Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
— { THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SATURDAY, MAY 22, 1880. MATTERS AT LINCOLY. | pren . Mgpert.of Onse ed for the pardon of Brad- out a life sen- Sullivan Knocked Out—Captain Cow- dry and the Tramp—The Cap- Life—Coon Huncing. TFROM THE BEE nureAr, The articles of incorporation of the Nebrask & Connecting Line Rail- way, ph and Telephone company which hayve been looked for at the seer wary of state’s office ever sine notice of organization was published in the BeEe, put in an appearance yestorday The faihers of the schemo are J ling Morton, F. C. Morrison, John ¢ Watson, Paul Schminke and Thomus Morton,who, mith a capital of $1,000,000, propose to nuild a railroad from Nebr worth to a point near the mouth of station on the Missouri Pacific near the village of Weeping Water, with an extension to Plattsmonth. rom the point at the mouth of the creck one branch of the road is to run northwest through Cass county, across the river to Towa, and on through the counties of Fremont, Mills and Pottawattamie to a junction with the Rock Island at or near Avoca, The line from br Ctty north is at no point to be more than ten miles west of the Missouri. is, of course, great speculation nection between the Rock Missouri Pacific roads sho as yet, has offe ON THE WAR PATH, en, of the Lineoln ball team, actice Thurs- and one or As the v ER Capt. W, ordered the boys out for p day morning, and_Sulliv two others refused to ry disciphine has been start a reform, and in«lr'fi(‘l\-ll Wery t fine the absentees $5 each for disobe- dience, which was dc n the day Werden entered G saloon on Eleventh steeet, livau and a crowd of his frie: ing ayoung man named Jumison. A rel between Sullivan and Werden and_resuited in the former being knocked out of time by a swinging blow from Werden’s seld hammer fist. Young Jamison, who was making himself quite prominent in scrap, then took up Sullivan’s qu: and was also knoc!l out. While th sessment of the fines was the dir cause of the disturbance, it was in ality only a prefext. Those on the inside know that there al of the players for some timo that would Y i ulminated 1n a row sooner or later. h ager or governing head since its organi- zation, and as a consequence the players, to use n horsey expression, ““could not he kept in the trices.” Mr. Durfee, while nominally the manager, has, from press of other business, never been able to give the team more than a little attention on quick to pe pable mal time to di that an_energetic, ca- ager, who could give all hi ting the business wasa the west, The Br not _at liberty to- day to say who the party is, but it can state that a contract has been closed, and that he will be here Monday next to take charge of the club. Under his supervis- ion there will be a higher grade of ball their proprietary interest in the club, the new manager coming in as a salaried ex- A BATTLE WITH A TRAMP. kill Captain Sowdery of the night patrol. The ease was such “an aggravated one thatJudge Parsons held the wretch to an- 500 sont him to & cell in the cooler, The fight with Soden, of yhich s;gntion was made in {ie Brr's special olegrams yesterday, was one of o hittest of the Kkind that ever took place in this city. Cap- tain Sowdery had arrested Soden at the depot for being drunk and disorderly, and was taking him to jail, when he sud- denly drew a knife and made a vicious attack on his eaptor. Sowd pistal, and succeeded in kecping away from him for nearly fifteen minutes, when the latter, having picked up a stone, hit the ofticer a sl\llminf;hlnwin the face, knocking bim senseless. Before the tramp could get in his work with hjs knife, as he intended, Officer Gammel, Firamen Hosman, Whitzel! and others were on hand and aftep s hard struggle managed to throw 4 rope over his hoad and wind n up so that he could be carted into During the time Cap- Jir. Sowdery was holding off the tramp anced around, knife in hand, defying Sowdery to shoot, and declaring his in- tention to kill