Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 29, 1886, Page 5

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NEBRASKA TE \LHERS en and Whers Tn t and T! MEWS, eir Cond REDUCED RATES PEK Jottings From the State Hot Oivil War in Eportive e Capital—A | Which a Cop Plays a nent PROM THE MRS LINCOLS From returns comj the state sup tiold longth of are now he the inf state the cot lent the pl orp rint nstitutos, their nd ¢ ed of every teachoer wd the latt well thousa In addition to the list ductors of the different tutes, ev of more mstructor the stat cipals of the mor enjoy form for in t up in ciren rmac hic number in of | s sted by , who number amor largely prin + important schools who in work of this kind s the list of countics, time and titutes y conductor is ns one tin the ind are vacation as reported Town | Bogin Conductor Nolith Vs s Honenoy Albion Ab Teki David City Wig. Wi Valentine, e Hire Shuylor West Po i ow Vi Chindy Diko 1 i i Auie 16 D. ¢ DM, Amsborry 1 W DPattors: 0,11 T Wil ¢ 2 16 Dinyton Ward Ty 1 ECC Ty m Aug 1)1 Bruner Genovii 00 K, Sext Frankiin 16 Ve, M. L. ¢ Stockyille 12 NV K Lonch Aripi 0 AL Allen Hen'rice 2 AT D Horhum S 0, Ktoetzel 1. O Patkyn 1611, A. Edwards 16 . i1 Barton NI It Morian Tuly 19 W 1, Hecler C. AL Manville €20 Covey S MeKitrick Fremont. Omitin 1. Lurrabee Keith 1L, Gl Kearnoy ) WG Pleking ) DK Bond 21 MeClusky 11 1 Bohannin Atbirn Neb. ( Paw Hubio ord cton| BT Wayne .| Wisno Webst |1teit Cloud York \York. ¥ JURSION RAT State Superintendent W. W, W. Jones been in correspondence with the railroads in this state relative to reduced rates for Nebraska teachers to the Na- tional teachers’ association at Topeka, commencing July The following rates ve been sceured and the superintend- ent has issued the following announce- ment “Penchers desiring to attend the meeting at Topeka will be interested in the rates of travel. “The B. & M. railroad will sell tiekets from all stations on their lines to Atchison or Kansas City for one and one-third fares for the round trip. No certificate of any kind wiil be required. ~Ask the avent a_week in advance so that he may get orders if he has ot received them. Tickets will be sold on July 11 and 12, limited to return on the 15th. rom Atchison or Kansas City rates will bo one fare for the round trip. You will have tickets from these points to Topeka, The Union Pacitic company will sell tick- ets from all of its stations to Omaha_for one and one-third for the round trip. The Missourl Pocific railrond will sell tickets from Omaha and all other points on its line for one fare for the round The fare from Omaha will be about 6 The fare from Lincoln to Atchison will be about $5.80. From these figures you can estimate about what the trip will_cost you, You should se- gure u topping }11.\('4' at Topeka in advance, Write to arimer, Topeka, telling him i of place you desu Doard will be from $110 $3 per day. AT THE STATE HOUSE. ‘With the secretary of state yesterday were filed the amended les of incor- poration of the Adams Countv Savings hank, with its place of business at the city of Hastings. This bank has ninety- nine y under the articles to run, with 21 paid up eapital of §60,000, which may be increased to §500,000, he names signed to the articles as incorporators are W. M. Korr, Leopold Halm, Henry Shedd, Samuel Hivsch, A. R. Van Sicl J. M. Bewall, R. A Batty, Joun M. Reagan, O. G, Suli(h, L. Rif Attorney General Leese came in from his home at Seward yester and Dep- uty Secretary of State Winterstein visited over Sunday at Geneva. CIVIL WAR, Sunday there was warfare in the north part of the city, and as the news reached olice headquaiters the next duy it was ted in the house of one of the force. From tho reports that neighbors and spectators have given of the affair it was a hot time. and no ten minutes storm her, Tho tales recited state that the py "’ was discovered by his marital lml{’m flagrante delicto with a girl, and the war opened in which the girl was }u\‘lly effectually thrashed and hurled rom the premises. Civil war between the husband and wife then followed, in whieh, it Qs stated, fists, flativons and fn re played important parts and a revi vas flashed in the ight. But,| tnnmfi r all concerned, it Was not used, 1y o calm suc- ceeded the storm, ul'»vg nmghhm an- nounced that an armis’ ing to- ward peace, was in v\uu-m-n and the opinion was general that the truce would Rates of itute; ‘WM be Held | THE OMAHA DAIL& BEE: r Todd, ayot -Ri Laric vestar capitol building witor | of the same county, and ex- of Plattsmouth, were in fay on busmess at the Mr. Toad was with the np_railroad nent rs for a lawsuit regarding taxa n of t B. & M. bridge th, a that has been ins ny agur e ensos ealled nd the health ord ged with v in the broiling terin the corporate 1 of e Brown's L yest t work with the Mclntee iminary hearing, in w murder in the f rome from Chic he was_on bu ) West Lincoln ow consummated md pac un pun \ance was a dead cow sun to fos he eity Iny hich he er ma d out ter in was on nd iness and r king ts are 1 f L senson neoln’s tonce wcoln and Topeka ats in the first mes at Dur home club has o last week a VALS overed Topeka at the n, S \\ ar d; Valparai wers reg terday: Thomas Benzen, Omahag N. A. Duft, Sy ( Albinus Hastings; smouth; G Omah P A Platismoutl J W, Stickley, Geneva ter, Omaha; W. D, 4 Skinnor, Nichois, Omaha; C Joln R, Manch Builey. York. FROM W TWATER. Close of'a Year of Hard Work at the Academy, Wrerng WaATER, June [Corres pondence of the Bre.]