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T LINCOLY'S BIG BOOY. m he i is now at work apportioning different school moneys pro rata to (he counties in the state | Requisition paper< upon the governor iking Houses and Manufactories Oon- | of Kansas from Governor Dawes have ted For a Botas Uonatenctad n the hands of an officer to trasted For o ‘IL‘”‘In racted co ssion of a man who dis. | rtgaged property in Gage THE OMAHA DAILY | WORKED 0UT BY A BRIGHT B0 A Very (lever Piece of Detective Work Results in thy Oaptureof a M or. | { BEE: 1d he w engafed at this wh constable arrested lum. Gitbert overcome that for a moment he oc speak. On the way to unty jail lie made the following statement On the day of the murderl came here e horse I'he animal s0 frisky that 1 c 1 not eatc I called to the drover, who was pa " and 1 over to m capt shes, 1 e return ran before us 1b which was 11 kicked upa He passed on bushes and was iking the sna th his weapon wh wled the stone s God is my judge, T flung at the snake ut th rock twisted in my hand and struck him in the back of the neck. He | fell without mn and in a minute or two [ knew that he was dea It wasan accident, pure and simple, and would | have been accepted as such had I at | once giventhe alarm. I did intend to, but it struck me that if I took his money | and seereted the budy the crime would be | nid to tramps. 1 drew the body to the M'INTEE RELEASED ON BAIL. Caught With His Plunder, He Con- | MINOT NOTES " . , de e ety Sotmoll &1 HETPT wenkly fesses, but Claims the Murder The Body of His Dead Child to be |1 ssed the vote east at the was an Accident - The Case Exhumed and a Post Mortem tion and certified to t | Closed by Suicid Held—sState House : 4] ed, Oopics of | — b ouse L cations for th use of Q \ Items. ordered, and advertise- | Some years since a drover name g bids for contractors for the | Churles Strang, a German, was mur [FAOM THE BER'S LINCOLY BUGEAD] buridaBab s iyl ”‘“”'" Sy | dered in wostern 1 for many | and its environs is enjoying prosperons A remarkably lively runaway yester. | body was notfound untila week after the rest, that da nd the corner of O and | the murder, as it was concealed in some . I' ind striking the Wells | bushes by the roadside. Only one blow neoln, where the o Limprovements Fargo expre on and team by the | had been struck, and that had erushed A . iiley by their company’s office, drove the 4 AT STl ot i | the line of manufactu Y e o o the ailey, | Misskull. The affair occurred on a high terests which possese a perman crowding one of the horses from the ex. | Way much travelled, and, as nearly as certainty of future growth above all oth- | press wagon nead first into an adjoining | could be figured down, at about 3 o'clock ers, The partics aireetly tercsted in | cellar. About a thousand men quickly | in the sfternoon. The drover had left that suburb propose to make a showing | Butaered at the place, and after much | is Jame Lorse at a farm house and B SNl B ARL Vol s Aht o it and b ‘, bty "”Hl" ock and tuc { jvas pro- | started ont to look at some cattle on a ) sent ye to that end the duced and the horse rescued from ten | farm two miles aw Several persor ond packing house is now under con- | minutes' experience standing on its head | wio wore driving tecognized I;um'p“\w.tf tract, the first packing house being now | without serious injury " Inm, but no one saw him nearer than well up and under contract to be com- | | |‘\Iu~ .“ |||lxv|v‘nly“| rontion” as v‘v:;vl- rHI within half a mile of the spot where he f August 1. The second packing | by the Lincoln Oratorio socicty under the | met his death, {§ ‘HdoF. bontekak Tor - At | directosship of Dr. Saxby, was very | It was wwo days before any sonrch was s ereditably patronized and the musical | hegun, and a week, us stated, before the tction, the contract for the work 'k performed has been very favorably | hody was found. Meanwhile there bad signed by Ji Fitzgerald, of the | criticised : ¢ @ N been a he rain W evidences of stock yard company, and John Thomas, ”Hn’ v;w-“ brick block on the corner \4{! A strugy 1 been removed. It w of Kansas City. the contractor, The lat. | Q.and Twelith streets, being vuilt by M. | holieved by everybody that the drover Alexander, has progressed to the point 1 iis bondl in the sum of $25,000 | Where brick] ‘lr Wy their trado, hiful pertormance of the work Two parties were up in_police court ll< for the completion of | yestorday and paid their fine under the ter has fil for the fa The contract ¢ this second packing hot on or before | Muisance ordinance, the ecause of the > . | trouble this time beiug an old rendering the first day of October. This building | s . x X & . B tank insten 4 e cus ary sl will be four stories in height, and the i e e R B SN SRR IC Dy covtract price for tho building is | field, one of the city conncil 52,000 This will give employment to | men of Platismouth, was in Lincoln yes msulting parties here who sted with him in the new town or, in Cheyenne county, w loeated at & point where the pre | feel ce Iroad must fing To-day the Lincoln and arr in the city, and the first of the s¢ | of four gnmes will be played by the clubs Wt Durfee's park some one hundred and fifty men, and will be run all the year round, Mr. W. I filberhorn, of Chic having a ten wr lease of the bunlding, business and ground Another new buginess for West Lincoln In the manufacturing line is the ization of u joint stock compy site el is ctors them opeka clubs ES R e b et L Senator Van Wyck is expected in - Lin Imhoft, which institntion has a ¢ oln to . where he will remain anob- stock of 000 his company | t of solicitude on the part of politicians manufacture sewer pipe, drain’ pipe, | for at least the day. chimney tops, fire brick, tili and such The salt well ‘drillers are pounding materinls, and will eniploy at least fifty | away in solid rock and are nearer China men from the start. The works will be | by some four hundred t than when | work commenced completed, ready for operation, in sixty There are people who duys, and will be ready to furnish sewer | are reckless enough to doubt the tinding e for the eity and its sewerage system | ot salt water in two or ten thousand authorized at the recent special elec- | foet search on. Mr. Summers, the gentleman who Thursday defe d case that w ks ago will be heard Cochran's court, and as an al started some two we sads this new West Lincoln enterprise, | & in Justi rentleman thoroughiy conversant business, and he is satisfied that | leged wedaing, a wedding dress and bon at command will make as fine a | net, and a non divorced man all in quality of sewer pipe as ean be purchy much rich in the state These are the new improvements in the line of manufacturing institutions, and ed | the case, the tr ness al omises AT THE HOTE Yesterday wmong others were the fol- accompuanying them there is reported a | lowing citizens of Nebraska: Lewis growing demand for West Lincoln Jots, | Hoebel, Syrac A. J. Dunn, Omaha; and the sceretary of the company is | Alva Smith, Waverly; J. 0. Shepherd, drawing deeds and conveyances nearly | Nebraska City; David Dean, Ashland; every day, some of the more interested | 9. 1L Sornberger, Wahoo; . I, Leland, parties in the new institutions | Omaha; J. Griflin, Samora; John - there showing their faith in _the | ney, Plattsmonth; D. D, Johnson, Tabo slace by investing in blocks of lots, ficld, Sidney: J. L. Johns Some will hotd them, and others wiil irickson, St. Paul; 1. H. Gra build cottages at _once that will be for alls . rentor for sale. It is also reported that B. w, the railrond company will put on a | mond. i e 'l'\'\':,'“,‘l"':h'“ ;""‘\!‘_'\"“i',l‘."'m:“','\‘I‘;h‘ l’h';f"jh!"fii The Bogus Diploma-Maker in Court. yards which, when inauguarted, will [, New York = Special Dr,” gohn oubtless prove a paying investment to | Bnehanan, the f2:ous manufacturer of the comp: ¢ | bogus diplomas, who for many cars ny. The next thing the W -olnites expeet will be the extension | Prior to 1830 scattered diplor of of one or both of the street railway lines | graduation from — im medical to that suburb, and tie move will he a | colleges like leaves of 0sn_ove necessity when the different institutions the country, waxing fat both in person and pocket' from the greenness of his there get full forces at wor NEW BIOCKDURIS 1N D% S0 rre oxs, | QUDCs was, in court heve to-day, sup: The preliminary hearing in the Me- | ported by a “daughter,” who is said not e, after twelve hotrs work, took | o be s dunghterat ail, to answer the change yesterdny noon owing | complaint of a ‘wife,” who he says is not his wife at all, After the Philadelphia newspapers ex- posed his college ho was indicted, and his trial fixed for August 12, in 1880. At 1 0’clock that morning he took a fer A the agreement of numerous doctors who held contrary opinions regarding the cause of the death of the girl. The nge taken was that the state went be- the county commissioners and asked authority to hive the body exhumed and | boat for — Camden, and, “when a post niortem held on the remains by | boat was in mid-chaunel, uttered physicians, which order was granted, and | &~ loud and’ leaped - over- to-day the examination will b held, 'The | board. For a ‘long time he was ease developed the usual procedure | supposed to have committed suicide, but when doctors disagree, and hence the | his bedy was not found until after a long scarch the police found 1t in Canada. Then it was a live body and was brought < to Philadclphia, convicted and sen- ced to_ a term in prison, which it ved. His companion during his career in, cook and seaman, all of the medical college ship, was a slender, light- haired woman, who ‘was called his wife. course taken. Justice Brown, before whom the examination of MecIntee has been in force, then proceeded to admit Meclntee to bail, notwithstanding the that the information charged a erim bailuble, and McIntee was released unc $1.000 bonds, which were signed by Me: Intee’s attorney, Mr Sawyer. (a rather unusual a,r.,(.‘....n,.m, and two other | Yesterday she had the “doctor” hauled parties whose responsibility on a bond of | into court on a warrantcharging him with 1880, The any kind is questioned. The proceeding | failing to support her sinc illistrates a leniency wholly inexcusably | case was called at 2:30 this afternoon, at in cases of such Serions nature, snd | which time his daughter and counsel statements have been scattered abroad | mounted the little platform before Jus- that the uni 1 opinion of physicians | tice Welde, and the attorney prosented a was that the child’s wounds came from | physician’s certificate, sotting forth that disease, when those who listened to the | the “doctor’” was so ill that his presence in court could not be otherwise than very dangerous to him, A CONSUMMATE case know thathalf the doctors we as }m-‘l!i\'u that the child died from abuse as rom natural eauses, Itis this division ACTOR. that has nsed the post mortem, The Lucie M. Buchanan was present with trinl, insofar as the defense is revealed, | her attorney, and the latter resisted his 5 in the usual course of defense—that of [ opponent'svlea for a postponement with making the prisoner charged with the | much vigor, asserting that the defendant Was a consummate liability to paralysis L fiction. Wiy, only yesterday,” exclaimed the y “when my client and I called at n's house he was as lively and a