him. Sowdery, though strongly tempted to fire at his assailant, wisely refrained from doing so, as he knew the chances were that some inno- cent person would be hit. After Soden was caged he feigned insensibility, and the boys, to bring him to, turned the hose on him., Ten minutes of soaking under a strong stream of cold water was all the fellow could stand, and he cried for quarter. KELEASE OF A DUSKY LOVF Bomg satisfied that the charge him could not be sustained, Jud; sons yesterday ordered the release of Thomas Menley, the darkey accused of seducing Minnie Hinkle, a white girl em- loyed at the Bostwick house m Hast- (‘:,, Thomas and Minnie stopped over inst Par- i Lincoln nxumm{ last, on their way trom Hastings to ODmaha, and some one atarted th were trying bport that they o get married. This led to their arrest 1 & mysterious manner by Oflicer Fowler and Detoctive Pound, and the girl was ‘nduced to make a charge of seduction against him. Minnie being over 18 years old, there was no offense under the statutes, and the sable Lothairo bad to be sot free. Public sentiment would justify the ralatives of the girl in going coon hunting for a while, but from a logal standpoint the darkey is the most badly injured of the two. False imprisonment is u serious offense, and there is but little doubt now but that Thomas was jailed without good cause and has fair ground for action agaiust his captors. In_ad sion to depriving Thomus of his liberty it is hinted that the officers made very 4ree with his effects, among whieh were a 2ouple of raiiroad tickets, which they sold aud appropriated the proceeds. ~ Just what right they tothe darkey's prop- erty, even if he had been held for trial on the charge, is diflicult to determine. BRIEF MENTION. The University cadets went into camp at Milford yesterday for four days. A parly of officials from Concordia, Kansas, consisting of Mayor Twichell, Councilman Short and City Attorney IAlng. have gone to Omaha, after in specting the Lincoln waterworks with an I‘)K:uh) building something like them ml own Lown. Governor Dawes was closeted yestorday enly” marringe. Mrs. Pieree was vory much averse tolpubtic life, and fainted wihen she learned of her hushand’s nom- prosidency, the message being brought them during a drive in Mount Anburn ‘eeiete James Buchangn, RARE OLD WHISKY. A New Yorker Mak, a Kentucky Plantation. You often hear of some man finding some of Capt. Kidd's buried coffers, but a client of mine unearthed other day which beats evi writer in the American JACOB MICHLER, THE SODT)T. Description of the Remarkable Man Who Captured the Florida Seminoles. “Two companies of Florida volunteers acted with tne regulars inan expedition,” id Captain James Murphy, of Beverly, in Times roporter. WIVES OF THE PRESIDENTS. The Women Who Have Reigned as Mis- tresses of the White House. ease and s 3 shaw, who is now sarvin; A New Railroad to Be Built From Ne- | tence in the penitentiary for the murder braska Oity. of Voorhees stated a Rich Find on ination to thi Mr. Hubert, as the Bee several we: - claims to be able to show that Bradsk BASE BALL DISAGREEMENTS, | is innocent Polly Dozier, better known rier Brown, stopped at the Commer- ssterday long enough to register good dinner before tackling his tain's Forbearance Saves a e Tt a brilliant stor liwyer, was engaged to the Woolings Objef Executives of the County— Why Buchanan Didn't Marry— Unpleasant Recollections of one fault ws Twenty-fourth longside Uncl r to Kentueky to atte I'he contrast wa them shook W had yellow, | clad in butt erings were old broad-brimmed wretched-lookig boeasts, nimals appeared as if t stages of consump- me into anl and return’ Arriving at d the thorough- ing Monday mornfng heard of an old th ague, were r aciated faces, a Their head cov y plantation that was to be sold and he bought it for almost nothing “The only buildings cn the place were a nd barn, which he intended to revair as anucleus of astock- brother-in-law York not long ago, and set to work to strengthen the the house, and on or county