—T week T » my pilgrimage to this thriving lhittle w ng Water is in the center of s county. The branch of the Missouri Pacific from here Lineoln is being pushed rapidly forward, and will finished in August. The indications are that another branch will be built from here to Shenandoah, connecting with the Wabash. This will give this place com munication east and west as well as north and south, and make it the raiiro center of Cass county. I had often he of Weeping Water, of its pleasant sity of its oung academy, industrions and enterprising The visit of this week has proved that her reputation is well de- served. She may be styled an intellectu church-going community. Many of hier husiness men arve graduatos of eastern colleges, while her prominent business men are pillars of the chureh. The situa tion reminds one of New England as he looks up and sces rock hlls, covered with trees, stretching betore him. But there is a spirit and tone to the place which only eultur ve that reminds one still more foreibly of New England. During my visit here closing exerc conne demy. Ouly last fall was started, yet th past yes as - nearly hundred. No building has be but one will be IPING o is m city to be nd tion, of its citizens has oceurred the rd with the the academy enrollment of the ached a n built yet, cted in good time. The academy has friends in Weeping Water and surrounding country, who are willing and able toaid the ac ny tinan- cially when the proper time comes. I t year the church has been used for recitation purposes 4 cr this week were held in the Con- gregational church. On Thursday after- noon came the musical rehearsal, in we of Misses Chadsey and Pierce achers in instrumental anc The rreises were both voeal and inst rd showed that thorough ti past year, Thursday evening Cl of the state university, dress which was both’ s structive. His subject was ar's Duty to Society On Friday evening the students of the academical departmennt gave a literary exhibition. Although many of the par ticipants .lplll\,.uul for the first time every thm;. passed off ph'ua.uulf and those t took part reflected creditupon them- -lu and upon the institution they rep- resented. 1 was especially impr with the amount of interest the people take in the academy. A crowded house gath- ered at each exercise and every body seemed interested. Two of the bus- iness men—¥red B. Muws and George Ashman—have heard classes the past year. Rev. George Hindly acts as princi- Pbal, though he has besides charge of one of the targest of the churches in the state. Both are prospering under his direction The coming year promises to be better than the past, so Professor Shaw, of Ripton, V has been secured for the coming year F. 1. P i in- he Schol- John Has recently purch cash grocery, N. B, Cor. 16th and Cal, sts, and is fitting it up in good shape, where he will be glad to see his old and many new friends.” Remember the place, N. E. Cor, 16th and Cal. sts. Saliessia A Ladies! We have to-day placed our entire stock of Summer Millinery Goods on sale at cost. This1s no newspaper adyertise- ment, but solid facts. Give us a call and you will be convinced that we mean bus- iness, and you will find that we are giv- ing the best argains ever offered in the Miltmery line.” Call while our assorc- ment is still large, at 404 North 16th Street Frank O. Kavser, Proprietor, Opposite Jefferson Square. - Money loaned on (urn'! re, mortgnges, warehouse receipts available seer at low rates. H. C. Wrrrcous, 1304 Douglas - oss ed the Peoples’ chattels nd all “Two saloon-keepers i Covington have been bound over to the distriet court for irrigating Sioux City picnickers on the last It is to be )lrrslnm‘nl thatthe proper investigation will be made in the matter and the truth discussed in all its minutia, for if the carcumstances are anything as related, there ought to be a vacaney on the police force to be supplied by a new nad lr-s censurable pers PASSING EVE Officer Pound returned )rom Colorado yesterday bringing with him J.J. Pear- son,who was captured by him at Sterling, this state, and for whom Pound hind u re- l‘lllhlllull ‘from the governor of Nebraska Poarson is brought back to Lincoln to an swer to the charge of obtaining money from seversl different parties under pretensos, and ho will be held for tri the noxt term of the district court. prisoner was atone time a resident of Sew- ard, where he dealt in stock buying and shipping. Of lute years, howeyer, m~hm been going down grade’ vithouc brakes and is now a eriminal heid for tri ]. The Clam Ba! ssociation elected the following officers for the ensuing year, during their Milford convention: Presi dent, John D. l\'nwh Clary; treasuver, 1 A llcl\\u nssist nay. So successful was the nnn\\ul h.m- that the ussoc! m is contemplating