squirrel, “:u:ml up and down stor, and that this erime n cuted innocent, while the child who suffered all is vo s in death. Itis tobe hoped that the case may be sifted to the bottom and justi done despite the multitude of technis points that are used to cover criminals, ol al AT THE STATE HOUSE rapidly, and finally fell on his knees and Land Commissioner Scott is home to | begged that some kind of priyate seitle- official work again after an oflicial visit | ment might be made. to the stute reform school, where two | ‘Thereupon counsel for the defense turned dramatically to Buchanan’s daughter and bade ler go out and bring that man before the court and let his honor decide for himself whether he is fiv to undergo examination. Counsel evel offered to submit the point to any phy *ian the court or the prosecution might new buildings for family pufposes and a new workshop are in course of construe- tion. The appropriation for improve nme there was ,000, and beside the buildings mentioned, steam heating apparatus will be supplied in ail the buildings. Commissioner Scott oxpresses | ¢ himself us satisfied with the progr the | summon, Then for ten minutes the law: contractors are making and in the gual- | yers wrangled over the case, to the evi- ity of the work done, and the reform | dent entertainment of the justice ani the oflicers who crowded about the bar. Finally, the attention of all was diverted to & enrious procession entering the room Miss Buchanan led the way, carrying a huge volume that looked™ like a scrap book; benind her came an aged, sympa- school will be much benefitted and _its ability fer work enhanced by the new im- provements. ‘There are now 112 boys in the school, and Mr. Scott reports the 200 acre farm there in & prosperous condi tion, with the boys up for reformation active in raising the crop. thetie looking darkey; 1 ing on his The state veterinary commission are | 8rm was a very short man with a broad finding the present month a busy one and | and bald head, very hike that of Col- their time fully occupied in atténding to | onel Robert T. Ingersoll, but the expres- notices of glandered horses. Twenty- | $1on was melanchoiy and subdued. This five complaints have been made in this | was the “‘doctor.”” He'wore no collar, 1 o the present month, and the commis. | brobubly because he had no neek; his sien have examined and superintended | short, fut body was ctad in a shirt and the killing of seventeen Yesterday | © and loose, dark trousers flapped they wore at ' Seward, where a |8bout his limbs. Behind him shambied horse was killed under ‘their order, | & tall ragamuaflin with a piratical mus- and they doparted from there for Fair' | tache. had nothing to do with the se, but he was distinct and picturesque rt of the procession all the same. Snchanan was assisted to the bar by sev- 4 and Justice Welde, aftor asking a few quostions granted a postpon- ment until next W ednesd The defense in the suit will be that no marringe ce bury and vieinity. The commission find their work all in isolated cases and in all parts of the state, and they have been up among the graders north of Schuyler on the northwestern railroad grade, up in Valley county, and down in the vieinity of Rod Cloud herctofore the present month. Dr. Gerth still remains actively | mony ever took | between the partics at work us tho state veterinary surgeon, | at issue, and, ineidentally, it will be and bis resignation remains on the | shown that the alleged Mps. Buchanan table. b simply a fing Wl pariner in th Sheriff . H. Ray,of Richardson county, | “doctor's™ famous transactions in Phil brought one James Lee up to the state | delphia. penitentiary yesterday, who was sen — tenced by dwdislnc( ourt in and for Mics-Ditterolf AR Richardson county to one year's impris Monluy M. HenryMiles of this city onment for the erime of grand larceny. | was married to Miss Katie Bitterolf, also { Soeeretary of State E. Roggen and Audiior Bibeock are in Omaha attending the meeting of the republican state cen tral committee. Suberintendent Jones hus, after long Ling, ry d the school census re twrns frow Liucolu aud Keys aha goun- of Omaba, at the resid. parents, corner of Sixtecnth and Mason streets. The cercmony was witnessed only by the immediato friends of the contracting parties, and_a very happy eveniug was enjoyed. Mr. Mies is in | busiuess on Sixteenth street, near Mason. re of the br was Killed” in th wmd his body lifted over the fence into the bushes, As he was a man weighing 180 pounds, it was reasonable to further believe that it took two men to lift the body over the the fence. The dead man had been robbed of wateh and nione; His cloth- ing was considerably disarranged, and in his right hand he “tightly clutched a stick about the size of a broom handle and half the length The detectives aceepted the theory that fwo men were el d in the affair, and it was natural to suppose t they were tramps. Arrests were mac wd there, but none of the susp rties could be loeated anywhere the scene of the murder “on that day. The bushes under which the body was found fringed one side of a field avout ter J in extent and used asa pasture. This ficld belonged to a man named Clair away and was a manu’ pumps. He had two or who lived a mile facturer of well three teams out selling them on the ¢ and at the time of the murder, afterward reealled, one of the drivers man named Gilbert, who was a stranger to the neighborhood—was at home on e count of one of his horses being lam This horse was turned into the old pa ture to rest, and two or three times du ing the week Gilbert: went to the field to s how the animal was domg 1t v finally remembered that he wus there on the day of the murder. A boy