vs n decided by 1inst the county. Simp. d for a moment at being met by some gay i ihg her to find th home thionghdut the ev tlon of his comingt By friends’ party, Greenleaf & ———— Judge a, son i3 the owner of $1 running twenty 1 cent thought they were of the option: ited to pay them ofl however, that they are not she hiad remained at ning in expe lition reports that Washington had .oved several times ere meeting the beau- iful widow, Martha Dendridge Custis, whom he wedded at twenty-six, Jan. 6, Her dower was £100,000, and her tumble-down f -y of his many gallantrios at the party, fug she onght never see him ag “Unever will supposed it would be merely ' cenched her side in he morning they ¢ resembled @ ra bivoucked near us Is were picketed ied with them, lked to their horses in a confiden- foundations lizging around in_the cellar whit do you think he found? W ot | Br red accomplishments are even now exh less themes for biographer and her first husband he fiest number of the “Western Journal of Health,” a handsome thirty madeits apy volsof whisky. amped and bore the date t turned ont that an old d lived in the houss during ears of the civil was haing constantly raid , and about 1863 the mormmng she had e membors of family, and when her sons dicd, his we Washington Washington 1" His daughter w 1 cold and lonely man, ad nitting no one to his confidenee. During his presidency Harrict Lane, now Mrs, Johnson, was f her uncle always in tlat boats Company C w of Fort Center. / ¢ walked mto adopted_ by 1 by one side 10| Arbuckle, went ska City [ court yesterday who bowght a orse of Weeping Water creek, thence to some | afterward mission came along and | had the glanders, kill uable mare he white hous Wi \ the messroom of DHIT i farmc i He was a remar bout medinm height built, athletic, sinewy and act s dressed in a alls tucked in a On his head was a His complexion was dark The lntter spurk- monds and were deeply pene- His hair was long and a heavy, black mustache covered his thin lips houlder, and by once his home, and now whisky and then hid it Not long after he was shot by one of Mor arefully under *and keeping her at as hie did all oth: A am Lincoin i aghter of Robert who in her g her bright, keen wit, all being quenche in the sorrow of her 1 survivor resides among live stock sanitary fore his own hounse nd nobody ¢ rd Mary Todd, blue flaunel 1d, of Lexington, | court” the brightest and most magni The property passed into the he i nd was sold Nothing could old Kentuckian's i ing of his farm, pl: #7100 which he wants Arby life of the pre heen wiser than the President W X v, Dec. 14, 170 John Adams’ wife, a minister’s daughter, and is known as the most intellecual of ovr the political queen of those days The “‘state ar torday wer ha pe flux. rep H L. W Albinus take as much ha'’ after his name Andrew Johnson wife teaching him to write. years she was an Mrs. Patterson, presiding at the married in 1826, his 4 r In her later invalid, their danghter, twenty-four ¥ rs in the wo n I would Ii be duplicated le, of whom there was mong those run down by the B sentative were 0. N, W i ison, John Dale, B, M. James Joseph ood, M. W. Clair, I Jung o bead ) b They certainly other side suspended from his shoulds revolutionary Julia Boggs Dent, and amiliar to our i ns afflicted with Dy rrhaea’ Colic, and all kinds of will find iminediate rel using Angostura Bitters. il \ufactured by DE. J. G. B. Siegert P J. Nichols and a wives to reign in Washington, and was born in the old c he gave of the dirty straggl village is unattractive in the extren The excentive mansion was then cal the president’s | and unfurnished it was, too, Mrs. "Al drying her washing in the Two children L them, both sons, the cldest dy while the father lived to see the oceupying the most ¢ y of San Augus- anish parents, and edueated for the profession of civil engineer. had heen engaged in survey of his native state and making mavs of In his travels he h. General Harney, and the old sold a great liking to him. Harney decmed Michler the proper