other at the same place 1w September, ‘when ;v-xorunu effort will be made on A ““avart of ever mmnb. to defeat the enjoyE@=mgnde by McBride of eating {Ier.wl\ln‘)l iy, lln;.. he guesiion o faadiciion of S Sebno next year. The pr lon of & special WissloRd oated by a large wajor ehosen as the hext |uum Lo sy Loy wdjowi ied iy ot cases, and those “or disposition Sabbath duy. TUTT'S PILLS 25 YEARS IN USE. Tho Greatest Medical Trinmph of the Age! SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER Bowels costive, P dull sensation in blade, Fullness {nelinasien to xertion el body ormiud, n iness, Dizziness, Flut before the eyes, Headucho right oye, Kestlessn sicful dreams, Highly colored Urine, aud CONSTIPATION. TUTT'S PILLS uro especially adanted to such casos, one dose uffects such & uh‘l:gln(mcnninlnlnonl:hth:lsu:u‘cr. rctite,and cause (1o TR i 'tho ayster 18 nollrl.h i R, %cll&: on IIJIT‘S mmi SABSIMRILU cuovato tho Lody, nakes healuly (e, irengthens the weak repains the wasges of the systewa with pure Llood sud band auscio; toues the uervous svstem, (vigorates the Lenia, aud fmparts Ghe vigor 81, Bold by druggists. OFFICE 44 Murray i, Now York, THETONNIS B()R\,.\LL SWELL Another Metropolis Looms Up in North weatern Nebraska. THE BIRTH OF CRAWFORD. | Country 1 in Fertility and Beauty Advautages of Town. The hoxe celle rounding the Nebraska nched Dawes I'h the r: | platted their land and the sale of lots is over. W | Crawford enters upon its carcer | second largest community in county, and the future metropolis citizens tirmly believe, of this of northwestern Nebraska. Few new towns | in Nebraska have started favoring auspices. It challenges parison in the state for the beauty Hill and alley ad corn lined farm lands slose it on all sides, whilst through its center runs the beautiful White river with its ever abundant cool and clear waters hureying on its way northward to join the ouri in eastern Dakot ruwford is beyond question located most fertile portion of the Wnite 1t stands in the very center cction which has “proved itself eapable of growing any crop raised in Nebraska soil. At the prosent time 1 is knee high and oats and wheat as far advanced as in such counties as Holt and Cherry. New potatoes raised within miles of the town are al dy in the markets, and all kinds ur tables in their season are purch and sold by its merchants, all of whi h own’ in the neighborhood. There n an abundance of rain, all erops well and their owners cor- happy. So much for the which Crawford will be for narket. Attention is called to these only to set at rest the countless ies whether nd is worth anything in the region referred to and whether crops can be d and farms profitably cultivated. county, road | oad ¢ | Crawrorn, 18 10 npany ning have ope lay's th its conclusion the Dawe its scetion such com of its pine under surrounding: crested butte Pm- be looking respondingly tion of el qu THE TOWN put on the airs of an oid Four thousand dollars worth of lots were sold the first day and the purchasers are mow busily at work erecting buildings. Thirty ~ business houses are Ay on the ground and nearly as many more are said to e on the road “coming to loeate. A bank, two lumber yards, four stores, a fur nitare stor meat blacksmith shop, a wheelwright, livery stable, two restaurants, three drug stores, ware establishment and flour emporium, with several saloon the pioneer business houses. henee Messrs, rar & Short w the tirst number of the paper. Business has located on Second street, running east and west, and is pushing nawrall I the military reserva: tion. Fort Robinson lies only three and one-half miles distant with its "unwn is expected by the m NS, purchasers of the lots |1|mh|vl y saw that the nearer they could loeate to the military post the better for their business, and much to the surprise of the railroad comps property on Main street for the thorough- fare running at might angles to its course. Five weeks from now will sce a weil built up street, and a bustling tow lllwu three days ago not a house was vi ible. has already settlement. A 1 print tirst Crawford THE PIONEERS of Crawford county descrve mention, ‘The land on which tiic town is located was purchased by the railrona from Messrs. Annin & Smillie, the former now livingin Omaha, the lattér a clerk at Fort Robin- son. One of the first on the ground was Mr. H. F. Clough, formerly an Indian trader, but displaced under the new dem- ocratic ciyil serv rules in order to make room for a more pronounced parti- san. Mr. Clough has the largest stock of neral merchandise in the town and is its leading merchant. He is an able and popular business man who bound to ln-x\\'n a brond mark in Crawford’s histor; Mr. Leroy Hall is conducting the bank and comes with excellent credentials and a solid basis of capital from Holt county. Mr. Dorr, proprictor of the lumber yard, has put in a heavy stock and is doing a attling business, as he ought to. He i i 'y inch and a courteous Josiah Burger, who conducts the blacksmith shop, is an old settler whose hearty hand-sh: and i added co his well-earned rep- twork make him a popu- able citizen. The