thirteen 3 old named Robert Smith took a decp interest in the murder from the outset. While hesaid but little, ire was constantly thinking and planning. He knew that the detectives ing on the theory that two men w guged in the crime, beeause the bod, been lifted over the fence. This w the theory that the murder had been committed in the road. The boy took the ground that the killing had been done in the pasture, although he was careful to nothing. In this case the body had en dragged into the bushes. He car fully inspected the ground and found sat- isfactory evidence that this was the fac 1 He also diszovered a stone weighing four or five pounds, which he believed to hi been the weapon with which th Four or five rods 3 ren, he found the spot ad been uprooted from the ground. If he was right, and he i believed he , how came the droverin the pasture? There were no was struci after a careful where the stone cattie in there for mspection, nor would he i the road to make a short cut to r days of cogitating the boy sud- denly remembered that one of the pump- aker's horses was in the pasture at the Could that fact have drawn the drover into the lot* Without in the least giving away the clue, the boy ascertained that the horse was removed from the pa son the day of the murder, entirely covered from his lameness and that Gilbert was the one who went after him It was a spirited animal, and the boy re; soned that Gilbert had had trouble catching him and the dro: into the lot to render assi; oning was correct, Gilbert was the murderer. Robert was the son of a poor farmer, and he could work the case no further—that is, he could not tind out Gilbert's antecedonts nor follow him about the country to verify his suspicions, The case rested here until the driver r turned aftera trip lasting four weeks The boy at once beeame his shadow. Not breath of suspicion attached to Gilbert cept in the boy's mind. He talked freely of the murder, and if his expressed horror was not genuine it was so well counterfeited us to deceive everybody. He arrived iome on Friday night On Saturday he was busy at the pump faq tory. Bright and early on Sunday mort ing the boy was at the pasture, hidden in such a positicn that he could take n the whole field. He had an idea that Gilbert would visit the place, and that he would learn something new in the e, though he had no solid foundation for the idea. At 3 o'clock in the afternoon Gilbert appeared. He had not entered the field in had gone 11 this from the highway, but had made a de- tour across a piece of woods. Near the centre of the lot was half an acre of briar patch, with several dead logs and stumups interspersed. Thedriver walked and acted like one who desired to escay observation, and made straight for th pateh. He was hidden from sight for about a quarter of an hour, and then he left the field by the route he had come Robert was satisfied that he han secured u further clue, but he did not investigate until Monday morning, after the man had driven away with his load. He crossed and reerossed the patch half & dozen times, looking for he knew not what, but at length he began to examine closely the stumps and logs. Inn hollow stump he found a ball of weeds and grass, and underneath this batl, wrapped in paper, was the evidence to convict the murderer of the drover. There was his watch and pocket-book, the latter con taining over $400 in money and many apers. There was no doubt in the boy’s mind that Gilbert had entered the copse to see if the hidden articles were all right. There evidence sufficient to warrant the man's arrest, but the boy was deter- mined to wait. He knew what clues the others were working on, and he was afraid of beng ridiculed, eyen when he had such positive proots. As Gilbert had not ¥emoved the articles, it was probable that he would come again and the boy determined to wait for a second visit. The driver had started off to be gone three wecks, but he was back in ten days pleading illness. He returned just at dark one evening, and half an hour later the boy had taken his case to a constable and given him all the points, They soon came to the conclusion that Gilbert returned with the intention of se the money and leaving the country, at daylight next morning they were hid- den in the thicket It was 5 o'clock in the afternoon before Gilbert showed up. He had forced u quarrel with his emvloyer in order to have an excuse to quit work, and when he approached the tield he was on his out of the neighborhood. He made a very eautious approach, and as soon ns he entered the thicket be went directly to the stump and removed the articles. When he bad done this be opened the waullet and began counting the wmoney, 2 the wateh and money in the stump and eame here to-day to seeure the plund 1 leave the conntry,” That the killing was accidental s many people lirmly believe, bushes, se at as Gilbert's vast record was traced, and it could not be found that he had ever been arrested for any oflense inst the law Others held that the killing was premeditated, and it was_likely that the lawyer en gaged by Gilbert 1o defend him warned him that his life would be perilled. He had been in jul less than a fortnight when he committed suicide by hanging, thus closing the case — PERHAPS THEY WERE TWINS. A Close Call for a Man Who Strik- ingly Resembled Another. About twenty years ago a_robber en- tered the farm house of John West in Indiana, and, being discovered while prowling around the house, he shot West in order that he might make his escape. The hour was miduight, and there was a Dright harvest moon lighting up the room in which the shooting took place. West hud a club beside his bed, and he gave the intruder a powerful blow with this