per- son to guide the troops through th a- mmocks, the ev quire more tha reign of Mrs, Hayes s the most brillig Vashington, and that of M ng portions palace, and ~—— A GALA DAY, Arrival of the First on the memory of Arthur was Rl R volume bound in blue moroceo, seventy-two autograph letters Horndon, daugh- cain at Loup went down w 1l Ameriean in She died in 187 while her hus ) rtending the v Lour Crry, Neb., May ponden Iax Tately, | ever known to onr Manager Durfee thoughtyit about time o | ther lot in the this ight hand and others with the left, with various copies of dispatches, cling expenses and ira s, was sold in London ted station in our Joln Adams died July 4, 1826, his A gentloman one remarked Ot all glad d wife in 1818, to John Quine; ms, whenee you inhe implicite instructions to The white hounse | the scene of 4 we 1s of Sherman county, hus probably been the mos lof the first Mangler's | train of cars within her confines. met Sul- | that enthusiasm runs high is a mild ex- rg floats majestically houso in Loup C there has been no earmine vinting, it is only reserved diguity for ze- | that grea v a mounted messenger from ve us orders to move. The ied and we floated down Kissimmee river, where we met Company L, with a crnel’ brevet j We went along the Kissimmee in the direction of Lake Stock- page, Landed near some timber, went into hummock, and scouted all his kind of work continued for a month, when the brevet major, n reading your POZZONI'S MEDICATED COMPLXION y of the presid; quently postmaster of i t their home For infant's toilet icle, healing all ¢ an indispensable ar- orintions immediate- on wedded in_January, v Wayles Skeltong—it 1s includ- | pression. from and b it It is perfectly harmless. For to have followed ale by druggists. advice—wlhose s of land and riends heing present. While Jackson was president a daugh- ter of Wildiam friend and constant companion, v Alphons» de Pegeot ch legation and g ce, and_in 1812, during T dower was 40,000 acr The paid base ball pla the country numbs yers throughout and draw an- ing about $900,000. dded the expense of sustaining grounds, the . the home of John Wayles, and be ptember Gth, 17 to them, both irls. and during his r, Mrs. Madison, . which we hope will not bo longer than a fortmght. ail for the grand refully con- d of the major's returncd to Tampa and re- 1 , the total would probably reach than §1,000,000. and festival i and harmony pre 3 tn‘nl;: guests shall be” hospitably enter- Yis bee! £ 5 aovor: | tainediiutiy has been o stmni jealousy among sever:- Rockville is the and soon is largely owingz to the fact that the | Fegular try club has b the | mitn county S ; ub has virtually been without o man- | B Sy are jubilant over their grand outlook. Crops are looking very Grasses are abundant, as th veteran to give him authority to rai regiment of volunteers and g every Indian out of the everglades inside of two months after his command ln\y his own men. dency his davg Diphtheria, the mother’s dread. R Star Cough 'Cure, prompt, sure, eflic o, presided ovi ny of the stately ob- distinguished its hington and Adams > discontinued by this first advocate name of the postoflice, whose mbther _“‘ 1l be a town, where the first Do owr in the spring of1874, R performing the: mar the east room of the ilton I'1sh, secreta ward ‘Thornton life under W ———— The bark Guy C. Goss, which recently arrived at Fort Townsend from Japan, aJapanese noblemen, his bride, and numerous scervants. tend to make a tour through the United time before the departure of C to Fort Myers there ws t shout and running t white house, s 4 | hap on board oward the Fort | prlyo s i cool, self con- son turned out ¥ senator from lelphia the beauti- Todd, the belle of d her in 1794, D fine. Virginia, mot at Phil ful Mrs. 