Grand Canyon,” We oross two ranges en routs to this valley, the first being the Sangre de Ohristo, which we oross over Veta Pass, in asoending which we traverse the fa- mous mule-shoe ocurve around Damp mountaln, whenos we look back apon the track we have already covered, hundreds of feet below, and from which we get the finest view of the Spanish P the southesst, twin mountaln beauty of form, nesr the New Mexlos ne. On detcendIng the range Into the love- 1y San Luis park, the most southern of the four great parks of Oolorado—North, Middle, Sovth and San Luls—we pass along the flank almost of Slerra Klanos, the highest mountain In Oolorado, which bossts forty different pesks of 14,000 foet altltude and over. Blanoa exceeds them all, however; by a few feet. Pilke's Poak s one of the forty, but la over. topped by several besldes Blanca. 'he view of the last-named mountain 1s muoh finer, however, from the farther slde of the psrk, which is here about forty miles wide by seventy-five In length. In looking back at it the eye takes in all of its grand proportions, and when its ocap of perpetusl snow which Flvu it Its name ng “White mountain” is lighted by the setting sup, it Is Indesoribably glori- ous in its varying tints of pearl and am. othyst and pink, deepening into erimson and purple as the shadows lengthen. On the west eide of the park we begln climblng the Comsjos range, making headway slowly In our ascent for many miler, as would seem from our z'gzag couree. We look back from a tlight el- ovation at the route just traversed and it looks llke a whip lash, just alter it has been cracked. Indeed, it Is called the “‘whip-lash.” A little farther on we pass the same station house three times, once on a lower level and twlce on a higher, clrollng around {t from the firs: to the second level. . After a fow mlles of mountain climb- ing we reach the brink of Bear creek, which we sre to follow to the top of the range. We look down into the gorge below, dizzy-headed; but this is nothing to what Is to come. Rsilroads must fol- low streams, 8s a rule, through the mountalns. It was found Impossible to get the requisite grade by followlng the bottom of the gorge, as the ascent near its upper end would bs tod precipltous for the rallroad to follow, there being waterfalls there as well as very rugged e- | rocke; mo the road is constructed along its upper brink. There belog numerous feeders to the maln stream, each one with its own sep- arate and Individual gorge, itls necessary to make many a detour around these wide gorges, or to travel farencugh up them to find a place narrow enough to to admit of belng brldged and then back again on the other slde to the main siream. 8o on we go, In and out, generally along a narrow terraca cut in the side of the mountains, which towers hundred of feet above us on ona side, whila the bank falls sheer away on the other to the creek, hundreds of feet below, It is exciting, but not very reassuriog. Presently we come to Monument curve, where the elements have carved out a large number of huge and gro- teeque figures from the rocks that ltne the road, sometimes on one slde and some- times on the other, llke genil of the place guarding us from danger. A little farther on, a spur of the mountaln blocks the way, but nothing daunted we burrow right through It, everywhere ga:ning grade, climbing higher and higher along the mountain stde, the gorge to our left growing correspondingly deeper, uatil finally we shoot through another tunnel and on its farther slde the traln pauses on the absolute brink of the Toltec gorge, where from the window we look sheer down over two thousand feet to the rolling, tumbling waters and the jagged rocks below, almost an inferno In its ruggedness. On all side of the chasm are the bare, blackened and otherwiss scolored rocks, bespeaking a volcanic rent, which th: ters have made serve them as a patsage-way. Directly the scenery assumes a milder type, and we traverse the protty, grassy dimples near the summit, which we soon reach atan altitude of about 11,000 feet above the sea. Our next object of Inter- eat is the enow-sheds, for which therels smple use in winter in exposed places where the wind drifts the enow to a depth of from ten to twenty feet. Ic reached a level here, last winter, f fcur or five feat, the tralns being often blccked for a few hours, till the track could be oleered, There have bzen no serlons de- lays, however, since the construction of the eheds, most of which were bullt a year ago, after the snow blockade of the previous winter, when no tralus came