betore the shot was tived. The bullet en tered his abdomen, and he lived about three days and was perfectly conscious all the time. He dec ton his dymg bed tiat his murderer was a young man named Solomon Richards;a lawless ehar acter who hung abont the village two miles away. Mrs. West recognized him well, and when Richards was ested ind charged with the erime he did not deny at. There wasn't the slightest donbt of his guilt, and but for the firm ness of the shenfl the fellow would have been lynched. He had been in il two weceks before he declared his innocence. As he had no money he could not eng a Inwyer, but he mide a statement to the sherifl, which set that oflici; work to prove an alibi for him, On the night of the shooting Richards had sat in the village tavern from 9 to 10 o'clock. This could be veritied. When he left the tavern he visited two saloons, but this could not be yerified. Several persons were almost sure of haying no one was Hositive went to alivery stable on the hay to sleep imed to have spoken to'a hostler named Warner; but when Warner was consulted he conld not be sure whether it was thay night or tho one preseding it. On lns way from the een him, but 30 o'clock he dimbed up loon to the barn Richards encountered person who Wwas dressed like himself, 1 whose genel emblance was very striking. Both ted and looked each other over as 1f astounded, but ncither spoke. Not one man in a hundred would have taken any stock in such a storv, but the sherifi, singular as it may scem, believed that Richards - was telling the trath. West had struck the man with a club. Richards had not the slightest wound or bru The pistol with which the shoot- ing was done had been left behind. No one about the village had everseen it before. How could Richards, who never had a doliar at a time, have purchased 1t? He was on the street, perfectly un- concerned, when arrested. If he was ruilty, why had he waited right there to be taken into custody, when the farmer had called out: *‘Sol Richards, you have shot me, but I'll live to see you hung! All these points were overlooked by everyhody except the sheriff. Mr. and Mrs. West declared that Sol Richards was the man; that was evidence enouga, especially when Sol was o good-for: nothing ~_Three weeks had passed, when the sheriff got track of a man who passed a toll gate at an early morning hour, carrying a bundle. Further on he found that the man with the bundle had a bloody ¢ Five miles further and he had entered a farm house, alleged he had met with an accident, and had a sealp wound dressed. He had journeyed a hundredmiles before the sheriff overtook him, but nere and there he had sold frag- ments of his plunder. When finaily overhanled and arrested he admitted his crime hardly before a question was asked. He was a professional tramp and robbery was nothing new to him. He not only dressed preciscly like Rich- , but he resembled him so closely in height, build, weight and facial "ex- pression that the people came to the jail and called him Richards, He gave his name as Terry,but as he could remember little or nothing of his childhood, and as this was also the case with Richards, it was generally believed that they were twin brothers. The one wasreleased as an innocent m: nd the other was sent to prison for such a long term as practically assured his death within the gloomy walls, e — SMILING FOR Kansas City Gets Another Big Slice of the Louisiana Lottery Prize, With the increase in the price of real estate, the boom in buildings, and the general prosperity of the v in ation, it 8 no wonder that she should get more than her share of The Louisiana State Lottery Drawing this month., The drawing came off ter- day, and ticket No. 15,145 drew the cap ital prize of $150,000. There was noth ing surprising in the fact that a lady in this city was so fortunate as to have a fifth ticket. Some one here was bound to have part of the ticket, for it has been demonstrated [that money cannot get away from Kansas City, this $30,000 mak- ing about $80,000 drawn by residents of this oivy since Janjary 1. Mrs. Anna M. Cross is the lucky pos sor of the shp of paper which by yester- day's turn of the wheel entitles her to congide $3),000. he is a widow aged ubout 85, and she s lived here for about three 3 For the past year and a half Mrs Cross bas been employed as hookkeepe dnd each month has invested part of he: earnings in tickets. Thisisthe first prize she bhas won and the news of he fortune almost overpowercd hes sther with her dauvghter she boards at ‘hitaker's hotel. For the present at least Mrs. Cross will continue to keep books, and when she receives the money she has sensibly concluded to invest it in real estate.—Kuansas Cily Times, June 16, en b B. D. Whiteside has been arrested for stealing & watch from a Mrs. Benocken She claims that he came to her house nnd asked her for a drink, to which she res- l:mm«d by going to the well, lik ecea of old, and drawing sowe wuter In her absence, she claims, he stole the waulch. WEDNESDAY. b JUNE 30. ‘988I GREAT MEDICAL PRACTICE. | Dr. R, 0. Flower of Boston—His Extensive Practice, Both at Home and Abroad--Boiled Down Facts—Some lnteresting Reading. To write the biogranhy of this distin guished physician m a few lines would [} n impossibility; a leader in his pro | fossion and in every senso of the word, great; with a practice tar excelling that of any ot the oid piiy and yet he is a young man of but 36 years of g From the opening sentences of a little book published by Deland & Barta of this city, and entitled “Dr. R. C. Flower of Boston, Muss. Who is he. What is he doing. His miraculons cures, His work as a physician’ we extract the following For some years Dr. R. C. Flower