'Dolly Payne the season, and mau wd 1o children, but she left a son by he Her father wasa V ernkecper, and it 1s iixed toddy for his vere roceived. acid looking. soned 1 all the trap- — of presents 1 1 chief, with beauti- utiful hillsides will he G. A. R. boys are ni tions for suitable obsery the side. Being a shrewd man, he was | ™ er,%'”fi"g {8 hooming and eyorybody ppy, and whife this AiFS s now carrying your correspondent will 2 ur beal i g di ohs pings of awild Indi ful bead work, leggings, “When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoris, ‘When she was a Child, she cried for Castoris, ‘When sho bocame Mias, sho clung to Castoria, 'When she had Childsen, sho gave them Castorin correspondingly b glorious sta cessity, and ho opened negotiations with | US on the tide, 8 ST LY | lay aside the pen for a few one of the celebrated men in that line in Nknz e our enthusiastic cullings. Max LENHART. 14 Easter gifi to Qrace ehureh, New York. It was Jacob Michler w ashion of the L from the state oLapout atiful neck and The colored people: rlet umbia have eighty charches and missions. wdden irruption ot Mormon mi s reported irom the Monongahe! 500,000 a year. papooses, and ponies, with camp equip- uarded by the long, lean, lank men of Nis command. =R ; busily engs Army Bricfs, Iame, down the First Lieut. Charles Byrne, Sixth in- playing, and the Lincoln club will be | fantry, is relieved from dut; pushed to the front. It may be well to | vocate of the general court m add that the Durfee brothers will retain | vened at Fort Douglas, el Two or three acres of ground were dis- placed last weck by a landslide at Vien- na, Me , and carried down a sharp de- ve or thirty rods. The ground displaced was from " two to PILE! A sure cure for Blind, Bleeding, ted Piles has been_ discovered by ms, (an Indian remedy), called Dr Williams' Indian Pile Ointment.” A singlo box has cured the worst chronic cases of 25 or No one need suffer five minutes after applying this wonderful sooth otions and instruments do It is stated that on the 31st of December stinns as judge ad- last the number of Ch view the dome of the capitol,” he It was while hington was cap- burned the The Presbyterian board of home missions ah, t Utah, by p: tarted 1% new churches and 350 graph 6, special orders No 51, current i serios from headquarters. First Lieut. Alexandor M. Wetherill, Mike Soden, the tough tramp who came | Sixth infantry, is detailed as j 80 near “doing up’’ the police and fire | cate of the general departments Thursday night, was ar- | vened at Fort Douglas, raigned in pblice court yesterday morning | graph 6, special orders No. 91, current on a charge of assaulting with intent to | seriesfrom headquarters. s bresident that V the British, white house and other public buildings forcing the famiiy to fly to Baltim Mrs. Madison die ing ber husband th love was a Miss Floy: as engaged though the mar- m some mysterie 30 years standing. ing medicine, more harm than good. Moody is raising $200,000 to start a school at Chicago for evangelizing (partieylarly at al bed), acts as a poultice, gives nstant relief, and is prepared only for Piles, itehing of private parts SKIN DISEAS ¥ Synday schools, ed 5,600 children. The Lutheran church in numbers alkother Protestant churehes com- bined, having upward of $3,000 communi- Utah. by para- and for nothing else. Wisconsin out- | pr, Frazjer's Magic Ointment cures a8 b ic, Dimples, Blnck [eads or Grub Eruptions on the face, leaying Also cures Itch, 1 off, 5 Jarmig Monvoe married, in 1791, Miss Bortright, of New York, lovely, brilli and amiable, though little is remembered of her sociul reign s first Enlarged Mail District. Yesterday Superigtend swer to the district court, and in defaultof | the mail carmsis extended the ma d5livery route in the oxtreme southwest- ern portion of the city. southerly limit was Woolworth avenue, immediately north of Hanscom park. aprehends the territory as far Shirley street, which defines the On the west the delivery will be ‘extended to Delaware street ingtead of Park avenue, which heretoforg bounded 25 YEARS IN USE. moh of the Agel the skin clear and Salt Kheum, Sore Nipples, Sore Lips, an Old Obstinate Ulcer d by druggists, cents. Retailed by Kuhn & Co. Conrad. Af Wlmlesa@v ‘The wz%t meeting of