through to Daringo fora perioa of s'x woeks, Thase shods are bullt of very heavy timbers, which will withstsand an immense pressure, and have beea the means of keeping the road open the prs: winter. The descent of the range Is quite another matter from the ascent. It doesn’c take long t> cover the twenty wiles down to Chama, (a Spanish name, pronounced with o broad a sound of the “a,” a8 to glve the lmpression of belng spelled withan *‘r,”) which Is a charming place, for sliuation at least, belng bullt in an open for:st of large yellow pines. Here we are within the territorlal limits of New Mexico, as we have been ever pincs we left the summit, the road travirsing the sofl of that territory for & number of miler farther slso, before croealng beck into Colorado, The next stream we strike Is the Nava- jo which we follow to its junotion with the San Juan, followlng down that stream for a considerable d'stance. Then we shoot across the country t» Durang), over a rolling mesa, a part of the South. ern Ute reservation, cros:ing the river at the sgency, then a few milcs farther on the Florlds, (pronounced Fiorets) thence o the Animas and up that riveg to beau- tifal Durango, three miles north of the reservation—which s here twenty miles wide and extends to the New Mexlco line—sixty miles from tha eastern boun- dary of Utah and 330 miles from Pucblo, To the north of the town tower the fa- mous San Juan mountaine, the magnifi- o rimass of the purple La Pldtas loom- 1ng up a fow miles distant to the north west, and the serrated Needles frowniog down from thelr lofty heigh's in the norttesstern horizon, The immsdlate surroundings are pic- toresque beyond description. The valley 1s shut in on either side by abrupt, rocky walls rlelog to the helght of from seven to twelve hundred feet In places, with graater heights beyond, rislng ia terrac until they become mountains several thousand feet high, ay one ssends the valley, Tae boundary walls ars broken right at Durango, by several creeks which here jin the An'mass, each with its corres pnding rocky pulissdes which every where ehow the edges of the more or lcs: ulted sirate, which vary greatly ia color, diffsrent tin's of red prevalliog in all the valley above the town, and all worn In'c ueifal shapes by wind and water, with an oscarioral carcade leapiog down thelr aldes, to add to their plotoresquencss, vines and evergreens sceking a foothold ;v. » 1885. In every little crevice or ravine and the sammits crowned with pine forests, Right at the town, the broken face of the ramparis takes the form of a line of glgantio frigates with prows drawn up abreast in battle array. In the midst dashes the benatifal, olear, mountaln stream of melted snowa over a rocky bot tom, Sometimens when the saows mil: very rapldly, under the Influence of too ardent a sun, It become a ragiog torrent and aweeps away bridges and makes Itself generally obnoxious for a time, It makes & bend nearthe middle of the town-plat, sweeping across from the eastern slde of the valley to the very foot of the western oliffs, which 1t fol- lows the rest of the way through the town., This makes two Darangos, Darango proper, whereall the business houses and a great majorlty of the resl- dences too, for that matter, are looated, and North Durango, a pretty resldence subarb, acroas the river, many of whose houses line the very banks of the atream, down which z'gzag paths wind amid tangled vines to the water's edge, and little rustic bridges croes to the islands, — ———— RuxuMATISM, GOUT AND NEURALGIA ARE generally caused by urea In the blood and it Is one of the special properties of Dr. Richmond's Samaritan Nervine to eradicate all these disorde: e — School Notes. There wlll be an examination of school teachera for the opening term to-day. The school board has made arrange- ments to rent the St. Barnabas’ par- ochial school on QOalifornla street, and then will fit 1t up and us» it durlng the coming year. It Is oalonlated that this move will greatly relleve the prossurs on the Central and North schoo's, which las year were crowded to overflowing. It is expected that the flagging on ths east slde of the High school grounds will bo completed next week. Prof. Bumann, the new instructor of normal training, hes nearly placed all the benches in his apartment in the High school building. —— Hush a bye, baby on the tree top, When the wind blows the cradle will rock, The cough of the baby will leave it for sure, For mamma wlll give it the Red Star Cough Care. Army Matters. Col. Hall, inspector of posts, returned from a tour among