same may be said of Wheelwright Harris who came to Crow Butte from Columbus when Crow Butte was barely more than a name but who now find. hands fudl in turning out the work which erowds his shop. J. J. Cuwming runs the meat market and Gottstein & Owen deal out liquid re- freshments to the non-prohibition class. Townsend & Hardy are the town bakers The postoffice at Crow Butte will soon Inx removed to Crawford and Cyrus Fuir- child, an old wheel-horse of the Ohio democracy and & man of sound attain- ments and excellent judgement, will, in all probability, ve the postmaster. Lack of space forbids mention of the other business men of Crawford, each of whom isdeserving of mention and would re- ceievet if limited time permitted, Craw- ford is destined to hy e ]m"o and obliging cit It po i wssed facilities for holding ca tule and for feeding ind water- ing herds. At its site all the trails up northwestern Dawes county converge, and the Sioux county drive meets them on the banks of the river just outside of the town. General Manager Fiteh has alveady requested permission to locate shipping yards on the border of the mulitary reserve, where the droves will be removed from all danger of inter- ference with farmers crops, and the quest will probably be granted by the military authorities as the proposed loea- tion 15 fully three miles lruml}u fort, and wot affect in any way its int is felt in this entire secf pproaching rebuflding of FORT ROBINSON, the sentinel post on_the left flank of the Sioux reserve and the military guardian of the lives and property of the thousands of settlers now swarming into the White river valley. The post is now almost u inhabitable, and its rotting logs and de caying roofs are a standing commen upon the foolish economy which cr anything but adobe or brick military 1,uu| rs in this climate. Fortunately, the condition of the post will render iy peity patching and reparing impossible, and'will force almost the entire rebuild’ mgof the garrison. ( ral Sheridan has reported to th senate eom- mittee that the position will be a ‘important one for muny years to and u|<'n;ll building of a ten- Any postus Ary meas while General Schofield in a r port y lust to the adjutant generul of the army urges even more strongly the enlargement of the commund and the construction of the needed buildings to house them. Quartermast General Dandy, when here last fall, saw at o1 the value of the position and the urgent need of prompt action and made the case socleartoGGeneral Howard that steps were at once taken by the headquarter. bring the matter to s final decision. In over the thils, both Goneriil Mandorson and Ush gressman Dorsey put their shoulders to | the wheel and 'sebared the promise of | General Sheridan that the post should be rebuilt, enlarged and made regimental headguarters as soon as possible, 1t be hoped that before plans are definitely ttle n a thorough reconoissance of 1 he made from depart ters. The plans sent in compiled while the post utleri from a fatal be consid Ofticers ne of of d back fully two the ment | were | comman | in o1 w nd w to mecet t ne ments that the | be remove north wing a finely e front with the men's nin the rear flanked by the warchonses a the railroad track to the east and the now hospital building on the west. Such a change wou give ample room for a on company post of three troops of | cavalry‘and seven of infantry, and it is the only available method by which the | space requisite for such a garrison can | be secured veral of the building | ereeted within the past five yoars can still be used The commanding ofticer’s | house is practical, and %o is the hospital | building. Contracts have been let for the construction of an amusement hall, | auartermaster’s house on the railroad quarters for non cquir e vd wild at the post ficer: on tLe slope of the hill hundred yards, 1 ade ground yarracks in ee quarters sh | track, and two sing commissioned staff ofticers Valley road runs dircetly b and within @ few yards of the quar Ihis makes the gurrison the cheapest frontier post to supply mnu- ontire de partment, and in_the words of General Schofield, greatly increases its i portance - INTERESTING INFORMATION, Al About Nebraska's Chautanqua— Railrond Fave, Cost of Living, Ad- mission to the Grounds and Other Matter; Crere, June [Correspondence of the Bk, |—The programme of the Chau- tauqua assembly to be held here from the 1st to the 10th of July has been fully dis cussed until everyone is aequainted with its merits, and but little more need In~ said as to that; but it will be nes to emphasize further a few facts conc ing commodations, expenses which it scems were not made sufliciently plain. By the accommodation of the railroad companics transportation rates are ns follows: One fare for the round trip from Hastings, Wymore, Lincoln and ail intervening ‘points. One and_onc-third all other points on the B, & M and Union Pacifie railrouds. On purchas ticket to Crete pay full fare and your railroad agent gives you a wh ticket. ese receipts rve and do not fal to mped at the assembly Then at_their presentation rent at Crete tickets for the re- 1l be sold