the connell of the Re- ‘The Greatost Medical wurches holdine to the Presbyterian system will e leld _in Loudon, beginning on the 26th of June, 1555, Ground will be broken immex by the Reformed Episc lady of our or mailed on recelpt of John Quincy Adams, in 1797, ma ne Johnson, the wedding place in London, where her father n the American consul. had two gops, one, John Quincy Adams, an war, whilo the Eormer TR G ile Now it con r ician, married Six years later insane and was placed in an asylum in In course of time the has been raised Some time ago the Methogist tentenary conference committec set dut {0 raise a spec- kifled in the Mo Bieberstein. city limits rs gnd distinction, warned Mrs. As of her boys, s: grandfather ha: it was possible that they content with the lot of ordinary Andrew Jackson’s marriage se amount of seandal, obloquy cast on Mrs, J. presidential campaign of led to her death, When Jackson fivst met her she was a Mrs, Robards—bright, hvely, a fine horsewoman, etc. With her husband unhappily, as he was an insancly joalous man, and in 1791 he left It bemng subse bud obtaine ginia. Jackson then ter it was discovered that the divorce as not granted until 1793, but, though herself and Jackson were innocent of any intentional wrong, there was an for detraction, ailed themselves to y Lafayette once ams to check the ambition ng that, their futher and ng cach been president, Hoart, Dots before tho ceived,with other large amounts in Youngstow he was considel when his wife walked into his offic doctor says she is still insane. clares that she is sane, and that she is looking for her son, whom her husband kidnapped and sent'to California. “bruised. St CONSTIPATION, : TUTT'S PILLS aro especially adaptod , one dose effects such & nishthe sufferor. Appetite,and cause the ‘The credit of tho United States has ly surprised sged that of Kngland, as it long assed that of every other civili: eonntry, and now stands at the head of United States 4 per cents now command 187} in London, the highest point ever reached, puttin, above any bonds in the world, as at this figure they pay only 2} per cent if held until maturity. As was expected, Phillips Brooks—the Rev. Dr. ry in speaking of him 5 to accept his election as bishop of Pennsylvania, Ti to several of his refusal has been seems unncee to such cases, change offeell Thiey Kncrease frionds, and_his of mailed from southern California. Recently the church at Bryan Station, Ky., celobrated its contennial anniversary. was founded in April, I f 1828 indireotly Slippery ico—fall—| Jacobs Ol heals brsises o —e— The little 2-year-old daughter of Au- gust Kutscher, of New about the room on Tuesday with a sharp- encd slate pencil in her mouth. She fell and the pencil was driven into her throat, jugular vein. by the father of omas B. Dudley, 0 100'years of its oxistence has had but the two pastors, father and son, T present pastor is the stepfather of May er Harrison, ot Chicago, and is ninety-four RSB n s P array BeoN X EXTRACT SARSAPARI tom with and during tl with pure bl There are fourteen Haven, played ed officially with the ] Paris. The theatre physician has his hts and duties. Among his rights and privileges he enjoys, it of seeing the pla; when it is his tarn to do his own stall, which none but But when a piece is_played 400 nights in succeasion it is no joke to be a theatre physici E 44 Murray St.. Now York. married her. piercing the in “the flrst place, almost 1mmediatel, for nothing ‘The_Methodist conference of Northern New York, representing 223 winisters and 25,000 church members, have sent a petition to'the house asking for the enactment of such_legislation as will enable the ofticers of the law to suppress all efforts to persecute the Chinese now in this country, and to se- cure to them the protection atforded all other classes of citizens, Tue will of the late Thaddeus F. Stuart, of South Burlington, bequeaths to the Vermont Methodist conferen vides thatat each annual se 1ce_one of 1ts members shall be appolnted to visitthe grave of the