some of the western posts of the department, In oconversation with a reporter Saturday he sald that ‘‘everything was all qulet on the frenfier,” and thiat there were no slgnsof Indism trouble In the west. Gen. Breck hes recetved from Gen. Schotield, of the division headquarters in Chicago, a t:legram Inttructing him to see that work Is at once suspended on Fort Bridger and Fort Douglas. Exten- slve barracks are belng erected at the one place and repalrs are being made at the other, The cause of the stoppage or work I8 not known. Xor washing clotning, ana a1 1aundry and cleansing purposes, JAMES Py LE'S PEARLINE is a favorite compound. It does not injure 1he fabrics, and saves a great deal of labor. _Sold by grocers. She Will Leave tne Town, Mirs, Gas Sohultz, who fizures in the police court on an aversge about once a week, stood up agaln, Saturday, before Judge Stenberg to answer to a charge of drunkenniss. ““Let me cff this once, Judge,” she pleaded, ‘‘and I'll leave the town.” ““Very well,” replled the judge, “‘I will let you off this onco on condition thst you leave the town without delay.” Mrs Schultz gathered up her skirts and sailed out of the court room vowing to leave Omaha and never retarn. ——— MALARIA provented and thoroughly eradicated by Durry's PURE MALT WHISKLY, Recommended by leading Physicians, Sold by Druggists and Grocers. ———— Police Ducket, The bualness before Judge Stenberg Saturday was unimportant, a few routine cases being disposed of. Charles Becker, drunk and disorderly, discharged. Jobn Russell, diuck and dlsorderly, $5 and costs, James Nagl and John Schmldt, intox!- cation, plead not gullty, cases cntinued for evidence, Mrs Schultz, disorcerly conduct, dis- charged. e — ThePresident of the Cambridge, Mass., Fire Irs, Co,, recommends Hood's Sarsa- parilla as a buildiog vp and strepgthen— ing remedy. e —— A Bad Bargain, John Delaney, a farmer from Iows, who hes but recently settled in the clty, was accosted by & horsetrader, Saturday, who wanted to trade him & fine span of mules fora a team of horses, belonging to him (Delaney) The trade was finally consummsted, and when Mr, D:liney got the maules fnto his poseession he found that they were broken down and wortbless, He has represented the case to the police, and an effort will be made to reccver his horses for him, —— In the Garden of Elen, It 1s mald that our firat psrents were not troubled by dyspeptis, and that they kuoew nothing of debllily, liver complaint or malerlous diseates But the children of Adaw, from Cain down to the present time, bave Inherited bad blood snda host of other disorders, most of which can be driven out by the timely use of Brown’s Iron Bitters. Mr. J. D Rodefsr, ot Greendale, Va., was cored of a bad case of eczema by this valuable medlcine, ard recommends it to every oue In his nefgh- bo:hood for any disorder of the blood, and as a geeral tonic e ——— A Missing Boy. Marshal Cummirgs has recelved a let- ter from Chief of Police Murray of New York clty, making sn inguiry for & mis sing boy, Joseph A, P, Demmer, who lefi his home August 5 and has not since been heard, Hels 19 years of age, 6 ‘eer 2 inobes 1o helght with large eyes, dark brown hair snd boylsh face, He wears a dark sult and dark brown derby hat. e When Baby was sick, we zave hor Castoris, Whien sho was s Child, she cried for Castoria, When sho became Mise, sho clung to ¢ storls, #hen ahe had Childees, she gave the,, Castoria COUNTY AFFAIRS. Goan, Opwin Preparing to Answer At. torney Goneral Lioess—Other Oonnty Matters, Mr. Ijams, clerk of the disiriot couet, turned over to Oounty Attorney Cowln Satarda; ‘“‘ohecked” list of the ineane patlents sent from Douglas county to the state asylam sincs 1873 Mr. Cowln is preparlog to file hls answer to the alle- gatlons of Attoraey General Leese, and will probably do so next week, He will protest sgainst the payment of the alleged dellnquent Insane tax by this county, on the ground that the records ara Incom- plete snd incorrect, and on the ground, further, that this clty and county are compelled to rend to the asylum a large number of insane patlents who drift into this place as the natural gatewsy be- tween the eastern and western halves of the continent. These persons are not In any tense the patients of Douglas connty and should not be charged to her, but to the state atlarge. Agsin, as already In- timated, Gen. Cowln will urge that even R et ReoSmn | T TRADE | aro/ MARK y thsotutely Froe from Oplates, Emetics and Poisons, A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE CURE For Coughs, Sor