at one-third fare. But ties of fifty or more, from any one , tickets will be sold for one fare ind the post pre them ticket oft to the iy iNproid platform of three cars length has been built 'by ' the B. & M. railrond just opposite the enfrance to the grounds Visitors to the assembiy will be I anded on this platform from which a three minutes’ risk walk will bring them to the grounds. isportation for passen e, of conrse, ¢ tendanct atallt will be transported with Full course tickets, entrance and exit, concerts, ason tick 15 nsand biggage ispatch with privilege of admitting to all lec- and. everything, in fact, ets for chiildren between years, 50 cents. Admission with entrance and exit at ents. Single admission for cents; children’s single ad- 10 cents. If you are a_ stock- holder, the ticket is $1.50, obtained of the secret or treasurer Stockholders must pay their a: 5 ments before purchasing tickets or |n) the usual Grand Army posts will be admitted free only on July 5, and must be in a body and in uniform. Apply to the superintendent of the grounds for ten ut if you have not engaged a tent, it would be ‘wise to do so atonce, and thus save time and trouble on the first day. Tents will be rented as follows: For entiro season tents 10x12 fect, %4; for entire season tents 12x14 feot, §5; floor in tent extra, $1; cots for entire season, $1: cots per day, 25 cents. Bring bedding, towels and the neces. sary articles of furniture may be rented for u trifling consideration. 1 have with me a list from the turniture store of Lang & Doyle, with lh('}nu e of rent for one day and for ten. Here is the list: Flain bedstead per day, 6c; per1d days, spring per day, 10c; " per 10 days, Wi und por day. o: vor 10 days, 00c. Plain tablo for 4 persons per d 10 days, Camp enairs per day, 134n; ,Common chairs per day, 10 and for oue d pleasur one missioi, s 134e3 for 10 days, 11 cking cliair per day, 13de; 136e; for 10 days, 23c. for 10 Suall mirror per da Other articles may be added at ple: re at an equally reasonable price Now about board. Most ample provision has been made for both modes of subsist- ence. Some perfer one way, some an- other, so the ladies of the Congrega- tional church of Crete, who have cha of the dining hall, will also furnish a Inluh(unutur where edibles will be sold in large or small quantities at reasonable rates for the uccommodation of thos: who desire to board in their tents. Milk butter, bread, will bo furnished here. ' Meals at the dining hall per §1; meals at the dining hall per week #5: meals at the dning hall for entire ason, $7; single meal, 35 cents. The dining hall has ' been greatly en- larged since last y W. H. Kirkl: of Omuha, whom' the ladies have en as steward, estimates the seating at 300. So you see it will nicely modate all who come. The ladi the assistance of Mr, Kirkland, lwpml to serve the viands in an attractive manner, They have engaged competent cooks and the tables will be supplied by atten- tive waiters. As to the convenience of this dining hall, it is within easy reach of all and accessible by a good walk, as also are all other Dulidioge "on ithe grounds, The 110 acres chosen for the assembly grounds lie nluu&thr‘ banks of the Blue riv They are not low, flat grounds, htly rolling,'so that during wet weather water does not stand in )mnls The grounds aredn most excellent condi- tion. All underbrush has been cleared away, trees trimmed and trained, until this is one of the most beautiful spots in the west, Lhereds & steamer und row s, thirty or morg, which will be kept ar the grounds and in good condition for use on excursions, et dJohn A. Logap will in all probability be one of the el altractions. We have his word of honob thut on his way from the Kansas assemibly at Ottawa he will visit our assembly aud address us July 5 The following letter from United States Senator Plumb to the ry of the Ottawa assembly places the certainty of the presence of General Logan at that place beyond a doubt B UNITED STATES SENATE, June 12 . Hlalnes, Secretary, Ottawa I have arranged with the )hio railroad company to take | an to Kansas. Ll there is no | change he will probably leave Lere on the night of the last dav of June and get into | Odawa about 1 o'clock on the morning of the 4d. * He will not, in this event, leave the car until after daylight. P B, Pris, This makes us s we can be anything, for it he goes to Ottawa he 1s bound to lecture to us at Crete. o o tare of Robert Nourse in the evening of Grand Army of the Republic day is also special attraction. After this we shall bave the grandest display of fireworks it WASHINGTON, 'J‘UEGDA\ JUNE | The Titled Dnos of Framce Flying Over turfed | The Elkhorn | ever had in the state. We rather expect | tlc largest crowd ou this day. 20, 1886, 'THE HECIRA OF HEIRS the Borders. THE DISTINGUISHED BOUNCED The Roots and Branches of the T A Princely Bxile. neh Royalty Boost into of Orleans of the are: Count de and their in also their son, The members of the house that come under the app prince expulsion measure Paris, Countess de Paris fants with them at Cannes Duke d'Orleans, in the College Stanislas, and their dau, r, the