de ) June, and_ there lyation to all that a; The' minister appointed is t give timely notice to the churches of the hour this sermon will: be preached, and is to re- for hi ices, the interest on the ‘or that purpose. "The total receipts of the American Baptist Mission " socTet March 81, 186, ‘wéry tributions were ' $25 ——e There was recently in Exater, N. H., a tournament of the New England s' association, were hired to work tho traps. When all ady the word ‘“‘Pull’ but no balls flew in the ai word was given without re the leader of the boys arose and “We want a dollar and a half a day or private secrol ded at the white e *West Indian dysentery’ 18 due to a owdered glass delivered to is food by the West India If the doses are continued Bottles filled with ground glass and water are used for One of them hung under a tree in an orchard is almost sure to keep the negroes away from the fruit, as they be- charm poisons it. mild dose of Martin Van Buren married at Sandy Hook, N. Y., in early life a isti guished for great beauty, wh twelve years of wedded life, I the wife of one presiding over ngton society during his adminis- Williama Henry Ha daughter of John C. farmer, in 1793, fanuly of six sons death is the result. the first Sunday o full and free tend to hear.” on married a liove that th i LINCOLN BUSI Recently Built NESS DIREGTORY The Tremont, ITZGERALD & SON, Proprittors. Cor, £ b und P 8ts., Lincgin, Neb, Rates £1.00 per day. Bureet cazs Irow Lowse to any THAWKINS, Architect, 3. 34 and 42, Richards Block, Lincoln, celve 810 for his sey $200 0 be used ved him with ona of whom be- tne father of Senator Harrison, of —~—— Crow hunung among Georgia plante is thus described b, “‘Catch one of the alk through the your gun eocked and finger on the tri The cries of the bird will cause ot of its tribe to flock around you, and 1 then be easily shot, tie it to your s first wife, Lel 7,105, 14, ineluding tian, died during the second yc 855,50 of conditignal and permanent trust i h general eontributions ,977.68 more than last 000 were recelved from Yashington quictly for New York, where he wedded Miss Eitie Cordner, a young lndy of twenty, he | Their married life and she died a y dying in 1862 ginia in the confederat {. Polk was Miss Sarah hildres, and she yet lives at Nashville amid many honors, thoug died in June, 1319, just after he left the Every year the Tennesseo cgislature pays her a visit of ceremony imergency fund; ng twice that age, s not a happy one, 95, The amount a » indebtedness 18 £100,050, and the balance mist be raisea by Junel, for which & specfafappeal has been made. — while senator F. M. WOODS, At a Chinese state dinuer everybod 3 1 | e L oo e In. Live Stock Auctioneer wble thick, mweilage i cious tasting soup, on the top of which float sca slugs, mushrooms aud pigeon Another smoke is then in order, follow some seven or eight ses, embracing all kinds of fried fish pheasants, wild ducks, : abundance of greasy fried substan Aok h her husban, nd Short Horn bulls for sale B. H. GOULDING, Farm Loans and Insurance, vouurd Lo louns solicited, 15 Block, Lineol, Nel Public Sale, Denver, Col., J ad of Show Short Horns -ycur-olds, weishin achary Taylor wmarried Margaret th, of Maryland, in 1808, and one of r daughters, the wife of Jefferson Davis, was lady of the Richmond white Millard Fillmore was married at Auro- ra, in 1826, to Abigail Powers, a minis- s daughter, and the wife of Franklin Pierce was Jane M. Appleton, a beautiful and talented lady, an invalid for mar vears before her death three children died before he sident, one being killed in a ral aceident just readers may recall an absurd spiritualist tale which went the rounds of ounecting this soa with a “heav- of Provincetown, ass., expresses the opinion that the wreck exposed on C storms is that of the nonogenarian POWDER Absolutely Pure. ‘This powder never varies. A maryel of puri- ty, strength and wholesomeness. omical than the ordinary hinds, and eannot be with the multitude of low plosphate powders, AKING POwngi Cos, B01h, 1586, Bates & Cruick e Cod by late british war ship driven ashore during revolu- 'y times, and adds that she remeni- bers distinetly that about 1812 the poor people of Provincetown eut away the )'s upper works and used the wood for It was eighty - years ago that she last saw it, and it was considered an old wreck then, ww, for catwlog an. Lincoln, Neb, | T PERFECT MADE Natural Fruit Fl; , Almoud, Rase, naturally as the trult. 