has startied the ¢astern world, from time to time, by performing what have seemed miraculons or supernatural cures. One writer' in describing Dr. Flowcer's trinmph in the si room, says: “‘Sick ness s a toy in his hands; in & most phenomenal way he sheds light into the darkened eye, life into the dying form, and robs the sick room of its sufferer and coflin of its prey.” Dr over important Rockies to the Ch to the Rio Giande to consult bad cases from the yeake, from Canada His greatest ability seen in desperate cases, nd his itiest feats and - most miraculous s at the deathi-bed itself. DR, FLOWER is a young man, smooth face, size, very largo head. Ho isa hard stu dent, deepthinker, a man of remarkably quick perecption and ntuitional faculty which are said to be marvelons Dr. Flower by birth, is a Western man He transferred” his pr: to the east | some years ago, since when he has made a most ren Kable record, To better deseribe the rise of his eastern practice, quote from the combined “History of wards, Lawrence and Wabash coun , of 1linois.” published by J. $. Mc Flower has been ealled and medinm ti Donough & Co , of Philadelnhix, which | is o hist of the English settlement of Southern” [linois, a settlement ab- | lished by Geol lower, of Stratford, England, (the grandfather of Dr. R. C Flower). We quote from pages 226 and 7, whichis an extract from the Bio- \phical history of the young doctor. BIOGRAVIY “His Ivrm'(iw drifted largely enstward, and the doctor finally to the deter mined to move to the great cities of the east, where he could more suceessfully overate his almost supcrnatural he pow In accordance, with these foel ings, he sold out his institute and trans- ferred his practice to Ph Iphia and From this on his practice beeame very great. His cures were so numerous and so phenomenal, t beeame a wonder in the east. anxious to live in Boston, New York. traction: Hing him to the Hub, he gave up his_beautitul residence on Fifth avenue, New York, and transferred his practice in May, 1832, to the Athens of Ameri “In Boston he has built up a practice which is said by many to be the largest in the world. His oflices are some dis tance from his residence, and under no i cirovimstances will _he mingle business with the pleasure of his home. ‘A phenomcenal feature in his pr is his method of dingnosing diseases. He never asks a patient his trouble, but the instant he es the hand of a sick person, he tells most_accurately the dis- ease in all its ramifications. This phe- 1al phase of his practice has brought him thousands upon thousands of ients, and itis claimed that out of up- wards of one hundred thousand examina- tions he has never made a mistake. Dr. Flower attained such a reputation in his profession that his oviion is sought in bad cases all over the world. His advice hasbrought him thousands of dollars in many instances. A big price, some one will say. Yes, but 1t was the pivot upon which® turned life and death “~to follow it was to get well. When the Rev. F. M. McSimmons of Ontario brought his wife to consult Dr. Flower for a lung and heart trouble, more than ono physician having pro- nounced her incurabie, he stated that he was very uneasy about his wife, and after the doctor had mined her he would like him to sce if he bad any troubles, as he so easily tired 1 can cnre your wife,” the doctor said, *‘but unless you have the best of treatment yourself, you will live but a few months.”” The Rev. MeSimmons neither believed tice nomes to the statement t his wife could be cured, nor that his own life was in dan- ger, but as o last chanco he had his wife take treatment, saying that when she was cured he might attend to himself. In a few months s was well as she is to-day,but,alas,within the sameshort time the husband was laid beneath the sod. The leading journals of the country have endorsed Dr. Flower as but few are endorsed. We make a few guotations as a sample of what hundreds of the daily and weekly journals have said: “Dr. Flower is deeply engaged in his nd the interest he takes in his ients is like unto that which a father takes in his children. He is especially noted for his_candor in always telling his patients just what he thinks as regards their case.” is books show that at this time he has the following number of patients in the different States: Maine 543 New Hampshire 619, Vermont 203, Massachusetts 3,106, Connecticut 1,481, Rhode Istand 230, New Jersey 552, New York 1,590, Ponnsylvania 1,431, Mary- Iand 847, Delaware 86, Virginia 239, West Virginia 320, Ohio 1,401, Indiana 926, Kentucky 1,022. Tennessee 370, North “urolina 103, South Caroli . Georgia ida 207, Alabama 208, Mississippi , Louisiuna 364, Arkansas 271, Texas 31, Indiau Territory 32, Kansas 651, Missouri 622, Ilinois™ 1,102, Michigan 1,166, V 1,277, Minnesota 84, wka 414, Dakota 551, 433, Ari 74, Nevad , Ut i, Montana 68, Idaho ushington Territory 124 lldurmg the last six ted joming 1 Oregon 61, W 18 L 8900 of these had been pro nounced incurable by other physicians, Consumption, 11,713 | Cured, Lost, Over 10,000 of these had been pro- nounced incurable by other physicians, Kidney und rheumatic discases, 28, Cured, Lost, Upwards of 22,000 of these had be pronounced incurable by other physi- | cians, Heart disease, 6,400 | Cured, 6,153 Lost, 217 | Upwards of 5500 af these had had been | pronounced incurable by other physi- ards of 1,800 of these pronounced incurable by other cians, Liyer and stomach dise; Cure 443 | Lost, 616 | Upwards of 42,400 of these had been | pronounced incurable by other physi- | cians This table of facts show that Dr Flower | pen to be taxp, ! itehing of private parts, and for nothing else, | Old Obsti i | does not protend to,) he eures such a | large per cent of the supposed incu y almost rob disease of its terror, furthermore that if help cannot b hle nd 1 at his hands it is of but little use going clsewhere I'hose, however, who may wish to know | more of 'this doctor, and I s, will [ by sending a two-cont stamp to Deland 1 Barta, 54 Pearl stroet, Boston, Mass., recoive a copy of their publication, from which a portion of this article is ex tracted.