Princ He who, n year or £o0 ago, entered society a fete given by Duke de Chartrer trer and their childr Prince Robert, Prince Henri, Princess Marguerite, and Prince Jean; Duke de Nemours, general of division, living 1n Paris, and his children: 1st, Duke d"Alen con, captain of artillery, in garrison at Vincenunes, his wife and two children, and Emmanuel; 2ud, Princess Blanche. Their son, the Count ‘u, has become a Brazilian prince by his mur- ringe to the crown princess of that em pire, and their daughter, the Princess Marguerite, is married to o Polish prince named Czartoryski. Prince de Joinville, vice-admiral, and the princess, his wife, both living in the Rue de Berri, a few from the American chapel, with children, Duke de Penth licutenant in the navy, and Pri Irancoise, wife of Duke de Chartres ready mentioned. Duke d'Aumale, senior division general in the French my, one of the forty immortels of the French academy, u splendid gentloman, who lives at Chantilly. Duke de Mont pensier and Princess Clementine, brother and sisters of the Duke de Nemours and d’Aumale and Prince de Joinville, and uncle m[ unt of Count de Paris and Duke de Chartres, would not be an.ong those to Bo xpelled, wise one hives in Spain and the other in Austria, the prin- cess being married to the Duke de Suxe- Coburg-Gotha and the duke to the Infanti Lowwse, sister of ex-Queen Isabella i . Of the Bourbons the elder branch finds its muil representative in the person of Count de Chambord, son of the assas inated Duc de Berri, grandson of Charles X, gnated by cation S8 ne, at one of the Rothschilds; and Duchess de Char 1, Princess Maric Louise doors their and sometimes des his friends Henry IV Of the thirteen children borne to Chas, and Letitia Bonaparte during the eigh teen rs of their wedded life five sons have attained maturity and played con- spieuous parts in the history” of Europe. Th e Joseph, Lucien, Napoleon, Louis and Jerome. Joseph' Bonaparte, sometime king of Spain _and sles, married a M Clary of M 3 whom he | male 1ssue, but his only daughter, Zenaide Charlotte, who died in ied her cousin Prince Charles 28, the eldest son of Lucien Bonaparte and beeame the mother of anumecrou: family, several members of which till alive. This umon is spoken of by historians as the “fusion of the two lines of Joseph and Lucien Its issve, and o that of Prince Lucien’s second mar- ringe with Mme. de Vombertie,constitute the elder branch of the Napoleon family, and, therefore, all its princes naturall precede the present Jerome in the £ cession. Prince Lucien, the second son, the Corsican notary, and heir presump: tive to the Napoleonic throne at the death of Duke de Reichstadt, was the father by hissecond wife of four sons and three daughters. One of the sons was killed in the Hellenic war of 1820; the three sons were Louis Lucien,born in England; Pierre Napolcon, tho hero of so many sanguinary adyentrues, and who died in lrm and Antoine, who married a norina Cardinaliin 1839, and about whc decease without issve in France in_1878, there has alw: been a doubt. Prince Charles Jules, son of Lucien by his_first wife, had no fewer than twelve children by his cousin, the Princess Zenaide, of whom two surviv viz: Prince Lucien Louis Josopl, one_of the cardinals at Rome, and Prince Napoleon Charles,who is the actual head of the Bonaparte family.n The prince, born in 1839, entered the French army during the reign of his cousin, Napoleon 1IT., fought through the Algerian and Meéxican campaigns, and took part as a captain of infantry in the late Franco-Prus He was taken prisoner by , and, having refused to give his parole not to ser Zainst the enemy if set at hboert was imprisoned at Brunswick until p was declared. When only twenty-one yeurs old Iw married Princess Marie of Ruspoli, by whom he has had two daugh- ters, Marie and Bugenic de Bonaparis the latter being born as recently as 1872 The lines of Napoleon I.and of Lonis, third and fourth sons respectively of M. and Mme. Bonap extinet by the deaths of the ex-king of Rome (Duke de Reichstadt) in 1832, and the prince impe- rial the 2d of Jun Thus there only emains for consideration the line of Jerome, formerly king of Westphalia, the thirteenth and 1 child of Letiti lhmu]mr ¢, born four months before his father's death. KEarly in the present cen- tury this Jerome Bonaparte married Miss Pafterson, of Baltimore, who died in 1879, and by her he had o. Their eldest son married Miss Susan May in 1830, and this marriage resulted in the birth of two sons, the eldest of whom, Colonel Jerome Bonaparte, came over from the United States in the early di Ih of the Secona Empire to ser in the army of s im- perial cousin. The origmal Jerome Bo- naparte's marriage with Miss Patterson was annulled i a highly arbitrary and unjustitisble manner by Napoleon I., who compelled his younger brother 1o mai Princess Fredeviea of Wurtemburg They had two sons ihd a danghter Prinee Jerome, count of Montfort, who died at Florcuce in 1847 without issuc ana_ Prince Napoleon Joseph Charles Paul, who, on his brother’s death, as- med the name of Jerome, and is the Plon-Plon” that created 50 much