6 POWDER CO., .. ] M. Woods, Auctionser. When in Lincoln stop at National Hotel, Vaailla, Lemon, davor u'dilluu\y e | 10462100 a. 80id in compotiti I test, short Weight, alum or sold ouly in cans. 05 Wall 8t Now York. COCA : Beef Tonic SO DUNCA ¥, RS, Prosiden M MPURLL, M. D., 1 Collego of Phys snoral Counoil tate Hospital, Medical Collego, York, &c., say markod and dceldod bag: A LERF TONEO" SIR ROBERT CHRISTISON, Baronet, M. D., D. C. L, LL. D, F. RS, Piysician to Her Maj oSty tho Qiice wsidont Royal Association, Professorat thy University of Elinburg, &o., sa; operties of this wo il plant (the re the 1108 remarkuble of Any known to . lical world. From ropeated po am convineed tha its uso is highly PROFESSOR F. W. HUNT, M. D.. Ll Di fombor” Tmperial Mo il Sog ety . Professor of Price LRI Co's CoCA | RR T INIOiS far super for to tho fashlonable an i illusive prepara‘lons o beef, wine wnd {ron FOR THE OPINIONS PEUFEBBO’R’.‘;[.‘GOULLD“, M. D., LI D., Physician to the Grand Duke of Savony, Knight of the Iron Cross, &o., &o. PROFESSOR R. 0. WORD, M. D, Dean of the University of Georgta, &c., &o. PROFESSOR VON SCHERING, Physician-in-Chief to the Saff of the Russian Tmporial Body Guard, &, &o. CLOT BEY, Physician-in-Chief to the Avmios of the Vicoroy of Exypt, &e., &o N. Y. MEDICAL JOUENAL, N. Y. MEDICAL TIMES, S8T. LOUIS CLINICAL REVIEW, JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL B8O0- CIETY OF VIENNA, And a thousand of equally eminent authorities, sond for a clreular, Invaluablein debility, Dyspopsia, Billoug and Livor nffections, Maliria,’ Norvous Aft Nervous and Sick Headacho, Sleoplegeni Opium Hubit, Weak Lungs, Astlima and Fom ilferings and infirmities. Deware of iniitatle er fmitative namos. PRICE One Dollar. N. Y. DEPOT, 38 Murray Street. WOODBRIDGE BRO'S,, State Agents FOR THE Deckerfro'sPianos Omaha, Neb. Wmnlnwélm. Broakfast Cocoa. Warranted absolutely Coooa, from which (Le excé of Oil haa boep removed. Tt has thres times the strength of Cocon mized with Btarch, Arrowroot or Bugary and s therefore far more coonombs cal, costing less than one cend & cup. It is delicious, nourishingy i strengthening, easily digested, and v sdmirably adapted for invaiids as ; well as for persons In health, Bold by Groe ; rywhero. V. BAKER & C0., Dorcuester, Mass, Railway Time Table OM. A, The following 13 the time of arrivel and de- B e oo Trar of the. O S Bl & O.nrrivo ahd dopart from their depot, eb i T4ia and Webnter atracts: trains on the Hy ho M., 0, B. &Q, and K. C. 8t J. & C. B, £ B'& 10nek: ARotKors dro the Union P m. CONNECTING LINES Arrival and donarturo of trains from the erunsfor depot at Council Blufts: DEPART. CNICAGO, ROCK 1SLAND & PA( ‘Bl AN 40 ¥ M B OILCAGQ & NORTHWESTELN, 95 A M iy CHA) P M CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUING! ASSiA M P oo u B ATl ONIOAGO, NLLWADKER & 87 FAUL ) 4 2Ex 2R ExK B0:15 A M s C 640 . M 187200 P, M KANSAS OITY, BT, JOB & COUNGIL BLUFFS. A 1000 A N Do » Cadbe M A 580w % WABASIL, 8T, LOUTS & PACTFIO, ABir W ] A B30 SIOUX CITY & PACIFIG. AT:00A M | A .M A Gz N | Depurt AN b 103558 | 22408 oaf......| s e | €:250) 7 Night Express Dopart. SOUTHW A RD. A M. P SOURI PACIFIC, 4w 10 Dy Express......| 0:44 900 | Night Expross. 4 K. C., 81, J. 8 | 9:20a] B:450) att T:00d] T Depurt Arris A M P M C.8PM P, M. XO AN Bl Sioux Gity Eapross || 4idho/Ouklund. Accommod n/i0:dal .. . Dicpart BASTWARD. Asvive AN PN OB & Q. AL | M, 02 | 6:m Vin Plgttainou b LERES ] T URTOCK YARDS TRAINS Will leave U donot. Omaba, at 6--10:5 2401 50 4:40--5:0 NOTE—A trnins daily: | € daily excopt Saturday: And git 4 good dinuer 1ur 4. ay,