Hoarscucss, Tnfluensa, et .ror them idy by sending one PR CONPANY, A M Baltimore, Is Conpuorkn BY if Douglas county Is compelled to pay Royal Havana Loltery the alleged dellnquent tax, that the amount, $36,000, is wrong, inasmuch as & nuwber of patlenis are charged to the ocounty, whose names do not appear upon our officlal records, The work of Clerk Jjams In “checking (A GovErNMENT INSTITUTION ) ‘Drawn at Havana, Cubg, Every 10 to 14 Days. Ticketa In Fitths, Wholos 45, Fractiovs pro rata. Bubject £1no manipulation, not controlled by the up” the list of patlents oharged to this | partiosimintercat. It 1sthe Tairest thing in the n county slnce 1873 shows thers is no record on the county booke, that four did not belong in thia county, and that five were unkuown, Mr. Corllss in epeaking with a reperter Saturlay about thematter, eald that he was in favor of fighting the ¢ 1leged delinqnent insane tax until the bitter end, *‘I shall in a day or two,” he caid, ‘‘submit a plan that of nine | ture of chance i existince. RIDGE'S FOOD for a new couaty poor farm and naane [ Statistics show tha: tho mertality among chlldren asylum, which I think will meet the ap- proval of the board.” STRAIGHTENING THE ELKHORN, The county commisstoners will leave Saturday for the Elkhorn to lo kover the ground preparatory to forming planas for straightening the river. It is expected thst they will hold a meeting before the end of the week with the commlssioners of Washington county to perfeot the scheme, SCHOOL EXAMINATION, County Superlntendent J. B, Brunner basreturned from Fremont, and Saturday was eogaged in examining several county teachers, far greater lu the summer montiis than any other on: I'h & action, s reacily take ones, ceda- sions 0o tax uson the oigestive organe, and fs ass'mi- lated when tan stomah 10jects ail else. IS_UNFAILING AND INFALUBLE N cuRiNG Epileptic Fits, Spasins, Falling Slckness, Con- vulsions, 8t. Vit- f us Dance, Alc boliem, Opiam Eating, Sciinal Weilucss, o Impotency, 8yphilis, Scrofuls, and all Nervousand Bl!ood D!I‘sensea. 55~To Clergymen,Lawyers, LiteraryMen, Merchants, Bankers, Ladies and all whose sedentaryemployment causes Nervous Pros- tration, Irregularitiesof the Blood,Stomach, Bowels or Kidneys, or who require a nerve tonle, sppotizer or stimulant, Samaritan Nervine 1s invaluable, Rudolph Trostin and others, throngh El@' 'f:‘a“fl’“d: A roclaim it the most their counsel, Hon. Jao. L. Webster, svandcr!ul Invigor commenced sult, Satarday, 1o the|ant that ever sus- | tained asinkingsys- :ll‘l:rlut court agalnst Henry Berth tom, 81.50at Drug- to compel him to convey to| gists. For testim the helrs of Mrs Rudclgh Tros.|nials and cireulars GONOUEROR. oln, deceased, lot G, in block 93; the | EcNdstamn. = south halt of lot 4, block 153, both on| 1B DR 8. A RICHNOND KERVINR CONPANY, Tenth street. The plilatiffs clim that ST. JOSEPH, MO, Berthold held these lots in trust for Mrs, | Correspondence frecly answored by Physictans. IN HIS NAME. How the Heirs at Law of Mrs, Ru- dolph Trossin, Deceased, Sue Her Agent to Save Their Home, For testimonials and circulars send stamp. * Trosslp, and the allegations of thelr bill are In substance as followa: In 1881 Berthold had the control of a large amount of money belonging to Mrs, Troseln and he bought these two pleces of property for her bat took the deed in his own name. Mrs. Trossin llved upon one of the lots, with hor husband and | giange Berthold was a | Pllsncr. famlly, as a home. lodger in the Trossin hcusehold and had the full confldence of Mrs. Troseia, being entrusted with her business affairs. In this wise the ti- tle to the above mentloned lots wss kept | ED in Berthold’s name because Mr. Trcssiu was in an embrrrassed finsncial conditton. Berthold had the control of all of Mrs. Trossin's money and proparty, keeping the losurarcs in her name and account- Ing to her for rents, etc., while she lived. Since Mrs. Troestn’s death, on April 5th, 1885, Berthold clalms to be the sole own- er of these lots, which are worth about $16,000, and has commenced a suit to put Mr. Trossin out of the house. The actlon enfered this morning s bronght to enjoin Berthold trom selling the proper- ty, from ejecting Troesin and to compel him to convey the lots to the helrs of Mrs, Trossin, A Dee al DI 1 Read, ponder and profit_thereby. Kemp's Balsam for the Throas sud Lungs is conceded by all who have used it to excol any prepara~ tion in the market as a complete Throat and Lung Healer. All persons afllicted with the [ 5" dreadful disease—Consumption — will find speedy relief and in a