excitement in France, . - Irrelevant Comparisons, Comparisons are made between the dressed meat business and railroad busi ness. The Chicago I ald says. Armonr & Co.'s sales lust year wero about 50,000,000, or nearly a iillion weck, and yet I am tola by one of their heads of departments, who probably knows what he is talking about, that the net profits were a little less than #1,550, 000. That is & large sum, butit is u smull sum to represent a year's profit of a busi ness 50 vast. Did you ever stop to think that there is a butcher shop in Chicago | whose sales are larger every year th the gross income of the greatest railway | in the count The earnings of the New York Central are only $30,000,000. Our great wostern roads crowd the Contral prety close, with §27,000,000 for Burling- ton, 25,000,000 for Northwestorn and $24.000,000 for St. Puul. In pointof gross receipts this big butcher shop leads them all, but there is & vast diffcrouce in profits As statements these figures are inter amount employs an invested capital of $100,000, { 000. The St. Panl carns §24,000,000 gross | and $0,000,000 net per annum and em- | ploys an invested capital of £150,00),000, | and so on through the list. The capital employed to earn $50,000,000 gross and | £1,500,000 net per annum in the dressed L bu thicant 1 MIPAr i 1siness is in n 1ese enormo! A Card from the Duay Co. BALTIMORE, Md., April 14, 188, 1itor—We have {rom time time, through the columns of you as well as through the medium of the ing newspapers of this country, called nt tention to a simple and_effective formula for a large cla allments which the the medical profession has intelligently conceded, cannot be benefitted perman ently in any other way than through the agency of some article of the clinracter of a food. The remedy to which we refer is a preparation which can be prepared in any household, the principal ngredi being raw beefsteak and a specitied g tity of Dufly’s pure malt whiskey. We expectod through the circulation of your paper and others in which our no tices appeared, to get a large demand for copies of this formula and onr expecta. tions have not only been met to the (ullest degree, but exceoded our most sanguine expectations. During the few months which have elapsed since the first notice appeared, ten thousand invalids have placed themselves in charge of our Medi. cnl Department; all these cases recsived individual supervision, and the wonderful results that have been obtained.ineluding in many cases o gain in weight from ten to twenty-five pounds, notices of which hiayo apponred i the papers, has also lod to the use of this formula by thousands with whom we are not in frionds of our patfents succese of this formuln is due prir to the pecullur propertics o Dufty Malt Whisky. ~ The range of action of this remedy comprises all lung, stomach, bowel affections and weakened conditions of the nervous systom. The extraordinary growth of our busi- ness has made it necessary for us to mako special arrangements to meot the inquiry and attend to the supervision of the thou- sands who are using our remedy, and wo aro anxions that no one suffering from any of the above allmenta should fail to sond to us for a copy of this formuln, which we will send With pleasure on re- ceipt of a two-cent stamp, to any address that muy be requested. With the formuls wo furnlsh evidence of its valno which causes Dufty's pure malt whiskey and formula to become at once an established household remedy. We appreciate the fact that our meas- ure of success is due to the interest mun- ifosted by your readers, and we desiro that none who are ailling from the dis- eases above referred to shonld remain un conscions of the fact that there is u simple and effective remedy that will restore health where disease now dwells THE DUFFY MALT WHISKEY CO, Malt Whiskey A To the to paver oad Runaway Boys, Fred and Willie Ge y and cleven, tived of their home cinnati, so they packed a big basket with provision, stole %3 and a pistol from their father, and set ont to see the world. And they saw it for two weeks, sleeping in barns, selling newspaper and Dlacking boots in Dayton and Toledo, and were in a fair ‘way to become thorongh tramps when the adver ments of their frantie father led to th apprehension and return to the parental rnl. They y they have had all the tramping they want. PIL agod nino in Cin- PIL PILES A sure cure for Blind, Bleeding, lichin and Ulcoratod Piles has been discovered Dr. Williams, (an Indian remedy), eall Williams' Indian Pile Ointiont. box has cured the worst chronic cases of 80 years standinz. No one need sulfe ) minutes aftor applying dhis wonderfal sooth ing medicine, Lotions and instruments do wmore harm than good, Willimns' Pile Ointment absorbs the tumors, Y3 intonse itehing, (partienlarly at wight after etting warm in bed), acts as a poultice, gives hstant relief, and is preparad only for Bilos, itehing of private parts, and for nothing elss. SKIN DISEASES CURE Dr. Frazier's Magie Olutment eures a8 by magic, Pimplos, Black Heads or Grubs, Blotelies and Eriiptions on the face, leayin the sicin learand beautiful, - Also eires Ltch; Salt