=Boston Conrier - | PLUCKY MONTANA WOMEN, | Maias Mothers as Successful Brea Tha Fair Sex | | | over Montana aro refined and bred in influence and ease and hopetul, cailed by the of their husbands or led by thewr desires to enter and in new fields the mission of life, to sarrender socicty, the | hon nd friends and scenes - of their Yo and march boldly to a far-off | Wilderness and endure privation, toil, | labor, and sufler: Bat these women says a Sadie (M. T)) corcespondent of the broad prairies of ttured women proud, young misfortunes San | isco Chronicle, have griwn to be brave, industrious, self-reliant, full of pluck and ene perfect horsewomen, healthy, hearty, active and independent, and in many cases about as preity and as plump as the very best of climates can make them. Now, the typieal Montana girl ifleft nione will suceeed where an ordinary man would fail. With no viees they stick closely to business, and if bent on tree ¢ ning, homesteading or pre empting a quarter, half or whole section of land, they generally stay by th aim to the end and prove up time. Many ot these enterprising in't have a husband at any price Again, many, after laying the foundation of a comfortable fortune, are taken in by some luzy bacl who comes loaf sees the chance, marries the ,and settles down into a nice wdy-made home, Our girls are broad wintiers and no mistake They are up to Ul sorts of schemes, such as ranching lierding of sheep or eattle, school sup intendents, andeven polities. The latter should be expeeted, howeyer, as the fo males of Montana have the right of suf frage extended to them in ease they hap I As nearly every woman in the territory is a taxpaycer, wihy, of course, she votes, asshe has a perfect right o do. In Boz n, afew miles west of here, one can see plastered all over the town placards appealing to the passer-by 1o *“Vote for Hamilton, the O choi or “Give your vote to darcy or “Yote for Nichols and re forn Hamilton, Nichols, and D were candidates for the school superintenden cy of the connty, and a fourth eandidate was in the fleld— n. 1tis needless to add that “the horrid man™ was beaten by all three of the giris, Hamilton com ing out ahead Alocal y reame out afew days before the election with the following: “Hamilton enters the ficld st the odds of regular party nomin tions. Hamilton has got sand; she will stay until the polls are closed. Hamilton should be eleeted. She says she isn't afraid of rond agents and that education 15 her forte; utsot it would afford he: sure to hop around from one country schoolho to anot in the perform ance of duty. The men of Gallatin county confounded mean they don’t run Hamilton in,” 15 1o question but what female i to Montana. jurors in which involve intemperance, ches of promise, and gaming would hang a culprit on moderate testimon Yet, with all this, girls are in Montana. The town of Maiden close by (the county seat of Fergus county), whose name is suggestive of wit, beauty, ete in fact a safe retreat for bachel ors, since there is not an unmarried man in the town. Sadie, whence these lines he are being penned, is a community of forlorn bachelors, with not a female within a radius of fiftcen miles, except- ing the C 0w squaws in the neighboring Ind ) camp. e Animals After Their Pay. San Francisco Examiner: A troop of boys filed into the Examiner office last i nd asked for the editor. (s wanted, little boyst™ be- damsels | Prepared with spoctal rgard + ' @0 Ammonta, Lime or PRICE BAKING POWDER 00 CHICACO. §¥ CAPITAL PRIZE, Tickets only 8. L .o N\ ] | LOUISIANA STATE LOTTERY COMPARY. W do e 1ty that we sune | Arrmngements for all the Monthly an Drawines of The Louisiana St Compuny and fn por<on manago and | the Drawinus thonse and that the sa conducted with honesty, fairness afd in | Trith toward all partios, aind we Muthorize the | Company to use this cortiflcato, with fac-simiies ofour slgnatures attached i its advertisment $75,000 Shares m Proportion, ol COMMISSTONBRS. We, tho undoraigned lnnks an1 Rankors, will | pay all Prizes drawn in The Louisinnn State Lot | verios whict may be prosontol at our counters J. 1L OGLESBY, Pres. Louisiana National Bank. 2w KILBRETH, Pres. State National Bank. A. DALD WIN, Pres. New Orleans National Bank. Tncorpornted in 1588 for 25 years by tho legis- lture for Bducational and Ciiaritable purposos with ncapital £L0W0,00-10 which & reserve fund of over $5%0.000 hud sinee boon Addod. By anoverwhelining popular voto jts franchise was mide u pirt of the pr tato Constitution ndopted December 20, A. D, 15w, The only lottery 0ver voted on and endorsed by the peonlo of any state, 1L nevor senlos or postpone Itsgrnnd sin, ber drawa monthly oxtraordinu s rogu- Jarly evory hs fnstond of sc.ai-unnu ally ns mine Mureh, 1866, A SPLENDID € 1TV 10 WIN A FORTUNE, i Grand Dra the Acadomy of Music, New Or . July 19th, 1833 19ith Monthly Drawing. CAPITAL PRIZE $75,000. 100,000 Tickets at Kive Dollars Buch, Fraotions in Vifths, in tion. Laer OF NEk JCAPITAL PRIZE. . 8§75 1 do do 25,000 1 do. do 10,000 2PRIZES OF 12,000 5 do 10,000 io a5 1000 20 do 10,0 10 o 20,000 0 do 0,000 500 do 000 1000 do :.m Arpie: 9 Approximation 6,750 « 9 o do 4500 9 do do B250 1067 Prizes, amounting to. ... ©..n. $205,500 Application for rates to_clubs should be mado gnly to thie ofics of the company in New O eans, further information writo_cloarty, ving full address, POSTAL NOTES, Express Orders, or New York ixchange 1n_ ordinary lo ter, curreucy by oXpress at our expenso ad dressed, M. ANIIASPHI-H.