majority of cases a | Ths Wor MiLwAUKSK anent cure, The preprietor has suthor- Schroter & Conrad, Druggists, No, 211 Oih street, to refund the money to any party who has taken three-fourths of “a bottle with- ut relief, Price 50 cents and $1. Z'vial size ree, Xail Notes, Twenty cars of wool, leaving Portland Ore , the night of the 24th inat., reached Omsha Saturdsy afternoon, magingtheex- traordinary run of a little less than five days between the two citles. The wool is routed via the Chicago & Northweitern and the Blue line t Philadelphia, It came over the Oregon Short line and Unlon Pacifio on regular freignt schedule, and oerlalnly entltles the route to the high praise of having reached the perfec tion of system and equipment, results showlng they are sccond to noune in the whole country. The discovery was made in the Unlon Pacific pastenger department Saturday morning thaton the South Park division at the little station of Dome Rock, far vp ia the wountains, the road hss an sgent name of U. 8, Grant, Bes the discharge of all | Krug’ For Sale hy C. F. Goodman. Imported Beer IN BOTTLES. .Bavaria . Louls | Aubauser ......| 8t. Louls Schlitz-P lsnor, Milwaukes 1 Ale, Porter, Domestioand Khine Wines, MAURER, 1218 Farnam St. to passon, § B MekiILD, © R, MILLER, o adar Rophie ok Dixi fong A sown, pids, Clinton, Dixle, Obloago, Ml with the dis‘inguished and historlcal { wai [ braska, Colorado, Wyomiog, Utah, Laho, Novada Oregon, AT CHICAGO, Milwatkee & St Panl RAIL W.AY. THE SHORT LINE And BEST ROUTE. FROM OMAHA 1) THE EAST. TWO TRAINS DAILY BETWEEN OMAHA AND Chicago, 8t. Paul, Clinton, Kook Island, Froeport Clgln, Bololt, And all othor Milwaukes Davenport Rockford, Janesvills, La Orosse, Minneapolis Codar Kapids, Dubuque, Madison, Winona, TImportant points East, North. east and Southeast, offico at 1401 Farnam _stroot (in Paxton Ho , aud at Unlon Paciflo Depot. ‘ullmen Sleopersand the Finest Dining Care in aro run on themain linea of the Cnicaeo B, PAUL Iy and every attention 1s paid crs by cousteous employes of thocompany, A.V. H. CARPENTEK, Gen'l Passonger Agont, GEO. ¥, HEAFFORD, Ars't Gon'l Mansger, s’ Gen'l Pass Agent 1. T. GLARK, Gen'l Sunarintendant e CHICAGO Avo ORTH- WESTERN RAILWAY. THE BEST ROUTE AND SHORT LINHK General Managor, Omaha Council Bluffs and Chicao, to take for Des Moinos, Marshall nd all pointa east, To the peoplo of Ne Waahinghou and Callfornia it offers superlor J. H, Green, formerly a prominent |sdvantsges not possible by any other line, representative of the Rock Island tn this olty, but now a substantlal business clti- ity enjosed by th Omahs and Chicago, Among fow of the nuierous poluts of nperior. troow of ‘this road hotwoeen zen of Albion, is here calling upon the | COACHES which old boys. J, W. Morse, general passenger sgent | LOR DRAWING EOOM OARS, ingenulty can create; Its PALACE BLEEPING oans ioh are models of comfort ik & of the Unlon Paclfic, roturoed from the | 4nd 14 widely colobrated PALATIAL DINING west yesterdny, Abe qual of which oaunob be found aisewere, e At Council Bluffa the trains of the Unlon Pecifi £losson, ticket agent of the | Ry. connech i Union Deyot with those of the Chica Unon Pacific at Linccla, 1 In the city, t-day, on his way home from the east. | ¥, A INash, general western agent of the Milwaukee, returned, Saturdsy, from the east. e e—ee An Athletic fournament, A number of gentlemen Interested in a0 athletio tournsment to take place nex Saturdsy or Sandsy. Mr. Danfel Roes, the cousin of the athlette, Duuncan OC. Rosws, Is in the clty and will doubtlees participate. Meosers, Couts, Bellamy avo Stevenson together with other local ath- lotes and sprinters will b invited to fake [ 1f all arrangements for the toor- nt, as now contemplated, are made, it will be & great euccess, nos. i 0F Detiolt, Oulumbus, Indiasapolt o and all poluts lu be m or ickels vis the 1t you wien the agents woll $lokeds via Shis line. stiuletic sports are trylog to arrsnge for |y pugurrr Gon Ium.unfun.n-g. eausiug Promature Doc | ing 1 dy i d 0 & Northwestern Ry 1o Ohicago the trams of this close connechlon with those of all eastera Otncinasd), ara Faus, Bullalo, Fillaburg, Torouto, Mobireal n, Now York, Philadolpbia, Baliimore, Wash. Eash, mak de ticked NORTH WESTERN, * o make bost acoommodations, Al ok 4 B B HAIR, Goa Frea Agend CHICAGE. W. N, BABOOCK, 1412 Farnam Bt , Omata, Neb, u!yuul§Jflg rug mesnsof so Genersl Muoager, o \ oy f red & siwple )f-cure, send FREE to his fellow-sufferens i ok /] ELVES, G Clathan Bt Y | j P —

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