Kheum, Sore Nipples, Sore Lips, and Old Obstinate Uleors, wbnl(l by druggists, or matled on recoipt of ailed by Kuln & Co., and Schroster & Conrad. At wholesale by C. ¥. Goodman A Lively Girl, Marie Hebron, fourteen years old and black, was committed to the industrial school in Baltimore, by her mother, who said she couldn’t do ‘anything with Marie. She had a room on the fifth Hoor. One dark night she got out on the roof, hung from the eaves by her hands and dropped to a building heneath, thence jumped to the roof of u house adjoining, got on the veranda, slid down n post to the ground, scaled the fence and went home. Her mother at once notified the police and one of the foree went to rearvest Marvie, He couldn‘t tind her untit he happened to stick his hand up a chimney. Fle ot something, and grabbed and~ pulied and down come Marie blacker than ever, and angry. e N130)990) MO 049 0NE ‘TONPIITD PEY 0N HOYA ‘epz04us) 0) Jungo 0N ‘SN SWEIA OTE UOTM 810} 10§ POHO OHY ‘DITUD © WA TS TOM SRR 39 949 04 ‘X018 PO SqugT UOYML e The One-Wheeled Vehicle. “Papa, if three wheels is a tricycle and two wheels is a bicycle, what is one wheel?" “One whecl, my son? Well let see! One wheel must be n unicycle “No, it ain't papa; it is a whe bow."" SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR AS A REMEDY IN Kidney Affection “My kidneys were so affected I have been compelled to getup as much as ten times in one night. 1 had pains in my side, back and left shoulder, and when down could hardly rise. I was unable to bend my body without great n. I tried Simmons Liver Regulator and my condition has improved so much that I hardly ever feel any of my old trouble, and then very slightly, and am satisfied that [ am entirely cured, I would not take thousands of dol.ars for my improvemen W. Jouxsox, }umms Agent. USEDINALL o PARTSOF THE NG G Gatalagues and Prices o applicut) Bullde me Ibar- lSTllI.ISHED A870. DfER 200000 SOLD o, Sold by fand Dealors, AN " DREXEL & MAUL. (Buocessors to J. G. Jaoobs esting, bur as comparisons they to nothing. To earn its §30,000, mg|m~ | and $3,000,000 net per annum th New | York Central employs an mveste 1 ¢ api- | tal of $165,069,000, exclusive of the West | Shore, The Luke shore earns §15,000,000 | &ross and $0,000,000 uet per anuuw aud | UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMERS. Al the olg stand, 1407 Farnam St O1 ders by telograpb solicited and prompily atonded ta Yoicphone No. | A POSITIYE ARLT] MOST PERFECT st And etrongest \\tnml Vanilla, Lemon, Orange tavor as deileately and naty PRICE BAKING POWDER eo.. _ORICAGO. DRUNKENNES abit, Posttively A by Admiinistering Dr. Tt can be given 1 & cip of ffes or tek w the Knowledge of th person kg 1t I absola harmiess, and will eflvct & peraanont and oLher Lhe pationt |3 4 Dhoderate drinkee: ok, Tt L bown given i Miou aaids Of cases, and 1 every (nstanoe n Herecteate has followed. "1t wevor fnila The Ayaiem ones Impie d with th W cames A0 UHSE impossibility for (ho liquor a FOR SALF DY FOLLOWING DRUGG s78: KUHN & €0, (5th and Deuging, and ) & Ste., Omahe, Nobd P il Blafs, fowa. o t containing b e i Tositivey v ovne's Ll oet e, Powerful, Eeolive, ny Cure without bor 16, 187 %o box will cure the most obtinate cnso in four diys or less. ltan'sSoluble Medicat adflnugln | No nauzeons doses of cubobs, copatba or oil adalwood that are cortain o produce dysp by dostroying the contings of the stom Sold by all drogeists or mailod on P. 0. Box 1533, V. C. ALLLLAN CO., &John#t., Now York. luuu e uulhmh Patented in Euroj NS I UN1T o John Hamilton 8 Tukos bare of knees, restores punt origrinal thape. Only pat'd sti comoinine scrow rod in ooness tion with climps, frimgem nts, Origmal and tretelior for Gentiomon's uSe. e urely pucked, Write for eirculars . G. W. BIMMONS GARRMGES SENT C. O. D. , AT WHOLESALE PRI o] I\nmm | nll | within mhes 1 o tamp e, ipntion 6. SPENCER'S TOV mifi 221 W. MADISON ST ochno. witnted in evory Boston, Muss BABY ONE_OR MORE 1 PAY all wmsxx! | va(vrn'-ln y Distilled for icinal Use. ) THE BEST TOMIC! g UNE! UALEDW /ASTING GENERAL: 3 PERFECTS DIDE! DR. EDW. L. WALLING, Sur oo in Chiet, Nutional Gaare Mault Whiskey Dreatin,of Revuion. with far bett have had, 1 your rticlo in my practice, flud it vory sutlsfaotory.” n:v’us ar II!I‘AHMI. o7 ViR MR on the Labl, EISMER & MEND!I.SOI. (Solo Agents for the U. 8.) 816, 818 and 320 Race 81, Philadelphia, Pa, For s: by C. F. Goodman, Omahs 3. worPERMAN, 5oLz A 61 BROADWAY, o Recently Built., The Tremont. FITZGERALD & SON, Prop th und P s 3. Rates §i J. H, W. HAWKINS, o SISO Neb. Elevator on1th street, — + Breeder ot GALLOWAY CATTLE, M \'\'U()Dfl. Live Stock Auctdon Bules made in all parts of the raten” 18000 3. Btite Biook, 1ngmk Golloway snd Short Horn bulls: " B. 1. GOULDIN , Farm Loans and muu. Correspondence in reyurd to I Koo 4, Kichurds Blook, Ling " Public Sz Denver, Col, June l 40 bead of Show Short Horny shank, 2-year-olds, heitors. Address ues, Dénver, Col. € Col. . M. Woods, Aictioneor. & When in Lincoln stap et National Hote! And get & §00d alnner for S, J. A VEDAWAY, All othors e A

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