“ Or M. A.DAUPHIN, pals Washington, D. C. Make P. 0. Money Orders payablo and address TOKIIRIW ONLEANS NATIONAL DANK, New Urleans, La. nignantly inguired the gospel reporter. “We've been pl:\)’iu% down to the Grand ( House tor Mr. Bert, and he won't p " they all eried in n chorn beat, an’ we want _you to show him up, cos the Examincr shows up all the frauds,” added a little chap with a head about as bigz as a base ball. littlo hoys, go wa answered the “Shows are wicked, and 3 y wicked for taking part'in them,” “What'sup, kids?'" inquired the base ball editor.’ “Why. we've bin playin’ wild imuls in the ‘Snowflake' for two weeks at_tour bits a night, an’ two bits apicce is all we've got,” said a boy with smut on his nose. ST didn’t white-hew ot nuthin’,” chipped in a Uchap. “Last night when we asked for our money Mr. Bert tried to throw a bue; of water on us “What parts did you tuke¥" the base ball sharp. T was a monkey “I'm a bullfrog. “I'm a pencock “I'm a wolf.” “I'm the swan. 1 played the ostrich, and my p was v owl.” L was a zebra the fivst week, but now I'm & cow. “I'm a tiger,” piped the smailest of the lot. “When I asked Mr. Bort for my wages, he callod me a wild man and wouldh't pay me.” “There was sixteen of us wild animals, an' when the kangaroo asked for his salary the boss tola him we ought to he satisfied to get a chance to learn to be actors, without asking for money. Don't jou think he's 1o goody” T 1 “man said he wonld and the youngsters jo fully slummed the door and rushed do Bladrs. inquired d one. B tner, t- - PILES! 1LES! A sure eure for Blind, Bleeding, Itohin and Uleerated Pilos has boen discovored by Dr. Williams, (an Indian remaedy), called Dr Williams' Indian Pile Ointment.’ A sinzlo box has eured the worst clironic cases of % or 50 years standing. No one noed suffer five minutes after applying this wonderful sooth ing medicine. ~Lotions and instruments do more_harm than good. Willians' Indian Pile Ointment absorbs the tumors, allays the intense itching, (partienlarly at nizht after . warm in bed), acts #s & poultice, gives sliet, and is prepared only for' Pile rILES SKIN DISEASES CURED. Dr. Frazier's Magic Ointment cures as by Vluplos, Black Heads or " Griis, fiptions on the face, leaying rand beautiful. - Also cires leh: Sore Nipples, Sore Lips, and d ate Uloers, Sold by drugsists, of mailed on receipt of B0cents Retaiied by Kulin & Co Con Atwholesale by C. ¥. Goodman —-— A female fortune teller named Mer- rick roped in a saloonkeeper in Sioux City and had him arrested for assaulting the honor of her duughte: and Schroeter & When Faby was a1k, we gav her Casteids, ‘When she was 8 Child, sbe cried for Castoria, When sho bocame Miss, she clang to Oastoris, When aho had Cluldses, sho gave them Castoria does not cure all his putienis, (and be LINCOLNBUSINESS DIRECTORY = —— Receutly Bullt. Newly Fumished The Tremont, J. C. FITZGERALD & SON, Proprietors. Cor. #th and P 5ts., Lincoln, Neb, Rates §1.60 por duy, Street cars from house o any part of the clty. J. H, W. HAWKINS, Architect, 34 and 42, Riehards Block, Lincoln, vitor on11th streot on Neb. 1 ecder of S0ut HORN OATILE Brooder ot GALLOWAY CATTLE, 1. M. WOODS, i Live Stock Auctioneer Sules made in all parts ot the U, 8. at falr ratos, Room 8, State Biock, Lincoln, Neb.a Golloway and 3hort Horn bulls for sule. B. H. GOULDIN Farm Loans and Insurance. Correspondence in regard to loans solicited, Room 4, Richurds Block, Lincoln, Neb, Public Sale, Denver, Col., June 10th, 1886, 40 hoad of Show Short Horne. Butos & Crulok shank, Z-your-lds, woeighine 1650; bulls hoifers. Addross Vicid und ¥arm, for oa ues, Denver, Cal. C. >, Linoln, Col. K. M. Woods, Al Whon in Lincoln stop at National Hotel, And get 8 good ainner for J.AK Ordinance No. 1,074. N Ordinnnce ordoring the grading of certain pure 1s in the ety of Oniadia 1o the estib: lishod g DAWAY, Prop. 1 ¢ Orduined by the City Council of the clty of aliin Soction 1, The following st are herob; ordored &1 fubiisthod grade, ping de suid work be done, 1 north to Lo ns now Cnth pvenue: wiso so mueh lies between 10th and 20th Tdahia 1t northoer Bourd of Public Works is the nccessury slops Lo o0 dome. ion i, nee shulibe in foree and ol trom At wi1or s pussge: wee, Prosident City Counoll, k. Passed Jun W.F. [ 4. B Souriain, vty Clo Approved June Zth, 1% 8 Janks B Bovp, Mayer. INPROVED FARMS, Butler Co., Kans., tor s nioe ety lots, Kl Dorado, Kns., Tor rale. Ench favin 1y woll 1419104 0 g w0 SocK§ rich #0il; 01l plow or pustuze lund o wisto), Te perfeet, with wirriiil y Geods e lots are smooth, nico building lots, ol I‘ 5 milo | nortii of 1. 0." Frice, $175 10 f'onchers, clerks, # wiio witlos & sulo roperty it will double in 1year, should buy fots in ¥ Do o gupulation 6(00; the prettivst olty i Kaa- 05 Merms cash, Address O, W, Case, Eldora: do. Kunsus. Ordinance ¥o. 1,071 AN, Oriiaucs locuting cortain ad@itional | £\ wator hydrants in the eity of Omnhs, Neb. | Boitordained Ly the eity council of tho city of additionu water hydranis bo ¥ ordored lociied in the ity ot Omnhi, (o-wit One nuiel stroot. One on Thirticth street a1 Pinimoy stieo One on Pinkney sirect at Thirty first uyene One on Piokioy stroct at Thirty-thivd strect One on N. W. Cor. 2ith Nicholus sireot Section 2. That this ordinence ko eflect and be in foree from aud aftor its passage. Passed June 15th, 1558 tha a1 Thirtieth stroet ai foliowing piices in o Wi F. BECHEL, Presidout City Council J. B BorTiaun, Oity Clerk, Approved June Axivs K. Bovs, Muyos. |